April 19, 2005
For immediate release from
Fast For Armenia
Contact person: Anahid Yeremian
P.O. Box 655, Menlo Park, CA 94026
[email protected]
650 – 926 – 4444
Stanford and Harvard Students Join Hands in the Second Annual Fast For Armenia
By Annie Voskerchian
The commemoration of the Armenian Genocide on April 24th holds a
larger significance this year due to the 90-year anniversary of the
atrocities committed by the Ottoman regime during World War I. As a
sign of remembrance on this symbolic day, Fast For Armenia encourages
Armenians across the globe to fast. The money that would be used to
purchase food can then be donated to Fast For Armenia where donations
will be used to provide textbooks and other necessities to schools
in Armenia.
Former Stanford graduate students Chris Guzelian and Alex Vartan
founded Fast for Armenia last year in hopes of enhancing education for
the youth in Armenia. It has become a way of commemorating the fallen
victims of 1915 as well as a productive plan to provide assistance to
students, the future generation of the Armenian nation. In its first
year alone, 53 students of Antarout village received a complete set
of textbooks. Also, the libraries of Karakert Village have maps that
the children can utilize for class projects.
This year the Stanford and Harvard Armenian Student Associations, with
the help of students from the University of California Los Angeles,
Cal State Northridge, and numerous other ASAs across the US will
continue the work and build upon the successes of last year. “By
building a strong grassroots foundation in the next generation of
Diaspora Armenians, Fast For Armenia believes it could exponentially
impact and inspire the next generation of native Armenians,” says
Seepan Parseghian, president of the Stanford ASA and Fast For Armenia
Executive Director. Christine Megerdichian, the president of the
Harvard ASA and Eastern Region Director for FFA says, ” It was so
powerful. As soon as the idea was presented to us we knew we had to
be a part of it.” This year and next, more university ASAs across
the nation and overseas are expected to join the effort, creating
unbreakable bonds between Armenian students worldwide and making the
plight of students in Armenia an important issue.
Fast For Armenia will deliver modern textbooks to Armenian students
in regions where children have limited access to such materials. It
will send desks to classrooms where three or four sit at a table for
two; it will purchase books for libraries; and it will send other
necessities to schools where funding is problematic. Ten dollars pays
for a year’s supply of textbooks for one child and thirty dollars
pays for a desk and chairs for students. Thus, even a small donation
provides a great many opportunities for Armenian children. Students’
access to these resources will strengthen and promote their education.
Because education plays an important role in the future of any nation,
strengthening the education system of Armenia is imperative. Those
who receive the best education become the strongest and most
capable leaders. Thus, participating in Fast For Armenia allows all
Armenians to play an active role in creating a more stable and strong
Armenia. On a personal level, fasting serves as a reminder of the
pain and suffering incurred upon the victims of the massacres of 1915
and the drive to overcome the difficulties of the past and progress
into a unified group. The project’s success hopes to further motivate
international aid organizations and donors to realize the importance
of education in Armenia.
Supporters of Fast For Armenia range from the Armenian Youth
Federation and various high school Armenian clubs to Massachusetts
State Assemblymen Peter Koutoujian and Rachel Kaprielian, the Armenian
Engineers and Scientists of America, and the National Foundation for
Science and Advanced Technology in Armenia.
Participants of Fast For Armenia can help by fasting, donating money,
or volunteering time. Also, this year’s program includes a wristband
campaign. These wristbands, which say “Remember the Forgotten” on them,
can be purchased in either black or red/blue/orange.
Be engaged and active; convince others, including non-Armenians
to commemorate the memory of our Armenian ancestors and inspire a
bright future for Armenia’s children. Involve co-workers, schools,
communities, churches, and social organizations to participate in
the Fast for Armenia.
For more information and how to make donations and order the
wristbands, visit
Photo by Mark Markarian: Children of the village of Gavar, in the
Geghama mountains of Armnia.
Author: Dabaghian Diana
NY ASA: May 4: Dr. David A. Grigorian “Armenia’s Economic Paradigm.
New York Armenian Students’ Association / ASA of USA
333 Atlantic Avenue
Warwick, RI 02888
(401) 461-6114
Contact person: Alec Gevorkyan
[email protected]
For Immediate Release!
April 17, 2005
Contact: New York ASA: [email protected]
New York, NY – The New York Armenian Students’ Association in
cooperation with the Columbia University Armenian Club, the Armenian
Network of New York / New Jersey Metro Area and Armenian National
Committee of New York is pleased to present Dr. David Grigorian,
who will discuss the current economic environment in Armenia.
The presentation will take place on Wednesday, May 4 at 6:30 PM at
the Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs,
Room 1219.
David Grigorian is an Economist at the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) and a founding co-chair of the Armenian International Policy
Research Group (AIPRG), a Washington-based network specializing in
Armenia-related public policy issues. He holds a Ph.D. in Economics
from the University of Maryland and an MA in Economics from the
Central European University. His research and operational work at
the IMF focus on open economy macroeconomics, banking and capital
markets development, and economic development. Prior to joining the
IMF, Dr. Grigorian worked at the World Bank’s Europe and Central Asia
Region, where he led banking and private sector development projects
in Central Asia.
In addition to providing a general overview of Armenia’s macroeconomic
performance in recent years and factors behind it, Dr. Grigorian
will focus on three key aspects of Armenia’s growth performance –
past and future – that have received little attention from the
policymakers in Armenia and the Diaspora: (1) sources of growth,
(2) sustainability of growth, and (3) income distribution. He will
provide an in-depth review of these aspects and offer recommendations
to mitigate any risks associated with them. A question and answer
session will follow the presentation.
