AMBASSADOR MORGENTHAU'S STORY
CHAPTER XXIII
THE "REVOLUTION" AT VAN
The Turkish province of Van lies in the remote northeastern corner of Asia
Minor; it touches the frontiers of Persia on the east and its northern boundary
looks toward the Caucasus. It is one of the most beautiful and most fruitful
parts of the Turkish Empire and one of the richest in historical associations.
The city of Van, which is the capital of the vilayet, lies on the eastern shores
of the lake of the same name; it is the one large town in Asia Minor in which
the Armenian population is larger than the Moslem.
In the fall of 1914, its population of about 30,000 people represented one of
the most peaceful and happy and prosperous communities in the Turkish Empire.
Though Van, like practically every other section where Armenians lived, had had
its periods of oppression and massacre, yet the Moslem yoke, comparatively
speaking, rested upon its people rather lightly. Its Turkish governor, Tahsin
Pasha, was one of the more enlightened type of Turkish officials. Relations
between the Armenians, who lived in the better section of the city, and the
Turks and the Kurds, who occupied the mud huts in the Moslem quarter, had been
tolerably agreeable for many years.
The location of this vilayet, however., inevitably made it the scene of military
operations, and made the activities of its Armenian population a matter of daily
suspicion. Should Russia attempt an invasion of Turkey one of the most
accessible routes lay through this province. The war had not gone far when
causes of irritation arose. The requisitions of army supplies fell far more
heavily upon the Christian than upon the Mohammedan elements in Van, just as
they did in every other part of Turkey. The Armenians had to stand quietly by
while the Turkish officers appropriated all their cattle, all their wheat, and
all their goods of every kind, giving them only worthless pieces of paper in
exchange. The attempt at general disarmament that took place also aroused their
apprehension, which was increased by the brutal treatment visited upon Armenian
soldiers in the Caucasus. On the other hand, the Turks made many charges against
the Christian population, and, in fact, they attributed to them the larger share
of the blame for the reverses which the Turkish armies had suffered. in the
Caucasus. The fact that a considerable element in the already changed forces was
composed of Armenians aroused their unbridled wrath. Since about half the
Armenians in the world inhabit the Russian provinces in the Caucasus and are
liable, like all Russians, to military service, there were certainly no
legitimate grounds for complaint, so far as these Armenian levies were bona fide
subjects of the Czar. But the Turks asserted that large numbers of Armenian
soldiers in Van and other of their Armenian provinces deserted, crossed the
border, and joined the Russian army, where their knowledge of roads and the
terrain was an important factor in the Russian victories. Though the exact facts
are not yet ascertained, it seems not unlikely that such desertions, perhaps a
few hundred., did take place. At the beginning of the war, Union and Progress
agents appeared in Erzeroum and Van and appealed to the Armenian leaders to go
into Russian Armenia and attempt to start revolutions against the Russian
Government; and the fact that the Ottoman Armenians refused to do this
contributed further to the prevailing irritation. The Turkish Government has
made much of the "treasonable " behaviour of the Armenians of Van and have even
urged it as an excuse for their subsequent treatment of the whole race. Their
attitude illustrates once more the perversity of the Turkish mind. After
massacring hundreds of thousands of Armenians in the course of thirty years,
outraging their women and girls, and robbing and maltreating them in every
conceivable way, the Turks still apparently believed that they had the right to
expect from them the most enthusiastic "loyalty". That the Armenians all over
Turkey sympathized with the Entente was no secret. "If you want to know how the
war is going," wrote a humorous Turkish newspaper, "all you need to do is to
look in the face of an Armenian. If he is smiling, then the Allies are winning;
if he is downcast, then the Germans are successful." If an Ottoman Armenian
soldier should desert and join the Russians, that would unquestionably
constitute a technical crime against the state, and might be punished without
violating the rules of all civilized countries. Only the Turkish mind,
however---and possibly the Junker---could regard it as furnishing an excuse for
the terrible barbarities that now took place.
Though the air, all during the autumn and winter of 1914-15, was filled with
premonitions of trouble, the Armenians behaved with remarkable self-restraint
For years it had been the Turkish policy to provoke the Christian population
into committing overt acts, and then seizing upon such misbehaviour as an excuse
for massacres. The Armenian clergy and political leaders saw many evidences that
the Turks were now up to their old tactics, and they therefore went among the
people, cautioning them to keep quiet, to bear all insults and even outrages
patiently, so as not to give the Moslems the opening which they were seeking.
"Even though they burn a few of our villages," these leaders would say, "do not
retaliate, for it is better that a few be destroyed than that the whole nation
be massacred."
When the war started, the Central Government recalled Tahsin Pasha, the
conciliatory governor of Van, and replaced him with Djevdet Bey, a
brother-in-law of Enver Pasha. This act in itself was most disquieting. Turkish
officialdom has always contained a minority of men who do not believe in
massacre as a state policy and cannot be depended upon to carry out strictly the
most bloody orders of the Central Government. Whenever massacres have been
planned, therefore, it has been customary first to remove such "untrustworthy"
public servants and replace them by men who are regarded as more reliable. The
character of Tahsin's successor made his displacement still more alarming.
Djevdet had spent the larger part of his life at Van; he was a man of unstable
character, friendly to non-Moslems one moment, hostile the next, hypocritical,
treacherous, and ferocious according to the worst traditions of his race. He
hated the Armenians and cordially sympathized with the long-established Turkish
plan of solving the Armenian problem. There is little question that he came to
Van with definite instructions to exterminate all Armenians in this province,
but, for the first few months, conditions did not facilitate such operations.
