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The Islamized Armenians and Us

by Contributor
November 25, 2013
in Featured Story, Latest, Op-Ed, Opinon, Top Stories
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A scene from the Hrant Dink Foundation's conference on “Islamized Armenians” at the Istanbul Bosphorus University. Nov. 3, 2013.

Reflections on a Groundbreaking Conference in Istanbul

BY RAFFI BEDROSYAN
From The Armenian Weekly

In early November, the Hrant Dink Foundation held a conference on “Islamized Armenians” at the Istanbul Bosphorus University, breaking one more taboo in Turkey. Islamized Armenians were hitherto a hidden reality, a secret known by many, but which couldn’t be revealed to anyone, whispered behind closed doors but filed in government intelligence offices, and it finally broke free into the public.

The late Hrant Dink would have been elated to see this conference become a reality, eight years after the first conference on “Armenians during the late Ottoman Empire era and the 1915 events” was held at Istanbul Bilgi University, when protesters hurled insults at the conference participants and government ministers labeled them as “traitors stabbing Turks in the back.” That conference had also broken a taboo, but Hrant was already a marked man for revealing the identity of the most famous Islamized Armenian—Sabiha Gokcen, Ataturk’s adopted daughter and the first female Turkish combat pilot, who was an Armenian orphan named Hatun Sebilciyan.

It is a known fact that in 1915, tens of thousands of Armenian orphans were forcibly Islamized and Turkified; that tens of thousands of Armenian girls and young women were captured by Kurds and Turks as slaves, maids, or wives; that tens of thousands Armenians converted to Islam to escape the deportations and massacres; and that tens of thousands of Armenians found shelter in friendly Kurdish and Alevi villages, but lost their identity. What happened to these survivors, these living victims of the 1915 genocide? Hrant was obsessed with them: “We keep talking about the ones ‘gone’ in 1915. Let us start talking about the ones who ‘remained.’”

These remaining people survived, but mostly in living hells. Remarkably, their children and grandchildren are now “coming out,” are no longer hiding their Armenian roots. One of the first was the famous Turkish lawyer Fethiye Cetin, who revealed that her grandmother was Armenian, in her book My Grandmother. This was followed by another book edited by Aysegul Altinay and Fethiye Cetin, titled The Grandchildren, about dozens of Turkish/Kurdish people describing their Armenian roots, without revealing their real identities. Then came the reconstruction of the Surp Giragos Armenian Church in Diyarbakir/Dikranagerd, which became a destination for many hidden Armenians in Eastern Anatolia. On average, over a hundred people visit the church daily, most of them hidden Armenians. Some come to pray, get baptized, or married, but most just visit to feel Armenian, without converting back to Christianity.

This has created a new identity of Muslim Armenians, in addition to the historical and traditional identity of Christian Armenians. In a country where only Muslim Turks can work for the government, where being non-Muslim is sufficient excuse for persecution, harassment and attacks, where the word Armenian is used as the biggest insult, it takes real courage for someone to reveal that he is now an Armenian and no longer a Turk/Kurd/Muslim. People can easily lose their jobs, livelihood, or even lives for changing their identity. As an example of the level of racism and discrimination in the country, an ultra-nationalist opposition member of parliament years ago accused Turkish President Abdullah Gul of having Armenian roots in his family from Kayseri. Gul sued her for defamation, and the courts sided with him, ordering her to pay compensation for such an insult.

It is difficult to estimate the number of Islamized Armenians in Turkey, and even more difficult to predict what proportion of them are aware of their Armenian roots, or how many are willing to regain their Armenian identity. Based on independent studies of the 1915 events, one can conclude that more than 100,000 orphans were forcibly Islamized/Turkified, and that another 200,000 Armenians survived by converting to Islam or by finding shelter in friendly Kurdish and Alevi regions. It is therefore conceivable that 300,000 souls survived as Muslims. The population of Turkey has increased seven fold since then; using the same multiple, one can extrapolate that there may be two million people with Armenian roots in Turkey today, originating from the 1915 survivors. There were even more widespread conversions to Islam during the 1894-96 massacres, when entire villages were forcibly Islamized. A couple centuries before, Hamshen Armenians were Islamized in northeast Anatolia. The Muslim Hamshentsis, numbering about 500,000, speak a dialect based on Armenian, but had never identified themselves as Armenian, until recently. Adding all these forced conversions prior to and during 1915, one can conclude that the number of people with Armenian roots in present-day Turkey reaches several million. (The numbers are difficult to accurately estimate, but in any case, they easily exceed the present population of Armenia.)

