Armenia 1915 -1920

Armenia 1915 -1920

Armenians commemorate the massacre of their people in what was then
Constantinople, and across Turkey, on April 25 every year. Here is a
selection of articles chronicling how the Manchester Guardian reported
the events in Turkey and Armenia between the massacre in 1915 and
Armenia becoming a socialist republic in 1920. Two years later Armenia
would become part of the USSR.

Tuesday December 21, 2004
The Guardian

April 25 1915 Turkish Army’s Plight

A Terrible Picture

Cities Turned into Cemeteries

Plague-ravaged towns

The “Corriera della Sera” (Milan) publishes a terrible account, sent
from Hoppa (Black Sea) of the sufferings of the Turkish army which has
been defeated in the Caucasus. It is, says the writer, a colossal
unknown tragedy. All Eastern Armenia is stricken with woe:
devastation, massacre, carnage, epidemics, misery, misery, misery! The
cities are cemeteries and hospitals. Trebizond, sweet voluptuous
Trebizond, which saw the glory of Alexis Commenus and which
degenerated under the corruption of the Empire risen on the dark
shores of the Black Sea, Trebizond is now half destroyed and its
inhabitants are fleeing. The disasters of the Turkish army in the
Caucasus campaign have sent survivors flocking here; a bloody spectre
of the Turkish army that was dispatched to the Russian frontier. Four
thousand sick or wounded soldiers have been sent to Trebizond from
Erzerum and from the frontier, and almost every day new and dolorous
convoys arrive from the interior. The authorities calculate that
Trebizond will be able to accommodate eight thousand patients, and so
from Eastern Armenia hundreds continue to arrive. They do not appear
to be men, but rather remnants of humanity. But however many are sent
it is unlikely that the figure mentioned will ever be reached, for
Death sees to the daily elimination among those already arrived. With
sickening regularity it frees the places for newcomers and those on
their way. There are more than a hundred deaths every day at
Trebizond. Typhus, small-pox and an infinity of other diseases play
havoc. Nearly all the doctors and chemists have contracted
illness. And there are only just five doctors to attend to the needs
of this entire city which lately counted a population of sixty
thousand souls, and to look after the thousands of wounded as
well. Sanitation material is nearly exhausted. There are no more
disinfectants. The best use is being made of whatever expedients can
be devised in order to keep going on.

The Spread of Plague

The Typhus spreads with amazing rapidity. Wounds not sufficiently
attended to become gangrenous. It is an infinite trial; a
slaughter. Until twenty days ago it was thought possible that the
epidemics might be confined to the encampments, but this has proved
and ingenuous illusion. When hospitals were improvised in the centre
of the city how could one believe that the epidemic would not spread
and become general! Hospitals rise beside the schools, the mosques,
the churches and near the Consulates. At the present moment there is
one on each side of the Italian Consulate. Naturally the plague
spreads among the citizens. A daughter of the German Consul is
suffering from typhus. Many families flee, terrified. But journeys
cost money and are disastrous. It is necessary to have or find means
of getting far away and there are no ordinary communications, because
in the interior there is not a single mile of railway, and the sea
route is closed – or else to resign oneself to a dangerous journey by
brief and painful stages. But towards what region! Where can safety be
found?

