Հարգելի ընթերցող: Այսուհետ International Journal of Armenian Genocide Studies հանդեսը հասանելի է նոր կայքում:
International Journal of Armenian Genocide Studies
ARTICLES
Robert TatoyanDr. Robert Tatoyan is a senior researcher at the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Foundation, Yerevan, Armenia. His research interests include the issues of demography of the Armenian population in the Ottoman Empire on the eve of the Armenian Genocide, particularly the analysis of statistical sources for that period.
He has authored numerous publications on the subject including the monograph “The Question of Western Armenian Population Number in 1878-1914,” (in Armenian) published in 2015 (for the complete list of publications visit: https://independent.academia.edu/RobertTatoyan).
Email: r.tatoyan@genocide-museum.am
Pages 7-31
Abstract
References to the issues of the number of Western Armenians and the ratio of Armenians to other ethnic groups in Western Armenia on the eve of the Armenian Genocide occupy a special place in the context of processes related to drafting a peace agreement with the Ottoman Empire and Armenia’s delineation after WWI. These issues were tackled by diverse Armenian official and non-official organizations struggling for the formation of an integral Armenian state, as well as Turkish authorities manipulating, inter alia, also demographic arguments against the Armenian claim for Western Armenia and the Entente Powers (particularly the United States of America and Great Britain) needing statistical data for deciding the fate of the Ottoman Empire. In the post-war processes the long-distance controversy of the Armenian and Turkish sides over the issues in question can be figuratively characterized as one of the stages — “battles” of the “statistical war” that emerged after 1878, i.e. following the entry of the Armenian Question into the international diplomatic agenda.
This article aims to present and analyse the statistics on the number of Western Armenians and the ratio of Armenians in Western Armenia to other ethnic groups on the eve of the Armenian Genocide presented by Armenian and Turkish delegations at Paris Peace Conference, as well as data circulated by the US and British diplomacy. It will try to explain the connection between the delineation of Armenia and the number of Western Armenians, the demographic composition of Western Armenia on the eve of the Armenian Genocide. The calculations of the number of Western Armenians have had a certain effect on deliberations around demarcation of the border between the Republic of Armenia and the Ottoman Empire in the context of post-war world regulation.
Keywords: statistics, Western Armenians’ population figure, demography of the Ottoman Empire, Paris Peace Conference, Armenian question, Armenian Genocide.
Received on 23.10.2020
Accepted on 08.02.2021
Meline MesropyanDr. Meline Mesropyan is a GSICS Fellow at Graduate School of International Cultural Studies, Tohoku University. She is a graduate (March 2019) of Tohoku University’s Graduate School of International Cultural Studies in Sendai, Japan. She has spent the last 6 years as a masters and PhD student researching the life and work of Diana Apcar. Her PhD dissertation, written in Japanese and making extensive use of Japanese archival data, dealt with the Japanese government’s processing of Armenian refugees during the Armenian Genocide and WWI and Diana Apcar’s role in this.
Email: melka5mes@gmail.com
Pages 33-47
Abstract
This article studies Diana Agabeg Apcar’s (1859-1937) perspective regarding the proposed American mandate over genocide-ravaged Armenia. It touches on aspects of historical empathy that are important in assessing the true nature of historical events. Through examining Diana Apcar’s correspondence with different individuals such as David Starr Jordan, Thomas J. Edmonds, Charles Albert Gobat as well as her articles related to this topic, this article aims to reveal the attitudes, opinions and mindset of this Armenian historical figure regarding the mandate issue.
Keywords: Armenian Genocide, American mandate, protectorate for Armenia, Paris Peace Conference, League of Nations, historical empathy.
Received on 17.02.2021
Accepted on 28.04.2021
Shushan R. KhachatryanDr. Shushan R. Khachatryan is a theologian and head of the Armenian Genocide Victims’ Documentation and Data Collection Department at the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Foundation. Her research interests include theological and religious studies of genocides, religious clashes during the genocides, philosophy of Holocaust, theodicy, persecutions of Christians in 20th — 21st centuries, etc.
Email: khachatryan.shushan@genocide-museum.am
Pages 49-79
Abstract
It is a well-known fact that the Islamisation of Christian children in the Ottoman Empire has a long history. In the great majority of cases Islamisation was carried out forcibly, accompanied by the erasure of a child’s ethnic-religious identity for those who remembered it and totally hiding their ethnic roots and religious affiliation from those who didn’t. The whole process of cultivating a new identity and character was a matter of time and of contested methods.
This article identifies a problem area, raising questions and analyzing the role of Turkish intellectual Halidé Edip in the state policy of Turkification of Armenian children at the Antoura orphanage during the Armenian Genocide. It draws comparisons between the three memoirs of Armenian orphans from that orphanage that are known to date, those of Garnik Banean (Karnig Panian as written in his English language memoir), Harutyun Alboyajyan, and Melgon Petrosean and that written by Halidé Edip. As a result, certain essential differences, ploys, as well as facts disguised by Edip have been collected and presented in this article. Therefore, the research carried out identifies the problems areas relating to various aspects of the Antoura orphanage by raising new questions, offering explanations and new approaches as well as highlighting issues that need to be researched further.
Keywords: Armenian Genocide, Djemal Pasha, Halidé Edip, Adnan Adıvar, Antoura orphanage, Armenian orphans, Islamisation, eugenics.
Received on 05.02.2021
Accepted on 19.03.2021
Acknowledgment: The work was supported by the Science Committee of RA, in the frames of the research project № 19YR-6F036.
Joceline ChabotJoceline Chabot is a full professor of history in the Department of History and Geography (Moncton University, Canada). Her current research focuses on humanitarian and socio-health aid to Armenian and Greek refugees in Asia Minor after WWI.
Email: joceline.chabot@umoncton.ca, Sylvia KasparianSylvia Kasparian is a full professor of Linguistics in the Department of French Studies and Director of the Textual Data Analysis Laboratory at the University of Moncton (Canada). Her main research focuses on representations in the media, in particular representations of the Armenian Genocide from press corpus and testimonial literature (survivors and humanitarian and health workers).
Email: sylvia.kasparian@umoncton.ca
Pages 81-91
Abstract
In September 1922, the great fire of Smyrna drove more than 200,000 Armenian and Greek refugees to the wharves of that port city. They had fled to Smyrna to escape the massacres perpetrated by Turkish nationalist troops and now urgently needed humanitarian aid to relocate them to safety in Greece. In this article we examine the actions and the roles of humanitarian workers of the Near East Relief (NER) and the American Women’s Hospitals (AMH) working in Greece among these refugees deported from Smyrna. We highlight the central role of women doctors and nurses in their humanitarian efforts to save this population. Their actions, and the gratitude of their peers and government authorities, solidified their professional status in the context of profound changes to transnational humanitarianism after 1919.
Keywords: Humanitarian aid, Near East Relief, American Women’s Hospitals, Smyrna’s catastrophe, Armenian refugees, Greek refugees.
Received on 10.03.2021
Accepted on 29.04.2021
BOOK REVIEWS
Tehmine MartoyanPhD, Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Foundation
Pages 92-97
Artyom TonoyanPhD, Research Associate, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Pages 98-100
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