Fifty-Two Months Of Hell, From WWI Outbreak To Armistice

FIFTY-TWO MONTHS OF HELL, FROM WWI OUTBREAK TO ARMISTICE

Agence France Presse
February 12, 2014 Wednesday 4:12 AM GMT

PARIS, Feb 12 2014

World War I’s deadliest and most decisive battles were fought in
Europe, on the Western Front slashed through the muddy fields of
northern France.

It was there, on a more than 700-kilometre (435-mile) line linking the
North Sea to the Vosges mountains, that the war’s greatest offensives
took place, with staggering loss of life.

But the Great War also raged on the Russian, Balkan and Italian fronts,
and spread rapidly to the Middle East, colonial Africa, and Asia
where Japan sided with the Allies in seizing German islands in 1914.

The United States intervened late — but decisively — in 1917, drawing
several Latin American nations into the war. As for the Middle East,
it was entirely redrawn by a war that brought about the collapse of
the Ottoman Empire.

— A war of attrition —

German troops began their march into Belgium on August 17 after
crushing Belgian defences, driving a flood of refugees before them
as they advanced on Paris. As France’s government fled southwest to
Bordeaux, the French were repelled and suffered heavy losses, with
27,000 soldiers killed on the single day of August 22, the deadliest
in the history of the French army.

General Joseph Joffre regrouped his retreating armies to fight the
First Battle of the Marne, on September 5-12, which succeeded in
halting the German advance led by General Helmuth von Moltke.

But the extent of losses this early in the conflict — more than half
a million already — ruled out any chance of compromise. Fighters
burrowed down into rival trenches to shield themselves from a hail of
artillery fire. From that point the conflict became a three-year war
of attrition that produced little tangible result despite repeated,
bloody attempts by both sides to break the stalemate.

Fighting played out quite differently on the less populated Eastern
Front whose sprawling expanses made trench warfare impossible.

Right after the outbreak of war, the Ottoman Empire, allied with
Germany and Austria-Hungary, closed the Bosphorus Strait to isolate
Russia, fighting alongside Britain and France. Russia launched a
major offensive into East Prussia on August 15, but its campaign
ended the following month with two heavy defeats at Tannenberg and
the Mazurian Lakes.

Russia, where the state was on the verge of collapse, began a
shambolic eastward retreat which continued until the Bolshevik
Revolution of 1917 and the humiliating treaty of Brest-Litovsk in
March 1918 which stripped Russia of its western territories and a
third of its population.

— Verdun and the Somme —

On the Western Front, 1915 saw a string of bloody but undecisive
offensives, marked by the use of modern weapons including machine
guns and heavy artillery. German forces made the first ever use of
poison gas near Ypres, in Belgium.

In the spring, the Allies — led on the British side by a young
Winston Churchill — launched a naval and ground campaign in the
Dardanelles to prise open the Bosphorus Strait. The battle, which ended
in bitter defeat for the Allies, left an enduring mark in Australia
and New Zealand whose young soldiers stood out for their courage in
the campaign.

Russia enjoyed more success against Ottoman forces, repelling them
in the Caucasus and Armenia. But hundreds of thousands of Armenians
were to die in mass killings between 1915 and 1917, accused of siding
with the Russians in the fighting.

Meanwhile British and German naval forces continued to face off in
the North Sea and Atlantic Ocean. To counter a maritime blockade,
Germany in 1915 launched a ruthless campaign of submarine warfare,
which came to a head in 1917.

As a strategic move this proved decisive, but not in Germany’s favour:
it would prompt the Americans, outraged by the torpedoing of neutral
ships or ones carrying American citizens, to enter the war in 1917.

1916 went down in history as the year of Verdun, the defining battle
of the war for the French, and the Somme, which holds the same place
in British memory.

The Germans launched the initial offensive at Verdun in February,
but French forces managed to contain their advance, at a huge human
cost with some 770,000 dead and wounded.

In July, to take the strain off Verdun, British forces launched
the biggest battle of the war, near the Somme river, which left 1.2
million men dead, wounded or missing, for minimal territorial gains.