The Armenian Students’ Association would like to thank St. Vartan
Armenian Cathedral of New York,the Armenian General Benevolent Union,
the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Armen Garo Gomideh, and the
New York University Armenian Hokee Club for their unconditional
support in planning this event. For more information about
the Armenian International Policy Research Group, please visit
For more information about the Armenian Students’ Association and
other events, please visit
###
Suit eases anguish of Armenians
Sacramento Bee, CA
April 17 2005
Suit eases anguish of Armenians
By Stephen Magagnini — Bee Staff Writer
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For years after his death, Setrak Cheytanian’s life insurance policy
was stashed away in a shoe box in a storage locker in Irvine.
Cheytanian, a minor civil servant in eastern Turkey, bought the
policy from an enterprising New York Life Insurance agent in 1910,
along with several thousand other Armenians who feared they would be
killed by the Turks.
Cheytanian, then 35, insured himself for 3,000 French francs, then
gave the policy to his sister-in-law, who was bound for America, for
safekeeping.
His fears were realized: In June 1915, Cheytanian was killed. He
died along with hundreds of thousands of Turkish Armenians who either
were butchered by the Ottoman Turks or sent on death marches into the
Syrian desert between 1915 and 1923.
But his four-page life insurance policy, embossed with an impressive
gold seal and a currency-green border, has culminated in a $20
million settlement for thousands of Armenians whose ancestors took
out policies that never were paid.
Today, a week before the 90th anniversary of Armenian Martyrs Day,
Cheytanian’s yellowed parchment legacy shines fresh light on the
Armenian genocide, an event never fully recognized by Turkey, nor
even the U.S. government.
Many historians agree Armenians were victims of genocide, legally
defined as the intent to destroy a national, ethnic, racial or
religious group.
California – home to more than half the nation’s 900,000 Armenians –
long has called the slaughter a genocide. But U.S. presidents and
Congress have refused to back a law acknowledging the genocide for
fear of angering Turkey, a key American ally in the volatile Middle
East.
The federal government’s reluctance has deeply wounded Armenians, who
feel denying the genocide is like denying the Jewish Holocaust.
The $20 million settlement with New York Life Insurance, certified by
a federal judge, represents a huge – if largely symbolic – victory
for the world’s Armenians. Many have fought bitterly to prove their
ancestors were victims of the first genocide of the 20th century, and
see the settlement as official acknowledgment.
“This isn’t a big issue in the Armenian community -it is the issue,”
said Brian Kabateck, one of several Armenian American attorneys in
Southern California who worked on the case. “After 90 years of
denials, there’s recognition by judges, by large corporations in this
country, by public officials and the international community that the
genocide exists.”
The tale of the landmark settlement is part history, part mystery,
spanning two continents and nearly half a century.
The case never would have gotten off the ground if not for Martin
Marootian, a retired pharmacist from La Cañada in Los Angeles County.
Marootian, 89, was born in 1915, the year Armenians recognize as the
start of the genocide. His uncle, Setrak Cheytanian, was one of about
3,600 Armenians who bought life insurance policies in Turkey between
1890 and 1915.
A New York Life agent in Istanbul, the capital of the Ottoman Empire,
hired a team of Armenian salesmen to sell policies from village to
village and then collect the premiums each month, Kabateck said.
Cheytanian insured his life for the 3,000 francs, worth about $600 in
1910 (but more than $50,000 today). In 1914, he gave the policy to
his sister, who was going to America to join her husband, a tailor in
Staten Island.
“My uncle thought since she was coming to New York, and the policy
was New York Life, it would be safe and it would be honored,”
Marootian said. “He had a sneaking suspicion something (bad) was
going to happen.”
Turkey had been a precarious place for Armenians since the late 19th
century.
The Armenians, as Christians, were considered infidels by many
Turkish Muslims, who also resented the Armenians’ success in
business. The killings began after Armenians began agitating for an
independent state, and escalated after the Turkish government accused
Armenians of conspiring with Turkey’s archenemy, Russia.
After disarming Armenian soldiers in the Ottoman army and banishing
them to slave labor camps, on April 24, 1915, the Turkish government
arrested several hundred Armenian leaders and intellectuals in
Istanbul. Most were executed.
In the ensuing years, thousands of Armenian men were tortured and
beheaded, and their wives and children sent on forced marches into
the desert. “My grandmother made it alone to Syria, but her
2-year-old daughter starved to death begging for food and water,”
said Father Yeghia Hairabedian of Sacramento’s St. James Armenian
Church.
Marootian said his entire family in the city of Kharpert, in eastern
Turkey, was killed, including his uncle. “Several thousand Armenians
there were massacred,” Marootian said. “One Armenian historian claims
they were taken to a nearby lake and shot and dumped into the lake.”
In 1923, Marootian said his mother went to the New York Life office
in Manhattan and tried to collect on her slain brother’s policy, “But
they wanted proof she was an heir.” Over the years, the family made
several attempts to collect on the policy, only to be rebuffed,
Marootian said.
New York Life remembers it differently. The company said after the
genocide, it hired an Armenian attorney who tracked down a third of
the policyholders’ heirs and made good on those policies. But the
attorney couldn’t track down the heirs of the other 2,400
policyholders who died.
A New York Life spokesman said the company advised potential heirs to
contact the Armenian Church in Turkey “to have them certify for us
that this person is the rightful heir and this is what happened.”
But Marootian said it took more than 30 years to get a certificate
from the church, “and New York Life still stonewalled us.”
New York Life stored the unpaid policies in a New Jersey warehouse,
where they might have remained if not for an attorney and historian
from Glendale named Vartkes Yeghiayan.
Like virtually every other Armenian American, Yeghiayan, 68, says he
has a personal stake in the genocide: The only person on his father’s
side who survived was his father, then a 9-year-old boy. “He wandered
through the desert for four years as an orphan,” Yeghiayan said. “He
was saved by Arab nomads, and eventually made it to an Armenian
church in Syria.”
