“Native Christians Massacred”: The Ottoman Genocide of the Assyrians during World War I
Genocide Studies and Prevention: An
International Journal
Volume 1 | 2006
Issue 3 | Article 8
“Native Christians Massacred”: The Ottoman
Genocide of the Assyrians during World War I
Hannibal Travis
Abstract.
The Ottoman Empire’s widespread persecution of Assyrian civilians during World War I constituted
a form of genocide, the present-day term for an attempt to destroy a national, ethnic, or religious
group, in whole or in part. Ottoman soldiers and their Kurdish and Persian militia partners subjected
hundreds of thousands of Assyrians to a deliberate and systematic campaign of massacre, torture,
abduction, deportation, impoverishment, and cultural and ethnic destruction. Established principles
of international law outlawed this war of extermination against Ottoman Christian civilians before it
was embarked upon, and ample evidence of genocidal intent has surfaced in the form of admissions
by Ottoman officials. Nevertheless, the international community has been hesitant to recognize the
Assyrian experience as a form of genocide. The Assyrian genocide is indistinguishable in principle
from its Armenian counterpart, however, and its recognition by scholars and the international
community may assist in the resettlement and relief of the Assyrian remnant, currently fleeing by the
thousands from its homelands in Iraq.
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Recommended Citation
Travis, Hannibal (2006) "“Native Christians Massacred”: The Ottoman Genocide of the Assyrians during World War I," Genocide
Studies and Prevention: An International Journal: Vol. 1: Iss. 3: Article 8.
Available at: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/gsp/vol1/iss3/8
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‘‘Native Christians Massacred’’: The
Ottoman Genocide of the Assyrians
during World War I
Hannibal Travis
Florida International University College of Law
The Ottoman Empire’s widespread persecution of Assyrian civilians during
World War I constituted a form of genocide, the present-day term for an attempt
to destroy a national, ethnic, or religious group, in whole or in part. Ottoman
soldiers and their Kurdish and Persian militia partners subjected hundreds
of thousands of Assyrians to a deliberate and systematic campaign of massacre,
torture, abduction, deportation, impoverishment, and cultural and ethnic
destruction. Established principles of international law outlawed this war of
extermination against Ottoman Christian civilians before it was embarked
upon, and ample evidence of genocidal intent has surfaced in the form of
admissions by Ottoman officials. Nevertheless, the international community
has been hesitant to recognize the Assyrian experience as a form of genocide.
The Assyrian genocide is indistinguishable in principle from its Armenian
counterpart, however, and its recognition by scholars and the international
community may assist in the resettlement and relief of the Assyrian remnant,
currently fleeing by the thousands from its homelands in Iraq.
Introduction
Since the invasion of Iraq by a coalition of democratic nations in 2003, the plight of
the Christians of that nation has captured the world’s attention in a manner not seen
since World War I. What was a steady flow of Assyrian refugees out of Iraq, after the
Gulf War and the comprehensive economic sanctions of the 1990s, has accelerated
since the 2003 war into a torrent of refugee flight into western Asia, Europe,
the United States, and Australia. The international press could no longer ignore the
Assyrians’ increasingly desperate straits.1
During and after World War I, newspapers in London, Paris, New York, and Los
Angeles regularly reported on the desperate straits imposed on Assyrians, Chaldeans,
Nestorians, and Syriac Christians in the Ottoman Empire.2 Like the Armenians,
the Assyrians living in Mesopotamia, Persia, Azerbaijan, and Turkey became victims
of a genocidal ‘‘holy war’’ declared by the Ottoman Sultan and carried out by the Young
Turk regime of Enver Pasha. That this war against the indigenous Christians of
the Ottoman Empire was genocidal in character is manifest not only from the
admissions of Ottoman and Turkish officials at the highest levels of government but
also from those of their German allies in World War I, American and British officials,
legions of foreign journalists and missionaries, and, of course, the countless civilian
victims of the war’s massacres and deportations.
As described by those who lived them, the events of 1915–1916 in the Ottoman
Empire were clearly a form of genocide, the contemporary term for any attempt
to destroy a national, ethnic, or religious group in whole or in part. As in other
recognized genocides, the Ottomans and their local allies, the Kurds and
Hannibal Travis, ‘‘ ‘Native Christians Massacred’: The Ottoman Genocide of the Assyrians during World
War I.’’ Genocide Studies and Prevention 1, 3 (December 2006): 327–371. 2006 Genocide Studies and
Prevention.
Genocide Studies and Prevention 1:3 December 2006
Persians, demonstrated a pattern of deliberate and systematic targeting of Christians
as such, including Assyrians, for murder, maiming, enslavement, rape, dispossession,
impoverishment, and cultural and ethnic destruction. Nevertheless, governments and
historians have not been as willing to recognize the Assyrian experience during and
after World War I as a form of genocide, or even to acknowledge the existence and
criminality of the Ottoman atrocities against Assyrians, as to give such recognition to
the Ottoman genocide of the Armenians. Generally speaking, recognition of the latter
by both governments and historians has been more rapid, official, and detailed.
This article will argue that the hesitation to recognize the Assyrian genocide is
unjustified, for the evidence is overwhelming that Turks and their Kurdish allies
massacred tens, and more likely hundreds, of thousands of Assyrians in order to
exterminate the Christian population; raped and enslaved hundreds, and more likely
thousands, of Assyrian women in a systematic fashion; and deported the Assyrians
en masse from their ancestral lands under conditions that led to famine and
widespread death. I will maintain that the more rapid legal recognition and
establishment of compensation mechanisms for the Ottoman genocide of Armenians
are attributable to the larger numbers of Armenian victims and survivors, as well as to
more copious evidence of an intention on the part of the Young Turks to wipe out the
Armenian people. In conclusion, I will contend that the legal and historical recognition
of the Assyrian genocide at the hands of the Ottomans is vital to focus the world’s
attention on the Assyrian remnant in Iraq. That remnant has been dispersed by mor (...truncated)