In the Middle East, British forces had invaded Turkish territory
from the south in 1914 and went on to encourage the Arab population
to rise up against their Ottoman rulers. In 1916, Britain and France
struck the Sykes-Picot accord under which they began carving out the
shape of the future Middle East.

–The German collapse–

In 1917 the United States declared war on Germany.

It was also the year of a British offensive in Flanders in Belgium, and
a French one at the Chemin des Dames. Dragging out from April to May,
the latter was a massive failure for the French and led to mutinies.

In October, Italian forces suffered a disastrous defeat at Caporetto,
leaving 300,000 prisoners in the hands of German and Austrian forces —
but the exhausted Central Powers failed to capitalise on their gain.

In December, meanwhile, British general Edmund Allenby entered
Jerusalem, after the Balfour Declaration in which Britain backed
a national homeland for the Jewish people — despite promises of
self-determination made to the Arab population.

Freed to focus on the Western Front following the Brest-Litovsk
treaty with Russia, German forces launched an all-out attempt to
break through Allied lines before the arrival of American troops,
succeeding in the spring of 1918.

German forces were within reach of the capital, shelling Paris with
howitzer guns, when they were stopped by Allied forces placed in
April 1918 under the unified command of French General Ferdinand Foch.

The Germans, who seemed poised for victory in the spring, collapsed
over the summer as the Allies reclaimed northern France with a series
of counter-offensives culminating in the Second Battle of the Marne
in July.

At the same time the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Bulgaria and the Ottoman
Empire suffered a string of crushing defeats that were to force them
into surrender.

On November 9, German Kaiser Wilhelm II abdicated, two days before
an armistice signed in Rethondes sealed the Allies’ victory.

Delirious crowds welcomed news of the armistice in France and Britain
crippled by four years of all-consuming warfare. But it took years
more, with a string of peace treaties to end its various sub-conflicts,
for the Great War to come to a final end.

From: A. Papazian

Armenia Welcomes The Agreement To Resume Talks On Cyprus

ARMENIA WELCOMES THE AGREEMENT TO RESUME TALKS ON CYPRUS

18:10 12.02.2014

Armenia, Cyprus

Armenia welcomes the agreement on the resumption of talks on Cyprus,
Spokesman for the Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs Tigran Balayan
said in comments to Times.am.

“We welcome the agreement reached between the President of the Republic
of Cyprus and the Turkish Cypriot leader to resume negations on the
settlement of the Cyprus issue under the auspices of the UN,” he said.

“We share the expectations of the international community regarding a
lasting, fair and mutually acceptable solution,” Tigran Balayan added.

Leaders of ethnically split Cyprus agreed to work towards a new
system of power sharing on Tuesday, in a bid to end a bitter and
long-running conflict.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/02/12/armenia-welcomes-the-agreement-to-resume-talks-on-cyprus/

The Number Of Foreign Tourists Visiting Armenia This Expected To Sur

THE NUMBER OF FOREIGN TOURISTS VISITING ARMENIA THIS EXPECTED TO SURGE BY 10%

YEREVAN, February 12. / ARKA /. Armenian authorities expect the number
of foreign tourists to visit the country this year to surge by 10%,
according to Mekhak Apresyan, head of an economy ministry division in
charge of tourism, who spoke today at a video conference between Kiev
(Ukraine), Yerevan, Astana (Kazakhstan) and Chisinau (Moldova).

Apresyan recalled that tourism industry was declared by the government
as a priority. He said the number of foreign tourists visiting Armenia
has increased by more than 20 times in recent 15 years. They are
mostly from Russia, Georgia, the EU, Iran and the United States.

“We have more than 24,000 cultural and historical monuments. This
means there is one for each square kilometer,’ he said.

He said apart from historical and cultural tourism, Armenia is
developing winter tourism, spa tourism, medical and agro tourism
and a number of other types of tourism , as well as a unique tourist
product – a mix that includes all these forms of tourism.