But very few survived the journey across the scorching sands.
Yeghiayan’s father never spoke of what he’d witnessed, except to
other survivors, but Yeghiayan resolved to uncover the truth. He was
reading the memoirs of the U.S. ambassador to the Ottoman Empire when
he learned of the life insurance policies.
In 1995, he ran an ad in Armenian newspapers looking for potential
beneficiaries. Several hundred people responded, but the only one who
actually had a slain relative’s policy was Marootian’s older sister,
Alice Asoian of Irvine.
Adrenaline coursed through Yeghiayan as he studied the colorful
document. He proposed that Asoian, then 84, become lead plaintiff in
a class action lawsuit against New York Life.
“I remember the look on her face. She said, ‘You go ahead and do it.
I was wondering why the good Lord kept me alive all these years.'”
But Asoian died before the suit was filed, and her relatives stashed
the policy in a shoe box for years. They were about to throw it out
when Marootian noticed the document, and called Yeghiayan. In 1998,
Marootian agreed to be lead plaintiff in the suit, which was filed in
California on behalf of Armenians worldwide.
At first, New York Life argued the statute of limitations had
expired, but in 2000 the California Legislature passed the Armenian
Genocide Victims Act, which erased time limits on such claims.
Both sides dug in for a battle. New York Life hired a high-powered
defense firm, and Yeghiayan recruited Kabateck, who had experience in
class action suits against insurance companies.
In 2001, Kabateck reached a $14.5 million settlement with New York
Life, but Marootian and the other plaintiffs rejected it, saying it
wasn’t enough.
The case remained deadlocked for two years until Kabateck and his
partners asked California Insurance Commissioner John Garamendi to
mediate.
Garamendi said he phoned Sy Steinberg, chairman and CEO of New York
Life. “I said, ‘This isn’t going well, let’s get it done’,” Garamendi
said. “He said, ‘I can’t.’
“I said, ‘I think you can. You’ve got a choice … I’m perfectly
capable of raising hell and giving insurance companies millions of
dollars in bad press. Or, you have the opportunity to be a leader and
get good publicity.'”
Early last year, New York Life agreed to a $20 million settlement. It
includes $3 million for Armenian American humanitarian organizations
that helped those displaced by the genocide; $250,000 for Marootian;
and $11 million to be divided among the heirs of the other 2,400
unpaid policies. New York Life also took the unprecedented step of
listing each of the 2,400 policyholders on a Web site.
By last month’s deadline, about 3,000 Armenians from 30 countries had
filed claims with the settlement board, which will determine the
rightful heirs and could start making payments within a year,
Garamendi said.
One of the board’s three members, Burbank attorney Paul Krekorian,
said the settlement is not intended to provide justice for victims of
the genocide. “No amount of money could do that. But it is historic
that a U.S. District Court has acknowledged an injustice that
happened 90 years ago, and it gives those whose voices were lost a
chance to be heard now.”
Krekorian said one of those long-silent voices was his great-uncle, a
math professor in Kharpert whose tongue was cut out by the Turks
before he was killed.
Marootian and his wife, Seda, said some Armenians have accused them
of settling too cheaply – each of the unpaid policies is worth an
average of $5,000.
But Marootian said the case wasn’t about money.
“We call it the forgotten genocide – we wanted the world to know this
really did happen,” he said. “I’m glad it’s over and I’m very happy
to see the day that some Armenians can benefit from this because it’s
been a long, long time.”
Armenians, Turks vie over truth of genocide
For nearly a century, Armenians have fought for international
recognition of the genocide of hundreds of thousands of Armenians at
the hands of Ottoman Turks between 1915 and 1923.
Turkey, to this day, doesn’t recognize the killings as genocide,
legally defined as the orchestrated intent to destroy, in whole or
part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group.
The number of deaths also is in dispute: Armenians say at least 1.5
million died, while Turkey says it’s closer to 300,000.
The Encyclopaedia Britannica takes a middle ground, saying the wave
of killings began in 1894 after Armenians began agitating for their
own territory and protesting high taxes. “In response to Russia’s use
of Armenian troops against the Ottomans in World War I (1914-18), the
(Turkish) government deported 1.75 million Armenians south to Syria
and Mesopotamia … 600,000 Armenians were killed or died of
starvation.”
Britannica doesn’t use the word “genocide.”
U.S. presidents, fearful of angering Turkey, a key ally in the Middle
East, generally have steered clear of the term. But the genocide is
widely recognized in California, home to 500,000 Armenian Americans.
For more than 30 years, the Legislature has passed an annual
resolution in remembrance of the genocide.
– Stephen Magagnini
Prayer in Memory of The Victims
A1plus
| 20:00:37 | 15-04-2005 | Social |
PRAYER IN MEMORY OF THE VICTIMS
Today the following session of the executive body of the Committee of
Orthodox participation in the World Church Council was organized in the
Sevan Vazgenyan seminary.
At the end of the session the participants got aqcuainted with the history
of the seminary and the present conditions. They met the students and
answered their questions.
On the same day the group consisting of high-ranked officials and clergymen
from different churches visited Tsitsernakaberd to respect the memory of the
victims of the Great Armenian Genocide. After putting a wreath to the
monument of the Genocide vistims the participants prayed to God for the
Armenian martyrs.
Customs Chief Knows Nothing About $100K Award on his Assailants
HEAD OF CUSTOM COMMITTEE KNOWS NOTHING ABOUT $100.000 PROPOSED FOR
INFORMATION ABOUT CRIMINAL EXPLODED HIM
YEREVAN, APRIL 15. ARMINFO. Head of Armenian State Custom Committee
Armen Avetissyan does not know sources from which $100.000 will be
paid by Office of Public Prosecutor General and National Security
Service for information on suspected in the case of encroachment to
him. However, Avetissyan knows precisely that it will be not from the
state budget. At the same time, he ruled out the encroachment’s motive
on the personal basis.
