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Hardcover The Armenian Massacres in Ottoman Turkey: A Disputed Genocide Book

ISBN: 0874808499

ISBN13: 9780874808490

The Armenian Massacres in Ottoman Turkey: A Disputed Genocide

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

Utah Series in Middle East Studies

In 1915, the Ottoman government, then run by the Young Turks, deported most of its Armenian citizens from their eastern Anatolian lands. According to reliable estimates, close to forty percent of the prewar population perished, many in brutal massacres. Armenians call it the first genocide of the twentieth century. Turks speak of an instance of intercommunal warfare and wartime relocation made necessary by...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Great book that breaks through the Armenian propaganda lies.

I highly recommend this well written and well researched book to each and every person who wants to know the truth, instead of hearing the continuous, one-sided Armenian propagada lies which have been continuously perpetrated upon the Christian nations of the world for 100 years, just so they (Armenians) can get their continous handouts (a.k.a. Foreign Aid) from these nations, and have them do their "dirty work (e.g. fighting)" for them! In reality, Armenians are TERRIFIED of the truth ever coming out! Case in point...one simply has to read their grossly negative "comments" regarding this book. In many cases, some of them have never even read this book, but will make every opportunity to trash it (which is their usual style!). Read the book and come up with your own conclussions. It's free from any bias and propaganda. It tells things like it was!

Final Word

Lewy has done a phenomenal job in addressing this emotional issue and has taken great personal risk by sticking to the facts alone. Work is scholarly, evidence based, broad scope, delivery and development is easy on the reader and he has taken pains to be as objective as possible. As someone who is more than familiar with the subject, WWI events themselves, many books and research on the topic, I can comfortably claim that this book can certainly be considered as the final word on this controversy. It is clear that this would not be satisfactory to many who have a vested interest in propagating the myths, and those whose identity is now closely tied to a fabricated history and propaganda. Lewy points out that as disturbing as it was the scale of misery suffered by the Armenians during WWI in Anatolia, and the underestimation by the Ottomans of the difficulties of uprooting and moving such a large population, there is no evidence of a plan, policy or intent by the Ottoman government of the time to physically eliminate a whole nation. There is no physical or documentary evidence to support the thesis of a systematic genocide. Period. It does take courage to state the facts and the author has done a very significant service in the name setting the record straight.

Possibly the most objective book of its kind

An exceptional book in every aspect of this long running dispute! When I decided to read an unbiased book on this complex tragic history of the past, I did a little research on the available material. I wanted to pick a book written by a credible western historian who has no ties to Armenian or Turkish side. I'm very glad I picked this one as it turned out to be a gem in more ways than I expected. Guenter Lewy is a much respected historian who previously researched and published various controversial cases of genocides (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guenter_Lewy). This is his latest book on this extremely sensitive subject. There is not a claim or quote in the book without pointing to the source (and there are hundreds of them). It certainly encourages the reader to read a few more of those referenced materials. The book has been divided to various sections to explain the events of the period as truthfully as possible, and to show the differences between the Armenian and Turkish views. You end up realizing that most claims are not usually as simple as you've been told and there are no blacks and whites but all shades of gray. Before I bought this book, I also read the reviews on this page. Now, I've come to the conclusion that you would only give "one star" rating to this book if it conflicted with your agenda. The author does not hesitate to point out the lies and half-truths used by both sides of the dispute, and some people naturally take offense in that approach. Read the book and develop your own opinion on an important piece of history that would likely be debated forever.

Calm in the Eye of the Storm

To an outsider, Lewy's book seems a model of objectivity and balance and a sincere effort at unravelling the confusing strands of this story. It is his balanced view that seems to have incited the greatest criticism: the reviews tend to be all or nothing, love or hate, and the reviews appear to fall according to party lines, politics and nationality. To that extent it isn't the book, per se, that has been reviewed, but Lewy's politics, or lack thereof. In refusing to come down on the side of centrally coordinated genocide (as opposed to uncoordinated massacres) Lewy has incurred the wrath of those insisting on the label of "genocide." Of particular interest, in light of a more recent book, was Lewy's note (p 262) that "...even as strong a defender of the Armenian position as the historian Taner Akcam has acknowledged the difference between the generally accepted historical reality of the Holocaust and the issue of the Armenian massacres." Highly recommended to the non-partisan reader. The agreed-upon facts are horrible enough in their own right, and the political questions will likely never be settled to everyone's satisfaction.

An Indispensible Resource on an Historic Controversy

Reading books about the tragic experience of the Ottoman Armenians during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire is a sorrowful experience. I have read nearly two dozen and in none, whether the author is a Turk, an Armenian, or an American, is one presented with a rosy picture. Armenians suffered horribly, died in appalling numbers and were permanently separated from many of their traditional heartlands that they had shared, usually in peace, with local Turks, Kurds and others. Overwhelming evidence also portrays that the Armenians did not suffer alone, that the prosecution of World War I in the Ottoman Empire by its leaders was disastrous for the population at large. Nearly all accounts demonstrate that this was a hard era of state-on-state war, widespread famine, massacre and counter-massacre, and unabated disease. Thus, given the breadth of suffering, I find it mystifying that this issue has so neatly cleaved the reading public into two distinct camps: those who interpret the Armenian experience as a genocide not just of a similar impact to the Holocaust, but analogous in its inception and execution; and those who interpret the Armenian experience as an immense tragedy made up of numerous crimes, but one that does not as a whole meet the internationally accepted definition of the term, "genocide." At one extreme are authors and their supporters who, favoring the genocide thesis, take no note of the role of Armenian revolutionary organizations, the attacks instigated by them on local Muslims and Ottoman troops, or the politics of the Ottoman leaders who were concerned with the imminent collapse on their watch of an empire that had lasted nearly 700 years. This group of authors also finds no room in their tomes for mention of Muslim suffering, as if Christian losses somehow counted more. On the other extreme are authors and their supporters who, denying the allegation of genocide, not only attempt to show that Armenian losses were much smaller than even the most modest estimates, but that the decisions that led to the Armenian relocations and massacres were soundly reasoned and valid to such an extent as to absolve the Ottoman leaders completely of responsibility for not only Armenian losses, but Muslim losses as well. The two camps have engaged in a sort of arms race. Those favoring the genocide thesis have produced many more volumes than those who oppose the genocide thesis or propose an alternative. Seeking to stifle future debate, those who favor the genocide thesis now argue that because of the numerical preponderance of works that favor the genocide thesis, the genocide theory is factually incontestable. This ignores the small but important body of scholarship that, while not ignoring the immensity of the Armenian tragedy, steadfastly concludes that it was not genocide. These works are in many cases derived from the same original sources as those that support the genocide thesis and are the product, for the most part, of identi
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