According to the National Statistical Service, the number of tourists
visiting Armenia in 2013 increased by 9.7 % to 924,965 people. The
number of Armenian citizens visiting other countries as tourists
increased by 12.3% last year to 906,154 people. -0-

– See more at:

From: A. Papazian

http://arka.am/en/news/tourism/the_number_of_foreign_tourists_visiting_armenia_this_expected_to_surge_by_10/#sthash.XqQ6oZKN.dpuf

USAID And UNICEF Join To Improve Children’s Health And Nutrition In

USAID AND UNICEF JOIN TO IMPROVE CHILDREN’S HEALTH AND NUTRITION IN ARMENIA

15:58 12.02.2014

On February 12, USAID and UNICEF signed a cooperation agreement for
a two-year program that will help improve the health and nutrition
of Armenian children 0-5 years of age.

The latest Armenia Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) revealed
worsening trends in the nutritional status of children in Armenia.

Nineteen percent of children under five fell into the “stunted”
category in 2010 due to mothers’ poor feeding practices, according to
the DHS. The health and development of infants and young children is
dependent upon good nutrition. Poor nutrition increases the risk of
dying due to infectious diseases and contributes to impaired physical
and mental development.

To help Armenia face this public health issue, UNICEF will work with
the Armenian Ministry of Health and World Vision to address mother
and child health needs in the country. Infant and young children’s
nutrition as well as prevention of vitamin and mineral deficiencies
in children’s diets will be of particular focus. The program will
provide education on best feeding practices and will support local
health care clinics to deliver quality child health and nutrition
services across the country, including rural areas.

Partners will also address the monitoring and evaluation system
for nutrition at the community, regional and national level, and
will work to improve family and community awareness on childcare,
nutrition practices, children’s growth and development to facilitate
early identification of nutrition related problems.

The initiative is part of a broader global effort to prevent and treat
acute malnutrition. The goal is to help reduce under-nutrition in women
and children during the child’s first 1,000 days, which encompasses
pregnancy and the first two years of life. Receiving proper nutrition
during this 1,000-day window can have an enormous impact on a child’s
ability to grow and learn. It can also have a profound effect on the
long-term health, stability, and development of entire communities
and countries.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/02/12/usaid-and-unicef-join-to-improve-childrens-health-and-nutrition-in-armenia/

Revue De Presse N1 – 12/02/14 – Collectif VAN

REVUE DE PRESSE N°1 – 12/02/14 – COLLECTIF VAN

Publié le : 12-02-2014

Info Collectif VAN – – Le Collectif VAN [Vigilance
Arménienne contre le Négationnisme] vous propose une revue de presse
des informations parues dans la presse francophone, sur les thèmes
concernant la Turquie, le génocide arménien, la Shoah, le génocide
des Tutsi, le Darfour, le négationnisme, l’Union européenne, Chypre,
etc… Nous vous suggérons également de prendre le temps de lire ou
de relire les informations et traductions mises en ligne dans notre
rubrique Par
ailleurs, certains articles en anglais, allemand, turc, etc, ne
sont disponibles que dans la newsletter Word que nous générons
chaque jour.

Pour la recevoir, abonnez-vous a la Veille-Média : c’est gratuit !

Vous recevrez le document du lundi au vendredi dans votre boîte email.

Bonne lecture.

Turquie : les codes raciaux toujours utilisés a l’école Info
Collectif VAN – – ” Le ministère turc de
l’Ã~Iducation a refusé a deux étudiants étrangers le droit
de s’inscrire dans une école grecque (Rum) a Istanbul, car ils
n’avaient pas la bonne origine ethnique. (…) Un document officiel
rédigé par la Direction régionale de l’Education d’Istanbul,
découvert l’an dernier, a révélé que le système d’administration
de la population en Turquie enregistrait les citoyens qui avaient
une origine arménienne, juive ou grecque anatolienne avec un ‘code
secret racial’. (…) Ainsi ” en dépit des critiques exprimées
suite a la révélation l’an dernier de l’existence du document de la
Direction de l’Education, l’Ã~Itat turc continue de classifier les
minorités avec des codes raciaux ”. Le Collectif VAN vous propose
la traduction d’un article en anglais paru sur le site du journal
turc Hurriyet Daily News le 10 février 2014.

Darfour : suspension des activités du CICR par Khartoum Info Collectif
VAN – – “En 2009, le régime soudanais avait
retiré les autorisations de 13 ONG majeures travaillant au Darfour,
en réaction a l’émission par la Cour Pénale Internationale d’un
mandat d’arrêt pour crimes de guerre et crimes contre l’humanité
a l’encontre du président soudanais Omar El Bechir”.