Caravan Column’s Fate

A column of a thousand camels was sent from Constantinople for the
caravan service between Trebizond, Erzerum and the interior. Eight
hundred are already dead, stricken by diseases that kill them in a few
hours. The grotesque and precious beasts drop down by the wayside and
nobody troubles about them. Carrion hover over them and help to
augment the elements of infection. The sea route barred by the Turkish
fleet, which arrives here now and again to bombard, the communications
with the interior rendered difficult and extremely slow, Oriental
Armenia is now threatened with yet another scourge – hunger. Flour is
becoming scarce, there is no sugar and the deficiency in the supply of
coffee is beginning to be felt. And already there is no more
petroleum! The situation is even worse at Erzerum, in the interior,
320 kilometres from Trebizond. Erzerum is a fortress and chief town of
the vilayet. It has a hundred thousand inhabitants and is almost
completely Armenian. But the Ottoman Government has always neglected
it, only troubling about its military position, and then close up,very
little. The city is without sewerage or drainage. Around the outlying
quarters there are putrid, stagnant waters; they surround the city so
that it lies enclosed as in a purulent wreath of ill. Erzerum is full
of sick and wounded. >From eight hundred to a thousand die there
every day. It is something fantastic. The Ottoman Army had been
organised for the invasion of Russia from the Caucasus is now here or
in the surrounding districts. It comprises 350,000 men in the most
deplorable condition, and discouraged and afflicted. When the city is
considered to be too full of sick, convoys are organised and sent to
Trebizond. But the distance is too far, and hundreds die on the
way. Entire columns of soldiers, already infected, are obliged to
undertake the journey on foot, as there are not sufficient carts and
animals. Every now and again one falls out. Secure him. With what and
how, when the others, who endeavour to push along somehow, are in the
same plight? Trebizond was bombarded on January 24 and 28 and February
3. The military zones were hardly damaged at all, but the city has
suffered enormously, especially the Christian quarters. The Turks,
following their old and favoured practice, always occupy the Christian
quarters when they fire on the warships, with the result that these
quarters suffer most from the bombardment of the latter. Half of
Trebizond lies in ruins.

April 27 1915

The War in the Caucasus

Armenians enthusiasm for Russian cause

At the beginning of the war with Turkey the Russian Armenians of the
Caucasus petitioned the Russian Government to allow them to form
Armenian volunteer regiments. Armenians of Russian nationality are, of
course, subject to compulsory military service and contribute their
quota to the Caucasian regiments. But, in addition to this, the
Armenians of the Caucasus desired to form purely Armenian regiments of
volunteers, with Armenian officers and commands in the Armenian
language. The Russian Government consented, and several battalions
were formed. There are from 80,000 to 90,000 Armenians in the
Caucasian regiments, and in addition some 15,000 Armenian volunteers
have joined. It is hoped to raise this number to 20,000 men in special
Armenian regiments. When one considers that the Russian Armenian
population altogether is only 1,700,000, one has proof of the
enthusiasm with which they have supported the Russian cause. The
Armenian regiments were equipped as to clothing &c. with money
subscribed by the Armenian community in the Caucasus. The Government,
of course, armed them, but they receive no pay either for themselves
or their families – only food and maintenance in their field. Over and
above this special effort, the Russian Armenians have contributed to
various war charities – hospitals, hospital trains, and so on – some
1,500,000 roubles. This, with the cost of raising the voluntary
regiments, will total probably 3,000,000 roubles altogether – a huge
sum for so small a community. In addition to this, thousands of
Armenian refugees have fled to the border before the advance of the
massacring Turks. These refugees have been distributed through the
Armenian villages of the Caucasus and are being supported by the
Armenian community. The regiments of the Armenian volunteers have been
of the greatest service in the operations against the Turks and have
won the warm approval of the Russian commanders. They are hardly
mountaineers accustomed to the country and familiar with the methods
of warfare of the Kurds. They are more lightly dressed and equipped
than the Russian troops and perform the mountain marches more
quickly. In the operations against the Turks from the Caucasus they
always formed the vanguard of the Russian army.

The Present Position

The advance into Turkish Armenia was made at four points, by one route
westward from Northern Persia towards Lake Van, and southward along
three routes from the territory of Kars. The advance was very
rapid. Though they were outnumbered three to one at least, they drove
the Turks back before their swift advance, fighting day and night. But
a Turkish force operating to the westward of all the lines of advance
threatened towards Tiflia and menaced the Russian lines of
communication. The Russians therefore withdrew all their forces from
Turkish territory. Afterwards they outflanked the Turkish force in
their turn. The position remains so at present, and must remain so for
some three or four weeks. Desultory fighting goes on but a general
advance is impossible because the melting of the snow makes the passes
impracticable. The Turks will mass at Erzerum and there will be a
secondary concentration at Bitlin. Much depends on the command of the
Black Sea. If the Turks could bring their transports to Trebizond ,
that would be the easiest way of getting their army to Erserum. The
big battle will be there.

