International Journal of Armenian Genocide Studies
ARTICLES
Jiří CukrPhD, an archivist, a chronicler and a local historian in České Budějovice, Czech Republic. He wrote a number of books and articles on historical and regional themes.
Email: jiri.cukr@ceskearchivy.cz, Marek JandákMgr., a historian and a PhD student at the Charles University in Prague. He is a member of The Centre for the Transdisciplinary Research of Violence, Trauma and Justice at the same institution. He published a monograph in 2018 on the Armenian Genocide and its reflection in the Bohemian lands.
Email: marek.jandak@ff.cuni.cz
Pages 7-31
Abstract
In 1922, the Czechoslovak traveller Karel Hansa visited the French Mandate for Syria and Lebanon, where he became acquainted with the lamentable living conditions and pitiful experiences of the survivors of the Armenian Genocide. He was deeply impressed by the work of Western humanitarian organizations, especially the American Near East Relief. This experience led Hansa to decide to write, lecture and try to organise humanitarian aid for Armenian orphans in Czechoslovakia, although his humanitarian efforts had only limited success.
Keywords: Karel Hansa, Armenian Genocide, survivors, humanitarianism, Czechoslovakia, Syria, Lebanon.
Received on 20.08.2020
Accepted on 03.10.2020
Lidia PrisacPhD, a senior researcher at the Institute of Cultural Heritage of the Moldavian Ministry of Education, Culture and Research. She holds a PhD in Historical Sciences (2013). In 2019 she was Raphael Lemkin Fellow at the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute in Yerevan, Armenia. Her research interests involve the history of the Armenian community in Bessarabia/Romania in the interwar period, and the history of the Armenian refugees from Russian and Ottoman Empires. She is an author of over three dozen articles related to the history of Armenians in Romania.
Email: lidiaprisac@yahoo.com
Pages 33-53
Abstract
This article examines the history of the 200 children rescued from massacres that took place during the Armenian Genocide, who found shelter in Greater Romania (1918-1940), in the Strunga orphanage, which was open for three years, from 1923 to 1926. The Strunga orphanage history approach reflects the dimensions of humanitarian assistance in the Kingdom of Romania on the issue of Armenian refugees, particularly on the fate of children after the genocide. The reconstruction of this orphanage history is based on historical sources, such the Album of Orphans (1923), archive documents and articles from the contemporary press published by the Armenian minority in interwar Romania. In general, the humanitarian dimensions of Armenian community support in Romania offered the orphans the possibility of rehabilitation after the genocide and adaptation to the new social environment that Romania represented.
Keywords: orphans, humanitarian assistance, rehabilitation, Armenian Genocide, Armenian community from Romania, Kingdom of Romania.
Received on 03.05.2020
Accepted on 20.06.2020
Robert TatoyanPh.D. in History, works as a senior researcher at the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute in 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.
Pages 55-65
Abstract
This paper aims to present and analyze data provided by censuses of the Ottoman Armenians from Van, Erzeroum and Bitlis provinces, who, fleeing the threat of massacre during WWI, found refuge in the territory of the Russian Empire, particularly in the Russian Transcaucasia. By comparing data on the Armenian refugees with information provided by other statistical sources, particularly the Armenian patriarchate and the Ottoman government, it is possible to enrich our knowledge of the numbers of Armenian population in Western Armenia and the Ottoman Empire in general on the eve of WWI and the Armenian Genocide. It is shown that the number of refugees is about 70% higher than the number of the Armenian population for the same areas before WWI mentioned in the official Ottoman statistics and corresponds approximately to the figures of the Armenian patriarchate. If account is taken that some people were already dead by the time the refugee censuses were carried out and also that the populations of some settlements within the administrative units in question were not evacuated at all but massacred, then the actual number of the Armenian population in these areas was even higher.
Keywords: Armenian question, WWI, Armenian Genocide, Armenian refugees, census, statistics, demography, Van province, Bitlis province, Erzeroum province.