Le Collectif VAN vous propose cette information publiée sur le site
du Collectif Urgence Darfour le 9 février 2014.

Chypre : négociations sur la réunification Info Collectif VAN –
– “Le Secrétaire général des Nations Unies,
Ban Ki-moon s’est félicité mardi de la publication d’un communiqué
conjoint du dirigeant chypriote grec, Nicos Anastasiades et de
son homologue chypriote turc Dervis Eroglu annoncant la reprise de
négociations formelles sur la réunification de l’île de Chypre avec
pour objectif de conclure un accord sur une solution définitive a
cette question”. Le Collectif VAN vous invite a lire cette information
publiée sur le site de l’ONU le 11 février 2014.

Chypre : le projet de réunification relancé La réunification de
Chypre est a nouveau a l’ordre du jour. Les dirigeants du nord et
du sud de l’île, divisée depuis 1974, se sont rencontrés hier en
terrain neutre, sur l’aéroport désaffecté de Nicosie, en présence
d’une responsable de l’ONU, qui abrite les discussions. Dans un
communiqué commun, le président de la République de Chypre, Nicos
Anastasiades, et le dirigeant de la République turque de Chypre du
Nord, Dervis Eorglu, ont déclaré qu’ils souhaitaient parvenir a
une solution ” aussi vite que possible ”.

Le président du Karabagh rencontre un responsable de l’OSCE Le
Président du Haut-Karabagh Bako Sahakian a recu le représentant
personnel du Président en exercice de l’OSCE, l’Ambassadeur Andrzej
Kasprzyk. Les questions liées a l’état actuel des négociations du
règlement du conflit et ses perspectives ainsi que la situation le
long de la ligne de contact entre les forces armées du Karabagh et
de l’Azerbaïdjan ont été discutés lors de la réunion.

Génocide rwandais: le TPIR acquitte deux ex-responsables militaires
La Chambre d’appel du Tribunal pénal international pour le Rwanda
(TPIR) a acquitté, ce mardi 11 février, deux anciens responsables
militaires et réduit la peine d’un troisième. Tous trois avaient
été condamnés en première instance en 2011 pour leur implication
dans le génocide de 1994. La Chambre a, en revanche, reporté sine die
– et sans explications – le verdict concernant le principal accusé de
ce dossier, le général Bizimungu, ex-chef d’état major des armées,
initialement condamné a 30 ans.

Article du journal franco-turc Zaman – 12/02/2014 – 1 Le Collectif
VAN relaye ici les articles du journal franco-turc Zaman (équivalent
du Today’s Zaman en langue anglaise, diffusé en Turquie).

Attention : ces articles ne sont pas commentés de notre part. Il
s’agit pour l’essentiel de traductions des versions turque et anglaise
du Zaman, journal proche du parti au pouvoir (AKP). “Aux yeux des
observateurs internationaux, la crise qui agite la Turquie depuis
quelques mois a déja affecté le “modèle turc”.”

Le président afghan se rend en Turquie pour participer a un sommet
trilatéral Le président afghan Hamid Karzaï a quitté son pays
mardi pour Ankara où il participera au 8e sommet trilatéral
Turquie-Afghanistan-Pakistan, a déclaré le palais présidentiel
du pays. “Le président Hamid Karzaï, dirigeant une délégation de
haut niveau, a quitté Kaboul ce midi vers Ankara, la capitale de la
Turquie, pour participer a un sommet trilatéral entre l’Afghanistan,
le Pakistan et la Turquie”, a confirmé le palais dans un communiqué.

L’info vue par la TRT (1) Le Collectif VAN vous propose cet article
publié sur la TRT (Télévision & Radio de Turquie). Les articles
de ce site ne sont pas commentés de notre part. Ils peuvent contenir
des propos négationnistes envers le génocide arménien ou d’autres
informations a prendre sous toute réserve. “Le Président de la
République turque de Chypre du Nord DerviÅ~_ Eroglu et le leader
du secteur chypriote grec Nikos Anastasiadis se sont retrouvés sur
l’Ã~Nle dans le cadre des négociations”.

