Azerbaijan, Armenia Could Cause A World War

AZERBAIJAN, ARMENIA COULD CAUSE A WORLD WAR

The Daily Utah Chronicle: University of Utah
January 13, 2014 Monday

By Rose Jones on January 13, 2014.

The current battle stage between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the
small enclave Nagorno-Karabakh was set after the collapse of the
Soviet Union. They both declared independence in 1991, keeping the
geographical structure of their previous Socialist Republics.

Currently the two war-ready countries, which have diverse religions,
cultures and languages, also have the potential to trigger another
world war.

Empires have bounced Armenia around for centuries. Armenians as an
ethnic culture date themselves back tens of thousands of years and
still use their time-honored language.

Azerbaijan, historically ancient Albanian, was populated in the 11th
century by ethnic Turks who, unlike their Sunni brothers in Turkey,
are majority Shi’a Muslims. Azerbaijan, Nakhchivan and Armenia
were seized from the Ottoman Empire by the Russians in the 1828 and
1877 Russo-Turkishwars. Nakhchivan is geographically separate from
Azerbaijan but shares Azeri culture and language.

Following the Bolshevik revolution, Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia
fell under control of the Soviet Union as the Transcaucasian Soviet
Socialist Republic. In 1922, they became separate Socialist Republics.

Soviet leader Joseph Stalin later designated Nagorno-Karabakh – known
by Armenians as Artsahk – and Nakhchivan to be governed by Azerbaijan,
which is still recognized internationally. Stalin’s dictate planted
the seeds of war between the two countries, generating a simmering
pot that is ready to boil.

Nagorno-Karabakh is over 80 percent ethnic Armenian, completely
surrounded by Azeri Turks. It covers seven rayons, or “districts,”
in the southwest quadrant of Azerbaijan.

In September 1991, Armenia claimed independence and included
Nagorno-Karabakh in their referendum. Three months later,
Azerbaijan, with Nakhchivan, claimed independence and also included
Nagorno-Karabakh, as it is inside of their national borders. The
battle over Nagorno-Karabakh immediately ensued. By 1994, 30,000 from
both sides had been killed, before a fragile ceasefire was put into
place. Conditions have risen to near-war status several times since,
inflamed by actions from one side or the other.

With decades of talks between the countries going nowhere and deadly
battles flaring from time to time, Nagorno-Karabakh has been in a state
of limbo. The citizens of Nagorno-Karabakh are fed up with both sides
and are calling for their own independent state. Armenia is cautiously
supportive of that notion. However, Azerbaijan rejects the idea because
it would leave a large foreign-governed island within their state.

The geography is multi-dimensional and complex, confused more by the
positions of allies and the allies’ security agreements with outside
interests. Armenia is landlocked between Azerbaijan to the east,
Georgia to the North, Iran to the south and Turkey to the West.

Azerbaijan’s capital, Baku, and its eastern shoreline on the Caspian
Sea are rich with oil and natural gas reserves, affording Azerbaijan
political clout and wealth for their military. Armenia has the tactical
advantage of mountain ranges, which are more defensible than offensive,
and they have weapons availability from their allies Russia and Iran.

As a recipient of United States foreign aid, Azerbaijan allied with
Israel against Iran, regardless of their common Shi’a majorities.

Turkey, with its massive military, is also allied with Azerbaijan,
pitting Russia – an ally of Armenia – and Turkey against each other.

Iran, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon welcomed millions of Armenians fleeing
the Ottoman Empire during World War I, so they ally against Turkey,
which also allies Iran with Russia. Armenians served in both the
Russian and Iranian armed forces. The U.S. attempts to ally with both
countries, but U.S. partnership with NATO Turkey and the perceived
war against Islam causes neither country to trust U.S. policy.

In 2012 things were especially tense when Hungary released convicted
Azeri officer Ramil Safarov back to Azerbaijan. He had killed Armenian
officer Gurgen Markarian in a training camp in Budapest.

