The Institutions of Turkification and Assimilation in the Eyes of Armenian Orphans Who Fled Them

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51442/ijags.0055

Keywords:

Technics of mass-killing, oral history interviews, survivors' memoirs, American, European, and Armenian orphanages, Turkish orphanages, Muslim households, technics of survival, orphan gathering, transgenerational effects, nightmares, iconic images

Abstract

Although Armenian orphans are the focus of this paper, taken in a broader context, the treatment of Greek, Assyrian, and Armenian orphans—with all commonalities and differences— is a signifier of intent to destroy targeted groups of people as the Genocide Convention defines.
This paper addresses the methods the Ottoman government undertook and the supplementary measures necessary in the implementation process of dealing with the myriad of children within the policy of total extermination. This involved setting up Turkish orphanages, some euphemistically called mektebs (religious schools)—with their brutal methods of forced conversion—pushing them into Muslim households—with all the torture and molestations that came with it but also serving the ulterior motive of improving the race—as institutions of Turkification, and in addition, the abhorring treatment of these children, torturing, raping, killing, along the roads of deportation. It will shed light on the experiences of these children in defined categories of victimization, those who lost their lives in this machination, those who survived and reached the outside world or continued living in Turkey as Muslims, true or pretending, as well as Christians upholding their faith against all odds. Based on interviews and first-person accounts of these orphans and newer studies on the state of mind of their offspring, this paper will outline the short-term effects, having turned this generation mostly into one that is socially dead unable to fully contribute to the perpetuation of the Armenian nation, as well as the long-term, that is the transgenerational effects of the genocide, a psychological burden upon the nation aggravating the situation and blocking the process of healing to begin.
The Genocide Convention does not project the effects of these genocidal treatments which the Armenian nation still struggles to overcome.

Author Biography

Rubina Peroomian

Ph.D in Near Eastern Languages and Cultures (UCLA). Formerly, lecturer of Armenian Studies at UCLA. Currently, independent scholar. She has lectured widely and made presentations in international symposia on Armenian Genocide, published several research articles in scholarly journals and contributed book chapters. She has authored textbooks, grades 10, 11, 12, in Armenian on the Armenian Question and the Genocide, as well as a teachers’ guidebook, with age proper material and methodology to teach the Armenian Genocide grades K-12 (also available online).
Her monographs on genocide include:
Literary Responses to Catastrophe: A Comparison of the Armenian and the Jewish Experience.
And those who Continued Living in Turkey after 1915.
The Armenian Genocide in Literature, Perceptions of Those who Lived through the Years of Calamity.
The Armenian Genocide in Literature, The Second Generation Responds.

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Published

2024-12-20

How to Cite

Peroomian, R. (2024). The Institutions of Turkification and Assimilation in the Eyes of Armenian Orphans Who Fled Them. International Journal of Armenian Genocide Studies, 9(2). https://doi.org/10.51442/ijags.0055