Une loi Internet ”liberticide” en Turquie Une loi contrôlant
strictement le Web a été votée par les députés turcs. L’opposition
dénonce une nouvelle atteinte a la liberté d’expression de la part
du pouvoir d’Erdogan. ”Big brother” a les Turcs a l’Å”il. Le
gouvernement islamo-conservateur a toujours eu Internet dans
le collimateur mais de la a placer sous surveillance tous ses
utilisateurs, il y a un pas… qui a été franchi.

Retour a la rubrique

From: A. Papazian

http://www.collectifvan.org/article.php?r=0&id=78464
http://www.collectifvan.org/rubrique.php?r=0&page=1.
www.collectifvan.org
www.collectifvan.org
www.collectifvan.org
www.collectifvan.org

Tablettes Et Smartphones Made In Armenia/

TABLETTES ET SMARTPHONES MADE IN ARMENIA/

ARMENIE

La presse du jour rend compte de la presentation officielle, en
presence du PM, des tablettes et smartphones de production armenienne,
ArmTab et Armphone, produits par la societe armeno-americaine Science
et Technologie Dynamics. Ces productions ont requis un investissement
de 6,5 M USD et seront vendus au prix approximatif de 180 $. Concus
en Armenie, ces appareils sont fabriques aux Etats-Unis et a Hongkong.

D’après les producteurs, leur qualite ne le cède en rien a celle
des produits de marques mondialement connues. Les tablettes seront
egalement introduites dans les ecoles secondaires dès 2015. La tablette
armenienne vient de remporter le projet du meilleur Multimedia et du
meilleur logiciel a Tbilissi. Le nombre d’appareils produits devrait
atteindre 50 000 par ans au cours des cinq prochaines annees. Le
Gouvernement a autorise la societe productrice a fonctionner dans la
zone franche, beneficiant des privilèges fiscaux.

Faisant part de sa fierte, Tigran Sarkissian a souligne qu’

From: A. Papazian

Le Systeme Financier De L’Armenie Est En Mesure De Resister A De Gra

LE SYSTEME FINANCIER DE L’ARMENIE EST EN MESURE DE RESISTER A DE GRAVES DEFIS SELON LE PRESIDENT DE LA BANQUE CENTRALE

ARMENIE

>, a declare le president de
la Banque centrale Arthur Javadyan lors d’une ceremonie consacree au
20e anniversaire de l’introduction de la monnaie nationale d’Armenie.

Selon lui, meme dans les moments les plus vulnerables de la crise
financière mondiale, le système financier a affiche des volumes accrus
de credits et des comptes de depôt, ce qui a contribue a la relance
de l’economie.

> a-t-il dit.

From: A. Papazian

AEF: Armenian Kesaria/Kayseri Released

PRESS RELEASE
UCLA AEF Chair in Armenian History
Contact: Prof. Richard Hovannisian
Tel: 310-825-3375
Email: [email protected]

February 10, 2014

Armenian Kesaria and Cappadocia Released

UCLA–Armenian Kesaria/Kayseri and Cappadocia was released by Mazda
Publishers in January 2014. This is the twelfth volume in the UCLA
series titled Historic Armenian Cities and Provinces, edited and
contributed to by Professor Richard G. Hovannisian, Past Holder of the
AEF Chair in Modern History at UCLA and currently Distinguished
Chancellor’s Fellow at Chapman University in Orange County.

Armenian Kesaria/Kayseri and Cappadocia focuses on the history,
religion, economic and social life, and cultural, educational, and
political developments among the Armenians in the city of Kesaria
(Gesaria) and its many outlying villages, such as Talas, Everek,
Fenesse, Tomarza, Chomakhlu, Injesu, Efkere, and Germir. Contributors
to the volume, aside from Hovannisian, include scholars James
R. Russell, Robert W. Thomson, Gérard Dédéyan, Dickran Kouymjian,
Sylvie L. Merian, Bedross Der Matossian, Hervé Georgelin, Jack
Der-Sarkissian, Simon Payaslian, Tina Demirjian, and Vartan
Matiossian.

This volume derives from one of the eighteen international conferences
organized by Professor Hovannisian between 1997 and 2010 relating to
important historic Armenian regions, nearly all of which are now
devoid of their native Armenian inhabitants.