And the situation just keeps getting hotter. Both the Armenian and the
Azerbaijani presidents have exchanged military action-laced barbs and
threatening comments.Nagorno-Karabakh is about the size of Sarajevo
and is situated among similar nationalist warring cultures. If a
21st century Archduke Franz Ferdinand happens by at the right time,
we could repeat the events of one century ago this year – only this
time we have weapons of mass destruction.

http://www.dailyutahchronicle.com/index.php/azerbaijan-armenia-could-cause-a-world-war/

Armenian Premier Calls For Complying With Schedule Of Armenia’s Join

ARMENIAN PREMIER CALLS FOR COMPLYING WITH SCHEDULE OF ARMENIA’S JOINING CUSTOMS UNION

ITAR-TASS, Russia
January 14, 2014 Tuesday 03:58 PM GMT+4

YEREVAN January 14

– Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan called for complying with a schedule
of Armenia’s joining of the Customs Union (Russia, Belarus and
Kazakstan).

Sargsyan told Itar-Tass on December 27 that the roadmap, which had
been worked out by the presidents of Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and
Armenia at the summit in Moscow on December 24, “implies that we’ll
have an agreement on joining the Customs Union in May”.

“This task was set to 22 working groups, involving the best specialists
and experts of our country,” Sargsyan said, adding, “The Customs
Union partners praised the work of our experts.”

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan said on September 3 that Armenia
intended to join the Customs Union and would be involved in forming
the Eurasian economic union.

“Much was done. Within four months we’ll be able to come to agreement
on the roadmap with specialists from the Eurasian Economic Commission.

This will guarantee that we’ll be able to prepare an agreement on
joining the Customs Union till May,” the Armenian premier said.

The World Must Be Ready To Learn The Truth About The Events Of 1915:

THE WORLD MUST BE READY TO LEARN THE TRUTH ABOUT THE EVENTS OF 1915: TURKISH PM

by Marianna Lazarian

Wednesday, January 15, 17:43

The world must be ready to learn the truth about the events of 1915,
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Erdogan said during a conference of
diplomats.

TRT Haber quotes him as saying that in order to understand what is
going on today, one should more often refer to history. “To forget
history is a crime,” Erdogan said.

Now that the 100th year of the Armenian Genocide is near, more and
more such crucial statements are being made.

The Armenian-Turkish protocols signed in Zurich on Oct 10 2009
suggested forming a commission of independent historians. Turkey was
thereby trying to turn the Armenian Genocide into a historical issue.

But the protocols were not ratified because of Ankara’s preconditions.

Turkey’s official position on the Armenian Genocide is that the events
of 1915 were a result of WW1.

http://www.arminfo.am/index.cfm?objectid=661DA2B0-7DF3-11E3-988B0EB7C0D21663

Turkish Intellectual RagıP Zarakolu To Live In Sweden

TURKISH INTELLECTUAL RAGıP ZARAKOLU TO LIVE IN SWEDEN

10:41, 15 January, 2014

YEREVAN, JANUARY 15, ARMENPRESS: The Turkish intellectual and human
rights defender Ragip Zarakolu, who recognized the Armenian Genocide
and wrote tens of books on the issue, will live for two years in the
city of Sigtuna, Sweden. Armenpress reports that the Kurdish Firat
agency informed about it. The press release, spread by the Sigtuna
Municipality, says that Zarakolu will be received as a guest by
the offer of the International Cities of Refuge Network and the PEN
international organizations, already agreed with the human rights
defender.

The statement reminds that after the military intervention in 1971
in Turkey, Zarakolu was imprisoned for having “secret ties” with the
Amnesty International organization and was taken to court for about 40
times for publishing books related to the Armenian Genocide and other
minorities. Besides, in October 2011 in the framework of the events
organized against the Kurdish Communities Union in Istanbul, Zarakolu
was arrested and was released only in seven months. Notwithstanding
the difficulties, Zarakolu continues living in Turkey.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/746225/turkish-intellectual-rag%C4%B1p-zarakolu-to-live-in-sweden.html

Lebanese Armenian Businessmen To Build Township In Karabakh Village

LEBANESE ARMENIAN BUSINESSMEN TO BUILD TOWNSHIP IN KARABAKH VILLAGE

11:30, 15 January, 2014

YEREVAN, JANUARY 15, ARMENPRESS: To stand alongside the Artsakh people,
to support the resettlement programs and contribute to the development
and revival of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic. To achieve that goal,
three years ago ARI (Artsakh Roots Investment) organization decided
to make investments in Artsakh.