May 21 1918

The Turks in Armenia

Massacres at Van

A telegram from Tiflis states that pourpariers for a separate peace
between the Caucasus and Ottoman Governments have been broken off
owing to the monstrous demands of the Turks. The latter at once began
an energetic offensive on the whole front, and occupied the town of
Van, massacring the Armenian population.

September 30 1920

Atrocities by Red troops in Armenia

An appeal to Chicherin Reuter’s Agency learns that the Armenian
Government has sent the following telegram, dated September 17, to Mr
Chicherin, the Bolshevik Commissary for Foreign Affairs. “The Red
troops of Soviet Russia, followed by Tartar marauding bands, are
laying waste the peaceful Armenian villages in Karabagh and
Zangezour. General Vasilenko, the Commander of the Second Red division
operating in this region has taken no notice of the preliminary peace
treaty signed between us at Tiflis on August 10. “Fifty important
Armenian villages have already suffered heavily, and the peasants are
leaving their homes in Zangezour in order to avoid the brutality of
your troops. “For the sake of our future co-operation and good
neighbourliness we request the Russian Soviet Government to stay the
advance of Red troops into Armenian territory and prevent further
atrocities.”- Reuter

November 29 1920

Armenia and Turkey

Peace Negotiations to Begin

Difficulty with Georgia

Fresh arrangements between the Armenians and the Turks were concluded
yesterday. The Armenian delegation, with M. Khatissian as president,
proceeds to Alexandropol in a few days to begin peace
negotiations. Half Armenia has been overrun, and the reconstruction
work of the past two years has been destroyed. Tens of thousands of
refugees, famished and frost-bitten, are struggling towards Delijeh,
Karaklis and Erivan. Georgia, quite excusably, has closed her
frontiers. The toll of human suffering equals the worst during the
Great War. Armenia has permitted Georgia to occupy the neutral zone
for three months. Georgian troops have now advanced and occupied
Djellalbuglu, against which Armenia has formally protested. This
incident, however, is not expected to impair amicable relations
between Armenia and Georgia.

Mr Conwil Williams, secretary of the British Armenia Committee, adds
the following explanatory note: The neutral zone to which your Tiflis
correspondent refers consists of the Sanahin district,
north-north-west of Erivan. It contains the important copper mines of
Maverdi. When the British evacuated the Caucasus they failed to decide
between the opposing claims of Armenia and Georgia in regards to this
area. The Armenians who number 80 per cent of the population, were in
favour of inking a plebiscite, but the Georgians failed to agree. Its
occupation by Georgia may be a necessary military measure in view of
the Turkish advance. It is to be hoped, however, that the taking of
Djellalbuglu, in Armenian territory, does not indicate that Georgia is
taking a mean advantage of her neighbour’s desperate plight.

BAKU: Meeting of Aliyev with Khatami

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
Jan 26 2005

OFFICIAL VISIT OF AZERBAIJAN PRESIDENT ILHAM ALIYEV TO IRAN

MEETING OF PRESIDENT OF AZERBAIJAN ILHAM ALIYEV WITH PRESIDENT OF
IRAN SEYED MOHAMMAD KHATAMI
[January 26, 2005, 15:36:37]

On January 26, President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev
staying on an official visit in the Islamic Republic of Iran met with
President of the country Seyed Mohammad Khatami.

The Azerbaijani leader described the visit as very successful and
fruitful from the standpoint of development of cooperation between
Azerbaijan and Iran.

The parties pointed out that the issues discussed during the meetings
held in the course of the visit fully correspond to the national
interests of the two countries. The stated with confidence that
strengthening of the Azerbaijan-Iran friendship and cooperation would
promote peace and stability in the region, as well as bring the
cooperation in political, economic, humanitarian and other fields to
a qualitatively new level.

It was also noted that there was a favorable conditions and legal
basis to deepen bilateral links in all spheres and realize mutually
beneficial projects.

The two leaders also touched up the Armenia-Azerbaijan,
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, stated the necessity of respecting
principles reflected in the documents adopted by the United Nations
and other international organizations with respect to this problem.
The Iranian President reaffirmed that his country’s stance is that
the conflict must be resolved on the base of territorial integrity
and inviolability of the borders of the Azerbaijan Republic.