Copies of Armenian Kesaria/Kayseri and Cappadocia may be obtained from
Mazda Publishers, Armenian-related bookstores, or by contacting
Professor Hovannisian directly at [email protected].

From: A. Papazian

Armenia’s C.Bank Cuts Refinancing Rate To 7.50 Pct From 7.75 Pct

ARMENIA’S C.BANK CUTS REFINANCING RATE TO 7.50 PCT FROM 7.75 PCT

Reuters
feb 11 2014

YEREVAN Tue Feb 11, 2014 6:08pm IST

Feb 11 (Reuters) – Armenia’s central bank cut its key refinancing
rate to 7.50 percent from 7.75 percent on Tuesday after data showed
a decline in annual inflation.

Annual inflation was 5.5 percent in January, the central bank said,
down from 5.6 percent recorded in December. That is within the
government’s target range of between 2.5 percent and 5.5 percent
for 2014.

Monthly inflation in January was 2.8 percent, compared to inflation
of 1.1 percent in December.

The central bank cut its refinancing rate to 7.75 percent from 8.00
percent in December. (Reporting by Hasmik Lazarian; Writing by
Margarita Antidze; Editing by Thomas Grove)

From: A. Papazian

http://in.reuters.com/article/2014/02/11/armenia-rate-idINL5N0LG2E620140211

Remembering The Armenian Genocide, Part 1 & Part 2

REMEMBERING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE , PART 1 & PART 2

The Tribune Papers
Jan31 2014

Islam’s Holy War Against Christianity – Turkey, 1894-1923

Part 1 of a Series by Mike Scruggs-

In nations governed by Islamic Law (Sharia), non-Muslims have the
status of dhimmis (“protected people”). They are protected from
slaughter or expulsion so long as they remain subservient and pay a
special poll tax, called the Jizya, to their Muslim masters. Under the
rules of dhimmitude the “protected people” must show deference at all
times to Muslims and wear special clothing to distinguish themselves
from Muslims. They are allowed only limited religious freedoms and
have no political or civil rights outside the Sharia, which regulates
their mandated status of degradation and humiliation. Usually, besides
the Jizya, they must also pay a large part of their income to the
Muslim community. Their continued status as dhimmis is strictly at
the pleasure of the dominant Muslim population. They are subject to
have their properties confiscated or their lives forfeited at any time.

Muhammad instituted this practice as a source of Muslim income, which
resulted in the umma (Muslim people) becoming somewhat dependent on
the dhimmi class for various technical skills.

The Armenians are an ethnic group whose original homeland was the
highlands surrounding Mount Ararat (Genesis 8:4). They have been an
identifiable people for at least 4,000 years. The modern Republic
of Armenia, formerly part of the Soviet Union, borders Turkey on the
west, the Republic of Georgia on the north, Azerbaijan on the east,
and Iran on the south. The Kingdom of Armenia, established about 500
BC, also now referred to as Greater Armenia, encompassed large parts
of Eastern Turkey. Armenia was the first nation to declare itself a
Christian nation about 301 AD. Most Armenians belong to the Armenian
Apostolic Church, but about ten percent belong to the Armenian
Catholic Church and about two percent to the Armenian Evangelical
Church. There were once large Armenian populations in Istanbul, Izmir
(formerly known as Smyrna, Revelation 2:8), and other metropolitan
areas. Only a remnant now remain in Turkey.

Near the beginning of the twentieth century, the 4.5 million Armenian
and Greek Christians in Ottoman Turkey were of the subjugated dhimmi
class. In Christian Europe and especially Britain, however, such Muslim
practices were being viewed with alarm. Consequently, the Armenians
began to appeal to Britain and other European powers to put pressure
on Turkey to relax the Sharia rules pertaining to non-Muslims. There
had been some relaxation late in the nineteenth century, but the Turks
began to resent the Armenian overtures to European powers and became
uncertain of their loyalty to Turkey. They considered these Armenian
pleas for help to have violated their constraints as protected people
under Sharia.