To remind, the official car of Avetissyan was damaged as a result of
an explosion in the center of Yerevan on March 24, 2005. He get out
from the car a second ago before the explosion.
Presidential Oversight Service Reveals Breaches in State-Run Uni.
Armenpress
PRESIDENTIAL OVERSIGHT SERVICE REVEALS BREACHES IN STATE-RUN UNIVERSITIES
YEREVAN, APRIL 14, ARMENPRESS: Vahram Barseghian, the chief of a
presidential oversight service, told a news conference today that the
service revealed a chain of serious breaches in the higher education system
(state-run universities) after a series of studies.
He said one of the findings is that too many first-year students were
transferred to other universities after the first semester, overall 225
students, violating the proportion of specialties each of these universities
have to teach under a state order.
He said the impression is that there were additional examinations for
some specialties. He said in some instances students majoring in one
specialty were transferred to another state-run university to major in a
subject that was radically different from what they studied before. He said
a student majoring in veterinary was transferred to another university to
continue majoring in psychology. Some others to major in banking, history
and so on.
Barseghian said the impression is that some state run universities act as
donors for others. For instances, 24 students were transferred from Gavar
State University. He said the breaches show that there is an urgent need to
improve some mechanisms concerning the transfer of students from one
state-run university to another.
Project Harmony Celebrates Global Youth Service Day
PROJECT HARMONY CELEBRATES GLOBAL YOUTH SERVICE DAY
YEREVAN, APRIL 13. ARMINFO. Project Harmony-Armenia, together with
organizations from more than 100 countries around the world, is
planning community service projects and special events to celebrate
the 6th Annual Global Youth Service Day, which will take place from
15-17 April 2004.
Project Harmony Office in Yerevan informs ARMINFO that Global Youth
Service Day (GYSD) is an annual global event led by Youth Service
America with the Global Youth Action Network as its key partner,
together with a consortium of 34 International Organizations and more
than 150 National Coordinating Committees. It is a public education
campaign that highlights the amazing contributions made by youth
year-round to their communities through volunteering. Since GYSD
started, a number of international organizations have joined Youth
Service America and Global Youth Action Network to expand this
program, including Inter-American Development Bank, Youth Employment
Summit, IEARN, Service for Peace and others. One of the major events
taking place in the framework of GYSD is the visit to Nork elderly
house. On April 15 students from Yerevan school
131 will prepare PowerPoint presentation on London and together with
grannies will create a “Virtual Tour” to the capital of Great
Britain. On the same day young artists from “Tsitsernak” NGO will
make a visit to the same elderly house to give a small performance of
singing and dancing. Similar visits to the elderly houses will be
organized in other regions of Armenia.
Some other interesting events, such as the human rights seminar for
disabled children in Lori region, visiting the Second World War
veterans in Vayots Dzor region, and the Gavar orphanage children’s
visit to the ICC will be implemented under GYSD. In addition, all
Internet Computer Centers (ICCs) created through the Armenia School
Connectivity Program in all eleven regions of Armenia will provide
the local community with free service by organizing an open doors day
on April 16 and 17. During these hours the site staff and students
will promote the ICC to the community and will help visitors use ICC
resources. At the same time, a community service project will be
organized by each ICC, which will include the cleaning of school
grounds and neighboring parks, tree planting, and other projects. In
Yerevan, on April 16 all schools will participate in the City
subbotnik (cleaning day) organized by the Yerevan municipality.
Project Harmony builds strong communities by fostering civic
leadership, harnessing Internet technology and facilitating
cross-cultural experiential learning. Project Harmony was founded in
Vermont in 1985 as a grass-roots exchange organization for Soviet and
American high schools. Today, Project Harmony has 13 offices
worldwide. In its 20-year history, Project Harmony has facilitated
educational, professional, cultural, and community-based programs
involving hundreds of families and individuals.
The living legacy of jihad slavery
The American Thinker
April 13th, 2005
The living legacy of jihad slavery
Andrew G. Bostom
A public protest in Washington, DC, April 5, 2005 highlighted the current
(ongoing, for centuries) plight of black Mauritanians enslaved by Arab
masters. The final two decades of the 20th century, moreover, witnessed a
frank jihad genocide, including mass enslavement, perpetrated by the Arab
Muslim Khartoum government against black Christians and animists in the
Southern Sudan, and the same governments continued massacres and
enslavement of Animist-Muslim blacks in Darfur. These tragic contemporary
phenomena reflect the brutal living legacy of jihad slavery.
Jihad Slavery
The fixed linkage between jihad- a permanent, uniquely Islamic institution-
and enslavement, provides a very tenable explanation for the unparalleled
scale and persistence of slavery in Muslim dominions, and societies. This
general observation applies as well to “specialized” forms of slavery,
including the (procurement and) employment of eunuchs, slave soldiering
(especially of adolescents), other forms of child slavery, and harem
slavery. Jihad slavery, in its myriad manifestations, became a powerful
instrument for both expansive Islamization, and the maintenance of Muslim
societies.
Juridical Rationale and Role in “Islamization”
Patricia Crone, in her recent analysis of the origins and development of
Islamic political thought, makes an important nexus between the mass
captivity and enslavement of non-Muslims during jihad campaigns, and the
prominent role of coercion in these major modalities of Islamization.
Following a successful jihad, she notes:
Male captives might be killed or enslaved, whatever their religious
affiliation. (People of the Book were not protected by Islamic law until
they had accepted dhimma.) Captives might also be given the choice between
Islam and death, or they might pronounce the confession of faith of their
own accord to avoid execution: jurists ruled that their change of status was
to be accepted even though they had only converted out of fear. Women and
children captured in the course of the campaigns were usually enslaved,
again regardless of their faith.Nor should the importance of captives be
underestimated. Muslim warriors routinely took large numbers of them.