The reality is that the secrets of “Armenianness” whispered for three or four generations after 1915 are now becoming loud revelations of new identities. As evidenced in the recent conference, even Hamshen Armenians have started exploring and reclaiming their long lost roots. During the reconstruction of the Surp Giragos Church and in my travels in eastern and southeastern Anatolia, one out of every three Kurds that I met had an Armenian grandmother in the family. This fact, hidden until recently, is now revealed openly, often leading young generations to reclaim their Armenian identities, but without giving up Islam. One interesting observation is that the hidden Armenians were aware of other hidden ones and all attempted to intermarry, resulting in many couples who ended up having Armenian roots from both parents.

The conference attracted numerous academicians, historians, and journalists from both within and outside Turkey, as well as dozens of presenters of oral history. One of the most dramatic presentations was about Sara, a 15-year-old Armenian girl from Urfa Viranshehir, who was captured by the Turkish strongman of the region, Eyup Aga. Eyup wanted to take Sara as his third wife. When Sara refused, Eyup killed her mother. When Sara refused again, Eyup killed her father. When Eyup threatened to kill Sara’s little brother, Sara couldn’t resist any more, and married the killer of her parents, on the condition that her brother be spared and she be allowed to keep her name. But her brother was also eventually killed. As she resisted Eyup’s advances, she was repeatedly raped and was pregnant 15 times, giving birth to 15 babies, who all died prematurely. Eyup constantly tortured her, even marking a cross in her body with a knife. His family also mistreated her, viewing her as an outcast, and she had a hellish life to the end. At the end of the story, the presenter, a Turkish academician, revealed that Eyup and the family who committed these crimes against Sara was her own family. Her final statement was even more dramatic than the story: “We always hear stories told by the victims. It is now time for the perpetrators to start talking about and owning their crimes.”

There are new revelations about how the Turkish government kept tabs on Islamized Armenians. Apparently, the government kept records of every Armenian village or large Armenian clan that was forcibly Islamized in 1915. It was recently discovered that the identification cards of hidden or known Armenians had a special numbering system to secretly identify them. There are anecdotes that a few Turkish candidates for air force pilot positions were turned away even though they qualified after rigorous tests, when government records revealed that they come from Islamized Armenian families.

It is of greater concern to us how the Islamized Armenians are being dealt with by Armenians. It seems that the Istanbul Armenian community and, more critically, the Istanbul Armenian Patriarchate are unable or unwilling to accept the hidden Armenians coming out as Armenians, unless these people accept Christianity, get baptized, and learn to speak Armenian. But it is unrealistic to expect the new Armenians to comply with these requirements. Since Armenians in Turkey are all defined as belonging to the Armenian Church, if the newcomers are rejected by the Patriarchate, they become double outcasts, not only from their previous Muslim Turkish/Kurdish community, but also from the Armenian community, as they cannot get married, baptized, or buried by the church and cannot send their children to Armenian schools. If they have made a conscious decision to identify themselves as Armenian—a risky and dangerous initiative under the present circumstances—they should be readily accepted as Armenians, regardless of whether they stay Muslim or atheist or anything else. Relationships get even more complicated as there are now many families with one branch carrying on life as Muslim Turks/Kurds, another branch as Muslim Armenian, and a third branch as Christian Armenian. The Etchmiadzin Church in Armenia is more tolerant, and has issued the following statement: “Common ethnicity, land, language, history, cultural heritage, and religion are general measures in defining a nation. Even if one or more of these measures can be missing due to historic reasons, such as the inability to speak the language, or practice the religion, or the lack of knowledge of cultural and historic heritage, this should not be used to exclude one’s Armenian identity.” Yet, Charles Aznavour’s approach is the most welcoming: “Armenia should embrace the Islamized Armenians and open its doors to them.”

After Armenia, Karabakh, and the Armenian Diaspora, there is now an emerging fourth Armenian world—the Islamized Armenians of Turkey. Accepting this new reality will help both Turks and Armenians understand the realities and consequences of 1915.

Raffi Bedrosyan is a civil engineer as well as a concert pianist, living in Toronto, Canada. For the past several years, proceeds from his concerts and two CDs have been donated to the construction of school, highway, water, and gas distribution projects in Armenia and Karabakh—projects in which he has also participated as a voluntary engineer. Bedrosyan was involved in organizing the Surp Giragos Diyarbakir/Dikranagerd Church reconstruction project, and in promoting the significance of this historic project worldwide as the first Armenian reclaim of church properties in Anatolia after 1915. In September 2012, he gave the first Armenian piano concert in the Surp Giragos Church since 1915.