NKR: Nothing to Hide From The World

NOTHING TO HIDE FROM THE WORLD

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR)
26 Jan 05

`We have nothing to hide from the international community and we are
ready to show to the OSCE monitoring mission both the regions of the
Republic of Nagorni Karabakh and the regions controlled by the
Karabakh forces.’ The NKR vice foreign minister Masis Mayilian
told this to the news agency `Mediamax’ commenting on the upcoming
visit of the OSCE Minsk Group to Nagorni Karabakh on January 30 aiming
to monitor the situation in the regions under the controlof the
Karabakh authorities. Masis Mayilian reminded that earlier the
Karabakh government invited similar missions to Nagorni Karabakh for a
number of times to get acquainted with the real situation and denying
the groundless accusations of Azerbaijan against NKR. `We commend the
visit of the OSCE monitoring group to Nagorni Karabakh and are ready
to assist to the works of the group in anyway,’ said the vice
minister. In reference to the situation in the regions controlled by
the Karabakh side Masis Mayilian said, `In the framework of our state
program re-settlement is implemented within the boundaries of the
NKR.’ At the same time he emphasized that the Azerbaijani side
makes attempts to accuse the NKR authorities of re-settlement in the
territories outside the republic, i.e. the territories forming the
security area around Nagorni Karabakh. Many international
organizations, whose representatives have had the opportunityto visit
these territories, know that here mainly refugees from Azerbaijan
live, whose number is insignificant compared to the former population
of these regions. According to him, after being forced out from
Azerbaijan people settled these regions not having normal living
conditions. The vice foreign minister mentioned that the role of the
government is confined to maintaining control over these territories,
which is successfully implemented. Masis Mayilian endorses the
necessity of forming a similar group and to monitor the territories
occupied by Azerbaijan forming 15 per cent of NKR, which will,
according to him, enable the OSCE mission to have an objective idea of
the situation in the territories controlled by the parties of the
Karabakh conflict. The meetings of the monitoring group, as well as
the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmen with NKR president Arkady Ghukassian
are planned in the framework of the visit.

AA.
26-01-2005

Govm’t Allocates AMD 100mil to Victims of NKR Natural Disasters

RA GOVERNMENT ALLOCATES 100 MILLION DRAMS TO ASSIST LAND USERS
SUFFERED FROM NATURAL DISASTERS IN NKR

YEREVAN, January 21 (Noyan Tapan). At the January 20 session, the RA
government made a decision to allocate in 2005 from its reserve fund
100 million drams (about 2 million US dollars) to the RA Ministry of
Finance and Economy with the aim of providing the NKR government with
resources in order to assist with seeds, fertilizers and fuel the land
users of Nagorno-Karabakh areas that suffered from frostbite, hail and
other natural disasters in 2004. NT was informed about this from the
RA governmemt’s Information and PR Department.

Rome: St. Gregory Finds a Niche at Vatican

Zenit News Agency, Italy
Jan 20 2005

St. Gregory Finds a Niche at a Vatican

Pope Blesses Statue of Apostle of Armenia

VATICAN CITY, JAN. 19, 2005 (Zenit.org).- John Paul II blessed a
statue of St. Gregory the Illuminator which now stands in one of the
exterior niches of St. Peter’s Basilica.

It is the first time that a statue of an Eastern-rite saint — in
this case, the apostle of Armenia — has been placed among the
founding saints that surround the exterior of St. Peter’s, according
to the basilica’s archpriest, Cardinal Francesco Marchisano.

The ceremony, which took place today as the Pope was on his way to
Paul VI Hall for the general audience, was attended by Patriarch
Nerses Bedros XIX of Cilicia of the Armenians, whose see is in
Lebanon.

Nerses Bedros XIX leads approximately 10% of the Armenian Christians
who live in his homeland and in the diaspora, and who are in
communion with Rome.

Some 90% of Armenian Christians obey the Armenian Apostolic
Patriarchate, which separated from Rome after the Council of
Chalcedon in 451.