In the first program, launched three years ago, about 100 businessmen
provided credits for the implementation of the agricultural and
livestock programs of 800 immigrants of Kashatagh region, in the
result of which today Kashatagh is one of the agricultural centers
of the country with 6,000 hectares of land and about 2,000 livestock.

“During the meetings with the people, president and the prime minister
of Artsakh, we understood that parallel to the providing of living
means, it is necessary to think about the housing problems of the
immigrants, creation of the comfortable and favorable conditions for
their living and working. For that particular reason 57 Diaspora
Armenian businessmen concentrated their attention to the Aghavni
Village of Kashatagh region, being the gates to Artsakh, and decided to
build a small township there. No land will be resettled and no economy
will be developed only with charity. Due to the cooperation with the
Government of Karabakh, we managed to convince the Lebanese businessmen
to make investments in the motherland, instead of the foreign shores”,
– said the Deputy Executive Director of Artsakh Roots Investment,
the Lebanese Armenian Benjamin Bchakchyan, stating that $2 million
has already been collected for the building of apartments.

After the construction of the township, the Government of the Nagorno
Karabakh Republic will implement the resettlement program with low
mortgage interest rates or other social programs. The Deputy Prime
Minister of Artsakh Arthur Aghabekyan stated that thus a mortgage
market will be formed in Karabakh.

Lebanese Armenian businessmen to build township in Karabakh village

11:30, 15 January, 2014

YEREVAN, JANUARY 15, ARMENPRESS: To stand alongside the Artsakh people,
to support the resettlement programs and contribute to the development
and revival of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic. To achieve that goal,
three years ago ARI (Artsakh Roots Investment) organization decided
to make investments in Artsakh.

In the first program, launched three years ago, about 100 businessmen
provided credits for the implementation of the agricultural and
livestock programs of 800 immigrants of Kashatagh region, in the
result of which today Kashatagh is one of the agricultural centers
of the country with 6,000 hectares of land and about 2,000 livestock.

“During the meetings with the people, president and the prime minister
of Artsakh, we understood that parallel to the providing of living
means, it is necessary to think about the housing problems of the
immigrants, creation of the comfortable and favorable conditions for
their living and working. For that particular reason 57 Diaspora
Armenian businessmen concentrated their attention to the Aghavni
Village of Kashatagh region, being the gates to Artsakh, and decided to
build a small township there. No land will be resettled and no economy
will be developed only with charity. Due to the cooperation with the
Government of Karabakh, we managed to convince the Lebanese businessmen
to make investments in the motherland, instead of the foreign shores”,
– said the Deputy Executive Director of Artsakh Roots Investment,
the Lebanese Armenian Benjamin Bchakchyan, stating that $2 million
has already been collected for the building of apartments.

After the construction of the township, the Government of the Nagorno
Karabakh Republic will implement the resettlement program with low
mortgage interest rates or other social programs. The Deputy Prime
Minister of Artsakh Arthur Aghabekyan stated that thus a mortgage
market will be formed in Karabakh.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/746236/lebanese-armenian-businessmen-to-build-township-in-karabakh-village.html

Karabakh Government Decides On Action Plan For 2014 Budget Execution

KARABAKH GOVERNMENT DECIDES ON ACTION PLAN FOR 2014 BUDGET EXECUTION

STEPANAKERT, January 15. /ARKA/. The government of Nagorno-Karabakh
republic (NKR) made a decision on measures to ensure the 2014 budget
execution, the press office of the government reported.

The decision approves state procurement procedures, increase in
salaries and lists for compensations to communities that suffered
from natural disasters in 2013, according to the report.