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Comments 8

  1. Sylva-MD-Poetry says:
    9 years ago

    Turkification of Armenians
    {Tattreek In Arabic Language}
    (Genocide of Identity)

    Turkifications of Armenians,
    Another word for crucification…Not only Islamatization*…
    By sinking their Identify at a degree
    Not to have one cross on any grave, Khatchkars
    Planned to destroy each historical Church
    Language: No-one should speak Armenian
    Even at a closed home.
    No more Armenian schools in the Armenian Highland

    Religion:
    All must become Muslims,
    The bells of Churches silenced and
    Churches demolished or turned to mosques;
    How many of those holy temples!

    No one should celebrate Christmas,
    Jesus must be wiped from all hearts;
    Jesus, Isa doesn’’t exist
    Thus . . . Isa’’s name must be deleted even from the Holy Qur’’an!
    (Isa is the Arabic name for Jesus which is mentioned twenty-five times in the Qur’’an,
    Seljuk-Turks entered Islam in 13th century)

    Culture:
    No more Armenian songs and dance
    Forenames and Surnames changed to Turkish,
    Surnames which end in Ian to Oghlo,***
    As well as forenames (like: Khajeg to Ahmet, Christine to Aisha.)

    Now in the Internet age
    Each Turk who can smell have some Armenian blood in them
    Yev . . . And . . .Are
    Searching vigorously for their smashed identity.

    This verse is in the poetry book “My-Son My- Sun, Chants Ann…”June 2011
    Forwarded to P. Obama,yet no answer…

    *If Hrant Dink was alive He would agree with me, not to use word Islamatization …
    but the real word Turkification…Because they tried to change even muslim Arabs
    Arabs define it “Tattreek”…Tattreek…Tattreek… Can I repeat more…???
    Can you read the word or you can’t…
    There is a proverb in Arabic which says …”No body listens to your hearty calls”{La Jawab lemn unidi}
    specially the stubborn Armenians…If they change any word, as if they are changing their religion…

    Sylva-Md-Poetry
    as my British Professor once called me Arabian Sylva…Because I use to translate Arabic Poetry to him…

    Reply
    • GB says:
      9 years ago

      Dear Sylva,

      Sounds like penal code 301 injected to Turkish made Koran!!

      Reply
  2. Sylva-MD-Poetry says:
    9 years ago

    If you have no respect to any writer you can remove…
    Thanks
    Sometimes I feel I waste my time to enter any Armenian side…
    Because they like to vanish and slay like the Seljuks
    who slayed Armenian necks, fingers and hearts …
    Don’t be like them…
    Sylva-MD-Poetry

    Reply
  3. Manoug Hagopian says:
    9 years ago

    Dear Raffi.

    I fully agree with you. I wholeheartedly embrace all the Islamized Armenians and look forward to the day when other Armenians both in Armenia and the Diaspora embrace them as well.

    Meanwhile, may I propose that a special website be created for this issue alone wherein all Armenians, including my Islamized brothers and sisters, socialize with one another? This in the hope that opportunities may arise of meeting one another in person?

    Reply
  4. Sevan says:
    9 years ago

    Blood is blood they did what they had to do. In their hearts they are Armenian, no one can take that away from them. The Turks tried looks like it didn’t work. Their ancestors cries are calling out to them. This is why they are coming forward. They know who they are they are Armenian! They should and will be accepted.

    Reply
  5. zareh says:
    9 years ago

    They are our brothers and sisters just like agnostic Armenians. Armenians were Armenians well before Christ and Mohammad. I sure hope one day them and us unite and liberate Western Armenia

    Reply
    • Daron says:
      9 years ago

      Well said Zareh.

      Reply
  6. Norin Radd says:
    9 years ago

    Being Armenian is not simply a matter of “having the Armenian spirit”. You are Armenian only when both your parents are Armenian. We are an ethnic group, not a religion or a philosophical viewpoint for just anyone to be able to “convert” to being Armenian.

    Hey Asbarez editors, why don’t you practice some of that “democracy” and “free speech” you are always putting up in your articles and publish my full comment earlier rather than continually filtering comments that only suit your political agenda.

    Reply

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