A key step was taken in 1996 to overcome this division, when John
Paul II and then Patriarch Karekin I signed a joint declaration that
resolved misunderstandings on the nature of Jesus.

Attending the ceremony were representatives of the Armenian Apostolic
Patriarchate and the Armenian republic.

The statue of Gregory the Illuminator — also known as Gregory the
Armenian — was sculpted by artist Khatchik Kazandjian, of Lebanese
origin. He won a competition convoked by the Vatican and the Catholic
Armenian Patriarchate.

The statue, 5.64 meters (18 feet) high and weighing 18 tons, is in
Carrara marble and cost 250,000 euros ($325,000).

With this gesture, the Pope wished to culminate the celebrations for
the 1,700th anniversary of the Armenian people’s conversion to the
Christian faith.

According to Armenian tradition, Gregory, who was born around
250-252, miraculously cured Armenian King Tiridates III, who
converted to Christianity in 301 together with all his court, making
Armenia the first Christian nation.

The gesture of placing the statue at the basilica, said Cardinal
Marchisano, “expresses marvelously” the “natural variety of the
traditions and rites of the Church, which contribute to her spiritual
enrichment.”

Armenia marks 15th anniversary of Baku pogroms

Armenia marks 15th anniversary of Baku pogroms

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
19 Jan 05

[Presenter] A march to mark the 15th anniversary of the Baku pogroms
of 1990 took place at 1200 [0800 gmt] today at the Tsitsernakaberd
memorial of the genocide victims. Our correspondent Gayane Davtyan is
also in Tsitsernakaberd.

[Correspondent from Tsitsernakaberd] Many politicians and people are
here today to commemorate the victims. The prime minister’s advisor
Granush Kharatyan is also here.

Ms Kharatyan, do you think it is high time to remind the international
community about what took place 15 years ago and what is being done in
Armenia today in this direction?

[Granush Kharatyan, captioned] This is our everyday pain and this is a
good opportunity to call on the international community and people all
over the world to be watchful, because this is not only our pain, this
is everybody’s pain. If you keep silent it means that you are joining
the evil, if you keep silent then you do not see what is happening
around you to people, monuments, history, memory, and humanity in
general.

We want to tell the whole world once again that this is not the best
way to remind you. But we, a group of people, wanted to remind you in
this way [as heard]. This cannot be allowed to continue. I am sure
that humanity did not understand what had happened.

[Presenter] Gayane, I would like to ask Ms Kharatyan what does she
think about the mourning ceremony which will take place in Baku
tomorrow [20 January]? Can these two mourning ceremonies be accepted
as equal by the international community?

[Granush Kharatyan] Unfortunately, I think that the forthcoming event
in Azerbaijan is an organized campaign by the government. I regret
that the Armenian and Azerbaijani youth could not and cannot tell the
truth about the reality. I talked to many young people here
today. They did not say that they hate Azeris. They say that they do
not want what happened in the 20th century to be repeated in the 21st
century. Today’s motto is into the 21st century without genocide. They
did not come here today to say that unfortunately, the Azeris ended
the 20th century with genocide. It is very painful that the Armenian
people started and finished their 20th century really with
genocide. We want the world and people not to see what the Armenian
people saw in the 20th century.

[Correspondent] Thank you very much.

Will revolutionary fire go out in 2005?

Will revolutionary fire go out in 2005?

By Karine Mangasarian

Yerkir/arm
January 14, 2005

The Georgian rose revolution of 2003 impacted Armenia in the way of
encouraging the opposition to overthrow the power. The latter did not
take place. The Ukrainian revolution of 2004 also provoked enthusiasm
with the Armenian opposition. However, why was the authority change
possible in Georgia and Ukraine, but not in Armenia?

The next logical question would be about the possible political
developments in 2005 both in the parliament, and outside. Chairman of
the `Republic’ party council (member of the `Justice’ bloc) Albert
Bazeyan does not link the foreign revolutions with the Armenian
reality. Talking about the prospects for 2005, Bazeyan said: `I find
possible new political developments, including massive events, since
the reasons for a power shift are still there. Peoplemust fight for
the power, which is taken away from people.’ Independent MP Manuk
Gasparian mentions Western and namely US influence, as prevailing over
the revolutions in Georgia and Ukraine.