NKR’s premier Ara Harutiunyan stressed the importance of all state
procurements to be made as per the approved plans and of additional
costs to be agreed upon in advance.

Harutiunyan urged the cabinet members to strictly adhere to deadlines
to avoid extra obligations. The premier instructed to complete pension
payment process by the 15th of each month. -0–

– See more at:

http://arka.am/en/news/economy/karabakh_government_decides_on_action_plan_for_2014_budget_execution/#sthash.bZWg9j1r.dpuf

Armenia Ranks As 57th World Country With Good Food – OXFAM

ARMENIA RANKS AS 57TH WORLD COUNTRY WITH GOOD FOOD – OXFAM

12:51 ~U 15.01.14

Oxfam’s latest food index, indicating “the best and worst places
to eat”, has placed Armenia in the 57th position in the list of 125
world countries.

The ranking positions Armenia as a leading country in the South
Caucasus region. Azerbaijan ranks as the 91st state. Georgia is not
included in the index. The other neighbors of Armenia, Turkey and Iran,
rank the 77th and 80th , respectively.

The index is drawn up based on the calorie content and value of food,
as well as the accessibility of drinking water and traditions of
using healthy food.

A top country on the list is Holland. Chad was found to be the worst
place to eat.

The index can be accessed here.

http://www.oxfam.org.uk/what-we-do/good-enough-to-eat
http://www.tert.am/en/news/2014/01/15/oxfam-arm/

Ce Que Survivre Veut Dire : Apres Le Genocide Armenien, La Shoah Et

CE QUE SURVIVRE VEUT DIRE : APRES LE GENOCIDE ARMENIEN, LA SHOAH ET HIROSHIMA

Publie le : 15-01-2014

Info Collectif VAN – – Le Collectif VAN vous
invite a lire la traduction de Georges Festa d’un article en anglais de
Taleen Babayan publie sur le site The Armenian Mirror-Spectator, mise
en ligne sur le site Armenian Trends – Mes Armenies le 14 janvier 2014.

Armenian Trends – Mes Armenies

mardi 14 janvier 2014

Universite Columbia – Ce que survivre veut dire : après le genocide
armenien, la Shoah et Hiroshima

© Columbia University Press, 2012

Ce que survivre veut dire

Symposium a l’Universite Columbia (New York), 4 dec. 2013

par Taleen Babayan

The Armenian Mirror-Spectator, 11.01.2014

NEW YORK – Un symposium sur le sens lie au statut de survivant,
qui reunissait d’eminents chercheurs dans ce domaine – Peter
Balakian, Robert Jay Lifton et Marianne Hirsch, s’est tenu a
l’universite Columbia, mercredi 4 decembre dernier, dans le cadre
d’une manifestation organisee par le Centre Armenien de cette meme
universite.

Intitulee “Ce que survivre veut dire : après le genocide armenien, la
Shoah et Hiroshima,” cette table ronde s’est interessee aux sequelles
des survivants de ces catastrophes humaines, cherchant a comprendre
leurs experiences tragiques.

Poète et auteur reconnu, laureat de nombreux prix, Peter Balakian
fut presente par Marianne Hirsch, titulaire de la chaire William
Peterfield de litterature anglaise et comparee a l’universite Columbia,
qui officiait en qualite de moderatrice et qui a ecrit plusieurs
ouvrages importants sur le traumatisme, la memoire et la Shoah.

P. Balakian presenta un recit personnel, heritage familial, a savoir
celui de sa grand-mère, Nafina, survivante du genocide armenien,
en guise d'”introduction au debat sur l’experience de survivant.”

Habitant a Diyarbakir a l’epoque du genocide armenien, les habitations
et les biens de sa famille furent pilles et confisques, et elle fut
temoin du massacre de sa famille et de sa communaute. Nafina survecut
a une marche forcee, dans laquelle tous les membres de sa famille
furent tues.