Djevdet himself was absent fighting the Russians in the Caucasus and the near
approach of the enemy made it a wise policy for the Turks to refrain from
maltreating the Armenians of Van. But early in the spring the Russians
temporarily retreated. It is generally recognized as good military tactics for a
victorious army to follow up the retreating enemy. In the eyes of the Turkish
generals, however, the withdrawal of the Russians was a happy turn of war mainly
because it deprived the Armenians of their protectors and left them at the
mercies of the Turkish army. Instead of following the retreating foe, therefore,
the Turks' army turned aside and invaded their own territory of Van. Instead of
fighting the trained Russian army of men, they turned their rifles, machine
guns, and other weapons upon the Armenian women, children, and old men in the
villages of Van. Following their usual custom, they distributed the most
beautiful Armenian women among the Moslems, sacked and burned the Armenian
villages, and massacred uninterruptedly for days. On April 15th, about 500 young
Armenian men of Akantz were mustered to hear an order of the Sultan; at sunset
they were marched outside the town and every man shot in cold blood. This
procedure was repeated in about eighty Armenian villages in the district north
of Lake Van, and in three days 24,000 Armenians were murdered in this atrocious
fashion. A single episode illustrates the unspeakable depravity of Turkish
methods. A conflict having broken out at Shadak, Djevdet Bey, who had meanwhile
returned to Van, asked four of the leading Armenian citizens to go to this town
and attempt to quiet the multitude. These men made the trip, stopping at all
Armenian villages along the way, urging everybody to keep public order. After
completing their work these four Armenians were murdered in a Kurdish village.
And so when Djevdet Bey, on his return to his official post, demanded that Van
furnish him immediately 4,000 soldiers, the people were naturally in no mood to
accede to his request. When we consider what had happened before and what
happened subsequently, there remains little doubt concerning the purpose which
underlay this demand. Djevdet, acting in obedience to orders from
Constantinople, was preparing to wipe out the whole population, and his purpose
in calling for 4,000 able-bodied men was merely to massacre them, so that the
rest of the Armenians might have no defenders. The Armenians, parleying to gain
time, offered to furnish five hundred soldiers and to pay exemption money for
the rest; now, however, Djevdet began to talk aloud about "rebellion," and his
determination to "crush" it at any cost. "If the rebels fire a single shot," he
declared, "I shall kill every Christian man, woman, and" (pointing to his knee)
"every child, up to here." For sometime the Turks had been constructing
entrenchments around the Armenian quarter and filling them with soldiers and, in
response to this provocation, the Armenians began to make preparations for a
defense. On April 20th, a band of Turkish soldiers seized several Armenian women
who were entering the city; a couple of Armenians ran to their assistance and
were shot dead, The Turks now opened fire on the Armenian quarters with rifles
and artillery; soon a large part of the town was in flames and a regular siege
had started. The whole Armenian fighting force consisted of only 1,500 men; they
had only 300 rifles and a most inadequate supply of ammunition, while Djevdet
had an army of 5,000 men, completely equipped and supplied. Yet the Armenians
fought with the utmost heroism and skill; they had little chance of holding off
their enemies indefinitely, but they knew that a Russian army was fighting its
way to Van and their utmost hope was that they would be able to defy the
besiegers until these Russians arrived. As I am not writing the story of sieges
and battles, I cannot describe in detail the numerous acts of individual
heroism, the cooperation of the Armenian women, the ardour and energy of the
Armenian children, the self-sacrificing zeal of the American missionaries,
especially Doctor Ussher and his wife and Miss Grace H. Knapp, and the thousand
other circumstances that made this terrible month one of the most glorious pages
in modern Armenian history. The wonderful thing about it is that the Armenians
triumphed. After nearly five weeks of sleepless fighting, the Russian army
suddenly appeared and the Turks fled into the surrounding country, where they
found appeasement for their anger by further massacres of unprotected Armenian
villagers. Doctor Ussher, the American medical missionary whose hospital at Van
was destroyed by bombardment, is authority for the statement that, after driving
off the Turks, the Russians began to collect and to cremate the bodies of
Armenians who had been murdered in the province, with the result that 55,000
bodies were burned.
I have told this story of the "Revolution" in Van not only because it marked the
first stage in this organized attempt to wipe out a whole nation, but because
these events are always brought forward by the Turks as a justification of their
subsequent crimes. As I shall relate, Enver, Talaat, and the rest, when I
appealed to them in behalf of the Armenians, invariably instanced the
"revolutionists" of Van as a sample of Armenian treachery. The famous
"Revolution," as this recital shows, was merely the determination of the
Armenians to save their women's honour and their own lives, after the Turks, by
massacring thousands of their neighbours, had shown them the fate that awaited
them.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction Chapter I Chapter II Chapter III Chapter IV Chapter V Chapter VI Chapter VII Chapter VIII Chapter IX Chapter X Chapter XI Chapter XII Chapter XIII Chapter XIV Chapter XV Chapter XVI Chapter XVII Chapter XVIII Chapter XIX Chapter XX Chapter XXI Chapter XXII Chapter XXIII Chapter XXIV Chapter XXV Chapter XXVI Chapter XXVII Chapter XXVIII Chapter XXIX
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