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Assyrian genocide

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Newspaper report from 1915.

The Assyrian genocide was a genocide by the Ottoman Empire and Kurdish tribes, where 275,000 – 300,000[1][2][3][4] Assyrians were killed during raids.

Etymology

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The Assyrians call it the Sayfo, the Aramaic word for "sword".

Background

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Ancient times

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Since ancient times, during their conquest by the Babylonians, the Assyrians have not have had their own nation and have had a diaspora that has spread over the world to many different countries.

Ottoman Empire

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The Ottomans oppressed the Assyrians, took away their independence and forced them to assimilate to their empire. Those who have survived keep their common unity, especially in their deep Christian faith. Many Assyrians were considered "impure" by the Ottoman Turks and were massacred for refusing to renounce Christianity to become Muslims. Assyrians lost their homes and possessions to the Red Sultan, Abdul Hamid II. Even before the genocide, they had been persecuted and forced to pay high taxes. Most killings happened between 1915 and 1917.

Assyrian experiences from the Assyrian Voice

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"One day the Moslems assembled all the children of from six to fifteen years and carried them off to the headquarters of the police. There they led the poor little things to the top of a mountain known as Ras-el Hadjar and cut their throats one by one, throwing their bodies into an abyss." [5]
Map showing the Armenian (in colours) and Christian (in shadings) population of the eastern Ottoman provinces in the year 1896. In the areas where the share of Christian population was higher than that of the Armenians, the non-Armenian Christian population largely consisted of Assyrians except in regions that were inhabited by Ottoman Greeks. Assyrians lived mostly in the southern and the southeastern parts of the region.
40 Christians dying a day say Assyrian refugees - The Syracuse Herald, 1915.
The Washington Post and other leading newspapers in Western countries reported on the Assyrian genocide as it unfolded.
An article from The New York Times, March 27, 1915.
Shortly after the first Russian retreat from Persie, and before the arrival of Mar Shimon's Army, the Persian Assyriahs began to flee to the protection of the American and the French flags in Urmia. But they were intercepted by the Moslems, who killed hundreds of them and carried their women captives.

The genocide was committed against Assyrians within the Ottoman Empire during the First World War by the Young Turks.[6] The Assyrian population of northern Mesopotamia included the Van, Siirt, Tur Abdin and Hakkari regions of present-day southeastern Turkey and the Urmia region of present-day northwestern Iran.

The Assyrians were forcibly relocated and massacred by Ottoman and Kurdish forces between 1914 and 1920 under the regime of the Young Turks. Under leadership of Djevdet Bey, the Ottoman governor, at least 55,000 Assyrian Christians were martyred. He is considered responsible for the massacres of Armenians and Assyrians in and around Van [7]

Death toll

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Scholars have placed the number of Assyrian victims from 300,000 to 750,000.[8][9][10][11]

Concurrent genocides

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The Assyrian genocide took place in the same context and period as the Armenian and Greek genocides.[12] But unlike the last two, no official national or international recognition of the Assyrian genocide has been made, and many accounts discuss the Assyrian genocide only as a part of the larger events subsumed under the Armenian genocide.[13]

100 years of Syriac-Aramean Genocide commemoration in Stockholm, Sweden (2015).
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References

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  1. 2017, p. 35
  2. 2019, p. 11
  3. 2014, p. 142
  4. 2016, p. 51
  5. Joseph Naayem, Shall This Nation Die?
  6. Aprim, Frederick A. Syriacs: The Continuous Saga, page 40
  7. Ye'or, Bat; Miriam Kochan, David Littman (2002). Islam and Dhimmitude: Where Civilizations Collide. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. pp. 148–149. ISBN 0838639437. OCLC 47054791.
  8. The plight of religious minorities: can religious pluralism survive? - Page 51 by United States Congress
  9. The Armenian genocide: wartime radicalization or premeditated continuum - Page 272 edited by Richard Hovannisian
  10. Not even my name: a true story - Page 131 by Thea Halo
  11. The political dictionary of modern Middle East by Agnes G. Korbani.
  12. Schaller, Dominik J. and Zimmerer, Jürgen (2008) "Late Ottoman genocides: the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire and Young Turkish population and extermination policies - introduction," Journal of Genocide Research, 10:1, 7 - 14
  13. Samuel Totten, Paul Robert Bartrop, Steven L. Jacobs, Dictionary of Genocide Greenwood Press, 2007, ISBN 0-313-32967-2, p. 26