Arrivee a Alep a l’automne 1915, elle se met a compiler des
declarations sous serment, en vue d’un procès, au nom des droits de
l’homme, contre le gouvernement turc pour toutes les pertes subies
par sa famille. P. Balakian lut la demande d’indemnisation de sa
grand-mère, extraite de ses Memoires, Black Dog of Fate, distingues
par le New York Times. La plainte, rappela-t-il, qu’elle deposa a
son arrivee aux Etats-Unis, “contribua a la prise en compte d’un
survivante au lendemain immediat d’un choc a grande echelle avec le
meurtre de masse, le viol, la malnutrition, la famine et la mort.”

“Elle fut temoin de la verite,” souligna Peter Balakian, titulaire
de la chaire Donald M. et Constance H. Rebar en sciences humaines a
l’universite Colgate (Hamilton, NY) et professeur associe d’etudes
armeniennes (chaire Ordjanian) a l’universite Columbia.

Chercheur, psychiatre et historien, Robert Jay Lifton, qui a ecrit
plus de vingt ouvrages sur le traumatisme, la survie et la violence,
a defini ensuite le survivant comme quelqu’un qui a, en quelque sorte,
rencontre la mort, en a ete temoin, tout en restant en vie.

“Il y a une victoire dans le fait de survivre, puisque l’on demeure
vivant,” rappela l’intervenant, professeur emerite en 3ème cycle a la
City University of NY et au John Jay College for Criminal Justice. “Il
est necessaire de donner du sens a ce genre de catastrophe, si l’on
veut trouver un sens au reste de son existence.”

Les survivants du bombardement d’Hiroshima, au Japon, après la Seconde
Guerre mondiale, souligna-t-il, vecurent toute leur existence en
proie a “une imagerie hantee par la mort,” nee de leur rencontre
avec les consequences de la tragedie qui furent transmises a la
generation suivante.

“Du sens lie au statut de survivant naît une mission du survivant,
que l’on entreprend, afin de faire valoir ce sens,” nota R. J. Lifton,
qui conclut son expose en revenant au recit de Nafina. “Un combat
heroïque fut mene par cette femme, qui chercha a s’opposer aux forces
de destruction dans son existence. Je ne pense pas qu’il y ait un
meilleur principe moral sur lequel nous puissions fonder notre monde.”

Succedant aux interventions de P. Balakian et R. J. Lifton,
Marianne Hirsch posa des questions complementaires, se demandant,
entre autres, pourquoi Nafina “fit le choix d’une plainte en justice,
non pour demander reparations, mais pour exprimer l’injustice subie
et commemorer les morts.”

“Il s’agit d’un point d’appui contre le fait d’avoir ete supprime ou
aneanti,” precisa P. Balakian, qui releva que la plainte n’aboutit
a rien et que le document resta dans le tiroir d’un buffet soixante
ans durant, jusqu’a ce qu’il le retrouvât. “Dans les cas de meurtres
de masse et de genocides, les survivants finissent par assumer un
rôle moral et la famille est essentielle. Cette plainte revet une
dimension post-mortem.”

Robert Jay Lifton rappela toute la serie de temoins, puisque Nafina
eprouve la catastrophe et raconte a nouveau son histoire a travers sa
plainte en justice. “Ce qui n’aboutit pas au plan juridique inaugure
les ramifications juridiques du temoignage, et il y a en cela quelque
chose d’emouvant.”

R. J. Lifton souligna que des desastres tels que la Shoah, Hiroshima
et le genocide armenien detruisent le sens, ainsi que les existences
et les structures humaines : “En tant qu’etres humains, nous sommes
des creatures assoiffees de sens. Voila pourquoi la lutte pour le sens
est si difficile, poignante et douloureuse – mais il en va toujours
ainsi, car c’est tel est notre fonctionnement mental. Il nous faut
recreer tout ce que nous percevons.”

Son intervention fut suivie d’un debat anime, tandis que des echanges
informels se poursuivirent en soiree, concluant un semestre memorable
de manifestations accueillies par le Centre Armenien de Columbia.