In 1894, fearing increasing unrest, the Ottoman government persuaded
Muslim religious leaders to undertake a major crack-down on any
dissent by Armenian dhimmis regarding their subjugated status. In an
1896 dispatch, Henry Barnham, a British Consulate official, gave his
personal description of events:

“The butchers and tanners, with sleeves tucked up to the shoulders,
armed with clubs and cleavers, cut down the Christians with cries of
‘Allahu akbar!’ (Allah is great!) (and) broke down the doors of their
houses with pickaxes and levers, or scaled the walls with ladders.

Then when mid-day came they knelt down and said their prayers, and then
jumped up and resumed the dreadful work, carrying it on far into the
night. Whenever they were unable to beat down the doors they fired
the houses with petroleum…”

One survivor recounted the destruction of two churches in the town
of Severek in December of 1896:

“The mob had plundered the Gregorian (Armenian) church, desecrated it,
murdered all who had sought shelter there, and as a sacrifice beheaded
the sexton on the stone threshold. Now it (the mob) filled our yard.

The blows of an axe crashed in the church doors.”

This survivor described the scene as this mob rushed into the second
church and ripped apart Bibles and hymnbooks, blasphemed the cross
as a sign of victory, and chanted their prayer (“There is no god but
Allah, and Muhammad is His prophet.”) He then related:

“The leader of the mob cried: ‘Believe in Muhammad and deny your
religion.’ No one answered…The leader gave the order to massacre. The
first attack was on our pastor. The blow of an axe decapitated him.

His blood spurting in all directions, spattered the walls and ceiling”

The British Consul intercepted a letter from a Turkish soldier giving
this account to his family:

“My brother, if you want news from here we have killed 1,200 Armenians,
all of them food for the dogs…Mother I am safe and sound.

Father, 20 days ago we made war on the Armenian unbelievers. Through
Allah’s grace no harm befell us…May Allah bless you.”

Another intercepted letter, evidently from an Armenian survivor,
described the slaughter of refugees at a church in ancient Edessa.

After breaking down the door, Turkish troops mockingly called for
Christ to prove himself a greater prophet than Muhammad. Then according
to the survivor:

“They began killing everyone on the floor of the church by hand or
with pistols. From the altar they gunned down women and children in
the gallery. Finally the Turks gathered bedding and straw, on which
they poured some thirty cans of kerosene and set the church ablaze.”

This 1894-1896 Jihad against Christians in Eastern Turkey claimed
250,000 lives. Many Armenian women were forced into harems, and many
women and children were sold as slaves. Rape, considered one of the
rights of “booty” in Muslim Jihad, was routine. Some under duress
converted to Islam, but others escaped to the West and reported the
massacre. This enormous suffering inflicted upon Armenian Christians
in Turkey was only a shadow of what was to come. In 1915, the Turkish
government would order a far more organized genocide of Armenian and
Greek Christians.

—————————

Part 2, Feb 9, 2014

Part 2 of a Series by Mike Scruggs-In 1915 the Turkish government
ordered a far more organized genocide of the Armenians. In a period
of two years, about 1.5 million Christians were killed. Johannes
Lepsius, a missionary who visited the area during the First World
War, reported that 549 villages were laid waste and the surviving
inhabitants forcibly converted to Islam. He reported that 568 churches
were destroyed and 282 churches were converted into mosques. A total
of 21 protestant pastors and 170 Gregorian (Armenian) priests were
subjected to unspeakable tortures before being murdered for refusing
to denounce their faith and accept Islam.

In the summer of 1915, Leslie Davis, the American Consul in Harput,
tried to save as many Armenians as possible by hiding them in the
consulate building. He soon ran out of room and had to put some in the
consulate’s walled garden. At night the consulate employees could hear
the Turks praying for Allah to bless them in their efforts to kill the
Christians. Outside, they carried on their bloody work. The leaders in
these atrocities were primarily Muslim clerics and theology students.

To promote the idea of Jihad, the Sheikh-ul-Islam, the most senior
Sunni Muslim religious leader in Turkey, published a pamphlet with
these words:

“Oh Muslims, ye who are smitten with happiness are on the verge of
sacrificing your life and your good for the cause of right…He who
kills one unbeliever of those who rule over us, whether he does it
secretly or in the open, shall be rewarded by Allah.”

