This was
genocide, but
Armenians were
not its only
victims
Forgetting
the Christians
who were
slaughtered is
nearly as bad as
denying it
happened
Thea Halo
Tuesday October
31, 2006
The Guardian
Timothy
Garton Ash
mockingly[1]
suggests bills
to criminalise
the denial of
genocides
committed by
other countries,
including France
(This is the
moment for
Europe to
dismantle
taboos, not
erect them,
October 19). And
he's right.
Let's mention
the absurdity of
enforcing the
bill except
against the
powerless. Would
France jail the
prime minister
of Turkey?
But the
double standard
Garton Ash
mentions should
include the
mind-boggling
omissions by the
Armenian
drafters of the
bill, who make
no mention of
the co-victims
of the Armenian
genocide: the
Pontic Greeks,
who lost 353,000
out of their
population of
700,000 in
Turkey; and the
Assyrians, who
lost
three-quarters
of their
population -
some put the
figure at
750,000.
Article
continues
There is
also the matter
of the other
Asia Minor
Greeks. At the
Lausanne
conference in
1923, Lord
Curzon stated
that 1 million
Greeks had been
slaughtered and
1 million more
were exiled.
These genocides
took place at
the same time
and place as
that of the
Armenians: in
Turkey between
1914 and 1923.
The genocide was
of the
Christians of
Ottoman and
Kemalist Turkey.
By age 10, my
Pontic Greek
mother had lost
everyone and
everything she
had ever loved,
including her
name, on her own
death-march to
exile from
Turkey in 1920.
My father was
Assyrian.
The
precursor to the
Nazi Holocaust
was not just the
Armenian
genocide of
1915-16, but the
pogroms, or
early stages of
what would
become a
genocide,
against the
indigenous
Greeks of Asia
Minor in 1914.
According to US
Consul General
George Horton,
Greek businesses
were boycotted
and Turks were
encouraged to
kill Greeks and
drive them out,
reminiscent of
Kristallnacht in
Nazi Germany 24
years later.
Thousands were
slaughtered or
sent to islands
in the Aegean
Sea. According
to the US
ambassador to
the Ottoman
empire, Henry
Morgenthau Sr,
the Young Turks
were so
successful in
their campaign
that they
decided to
target the other
Christian
"races" as well.
Mustafa Kemal
(Ataturk) picked
up where the
Young Turks left
off.
The
Armenian people
are part of my
extended family.
My aunt was
Armenian, as was
the family who
rescued my
mother in
Turkey. In
Armenia, all
victims of the
genocide are
honoured: Pontic
Greeks,
Assyrians and
Armenians. But
the framers of
the French bill,
along with
numerous
Armenian-descended
historians in
the US and
elsewhere,
prefer
exclusivity.
Thus, if
the bill passes
the upper house
of the French
parliament,
perhaps we
should first
jail its
Armenian
drafters, as
well as those
who actively
deny the other
genocides.
These
co-victims had
inhabited the
territory of
what became
Turkey for three
millennia. One
must ask which
is worse:
genocidal
denial, or being
invisible as if
one never
existed? At
least with
denial, there is
the possibility
of debate. The
expropriation by
a single group
of such a
monumental evil
serves to strip
the other,
"nameless"
victims of that
same evil of
their rightful
place in history
- thereby
assuring that
their genocide
is complete.
Thea Halo
is the author of
Not Even My
Name, a memoir
of her Pontic
Greek mother,
and has lectured
for the
International
Association of
Genocide
Scholars
theahalo@notevenmyname.com
|
[1]
Timothy
Garton
Ash
is a
senior
fellow
at the
Hoover
Institution
and a
fellow
of St.
Antony’s
College
at
Oxford
University. |