The Thirty-Year Genocide

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The Thirty-Year Genocide Page 49

by Benny Morris

outside the city recorded, “The children began to cry and the grown- ups to

  get panicky. . . . Thru my interpreter I told the children that we had gathered

  to celebrate the birthday of the Prince of Peace, who had come to teach us

  how to live, that instead of war, Love and Peace and Goodwill to Men might

  prevail. . . . It was the first real Christmas for many of the children as they have been in exile for five years.”294

  For two days, the sides traded shot and shell. Here and there Turkish mi-

  litiamen torched Armenian homes, but the irregulars’ initial focus was the

  French. That changed on the 23rd. The Turks may have noted that the French

  were busy defending only their own positions, several large buildings in the

  town center, so they began to “kill the Armenians.”295 Missionaries heard a

  Turk shouting, “Has the slaughter of the [infidels] begun?”296 In an attempt to

  stop the killing and appease the population, the French released the deputy

  mutesarrif. It made no difference.297

  During the following fortnight, the Turks systematically murdered Arme-

  nians and torched their homes, as the French, besieged in their positions,

  Mustafa Kemal and the Nationalists

  stood by largely “powerless.”298 The local YMCA secretary, C. F. H. Crathern,

  had a bird’s eye view of the battle from the hospital verandah in the missionary

  compound on a slope north of the city: “Through our glasses we could see

  Armenians escaping from their houses and fleeing before the Turks, who were

  shooting them down like jack rabbits. Other Turks were hiding in the

  fields behind rocks, trees and manure heaps, and shooting at those who

  had escaped . . . some dropping wounded . . . and others staggering into the

  mission grounds with wild eyes . . . and purple faces, telling of an awful

  massacre.”299 Here and there the Armenians, ensconced in large buildings,

  fought back, as did pockets of French troops.300 Most of the Armenians who

  survived the massacre holed up in walled churches and in Beitschallum, a

  German orphanage.301 A few apparently were protected by Turkish officials

  in the local prison.302

  The siege lasted almost three weeks. “Hundreds of men, women and

  children [ were] massacred daily,” a missionary in the city cabled.303 The Turks

  “set fire to the vari ous buildings where Armenians had taken refuge and in

  one place”— apparently the Armenian church of St. George— “about 800 were

  burned.”304 Those reaching the missionary compound told harrowing tales.

  “ Mothers had children taken out of their arms and ripped up with knives,”

  Crathern wrote. “The shrieks of the tortured we could hear a mile across the

  ravine.”305 Another missionary observed, “The Turk, it seems, wastes little

  ammunition on these helpless people” and often uses “the knife.” The Turks

  were said to be burning some of the bodies in a lime kiln to prevent recogni-

  tion. “They do this to hide the fact that they have stolen [i.e., raped] the young girls.”306 The town was completely isolated. “If we were in the jungles of Africa we would not be more cut off from the outside world than here in the in-

  terior of Turkey . . . the auto road infested with bandits and all telegraph and

  telephone wires cut,” a local American missionary wrote.307 The first contact

  between Maraş and the outside world was on day eigh teen of the siege, when

  a French airplane overflew the town.

  In the missionary compound, some 2,000 “orphans and refugees” were

  gathered for safety and sustenance. The missionaries raised the American flag,

  in an effort to deter the Turks from attacking. Women were “ going crazy with

  fear,” Crathern wrote. Down in Maraş French “soldiers are creeping stealthily

  forth with benzine torches and hand grenades to set fire[s]. . . . It is sometimes

  Turks and Armenians, 1919–1924

  like Dante’s Inferno.”308 On the 25th he wrote, “News came today that scores

  of women and children huddled in one house were butchered with knives and

  hatchets after the men had been taken out and shot.” The men had “surren-

  dered on the promise of protection.”309 On February 4th he recorded a story

  related by one survivor: “Deep pits were dug, and men tied in bunches of

  three, and led to the edge of it, and then shot and dumped into it, dead or

  alive.”310

  Crathern’s diary contains telling detail. “ Little girls, 8 and 10 years old, and

  wrinkled women of 70 years were agonizing with pain from dum- dum bullet

  wounds which tore great pieces of flesh from arms and legs.”311 On January 28

  the wife of an Armenian protestant pastor, Reverend Solakian, reached the

  hospital: “She was . . . bleeding from three bullet and three dagger or knife

  wounds while a child of 18 months had been taken from her breast and slain

  with a knife, and an older girl killed with an axe. To add to the sorrow of it,

  this woman was pregnant and had a miscarriage as soon as she reached the

  hospital.” She died the next day.312

  There were about 2,200 French troops in and around the town, mostly

  Senegalese and Armenians.313 They had no communications equipment and

  lacked food, ammunition, and adequate clothing. Soldiers reached the hos-

  pital with frostbite; arms and legs were amputated.314 Crathern reported that

  by early February the French were killing their horses and mules. “We had

  mule roast today and we like it fine,” a missionary recorded. “We like it better

  than horse meat.”315

  Vio lence occurred outside Maraş as well. While Turkish forces fought in

  the town, their comrades overran a cluster of villages to the southwest, killing

  as many as 1,500 Armenians.316 At Djamostil all the males were reportedly

  “annihilated.”317 On February 1 two American missionaries, James Perry, the

  general secretary of the International YMCA, and Frank Johnson were mur-

  dered by Turks on a road near Antep.318

  The siege of Maraş quickly became a rallying cry. In the days after the start

  of the battle, as we already know, Kemal urged Nationalists elsewhere to join.