Leaving aside those who converted to avoid execution, some were ransomed and
the rest enslaved, usually for domestic use. Dispersed in Muslim households,
slaves almost always converted, encouraged or pressurized by their masters,
driven by a need to bond with others, or slowly, becoming accustomed to
seeing things through Muslim eyes even if they tried to resist. Though
neither the dhimmi nor the slave had been faced with a choice between Islam
and death, it would be absurd to deny that force played a major role in
their conversion. [1]
For the idolatrous Hindus, enslaved in vast numbers during the waves of
jihad conquests that ravaged the Indian subcontinent for well over a half
millennium (beginning at the outset of the 8th century C.E.), the guiding
principles of Islamic law regarding their fate were unequivocally coercive.
Jihad slavery also contributed substantively to the growth of the Muslim
population in India. K.S. Lal elucidates both of these points: [2]
The Hindus who naturally resisted Muslim occupation were considered to be
rebels. Besides they were idolaters (mushrik) and could not be accorded the
status of Kafirs, of the People of the Book – Christians and Jews. Muslim
scriptures and treatises advocated jihad against idolaters for whom the law
advocated only Islam or death. The fact was that the Muslim regime was
giving [them] a choice between Islam and death only. Those who were killed
in battle were dead and gone; but their dependents were made slaves. They
ceased to be Hindus; they were made Musalmans in course of time if not
immediately after captivity.slave taking in India was the most flourishing
and successful [Muslim] missionary activity.Every Sultan, as [a] champion of
Islam, considered it a political necessity to plant or raise [the] Muslim
population all over India for the Islamization of the country and countering
native resistance.
Vryonis describes how jihad slavery, as practiced by the Seljuks and early
Ottomans, was an important modality of Islamization in Asia Minor during the
11th through the 14th century 3:
A further contributing factor to the decline in the numbers of Christian
inhabitants was slavery.Since the beginning of the Arab razzias into the
land of Rum, human booty had come to constitute a very important portion of
the spoils. There is ample testimony in the contemporary accounts that this
situation did not change when the Turks took over the direction of the
djihad in Anatolia. They enslaved men, women, and children from all major
urban centers and from the countryside where the populations were
defenseless. In the earlier years before the Turkish settlements were
permanently affected in Anatolia, the captives were sent off to Persia and
elsewhere, but after the establishment of the Anatolian Turkish
principalities, a portion of the enslaved were retained in Anatolia for the
service of the conquerors
After characterizing the coercive, often brutal methods used to impose the
devshirme child levy, and the resulting attrition of the native Christian
populations (i.e., from both expropriation and flight), Papoulia concludes
that this Ottoman institution, a method of Islamization par excellence,
also constituted a de facto state of war: [4]
.that the sources speak of piasimo (seizure) aichmalotos paidon (capture)
and arpage paidon (grabbing of children) indicates that the children lost
through the devsirme were understood as casualties of war. Of course, the
question arises whether, according to Islamic law, it is possible to regard
the devsirme as a form of the state of war, although the Ottoman historians
during the empire’s golden age attempted to interpret this measure as a
consequence of conquest by force be’anwa. It is true that the Greeks and the
other peoples of the Balkan peninsula did not as a rule surrender without
resistance, and therefore the fate of the conquered had to be determined
according to the principles of the Koran regarding the Ahl-al-Qitb: i.e.
either to be exterminated or be compelled to convert to Islam or to enter
the status of protection, of aman, by paying the taxes and particularly the
cizye (poll-tax). The fact that the Ottomans, in the case of voluntary
surrender, conceded certain privileges one of which was exemption from this
heavy burden, indicates that its measure was understood as a penalization
for the resistance of the population and the devshirme was an expression of
the perpetuation of the state of war between the conqueror and the
conquered. the sole existence of the institution of devshirme is sufficient
to postulate the perpetuation of a state of war.
Under Shah Abbas I (1588-1626 C.E.), the Safavid Shi’ite theocracy of Iran
expanded its earlier system of slave razzias into the Christian Georgian and
Armenian areas of the Caucasus. Georgian, Armenian, and Circassian
inhabitants of the Caucasus were enslaved in large numbers, and converted,
thereby, to Shi’a Islam. The males were made to serve as (primarily)
military or administrative slaves, while the females were forced into
harems. A transition apparently took place between the 17th and 18th
centuries such that fewer of the slaves came from the Caucasus, while
greater numbers came via the Persian Gulf, originating from Africa. [5]
Ricks notes that by the reign of Shah Sultan Husayn,
The size of the royal court had indeed expanded if the numbers of male and
female slaves including white and black eunuchs are any indicators.
According to a contemporary historian, Shah Sultan Husayn (d. 1722) made it
a practice to arrive at Isfahan’s markets on the first days of the Iranian
New Year (March 21) with his entire court in attendance. It was estimated by
the contemporary recorder that 5,000 male and female black and white slaves
including the 100 black eunuchs comprised the royal party. [6]
Clement Huart, writing in the early 20th century (1907), observed that
slaves, continued to be the most important component of the booty acquired
during jihad campaigns or razzias: [7]
Not too long ago several expeditions crossed Amoû-Dery, i.e. the southern
frontier of the steppes, and ravaged the eastern regions of Persia in order
to procure slaves; other campaigns were launched into the very heart of
unexplored Africa, setting fire to the inhabited areas and massacring the
peaceful animist populations that lived there.
