100th Anniversary of Armenian Genocide

BeauBenken

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On this day in 1915, the Turks of the Ottoman Empire began the persecution and genocide of the Armenian for almost no reason. Roughly 1.5 million Armenian people were killed. To this day, the Turkish government refuses to acknowledge this as a genocide and threatens to cut ties politically with nations that refer to it as such. The Day of Rain and Sorrow, as it has become referred to by the Armenians, is acknowledge by most historians as the first genocide of the 20th century.

100th Anniversary of Armenian Genocide - The New York Times

Is this genocide? What four Americans saw happening to Armenians 100 years ago - The Washington Post
 

Whiskeyjack

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I've just been notified that the Turkish government has recalled it's ambassador to Irish Envy. Way to go, Beau.
 

irishfan

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Fun Fact: Belichick wore an Armenian pin to the White House yesterday.
 

tadman95

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That's pretty brutal stuff. Heard more on this on the radio just now. Good post Beau.
 

BeauBenken

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Just trying to do my part as a young historian. Had not seen it posted, and it was honestly an event I had never been taught about until this year despite its severity and historical significance.
 

BGIF

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Memorial in Emerson, New Jersey

I remember when this memorial to the massacre of Armenians was erected in the mid 1960's on the site of the Armenian Home For The Aged in Emerson, NJ. As I recall it's about 30 feet tall. I used to pass this site on the way to my sister's house which was also on Main St.

I was stunned by the magnitude of the genocide. The only genocide I had learned about in high school was The Holocaust which was only mentioned briefly in an American History class. I had learned about the English Genocide of The Irish from my father after watching the movie, The Informer. on TV. He gave me a book on the history of Ireland to read. I was stunned at inhumanity of the English. I subsequently learned of other genocides around the world.

Curious about this memorial I went to my town library, two towns away from Emerson and found nothing. I asked the librarian about it and she knew nothing but said she would research it. This was pre-Internet. A couple of weeks later she called me. She had found some old articles. Some described villages being wiped out in pogrom like actions. Other articles refuted those claims describing the deaths as grossly exaggerated and those that did occur were incidental to battles being fought, today's "collateral damage". I asked the librarian how 1.5 million people could die as incidentals to battles. Turkey wasn't the site of prolonged major actions like Yipres, Somme, and others along the several 100 mile front of WWI. She couldn't fathom it either but noted that history is usually told by the winners. And more significantly she added that we were in a Cold War with the Soviet Union and Turkey was a strategic ally on the eastern front of NATO. Allies she noted tend not to speak ill publicly of other allies during wartime.

One day I stopped at the Armenian Home For The Aged and enquired. They had quite a bit of information. I asked why I had never heard of this before they erected their memorial. They pointed out they came from a small place far away. And unlike Irish-Americans there were not millions of their former countrymen in America. The person I spoke with also pointed out who writes the history books as well as Turkey's strategic value in the Cold War and the consequences of that relationship.

With the coming of the internet I learned much more. The end of the Cold War also saw WWI documentaries start to include the slaughter of Armenians as a consequence of the Turks losing battles battles and the Turkish government losing face and seeking a scapegoat for their military blunders.
 

BeauBenken

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I do not feel bad about bumping this post whatsoever. History like this, that people refuse to acknowledge, deserves recognition, and I have a responsibility to make sure it receives acknowledgement.

I ask, that even if you do not respond to this story on IE, that you share it with your friends in real life. It scares me that this event is so little well known. Please share this tragedy.
 
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Bogtrotter07

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One of several peoples butchered by a more powerful government, with the capacity to control "media" access.

I am glad the truth won out; and pray for justice for all persecuted peoples.
 
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