He also said: `The two sons of Soros, Georgia and Ukraine can be added
by new post-Soviet countries. I do not exclude Armenia, Azerbaijan or
Moldova. I find likely that Armenia may be influenced upon by pressure
through the Karabagh issue.’ He also said that the situation had
better not change rather than be changed by foreigners. However, he
finds that there is a 50-60 per cent chance for a national overthrow
of the power.

Leader of the Modernized Communist Party Yura Manukyan believes there
is not social need for a revolution in Armenia today and people `are
too smart to follow a couple of adventurers who want to revolt.’

ARF faction leader Levon Mkrtchian, as usual, is against forecasting.
However, he expects more active foreign political developments around
Karabagh and Armenian-Turkish border. He said: `We must establish
qualitatively new relationships with foreign organizations and
institutions and this will have a considerable influence.

I believe the internal situation will mainly remain the same, although
foreign developments may tell upon it. I do not think that examples of
foreign countries can be so easily implemented in the Armenian
reality. In this respect, I do not believe the Georgian or Ukrainian
case studies may work out in Armenia.’

Norma Karaian, 100; was Boston real estate attorney

Boston Globe, MA
January 18, 2005

Norma Karaian, 100; was Boston real estate attorney
By Glenn E. Yoder, Globe Correspondent |

Norma M. Karaian, considered the first American-born Armenian female
attorney in the United States, died Sunday at her home in Watertown.
She was 100.

Starting her career as a title examiner after graduating from Boston
University Law School in 1925, Mrs. Karaian ignored gender bias while
becoming widely recognized in her field. She spent the bulk of her
career at the Boston-based firm Gaston & Snow and was highly regarded
for her legal work in real estate.

“She was very accomplished and so well-known in the legal arena when
it concerned real estate law,” said her son John, adding that Mrs.
Karaian handled the title for the Prudential Center’s construction.
“I remember her saying that she could call a title company and upon
her name alone being mentioned they would issue a title policy.
That’s how well-respected she was.”

Born Yaghnor Maksoodian in Providence in 1904, she changed her first
name to Norma after the actress Norma Talmadge to “sound American,”
friend and fellow attorney Cerise Jalelian said. She began her
working career at the age of 8, operating the cash register at her
father’s store.

She graduated from Boston University Law School at the age of 20, but
had to wait a year to take the bar exam since she had not yet turned
21. In the interim, she found a job at a law office that paid $15 per
week.

Although she wished to become a litigator, women were banned from the
practice at the time, Jalelian said.

“She didn’t look at being female as an obstacle; she just thought
everyone should be treated the same,” she said. “She was really born
before her time.”

Mrs. Karaian found her calling when she became a real estate attorney
in 1926. She remained at the post until 1941, when she retired and
had three children.

However, in 1951, hard times struck. Her husband, Leo J. Karaian, an
organic chemist, died. Mrs. Karaian began performing contract work
for the firm of Hoag & Sullivan. Even without a high income, she put
her children first, her son said.

“She always made sure if she could buy us one pair of shoes, it would
always be the best,” he said. “She wanted to give her children the
very best because that’s how much she thought of us.”

The family lived in an apartment in Watertown until 1969, when Mrs.
Karaian purchased her first and only house, where she lived with her
son.

She continued contracting before joining the firm Rackemann, Sawyer &
Brewster for one year. In 1972, she moved to Gaston & Snow, where she
remained until the firm folded in 1991.

For the remainder of her life, Mrs. Karaian took on legal projects
and was honored with numerous awards. She was a member of numerous
organizations and in 1954, she served a year as president of the
Massachusetts Association of Women Lawyers.

Her son said that at Boston’s finest restaurants waiters would vie
for the right to serve her.

“People were attracted to my mother like a magnet,” he said. “I’ve
never thought of my mother about being anything but my mother, but
there was this aura about her that would be totally engaging to
people.”

For her centennial in September, a celebration was held at Anthony’s
Pier 4 in Boston. Mrs. Karaian personally greeted each of the more
than 100 guests.