Willis characterizes the timeless Islamic rationale for the enslavement of
such “barbarous” African animists, as follows: [8]
.as the opposition of Islam to kufr erupted from every corner of malice and
mistrust, the lands of the enslavable barbarian became the favorite hunting
ground for the “people of reason and faith”-the parallels between slave and
infidel began to fuse in the heat of jihad. Hence whether by capture or
sale, it was as slave and not citizen that the kafir was destined to enter
the Muslim domain. And since the condition of captives flowed from the
status of their territories, the choice between freedom and servility came
to rest on a single proof: the religion of a land is the religion of its
amir (ruler); if he be Muslim, the land is a land of Islam (dar al-Islam);
if he be pagan, the land is a land of unbelief (dar al-kufr). Appended to
this principle was the kindred notion that the religion of a land is the
religion of its majority; if it be Muslim, the land is a land of Islam; if
it be pagan, the land is a land of kufr, and its inhabitants can be reckoned
within the categories of enslavement under Muslim law. Again, as slavery
became a simile for infidelity, so too did freedom remain the signal feature
of Islam.The servile estate was hewn out of the ravaged remains of heathen
villages – from the women and children who submitted to Islam and awaited
their redemption.[according to Muslim jurist] al-Wanshirisi (d.1508),
slavery is an affliction upon those who profess no Prophecy, who bear no
allegiance to religious law. Moreover, slavery is an humiliation – a
subjection- which rises from infidelity.
Based on his study and observations of Muslim slave razzias gleaned while
serving in the Sudan during the Mahdist jihad at the close of the 19th
century, Winston Churchill wrote this description (in 1899): [9]
all [of the Arab Muslim tribes in The Sudan], without exception, were
hunters of men. To the great slave markets of Jeddah a continual stream of
negro captives has flowed for hundreds of years. The invention of gunpowder
and the adoption by the Arabs of firearms facilitated the traffic.Thus the
situation in the Sudan for several centuries may be summed up as follows:
The dominant race of Arab invaders was increasingly spreading its blood,
religion, customs, and language among the black aboriginal population, and
at the same time it harried and enslaved them.The warlike Arab tribes fought
and brawled among themselves in ceaseless feud and strife. The negroes
trembled in apprehension of capture, or rose locally against their
oppressors.
All these elements of jihad slavery- its juridical rationale, employment as
a method of forcible Islamization (for non-Muslims in general, and directed
at Sub-Saharan African Animists, specifically), and its association with
devshirme-like levies of adolescent males for slave soldiering- are apparent
in the contemporary jihad being waged against the Animists and Christians of
southern Sudan, by the Arab Muslim-dominated Khartoum regime. [10]
Extent and Persistence
The scale and scope of Islamic slavery in Africa are comparable to the
Western trans-Atlantic slave trade to the Americas, and as Willis has
observed (somewhat wryly), [11] the former “.out-distances the more popular
subject in its length of duration.” Quantitative estimates for the
trans-Atlantic slave trade (16th through the end of the 19th century) of
10,500,000 (or somewhat higher [12]), are at least matched (if not exceeded
by 50%) by a contemporary estimate for the Islamic slave trade out of
Africa. Professor Ralph Austen’s working figure for this composite of the
trans-Saharan, Red Sea, and Indian Ocean traffic generated by the Islamic
slave trade from 650 through 1905 C.E., is 17,000,000. [13] Moreover, the
plight of those enslaved animist peoples drawn from the savannah and
northern forest belts of western and central Africa for the trans-Saharan
trade was comparable to the sufferings experienced by the unfortunate
victims of the trans-Atlantic slave trade. [14]
In the Nineteenth Century, slaves reached the ports of Ottoman Tripoli by
three main Saharan routes, all so harsh that the experience of slaves forced
to travel them bore comparison with the horrors of the so-called
“middle-passage” of the Atlantic.
This illuminating comparison, important as it is, ignores other vast domains
of jihad slavery: throughout Europe (Mediterranean and Western Europe, as
well as Central and Eastern Europe, involving the Arabs
[Western/Mediterranean], and later the Ottoman Turks and Tatars [Central and
Eastern Europe]); Muscovite Russia (subjected to Tatar depredations); Asia
Minor (under Seljuk and Ottoman domination); Persia, Armenia, and Georgia
(subjected to the systematized jihad slavery campaigns waged by the Shi’ite
Safavids, in particular); and the Indian subcontinent (razzias and jihad
campaigns by the Arabs in the 7th and 8th centuries, and later depredations
by the Ghaznavids, during the Delhi Sultanate, the Timurid jihad, and under
the Mughals). As a cursory introduction to the extent of jihad slavery
beyond the African continent, three brief examples are provided: the Seljuks
in Asia Minor (11th and 12th centuries); the Ottomans in the Balkans (15th
century); and the Tatars in southern Poland and Muscovite Russia (mid-15th
through 17th centuries).
The capture of Christians in Asia Minor by the Seljuk Turks was very
extensive in the 11th and 12th centuries. [15] Following the seizure and
pillage of Edessa, 16,000 were enslaved. [16] Michael the Syrian reported
that when the Turks of Nur al-Din were brought into Cilicia by Mleh the
Armenian, they enslaved 16,000 Christians, whom they sold at Aleppo. [17] A
major series of razzias conducted in the Greek provinces of Western Asia
Minor enslaved thousands of Greeks (Vryonis believes the figure of 100,000
cited in a contemporary account is exaggerated [18]), and according to
Michael the Syrian, they were sold in slave markets as distant as Persia.
[19] During razzias conducted by the Turks in 1185 and over the next few
years, 26,000 inhabitants from Cappadocia, Armenian, and Mesopotamia were
captured and sent off to the slave markets. [20] Vryonis concludes: [21]
.these few sources seem to indicate that the slave trade was a flourishing
one. In fact, Asia Minor continued to be a major source of slaves for the
Islamic world through the 14th century.