  In par tic u lar, he ordered the 3rd Army Corps to help “in every way.” “It is very impor tant that the fight commenced at Marash should end to our advantage,”

  he wrote. He ordered other units to prepare to “create strong armed organ-

  izations” elsewhere and to force the French to “return to [their] country.”319

  Mustafa Kemal and the Nationalists

  Irregulars from as far afield as Elbistan joined the fight.320 Turkish forces in

  Cilicia were apparently commanded by General Polad (Polat) Pasha, also

  known as “Captain Shukri,” a Circassian from Yenibahçe. He had served as

  Enver’s adjutant during the Great War.321

  On the po liti cal side, the Nationalist defense committees around Anatolia

  bombarded the foreign legations in Constantinople with tele grams alleging

  Armenian atrocities in Maraş. “The French and Armenian soldiers . . . tie up

  the limbs of the Mohammedans and then strike them to death with axes,” one

  writer claimed. “They put the men together and burn them, while the women

  and children are having their limbs cut off one by one.”322 There is no

  corroboration for this in any Western documentation. />
  Events were portrayed similarly in messages from Maraş Turks to compa-

  triots elsewhere in Anatolia. “We Turks have protected and respected [the Ar-

  menians] . . . in spite of their aggressions,” one tele gram asserts. Muslims

  were engaged in “self- defense.”323 Perhaps prompted by what they heard

  about Maraş, on January 31 a Turkish mob killed or wounded a total of ten

  Armenians in Antep. The outbreak was promptly quashed by the town’s

  police and gendarmes.324

  By early February General Henri Gouraud, the commander of the French

  Army of the Levant, was forced to admit that there was “no longer [an] armi-

  stice” in Cilicia; a “state of hostilities” prevailed between the French and the

  Turks.325 On February 7 the 3,000- strong French rescue column reached the

  outskirts of Maraş and the following day the main French redoubt, a position

  on the slope next to the American missionary compound. Emboldened by the

  reinforcements’ arrival, Armenians downtown emerged from hiding and

  set alight mosques and Turkish homes.326 The Turks, exhausted and dispir-

  ited, streamed out of town in large numbers.327 But instead of assaulting

  and occupying the town, Querette deci ded—or was ordered—to evacuate

  his forces and withdraw to Islahiye.328 The Turks apparently were on the

  verge of surrender—or so, at least, the missionaries, who were in contact with

  them, believed. They told Querette but failed to persuade him.329 Evidently the

  French command concluded that the garrison in Maraş was untenable or that

  the prize wasn’t worth the fight.

  News of the impending French evacuation alarmed the Armenians and the

  missionaries, who were afraid to stay behind unguarded. “The Armenians . . .

  Turks and Armenians, 1919–1924

  are frantic and desperate. They are determined to leave . . . with the French

  as they fear massacre,” Crathern wrote. The missionaries pleaded with the

  French for time to prepare an orderly evacuation of Christians. Querette gave

  them twenty- four hours.330

  Most Armenians in the compound deci ded to leave. But most of the mis-

  sionaries elected to stay and care for the orphans and wounded. During the

  daylong reprieve, they prepared food and clothing for those leaving on the

  prospective three- day trek, “75 miles through mountain and plain,” to Isla-

  hiye. “I fear that many of them will not be equal to it,” Crathern wrote. “It is

  winter and God help them if the weather should be severe.” Crathern may also

  have been thinking about himself—he was seventy years old.

  The column of 10,000 French troops and Armenian civilians, along with

  a handful of missionaries, left Maraş in the dead of night on February 10–11.331

  “It was . . . bitterly” cold, Crathern recorded. “The city was in flames. Guns

  were booming from the hills covering our retreat.”332 Nationalist soldiers, who

  knew nothing of the evacuation, continued their withdrawal from Maraş.333

  The French refrained from notifying the Armenians holding out inside

  the town, but many got wind of what was happening and desperately tried

  to join the evacuating column.334 Many apparently were killed by Turkish

  fighters in the attempt.335

  February 12 was a “severely cold day.” Trudging through deep snow, “Many

  of the weak ones dropped by the wayside to freeze or to starve.”336 There was

  little accommodation, so the travelers camped in the open, hungry and ex-

  posed.337 Most of those who walked were able to keep warm enough to sur-

  vive, but infants and children carried by their mothers or riding in carts or on animals froze to death.338 “Turkish villages were burnt by the soldiers after