Source : Traduction :
© Georges Festa – 01.2014

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Source/Lien : Armenian Trends – Mes Armenies

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ARG Cherche Des Marches Exterieurs Pour L’exportation D’electricite

ARG CHERCHE DES MARCHES EXTERIEURS POUR L’EXPORTATION D’ELECTRICITE

ARMENIE

Le Directeur general d’ArmRosGazprom (ARG) Vardan Harutyunyan
a charge son entreprise de recherche des marches exterieurs pour
vendre l’electricite produite par la cinquième unite de la centrale
de Hrazdan qui a demarre le 2 decembre dernier pendant la visite du
president russe Poutine en Armenie.

La capacite de la cinquième unite est de 480 megawatts. Elle peut
generer 3,3 milliards de kWh d’electricite par an. La construction
de l’installation a ete lance a la fin des annees 1980, mais a ete
au point mort a la suite de l’effondrement de l’Union sovietique.

La cinquième unite est plus puissante et plus efficace que les
quatre autres unites d’exploitation de la centrale. Son lancement
a considerablement renforce la capacite de production d’energie
de l’Armenie. La cinquième unite fonctionne grâce a des turbines a
vapeur et a gaz uniques non seulement au niveau de la region, mais
egalement dans le monde entier.

Vardan Harutyunyan a egalement souligne l’importance d’accroître la
capacite des installations de stockage souterrain du gaz a Abovyan.

L’annee dernière, elle a augmente de 140 millions de mètres cubes.

Le stockage de gaz Abovyan est un des principaux elements du système
de transport de gaz de l’Armenie qui assure la securite energetique
du pays. Il a ete construit en 1962 sur les depôts de sel a une
profondeur de 800 a 1000 mètres.

mercredi 15 janvier 2014, Stephane ©armenews.com

ANKARA: Turkey Through A Traveler’s Eyes: From Istanbul To Diyarbaki

TURKEY THROUGH A TRAVELER’S EYES: FROM ISTANBUL TO DIYARBAKIR WITH E. B. SOANE IN 1908 (2)

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Jan 13 2014

13 January 2014 /TERRY RICHARDSON, ÝSTANBUL

Today Þanlýurfa is one of the high points of any visit to Turkey’s
Southeast. This fast-growing city, its economy buoyed by the vast
irrigation project that is GAP (the Southeast Anatolian Project),
has an ancient heart spruced-up over the past couple of decades to
meet the demands of visitors.

GALLERY

They come here to experience Turkey’s most authentically Middle
Eastern bazaar, wander round the restored houses of the old quarter,
clamber to the top of a fantastic citadel rock overlooking the lush
gardens at its feet, and spend a night or two in a classy boutique
hotel fashioned from a period, honey-hued stone mansion.

The cave reputed to be the birthplace of the prophet Abraham is a
major draw for pilgrims from all over the Islamic world, while the
beautiful gardens at the foot of the citadel, incongruously green and
manicured in this dry and torrid region, appeal to Muslim pilgrims
and tourists alike. Here too are the still waters of the Pools of
Abraham, filled with shoals of overfed carp whose ancestors were
created when God rescued Abraham, hurled onto a pyre by the tyrant
Nimrod (Nemrut), by miraculously transforming the flames into water,
the burning branches into fish.

Urfa’s corner loafer efendis

The Urfa discovered by Soane a little over a hundred years ago was
rather different. Walls “of peculiar blackness,” likely going back
to the time of the city’s re-foundation as Edessa (the old name for
the city) in the Hellenistic period, still “stand everywhere.” Today
there are only scant remains. Gone too are the “families of sedentary
Kurds” who inhabited the “innumerable cave-dwellings of the ancients”
in the rocky outcrops around the citadel, as have the “enormous number
of Armenians” whom Sloane reports as living in the “clustered houses
upon the hummock forming the Armenian quarter.”

Like many a visitor today, Soane was captivated by Urfa, writing,
“The water supply is plentiful, the scenery around beautiful in its
ruggedness and the fantastic nature of its hills.” In fact, for the
anti-Turkish, London-born adventurer, Urfa’s only major problem was
the “Turks and their misrule,” not least the gaggles of minor Ottoman
officials, or “corner loafer efendis in uniform,” as Soane called
them, who “never appeared to have any kind of duties” bar cluttering
up Urfa’s cafes and eyeing travelers with suspicion.

