Wednesday, September 21, 2011

The Turkish Slaughter Of Christians In Asia Minor: The Adana Massacre


From Wikipedia:

Adana massacre


A street in the Christian quarter of Adana, photographed in June 1909.

An Armenian town left pillaged and destroyed, during the Adana massacre.
The Adana massacre occurred in Adana Province, in the Ottoman Empire, in April 1909. A religious-ethnic clash[1] in the city of Adana amidst governmental upheavalresulted in a series of anti-Armenian pogroms throughout the district. Reports estimated that the massacres in Adana Province resulted in 15,000-30,000 deaths.[2][3][4][5]

Turkish and Armenian revolutionary groups had worked together to secure the restoration of constitutional rule, in 1908. On 31 March (or 13 April, by the Western calendar) a military revolt directed against the Committee of Union and Progressseized Istanbul. While the revolt lasted only ten days, it precipitated a massacre of Armenians in the province of Adana that lasted over a month.
The massacres were rooted in political, economic,[6] and religious differences. The Armenian segment of the population of Adana was the "richest and most prosperous", and the violence included the destruction of "tractors and other kinds of mechanized equipment."[2] The Christian-minority Armenians had also openly supported the coup against Sultan Abdul Hamid II, which had deprived the Islamic head of state of power. The awakening of Turkish nationalism, and the perception of the Armenians as a separatist, European-controlled entity, also contributed to the violence.[2]

Origins


Bodies of massacred Armenians during the Adana massacre.                     Read the whole article on: 
The Iconoclast





Enhanced by Zemanta

No comments:

Post a Comment