Special for the Armenian Weekly
The two key human rights concepts of “crimes against humanity” and
“genocide” have their roots in the response to the Young Turk mass
deportations and massacres of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire during
World War I. Following the April 24, 1915 mass arrests of hundreds of
Armenian political, religious, and community leaders in Constantinople
and their subsequent exile and deaths, and the massacres of multitudes
of other Armenian civilians, the Entente allied powers of England,
France, and Russia on May 24, 1915 warned that the Young Turk
dictatorship would be held accountable for the massacres and the “new
crimes of Turkey against humanity and civilization.”
In 1921, Soghomon Tehlirian was put on trial in Germany for having
assassinated Mehmet Talat, one of the key Young Turk triumvirate
responsible for the deportations and massacres of the Armenians. Raphael
Lemkin, a young Polish university student, who would later become a
lawyer, wondered why there existed domestic laws to deal with the murder
of one person, but no international law to punish those responsible for
the mass killing of a million or more persons. During the 1930’s,
Lemkin suggested the twin concepts of “vandalism” and “barbarism” to
deal with such crimes. The former dealt with the destruction of cultural
artifacts, while the latter related to acts of violence against
defenseless groups. By 1944, these twin concepts had merged into his
proposed international term: “genocide.” The new concept, along with
“crimes against humanity,” would become a key pillar of international
law.
With the introduction of the two crucial legal concepts of “crimes
against humanity” and “genocide,” it remained for scholars and
prosecutors alike to apply these principles to specific cases. Over
time, there emerged the need to compare different historical and
contemporary examples. Pioneering analytical and comparative books, such
as Irving Horowitz’s Genocide (New Brunswick, Transaction Books, 1976) and Leo Kuper’s Genocide
(Harmondsworth, Penguin Books, 1981), were penned in this regard.
Before long, the field of genocide studies emerged and was formalized
with the birth of the International Association of Genocide Studies
(IAGS) in 1994. However, a challenge familiar to many in comparative
politics arose; given that most individuals and scholars lack the global
expertise to know sufficient details about all of the major case
studies, there was an urgent need for encyclopedias and dictionaries on
genocide.
Drawing intellectual inspiration and editorial guidance from Israel
Charny, a pioneering project was launched. In 1999, the two-volume Encyclopedia of Genocide,
(Santa Barbara, ABC-CLIO, 1999) was published. With substantial input
by Rouben Adalian, the encyclopedia included two-dozen entries about the
Armenian Genocide and the Ottoman Young Turk regime. The encyclopedia
also contained several thematic entries that cited reference to the
Armenian case. Adalian led the way with 17 entries that he penned on
such such as the Hamidian Massacres, Adana, Musa Dagh, the Young Turks,
Woodrow Wilson, and Henry Morgenthau, Sr. Other prominent authors
included Vahakn Dadrian (Armenian Genocide documentation and courts
martial), Roger Smith (Armenian Genocide denial), Robert Melson
(comparison of the Armenian Genocide and the Holocaust), Samuel Totten
(genocide films and literature), Peter Balakian (poetry on the Armenian
Genocide), Sybil Milton (Armin T. Wegner), and Steve Jacobs (Raphael
Lemkin). The two volumes were not only pioneering, but remain quite
useful even today. This is a testament to their strong scholarship and
the continued importance of the topic.
Soon after the appearance of the English-language two volume Encyclopedia of Genocide, a French-language one-volume version appeared: Israel Charny, ed., Le Livre noir de l’humanite: Encyclopedie mondiale des genocides
(Toulouse, Editions Privat, 2001). For the most part in the French
edition, the entries on the Armenian Genocide and other genocides were
the same, but there were a few additions and deletions. Overall,
students of the Armenian Genocide were exceptionally well served by the
two editions.
The three-volume set edited by Dinah Shelton, titled Encyclopedia of Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity
(Detroit, Thomson Gale, 2005), provided extensive material on the
Holocaust and attempted to be more inclusive of other genocides.
However, the coverage on the Armenian Genocide (with under 10 full
entries) was less in this 3-volume account than in the earlier and
smaller English and French Encyclopedia of Genocide.
Nevertheless, the entries were written by prominent figures: Vahakn
Dadrian (Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, Talat), Dennis Papazian
(Armenians in Russia and the USSR), Michael Hagopian (Armenian Genocide
documentary films), Atom Egoyan (Armenian Genocide feature films), and
Peter Balakian (poetry, including a section on the Armenian Genocide).