Received on 21.12.2019
Accepted on 20.09.2020
Tessa HofmannDr. phil., Magistra Artium, Prof. h.c., studied philology (Slavic literatures and languages, Armenian Studies) and Sociology at the Freie Universität Berlin (FUB); 1983-2015 research associate at the Institute for Eastern European Studies of the FU Berlin; research associate in international research projects (e.g. “Out-Migration from Armenia and Georgia”, 2008-2012); since 2015 independent scholar; author of numerous publications on the history, culture and present situation of Armenia and its diaspora, on genocide research with a focus on Ottoman genocide, on minorities in Turkey and the South Caucasus (https://independent.academia.edu/TessaHofmann).
Since 1979 volunteer human rights work, e.g. as Chair of the non-profit Working Group Recognition – Against Genocide, for International Understanding; spokeswoman of the Board of the Association for the Promotion of an Ecumenical Memorial for Genocide Victims in the Ottoman Empire.
Email: tessa.hofmann@katwastan.de
Pages 67-89
Abstract
A hundred years ago, on the late morning of March 15, 1921, the Armenian Soghomon Tehlirian (Soġomon T’ehlirean – Սողոմոն Թեհլիրեան; also: Soghomon Tehliryan; Soġomon T’ehlerean – Սողոմոն Թեհլերեան (1897-1960)) shot the former Ottoman Minister of the Interior (21 January 1913 to 4 February 1917), Minister of Finance (November 1914 to 4 February 1917) and head of government (Grand Vizier; 4 February 1917 to 8 October 1918), Mehmet Talaat (1874-1921) on Berlin’s Hardenbergstrasse. In an unusually short time by today’s standards, after two and a half months, the assassin was put on trial on 2 and 3 June of the same year at the jury court of Berlin District Court III (Landgericht Berlin III) in Berlin-Moabit. The trial lasted one and a half days, which was also unusually short. Obviously, the German or Prussian judiciary wanted to get rid of the accused and with him the subject of German-Turkish relations as quickly as possible. Tehlirian was acquitted on 3 June 1920, on the grounds of incapacity of guilt and was immediately deported from Germany. This article explains the background, context and lasting effects of his crime.
Keywords: Soghomon Tehlirian, Mehmet Tala(a)t, Armenian Genocide, Armenian Question, Operation Nemesis.
Received on 06.06.2020
Accepted on 03.09.2020
Hasmik TigranyanHead of Anti-Corruption Monitoring Division (Department of Anti-corruption elaboration and monitoring) in the Ministry of Justice of the Republic of Armenia. Previously, she has worked in the RA State Commission for Protection of Economic Competition as a legal expert, a lawyer, then as a Chief Lawyer for nearly ten years. She received an MA at Yerevan State University and an L.L.M. at American University of Armenia.
Her scientific research relates to the issues of human rights, constitutional law, competition law, and business law (specifically transactions, mergers, and acquisitions). She is an author of three scientific articles and dozens of comparative legal analyses.
Email: hasmiktigranyan@gmail.com, Edita GzoyanPhD., Deputy Scientific Director at the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Foundation since 2018. She received her Ph.D. in History at Yerevan State University and an L.L.M. at American University of Armenia.
She authored more than four dozen articles and a book. Dr. Gzoyan is Armenia country editor for Central and Eastern European Review and associate editor of Ts’eghaspanagitakan handes and International Journal of Armenian Genocide Studies.
Email: gzoyan.edita@genocide-museum.am
Pages 91-101
Abstract
This article examines retroactive jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) for the possibility to litigate compensations for the Armenian properties confiscated during and after the Armenian Genocide. The study considers ECtHR platform for the Armenian Genocide reparations, as ECtHR is the most effective human rights regional Court to compel Turkey to protect human rights and remedy for violations. The paper considers only European Convention on Human Rights (Convention) Article 1 Protocol 1 to avoid as much as possible politicizing this study. Considering the fact that a long time has passed since the confiscations, this study considers ratione temporis jurisdiction of the ECtHR.
Keywords: reparations, compensations, European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), European Convention on Human Rights (Convention), confiscation, abandoned property.
Received on 10.01.2020
Accepted on 01.10.2020
BOOK REVIEWS
Reviewed by Sato MoughalianWriter and Musician, New York, USA
Pages 102-106
Reviewed by Asya DarbinyanPhD, Visiting Scholar, Clark University
Pages 107-109
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