Soaked in Siverek

After just two days in Urfa, where he stayed in a caravanserai, Soane
headed northeast for Diyarbakýr. The landscape around the mid-point of
his journey, the town of Siverek, is a bleak one, a vast lava-encrusted
plateau blasted by wind, rain and snow in winter, baked under a fierce
sun in summer. Soane describes “[t]he prospect as always immense,
always dreary” as he plodded across the plateau in April, with snow
patches still clinging to the rocks and the “sullen, frowning masses
of the Kurdistan mountains” to the north “half hidden in black clouds.”

Soane passed the night in Siverek in a “ruinous” Armenian-run
caravanserai. The sole high-point of his visit to the “mean town”
and its “peculiarly surly and ill-mannered” inhabitants was the
friendliness of the local imam. Having established Soane’s credentials
as a genuine Muslim by having him “repeat the creed,” he then helped
him buy bread from “an earth-oven” for the bargain price of “ten flaps
for two-pence.” Having been rained on all night in his leaky cell in
the caravanserai, Soane and his Muslim companions were outraged at the
price they were charged for their sub-standard accommodation and left
“cursing Christians and pagans in general and Armenians in particular.”

Few tourists venture to Siverek even today, though a handful do pass
through en route to Diyarbakýr from Urfa or Kahta (the base for Mt.

Nemrut), unsurprisingly given its bleak location and lack of obvious
historical remains. It’s nowhere near so unlovely as the town described
by Soane in 1908, however. Even his goal, though, was less than
spectacular at first sight than he might have hoped. “Approaching from
the west, Diarbekr is not beautiful nor remarkable …(it) appears as
a citadel of black stone without any green or vegetation.” He bucked
up as he got nearer, though, as “on slopes and the lands by the river
banks, there are splendid gardens, which in this month of April were
dressed in all the delicate hues of blossom and new leaf.”

Into the black city

Panic mode set in as Soane crossed the Tigris (Dicle) and neared a city
ringed by 6 kilometers of some of the finest Medieval city walls in
the world, as he knew the travel documents he had obtained in Ýstanbul
would be inspected at the gateway. And here he was, in the guise of
a Kurdish Muslim haci returning to his home in Persia from Mecca —
and known as such by his Muslim road companions — travelling on a
document “proclaiming [him] an English, British-born… Christian.”

At least he looked the part. “I was darkened by the wind and sun;
nine days black beard scraped the chest left bare by a buttonless
shirt. My trousers were muddy and torn, and I wore a long overcoat
very much like the robes of any of the myriad Turkish subjects who
adopt semi-European dress.”

Fortunately, the official was “utterly illiterate,” holding his
“passport… upside down” when inspecting it, and was satisfied
with Soane’s verbal assurances that he was a Persian-born British
subject en route to Mosul. “[W]ith a polite good-day,” Soane and his
companions passed through the formidable black basalt walls into what
was, and remains today, one of Turkey’s most fascinating cities.

Fortunately, the walled city of Diyarbakir has changed but little in
terms of its physical appearance since the time of Soane’s visit, its
venerable black with contrasting white stone-built houses, mosques,
churches, hans, caravanserais and the like still lining cobbled
streets following its original late-Roman ground plan. Indeed, the city
retains a fine caravanserai, the Deliler Haný, now a boutique hotel.

Coffee shops, Christians and conversations in Kurdish

>From his description, however, it seems that Soane lodged at the Hasan
Paþa Han. Today this beautifully restored building near Daðý Kapýsý
(Mountain Gate), built around an airy courtyard, is home to boutique
shops selling old carpets, kilims and brassware, as well as to a
coterie of cafes specializing in delicious Kurdish breakfast spreads.

Soane was delighted that his upstairs room had “a board floor, another
luxury this, in a country whose floors are of mud.” Like many travelers
to Turkey even now, once he had secured his lodgings for the night
Soane “retired to a coffee house outside for a cup of tea.”