  the column had passed through,” and troops ate cows and oxen the fleeing

  villa gers left behind.339 Come dawn February 13, a blizzard “raged”; a mis-

  sionary reported that it was the worst storm the area had experienced in sev-

  enteen years.340 At noon, the sun came out. An Armenian pastor, Pascal

  Maljian, recorded: “We climbed the mountains, descended, only to climb

  again and descend. It was a new Israel searching for the Promised Land of

  Cilicia.”341 Some 1,000–1,200 refugees and dozens of soldiers died before the

  column reached Islahiye later that day. “The Islahiye road,” a missionary later

  observed, “is bordered with the skeletons of those who perished. In one

  Mustafa Kemal and the Nationalists

  defile are hundreds still unburied, lying where they fell.”342 More Arme-

  nians died at Islahiye, which offered little food and no accommodation. The

  Turkish governor, French command, and American missionaries did their

  best to tend to the refugees, who eventually were transported to Adana.343

  One source speaks of 6,000 Maraş Armenians who died between Jan-

  uary 21 and February 10, mostly unarmed civilians.344 Another speaks of

  20,000 deaths in and around Maraş during the whole period, covering the

  siege, battle, and evacuation.345 Curzon said that “in all probability, as many

  as 15,000 had perished.”346 But the French military— assailed by charges of

  incompetence and of abandoning the Armenians— rejected British and Ar-

  menian figures and questioned whether “ there had been massacres of Arme-

  nians anywhere.” The French also doubted that their policies, conceived by

  Kemal’s troops as pro- Armenian, were responsible for the Turks’ belligerent

  attitude toward the Armenians.347 According to R. A. Lambert— the NER di-

  rector at Aleppo, who visited Maraş in March— the Turks claimed they had

  lost 4,500 killed in the battle.348 The French had suffered 800 casualties.349

  Back in Maraş, Armenian and Turkish representatives, with American mis-

  sionaries mediating, reached an accord on February 11 or 12. The town’s

  remaining Armenians—8,500–10,000, “almost all women”— agreed to give

  up their arms and leave their downtown redoubts, and the Turkish authorities

  promised them protection.350 A few days later, James Lyman and Dr. Marion

  Wilson, two of the American missionaries who had stayed behind, telegraphed

  Constantinople that the Armenians were safe under Turkish guard. “No

  more Armenians were killed after that,” and Armenians who had fled to

  Mersin were returning.351

  There was not much to come back for. It was estimated that about 40 percent

  of Maraş’s houses, most of them belonging to Armenians, were destroyed

  during the vio lence. The Turks also renewed the boycott and robbed Arme-

  nians as they made their way back to their looted, ruined homes.352 “ Every”

  Armenian was “grimy with dirt and lice, and half- starved,” Wilson wrote.353

  The protection granted in the immediate aftermath of the January– February

  battle and massacre was short- lived. An April report from Armenian lobby-

  ists claims that “over fifty” men dis appeared from Maraş without a trace.354

  At the same time, Jackson noted that thirty- four prominent Maraş Armenians

  were in jail, and the Nationalists were “preparing to deport the survivors” of

  Turks and Armenians, 1919–1924

  the massacre. He also pointed to its lingering effects: ten to fifteen were dying daily from hunger and illness.355

  In
July an American missionary wrote that Armenians weren’t allowed to

  leave the city and had “few houses, no money, no work, and are in constant

  fear.”356 The Turks confiscated absent Armenians’ homes and closed mis-

  sionary institutions serving orphans and refugees, though American relief

  workers were able to feed them through 1920. Armenian women were said

  to be “knitting socks” for Kemal’s army.357 In summer 1921 the Turks de-

  ported hundreds of Zeytunli refugees from Maraş; stragglers were mur-

  dered outside the town. James Lyman, an American missionary, said in 1922

  that there had been a “good deal of promiscuous killing of Armenians” in

  and around the town after the French departure, with as many as 2,000

  murdered.358

  The battle and massacre in Maraş proved to be the key event in the Franco-

  Turkish war. The French did not give up immediately. Amid recurrent policy

  debates in Paris, they massively reinforced their units in the Levant and had

  occasional tactical successes. But the strategic outcome of the Maraş retreat

  was clear: Cilicia was lost. Instead the French focused on the area to the south,

  encompassing Damascus, Aleppo, and Beirut. With Cilicia off the table, the

  real battle would be over the borderlands along the Alexandretta- Antep- Urfa-

  Mardin axis.

  London, too, understood that Cilicia was lost; British policy would have

  to be adjusted accordingly. At the highest level of strategic consideration, de

  Robeck advised restraint in the peace pro cess. Imposing a “drastic peace,” as

  the Allies had done with Germany, would only stoke the anger the Turks had

  shown at Maraş.359 Henceforward the British quietly regarded the French as

  inept at best. Bristol was of similar mind. Putting the French in charge in Cilicia amounted to sending “a boy to do a man’s job.”360 The Armenians were out-spoken on the matter. The French, as one notable put it, were “mean, treach-

  erous, cowards and dishonest.”361

  The Turks understandably lost their fear of the French.362 More widely,

  after Maraş, the Turks understood that no Western power would intervene

  on the Armenians’ behalf. This meant the Turks could do as they pleased with

  the Armenians under their control. The Turks prob ably also noticed that a

 

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