The cluster of entries was stronger on the arts angle of the Armenian
Genocide than the history or sociology. For example, Henry Morgenthau,
Jr. addressing the Holocaust was listed, but not Henry Morgenthau, Sr.
on the Armenian Genocide. The entry on Benjamin Whitaker was an
important one, but remained silent on the Turkish government’s powerful
efforts to thwart the UN’s Whitaker Report, which contained an important
historical reference to the Armenian Genocide. The encyclopedia did,
however, include an entry by Christopher Simpson on German missionary
Johannes Lepsius and his brave report during World War I on the Armenian
massacres. On another positive note, some of the thematic entries
provided references to the Armenian Genocide.
The one-volume account edited by Leslie Horvitz and Christopher Catherwood, Encyclopedia of War Crimes and Genocide
(New York, Facts on File, 2006), contained only one main entry on the
Armenian Genocide and one partial reference in the entry on “crimes
against humanity.” This was inadequate coverage of one of the major
genocides of the 20th century. It seemed that the pattern had become one of declining coverage. But that was about to change.
The two-volume collection co-edited and co-authored by Samuel Totten
and Paul Bartrop (with some assistance from Steve Jacobs), titled Dictionary of Genocide
(Westport, Greenwood, 2008), saw a return to more comprehensive
coverage. While no Armenian Genocide specialist authors were listed as
contributors, the volumes included at least 40 entries on the Armenian
Genocide and covered a wide range of topics. Entries dealt with the key
perpetrators (Abdul Hamid II, Committee of Union and Progress/CUP, Ahmed
Djemal, Ismail Enver, Mehemet Talat, Mehemed Nazim), famous places and
incidents (Adana, Deir ez Zor, Forty Days of Musa Dagh), key
humanitarian figures (Johannes Lepsius, British Viscount James Bryce,
Ambassador Henry Morgenthau, German military medic Armin T. Wegner),
international reaction (British and the Bryce Report on the “Treatment
of the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire,” American on the formation of
the “Armenian Atrocities Committee”), films (“Ararat,” “Voices from the
Lake,” “Armenia: The Betrayed”), genocide centers (Armenian Genocide
Institute Museum, Zoryan Institute), Armenian Genocide denialist authors
(Bernard Lewis, Justin McCarthy), links to related Ottoman genocides
(Assyrians, Pontic Greeks), and the Holocaust. It is a highly readable
set of volumes that provides useful summary information about the
Armenian Genocide. However, some readers would want more detailed
entries, and that was about to appear.
In the internet age, it was inevitable that an online encyclopedia of
genocide would emerge. The American educational publisher ABC-CLIO
recently created a large database on genocide that was primarily
intended for high school students and teachers, but would also be
valuable to university students and professors. Entitled “Modern
Genocide: Understanding Causes and Consequences,” it is available for an
annual subscription fee. Developed in consultation with an advisory
board comprised of Paul Bartrop, Steven Jacobs, and Suzanne Ransleben,
the database continues to grow and be updated. At the current time, it
contains seven main entries on the Armenian Genocide (Overview, Causes,
Consequences, Perpetrators, Victims, Bystanders, International Reaction)
by Alan Whitehorn. There are also several discussion essays by various
authors (including Colin Tatz and Henry Theriault) on Armenian Genocide
recognition and how well the genocide has been known, and about 70
individual subject entries. Entries include pieces done by Rouben
Adalian, Paul Bartrop, Zaven Khatchaturian, Robert Melson, Khatchig
Mouradian, Rubina Peroomian, George Shirinian, Roger Smith, and others.
However, not as many Armenian Genocide specialists have contributed as
one might have expected. In addition to the encyclopedia entries and
genocide timeline, there are some primary source documents and photos.
The online database provides useful insight on the Armenian Genocide. It
also suggests what might be possible if all of the entries were to be
gathered together into a separate encyclopedic volume that is focused on
the genocide. Unfortunately, this is something that has not yet been
done, but that one hopes will occur before 2015.
Quite significantly, all of the genocide encyclopedias together show
that the Armenian Genocide constitutes an important case study, as it is
included in each and every genocide encyclopedia from the first to the
most recent. This reflects academic consensus among genocide scholars
that the mass deportations and killings of Armenians constitute
genocide. These important scholarly reference works thus provide
significant academic documentation that can serve to repudiate the
Turkish state’s repeated polemical denials of the Armenian Genocide.
Accordingly, these genocide encyclopedias ought to be cited by scholars,
jurists, and citizens alike. The European Court of Human Rights, in its
recent (Dec. 17, 2013) flawed decision on Armenian Genocide denial,
should have been aware of such key academic reference works. If they
had, their reasoning, in all likelihood, would have been different.
Without a doubt, these encyclopedias’ coverage of the Armenian Genocide
remind us that time is long overdue for the Turkish government and its
citizens to face the dark pages of their history.
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
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