But unlike most contemporary foreigner visitors, Soane was able to
converse with the cafe’s customers in the Kurdish he had learned
while working in Persia. One drawback, though, was that in his guise
as a Muslim, he was unable to visit the churches of the Christian
Armenians, Chaldeans (Keldani), Nestorians, Greeks and Syrian Orthodox
(Suriyani) who, along with the Kurds, then made up the majority of
the populous. Mind you, his view of the “Eastern” Christians was every
bit as negative as his opinion of the Turks. “It is unfortunate that
the Asiatic Christian is, as a rule, a very undesirable creature,
more bigoted than the most fanatical Muhammadan, of a craft and an
infidelity seldom witnessed in other lands, and of an attitude to
his co-religionists of different tenets that can only be described
as traitorous.”

By raft down the Tigris

Soane’s eventual goals were first Mosul, then Suleymaniya, in what
is now Northern Iraq but was then still Ottoman territory. Today,
in spite of the political turmoil in Iraq, it’s easy enough to hop
on a comfy air-conditioned coach in Diyarbakýr and head for various
cities in the relatively stable Kurdish enclave. The intrepid Sloane,
by contrast, used the best method available to the traveler in 1908,
a raft down the Tigris.

The vessel on which he floated down one of the world’s most evocative
rivers was a kalak, formed “from two hundred inflated goat skins
arranged in the form of ten by twenty … bound to a few thin
transverse poplar trunks above them.” Soane shared this ingenious
craft with an elderly Kurdish Haci he’d befriended in the caravanserai,
an Arab merchant from Mosul, a “foul-mouthed, blasphemous” young man
recently discharged from the Ottoman military and, last but not least,
sack loads of dried apricots.

All went well at first, as the raft drifted gently down a placid
river under clear blue skies. The third day brought a “strong gale
… with torrential rain,” soaking clothing, bedding and food alike,
even the sacks of apricots the passengers tried to seek shelter behind
were “slippery with the juice and wet that oozed from them.” The next
dawned fair, but with the river running high after the storm the raft
“was flying along at express speed” through deep defiles and “running
over submerged rocks.”

To Hasankeyf and Cizre

Further downstream, as the current slowed, Soane was treated to “one
of the most remarkable sights the Tigris has to offer.” They had
reached the soon-to-be-submerged ancient city of Hasankeyf, perched
on a sheer bluff above the river. Soane noted of Hasankeyf that “most
remarkable of all were the great piers of a once colossal bridge,” but
also mentions “cave dwellings,” minarets “the dimensions of factory
chimneys,” “a staircase zig-zagging down the cliff-face to where the
river laps the rocks wall.” All this survives for the time being,
but the waters of the Ilisu dam will soon destroy one of Turkey’s
most remarkable and beautiful sights.

Surviving a number of shots fired by Kurdish bandits, Soane and his
companions eventually reached Cizre, the last stop of his journey
on what is today Turkish territory. Here he was treated to tea by
curious locals before purchasing dates and rope for the remainder of
his river journey to Mosul.

Postcript: Soane made it to Mosul, then traveled onto Turkmen-dominated
Kirkuk. From there he crossed dangerous bandit country by caravan to
Suleymaniya. There he spent a considerable, making various forays to
places such as Halabja, before finally ending up in Baghdad. Here,
although he dispensed with his disguise, he was unable to adapt to his
old life. The sight of the “European bread, milky tea and boiled eggs”
served up in his hotel disgusted him and he “called for tea from a
tea shop, milkless, and in a small glass, not a great footbath of a
cup.” Sitting in a chair, not cross-legged, was torture and, worse,
he “felt a stranger and lonelier than (he) had ever done before.” At
journey’s end, Soane pined for “the coffee house and the bazaar, of
the multitudes of which I was one, and equal, and spoke and laughed,
and fought and wrangled.”

For a brief biography of Soane, and to read more about his adventures,
see Part 1 of this Today’s Zaman feature.

http://www.todayszaman.com/news-336460-turkey-through-a-travelers-eyes-from-istanbul-to-diyarbakir-with-e-b-soane-in-1908-2.html