The Ottoman Sultans, in accord with Shari’a prescriptions, promoted jihad
slavery aggressively in the Balkans, especially during the 15th century
reigns of Mehmed I (1402-1421), Murad II (1421-1451), and Mehmed II
(1451-1481). [22] Alexandrescu-Dersca summarizes the considerable extent of
this enslavement, and suggests the importance of its demographic effect:
[23]
The contemporary Turkish, Byzantine and Latin chroniclers are unanimous in
recognizing that during the campaigns conducted on behalf of the unification
of Greek and Latin Romania and the Slavic Balkans under the banner of Islam,
as well as during their razzias on Christian territory, the Ottomans reduced
masses of inhabitants to slavery. The Ottoman chronicler Asikpasazade
relates that during the expedition of Ali pasha Evrenosoghlu in Hungary
(1437), as well as on the return from the campaign of Murad II against
Belgrade (1438), the number of captives surpassed that of the combatants.
The Byzantine chronicler Ducas states that the inhabitants of Smederevo,
which was occupied by the Ottomans, were led off into bondage. The same
thing happened when the Turks of Mentese descended upon the islands of
Rhodes and Cos and also during the expedition of the Ottoman fleet to Enos
and Lesbos. Ducas even cites numbers: 70,000 inhabitants carried off into
slavery during the campaign of Mehmed II in Morée (1460). The Italian
Franciscan Bartholomé de Yano (Giano dell’Umbria) speaks about 60,000 to
70,000 slaves captured over the course of two expeditions of the akingis in
Transylvania (1438) and about 300,000 to 600,000 Hungarian captives. If
these figures seem exaggerated, others seem more accurate: forty
inhabitants captured by the Turks of Mentese during a razzia in Rhodes,
7,000 inhabitants reduced to slavery following the siege of Thessalonika
(1430), according to John Anagnostes, and ten thousand inhabitants led off
into captivity during the siege of Mytilene (1462), according to the
Metropolitan of Lesbos, Leonard of Chios. Given the present state of the
documentation available to us, we cannot calculate the scale on which slaves
were introduced into Turkish Romania by this method. According to
Bartholomé de Yano, it would amount to 400,000 slaves captured in the four
years from 1437 to 1443. Even allowing for a certain degree of exaggeration,
we must acknowledge that slaves played an important demographic part during
the fifteenth-century Ottoman expansion.
Fisher [24] has analyzed the slave razzias conducted by the Muslim Crimean
Tatars against the Christian populations of southern Poland and Muscovite
Russia during the mid-15th through late 17th century (1463-1794). Relying
upon admittedly incomplete sources (“.no doubt there are many more slave
raids that the author has not uncovered” [25]), his conservative tabulations
[26] indicate that at least 3 million (3,000,000) persons – men, women, and
children – were captured and enslaved during this so-called “harvesting of
the steppe”. Fisher describes the plight of those enslaved: [27]
.the first ordeal [of the captive] was the long march to the Crimea. Often
in chains and always on foot, many of the captives died en route. Since on
many occasions the Tatar raiding party feared reprisals or, in the
seventeenth century, attempts by Cossack bands to free the captives, the
marches were hurried. Ill or wounded captives were usually killed rather
than be allowed to slow the procession. Heberstein wrote. “the old and
infirm men who will not fetch much as a sale, are given up to the Tatar
youths either to be stoned, or thrown into the sea, or to be killed by any
sort of death they might please.” An Ottoman traveler in the mid-sixteenth
century who witnessed one such march of captives from Galicia marveled that
any would reach their destination – the slave markets of Kefe. He complained
that their treatment was so bad that the mortality rate would unnecessarily
drive their price up beyond the reach of potential buyers such as himself. A
Polish proverb stated: “Oh how much better to lie on one’s bier, than to be
a captive on the way to Tartary”
The persistence of Islamic slavery is as impressive and unique as its
extent. Slavery was openly practiced in both Ottoman Turkey [28], and Shi’ite
(Qajar) Iran [29], through the first decade of the 20th century. As Toledano
points out, [30] regarding Ottoman Turkey, kul (administrative)/ harem
slavery,
.survived at the core of the Ottoman elite until the demise of the empire
and the fall of the house of Osman in the second decade of the 20th century.
Moreover, Ricks [31] indicates that despite the modernizing pressures and
reforms culminating in the Iranian Constitutional Movement of 1905-1911,
which effectively eliminated military and agricultural slavery,
The presence of domestic slaves, however, in both the urban and rural
regions of Southern Iran had not ceased as quickly. Some Iranians today
attest to the continued presence of African and Indian slave girls.
Slavery on the Arabian peninsula was not abolished formally until 1962 in
Saudi Arabia, 32 and 1970 in Yemen and Oman. 33 Writing in 1989, Gordon [34]
observed that although Mauritania abolished slavery officially on July 15,
1980,
.as the government itself acknowledges, the practice is till alive and well.
It is estimated that 200,000 men, women, and children are subject to being
bought and sold like so many cattle in this North African country, toiling
as domestics, shepherds, and farmhands.
Finally, as discussed earlier, there has been a recrudescence of jihad
slavery, since 1983 in the Sudan. [35]
An Overview of Eunuch Slavery-the “Hideous Trade”
Eunuch slaves – males castrated usually between the ages of 4 and 12 (due to
the high risk of death, preferentially, between ages 8 and 12), [36] were in
considerable demand in Islamic societies. They served most notably as
supervisors of women in the harems of the rulers and elites of the Ottoman
Empire, its contemporary Muslim neighbors (such as Safavid Iran), and
earlier Muslim dominions. The extent and persistence of eunuch slavery –
becoming prominent within 200 years of the initial 7th century Arab jihad
conquests [37], through the beginning of the 20th century [38] – are
peculiar to the Islamic incarnation of this aptly named “hideous trade”. For
example, Toledano documents that as late as 1903, the Ottoman imperial harem
contained from 400 to 500 female slaves, supervised and guarded by 194 black
African eunuchs. [39]
But an equally important and unique feature of Muslim eunuch slavery was the
acquisition of eunuchs from foreign “slave producing areas” [40] , i.e.,
non-Muslim frontier zones subjected to razzias. As David Ayalon observed,
[41]
.the overwhelming majority of the eunuchs, like the overwhelming majority of
all other slaves in Islam, had been brought over from outside the borders of
Muslim lands.