Note the words “of those who rule over us” turn upside down the actual
status of the victims. Anyone who rejects Islam is considered to be
an oppressor.

The Jihad against Christians was renewed in 1922. Perhaps the last
brutal act was in the western Turkish city of Smyrna (now Izmir), one
of the seven towns mentioned in the book of Revelation. The inhabitants
were surrounded by the Turkish Army and systematically murdered. More
than 150,000 died in four days of slaughter. The city was then burned
to the ground. Allied British, French and American naval vessels were
anchored in the city’s port, and their crews could hear the desperate
cries of Smyrna’s Christians for rescue. To our eternal shame, they
had been ordered not to interfere. The years of 1922 and 1923 claimed
the lives of another one million Armenian and Greek Christians. Several
hundred thousand were eventually able to make it to safety in Britain
and the United States, and only about 100,000 remain in Turkey.

Despite massive photographic and documental evidence and substantial
personal testimonies, the Turkish government has never acknowledged
its genocide of approximately 2.75 million Christians from 1894 to
1923. The victims included Armenian, Greek, and Protestant believers.

Jihad occurs everywhere Islam encounters other cultures. In the Sudan,
the Muslim regime is waging a bloody war against Christians, who are
mostly concentrated in the southern part of the country. Thus far,
two million Sudanese Christians have been killed, and five million have
been displaced and are facing rampant disease and possible starvation.

Former Secretary of State Colin Powell has said :

“There is no greater tragedy on the face of the earth than the tragedy
that is unfolding in the Sudan.”

Meanwhile, Muslim terrorists are killing tens of thousands in the
Philippines, Nigeria, Indonesia, the Indian Kashmir, and wherever
Islam has established a beachhead in non-Muslim countries. Over 100,000
Muslims have died in an Islamic-sectarian civil war in Algeria. Once
majority-Christian Lebanon is being destroyed as Muslim immigration
and Hezbollah infiltration threaten renewed civil war there. The
world is ablaze with Muslim Jihad.

Yet most prominent European and American politicians continue to
insist that Islam is “a religion of peace and tolerance” that has
been hijacked by a small group of radicals.

“Some call this evil Islamic radicalism; others, militant jihadism;
still others, Islamo-facism. Whatever we choose to call the enemy,
we must recognize that this ideology is very different from the tenets
of the great religion of Islam.”

-George W. Bush, November 14, 2005

“We honor the universal values that are embodied in Islam–love of
family and community, mutual respect, the power of education, and
the deepest yearning of all: to live in peace. Values that can bring
people of every faith and culture together, strengthen us as people,
and I would argue, strengthen the United States as a nation.”

-Hillary Clinton, January 21, 1999

In December 2011, just nine months before the murder of the American
ambassador to Libya and three American staff members in Benghazi,
Hillary Clinton, acting on the desires of President Obama, was
conspiring with the 56-nation-member Organization of Islamic
Cooperation (OIC) to make “Islamophobia” or criticism of Islam a
United Nations hate crime enforceable and punishable in the United
States and other Western countries. This plan would have been more
salable in the U.S., if the murder of American officials could have
been blamed on an anti-Muslim video rather than an embarrassing
resurgence of al-Qaeda terrorism.

As to President Obama, this quote from FreedomPost.com should suffice:

“Obama has repeatedly attacked traditional Christianity, and he has
a very long history of anti-Christian actions. In public speeches he
has repeatedly cast doubt on the Bible, he has repeatedly stated that
he does not believe that Jesus is necessary for salvation, and he has
consistently said that all ‘people of faith’ believe in the same God.”

How is it that so many of our leaders are blind to the true nature
of Islam, clearly taught in the Koran, the teachings of Muhammad,
and clearly seen in history and current events? Too many of them
reject scholarly Christian counsel and base their knowledge of Islam
on the Muslim Brotherhood financed propaganda of the Council on
American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) and the delusional politically
correct advice of liberal academics. American infatuation with
multiculturalism and Islam is the path to national calamity.

Part 1:

Part 2:

From: A. Papazian

http://www.thetribunepapers.com/2014/01/31/remembering-the-armenian-genocide/
http://www.thetribunepapers.com/2014/02/09/remembering-the-armenian-genocide-2/