Problem from Hell
America and the Age of Genocide
By Samantha Power
Rebound by Sagebrush
Copyright © 2003
Samantha Power
All right reserved.
ISBN: 9781417701186
Chapter One
"Race Murder"
Trial by Fire
On March 14, 1921, on a damp day in the Charlottenburg district of Berlin, a
twenty-four-year-old Armenian crept up behind a man in a heavy gray overcoat
swinging his cane. The Armenian, Soghomon Tehlirian, placed a revolver at the
back of the man's head and pulled the trigger, shouting, "This is to avenge the
death of my family!" The burly target crumpled. If you had heard the shot and
spotted the rage distorting the face of the young offender, you might have
suspected that you were witnessing a murder to avenge a very different kind of
crime. But back then you would not have known to call the crime in question
"genocide." The word did not yet exist.
Tehlirian, the Armenian assassin, was quickly tackled. As pedestrians beat him
with their fists and house keys, he shouted in broken German," I foreigner, he
foreigner, this not hurt Germany ... It's nothing to do with you."
It was national justice carried out in an international setting. Tehlirian had
just murdered Mehmed Talaat, the former Turkish interior minister who had set
out to rid Turkey of its Armenian "problem." In 1915 Talaat had presided over
the killing by firing squad, bayoneting, bludgeoning, and starvation of nearly 1
million Armenians.
The outside world had known that the Armenians were at grave risk well before
Talaat and the Young Turk leadership ordered their deportation. When Turkey
entered World War I on the side of Germany against Britain, France, and Russia,
Talaat made it clear that the empire would target its Christian subjects. In
January 1915, in remarks reported by the New York Times, Talaat said
that there was no room for Christians in Turkey and that their supporters should
advise them to clear out. By late March Turkey had begun disarming Armenian men
serving in the Ottoman army. On April 25, 1915, the day the Allies invaded
Turkey, Talaat ordered the roundup and execution of some 250 leading Armenian
intellectuals in Constantinople. In each of Turkey's six eastern provinces,
local Armenian notables met roughly the same fate. Armenian men in rural areas
were initially enlisted as pack animals to transport Turkish supplies to the
front, but soon even this was deemed too dignified an existence for the
traitorous Christians. Churches were desecrated. Armenian schools were closed,
and those teachers who refused to convert to Islam were killed. All over
Anatolia the authorities posted deportation orders requiring the Armenians to
relocate to camps prepared in the deserts of Syria. In fact, the Turkish
authorities knew that no facilities had been prepared, and more than half of the
deported Armenians died on the way. "By continuing the deportation of the
orphans to their destinations during the intense cold," Talaat wrote, "we are
ensuring their eternal rest."
"Official proclamations," like this one from June 1915, cropped up around town:
Our Armenian fellow countrymen, ... because ... they have ... attempted to
destroy the peace and security of the Ottoman state, ... have to be sent away to
places which have been prepared in the interior ... and a literal obedience to
the following orders, in a categorical manner, is accordingly enjoined upon all
Ottomans:
1. With the exception of the sick, all Armenians are obliged to leave within
five days from the date of this proclamation ...
2. Although they are free to carry with them on their journey the articles of
their movable property which they desire, they are forbidden to sell their land
and their extra effects, or to leave them here and there with other people ...
The Young Turks - Talaat; Enver Pasha, the minister of war; and Djemal Pasha,
the minister of public works - justified the wholesale deportation of the
Armenians by claiming that it was necessary to suppress Armenian revolts.
When Russia had declared war on Turkey the previous year, it had invited
Armenians living within Turkey to rise up against Ottoman rule, which a small
minority did. Although two prominent Ottoman Armenians led a pair of czarist
volunteer corps to fight Turkey, most expressed loyalty to Constantinople. But
this did not stop the Turkish leadership from using the pretext of an Armenian
"revolutionary uprising" and the cover of war to eradicate the Armenian presence
in Turkey. Very few of those killed were plotting anything other than survival.
The atrocities were carried out against women, children, and unarmed men. They
were not incidental "by-products" of war but in fact resulted from carefully
crafted decisions made by Turkey's leaders. In June 1915 Erzindjan, the hometown
of Talaat's eventual assassin, was emptied. Soghomon Tehlirian, then nineteen,
marched in a column of some 20,000 people, with his mother and siblings - two
sisters of fifteen and sixteen, another of twenty-six who carried a
two-and-a-half-year-old child, and two brothers of twenty-two and twenty-six.The
journey was harrowing. The gendarmes said to be protecting the convoy first
dragged Tehlirian's sisters off behind the bushes to rape them. Next he watched
a man split his twenty-two-year-old brother's head open with an ax. Finally, the
soldiers shot his mother and struck Tehlirian unconscious with a blow to the
head. He was left for dead and awoke hours later in a field of corpses. He
spotted the mangled body of a sister and the shattered skull of his brother. His
other relatives had disappeared. He guessed he was the sole survivor of the
caravan ...
Continues...
Excerpted from Problem from Hell
by Samantha Power
Copyright © 2003 by Samantha Power.
Excerpted by permission.
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