Eunuch slaves in China, in stark contrast, were almost exclusively Chinese
procured locally. [42]
Hogendorn [43] has identified the three main slave producing regions, as
they evolved in importance over time, from the 8th through the late 19th
centuries:
These areas were the forested parts of central and eastern Europe called by
Muslims the “Bild as-Saqaliba” (“slave country”), the word saqlab meaning
slave in Arabic (and related to the ethnic designation “Slav”); the steppes
of central Asia called the “Bilad al-Atrak” (“Turks’ country” or Turkestan);
and eventually most important, the savanna and the fringes of the wooded
territory south of the Sahara called the country of the blacks or “Bilad
as-Sudan”.
Lastly, given the crudeness of available surgical methods and absence of
sterile techniques, the human gelding procedure by which eunuchs were
“manufactured” was associated with extraordinary rates of morbidity and
mortality. Hogendorn describes the severity of the operation, and provides
mortality information from West and East Africa: [44]
Castration can be partial (removal of the testicles only or removal of the
penis only), or total (removal of both). In the later period of the trade,
that is, after Africa became the most important source for Mediterranean
Islam, it appears that most eunuchs sold to the markets underwent total
removal. This version of the operation, though considered most appropriate
for slaves in constant proximity to harem members, posed a very high danger
of death for two reasons. First was the extensive hemorrhaging, with the
consequent possibility of almost immediate death. The hemorrhaging could not
be stopped by traditional cauterization because that would close the urethra
leading to eventual death because of inability to pass urine. The second
danger lay in infection of the urethra, with the formation of pus blocking
it and so causing death in a few days.
.when the castration was carried out in sub-Saharan West and West-Central
Africa.a figure of 90% [is] often mentioned. Even higher death rates were
occasionally reported, unsurprising in tropical areas where the danger of
infection of wounds was especially high. At least one contemporary price
quotation supports a figure of over 90% mortality: Turkish merchants are
said to have been willing to pay 250 to 300 (Maria Theresa) dollars each for
eunuchs in Borno (northeast Nigeria) at a time when the local price of young
male slaves does not seem to have exceeded about 20 dollars.Many sources
indicate very high death rates from the operation in eastern Africa..
Richard Millant’s [1908] general figure for the Sudan and Ethiopia is 90%
Conclusion
Contemporary manifestations of Islamic slavery-certainly the razzias (raids)
waged by Arab Muslim militias against their black Christian, animist, and
animist-Muslim prey in both the southern Sudan and Darfur-and even in its
own context, the persistence of slavery in Mauritania (again, black slaves,
Arab masters)-reflect the pernicious impact of jihad slavery as an enduring
Muslim institution. Even Ottoman society, arguably the most progressive in
Muslim history, and upheld just recently at a United Nations conference as a
paragon of Islamic ecumenism, never produced a William Wilberforce, much
less a broad, religiously-based slavery abolition movement spearheaded by
committed Muslim ulema. Indeed, it is only modern Muslim freethinkers,
anachronistically referred to as “apostates,” who have had the courage and
intellectual integrity to renounce the jihad, including jihad slavery,
unequivocally, and based upon an honest acknowledgement of its devastating
military and social history. When the voices of these Muslim freethinkers
are silenced in the Islamic world-by imprisonment and torture, or
execution-the outcome is tragic, but hardly unexpected. That such insightful
and courageous voices have been marginalized or ignored altogether in the
West is equally tragic and reflects the distressing ignorance of Western
policymaking elites.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
RA Ambassador to Canada Speaks about The Genocide To U. of Ottawa
RA AMBASSADOR TO CANADA SPEAKS ABOUT ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN INTERVIEW TO
STUDENT RADIOSTATION OF UNIVERSITY OF OTTAWA
OTTAWA, APRIL 13, NOYAN TAPAN. The Student Radiostation of the
University of Ottawa broadcast live an half hour’s interveiw with Ara
Papian, the Ambassador of Armenia to Canada on April 11. As Noyan
Tapan was informed from the RA Foreign Ministry’s Press and
Information Department, the interview was dedicated to the Armenian
Genocide, its causes and consequences, as well as events in Canada
dedicated to the 90th anniversary of the Genocide. The radiostation
broadcasts for 17 thousand students of the University of Ottawa but it
is acceptable in the most part of the city of Ottawa. The interveiw
will be broadcast once more on April 14.
Human Rights Library in Sevan Town
A1plus
| 14:15:21 | 13-04-2005 | Social |
HUMAN RIGHTS LIBRARY IN SEVAN TOWN
>From now on in the Sevan town the protection of Human Rights is paid serious
attention. Today the opening ceremony of the Human Rights Library was held
in the Cultural Palace of Sevan town. Representatives of state governing and
local self-governing bodies, as well as international, local organizations
and the mass media were invited to the event.
Sevan Human Rights Library is the sixth one among the libraries of the ACRPC
Human Rights Library Network. The other libraries are located in Vanadzor,
Dilijan, Hrazdan, Artashat and Gavar towns of Armenia.
There is a reading-room in the newly founded library; it is saturated with
modern computer techniques and stationary.
The book fund is accounted through the software program WINISIS, which also
gives the opportunity of a fast search of needed publications.
The readers make use also of the Legal Informative System IrTek, which
represents the e-versions of the full set of legislative enactments, laws
and legal acts adopted by state bodies of the republic.
At present the Network possesses about 15000 pieces of literature of 3600
titles. The libraries receive the periodical republican and foreign press.