Kurdish Recognition of The Armenian Genocide - Armenian Genocide

See also: Kurdish-Armenian relations
Armenian Genocide
Background
  • Armenians in the Ottoman Empire
  • Armenian Question
  • Hamidian masscres (1894–96)
  • Diyarbakir (1895)
  • Zeitun (1895–96)
  • Ottoman Bank (1896)
  • Yıldız (1905)
  • Adana (1909)
  • Young Turk Revolution (1908)
The Genocide
  • Congress at Erzurum
  • Red Sunday
  • Tehcir Law
  • Labour battalions
Deportation
  • Centres: All the settlements
    at Western Armenia
  • Camps: Deir ez-Zor
  • Ra's al-'Ayn
  • Foreign aid and relief: ACRNE
  • NARC
Resistance
  • Zeitun
  • Van
  • Musa Dagh
  • Urfa
  • Shabin-Karahisar
Responsible parties
  • Young Turks:
  • Committee of Union and Progress
    • Talaat
    • Enver
    • Djemal
    • Behaeddin Shakir
  • Special Organization
    • Reshid
    • Djevdet
    • Topal Osman
  • Kurdish Irregulars
Trials
  • Courts-Martial
  • Malta Tribunals
  • Soghomon Tehlirian
Armenian population
  • Population
  • Casualties
See also
  • Armenian militia
  • Operation Nemesis
  • Recognition
  • Denial
  • Cultural portrayal
  • Reparations
  • Timeline

The genocide of Armenians by some Kurds was meticulously carried out with help from some tribal Kurds who were organized into an auxiliary force called the 'Hamidiye Alaylari' or Hamidiye Brigades of the government in Istanbul.

During the Van resistance, Armenians who left via Persia took defense positions in the Bargiri, Saray and Hosap districts of Van Province. The refugee group following the Russian forces were intercepted by Kurdish forces when they crossed the mountain passes near Bargiri Pass. At the Bargiri Pass, the Armenian refugees had many casualties.

The security of the refugees was the responsibility of the Ottoman Empire. The Ottoman authorities state that some groups of refugees were attacked by local tribes, both Kurdish and Arab, before they reached their destinations. These attacks mainly took place on the roads between Aleppo and Meskene, but it was also dangerous from Diyarbekir to Der Zor and from Saruc to Halep via the Menbic Road. This region is heavily populated by Kurds. Grand Vizier Mehmed Talat in his Posthumous Memoirs of Talaat Pasha claimed that:

"Although we punished many of the guilty, most of them were untouched. These people, whom we might call outlaws, because of their unlawful attitude in disregarding the order of the Central Government, were divided into two classes. Some of them were acting under personal hatred, or for individual profit. Those who looted the goods of the deported Armenians were easily punishable, and we punished them. But there was another group, who sincerely believed that the general interest of the community necessitated the punishment alike of those Armenians who massacred the guiltless Mohammedans and those who helped the Armenian bandits to endanger our national life."
  • January -1915 Armenians and Cossack (Russian) soldiers waiting for Kurdish Cavalry; see image detail for explanation

  • Refugess at the Mountain Passes attacked by Kurds. Such as famous Bargiri Pass Massacre

Read more about this topic:  Kurdish Recognition Of The Armenian Genocide

Famous quotes containing the word armenian:

    The exile is a singular, whereas refugees tend to be thought of in the mass. Armenian refugees, Jewish refugees, refugees from Franco Spain. But a political leader or artistic figure is an exile. Thomas Mann yesterday, Theodorakis today. Exile is the noble and dignified term, while a refugee is more hapless.... What is implied in these nuances of social standing is the respect we pay to choice. The exile appears to have made a decision, while the refugee is the very image of helplessness.
    Mary McCarthy (1912–1989)