“We ended the evening with my dancing with mom to Nat King Cole’s
‘Unforgettable,’ which I think she is,” her son said.

Besides her son, she leaves two daughters, Lenore of Waltham and
Marilyn Hollisian of Watertown.

A funeral service will be held at noon tomorrow at St. James Armenian
Church in Watertown.

From Herald Archives: 100 years ago: SCOTTISH Armenian Association

The Herald (Glasgow)
January 14, 2005

FROM THE HERALD ARCHIVES

100 YEARS AGO

SCOTTISH Armenian Association: Women’s Auxiliary – A meeting was held
when the report for 1904 was presented.

During the year, pounds-126 had been forwarded to Marash in support
of 21 Armenian orphans. Industry and selfhelp are fostered among the
boys and girls who take their share in the daily routine of work in
the orphanages. The orphans are, of course, brought up as Christians.

Le musee des Etrangers qui ont fait la France

Le Figaro, France
14 janvier 2005

Le musée des étrangers qui ont fait la France

HISTOIRE Un budget de 20 millions d’euros est prévu pour la
réalisation de la Cité nationale de l’immigration qui s’ouvrira à la
Porte Dorée en 2007

par Anne-Marie ROMERO

« Ce n’est pas un musée des immigrants que nous allons faire, mais un
musée de l’Histoire de la France avec toutes ses composantes
ethniques, une cité qui hébergera les multiples facettes d’une
société qui, en deux siècles, a absorbé cinquante-six ethnies
différentes dont chacune a contribué à faire de notre pays ce qu’il
est aujourd’hui. » Jacques Toubon, de nature, est un enthousiaste.
L’ancien ministre de la Culture s’anime particulièrement lorsqu’il
parle de sa nouvelle mission. Le 1er janvier, il vient, en effet,
d’être nommé président du GIP (groupement d’intérêt public) chargé de
la création d’une Cité nationale de l’histoire de l’immigration. Un
défi qu’il relève avec passion et sans perdre une minute, car tout
doit être fini pour avril 2007. Au moment des élections.

« Il est essentiel que la future cité soit un projet culturel,
tranchant avec la vision strictement sociale que nous avons de nos
jours de l’immigration, ajoute Jacques Toubon, un projet qui parte de
la demande des publics plutôt que de l’offre des pouvoirs publics, de
cette réalité extrêmement multiple, confuse, profuse, émotive aussi
et qui ne concerne pas seulement les problèmes de logement ou de
scolarisation des nouveaux immigrants. »

Car c’est bien de deux siècles d’immigration que le musée veut
traiter, de tous les types d’immigration, économique, politique, liée
à la décolonisation, aux guerres. En commençant par les Allemands,
migrants de la faim, touchés par la crise agricole de leur pays dans
les années 1820 jusqu’aux beurs de nos cités de banlieue, la liste
est longue. Ce sera d’abord les Savoyards, avant l’annexion, que
l’imagerie d’Epinal a tous transformés en petits ramoneurs, les
frontaliers venus chercher du travail et qui resteront en France. On
compte 300 000 Belges dans ce cas, tous dans le Nord-Pas-de-Calais.

Puis ce seront des vagues beaucoup plus massives de migrants juifs
d’Europe centrale. Pleins d’illusions, ils inventent même un proverbe
« Vivre comme Dieu en France » résumant toutes leurs espérances. Et
la Grande Guerre qui enrôlera des « indigènes » les célèbres
tirailleurs sénégalais considérés comme français mais sujets et non
citoyens. Cette arrivée massive de gens de cultures, de couleurs et
de religions différentes provoquera une première vague de méfiance
dans l’opinion. « Nous ne sommes que des sidis et des bamboulas »,
écrira, en 1934, un journal afro-antillais édité à Paris.

Entre les deux guerres, la naissance des totalitarismes entraînera de
nouveaux afflux de réfugiés, politiques cette fois, 80 000 Russes
blancs, 63 000 Arméniens échappés du génocide, puis 700 000 Polonais,
800 000 Italiens fuyant devant la misère et le fascisme, une nouvelle
vague de juifs d’Europe centrale tentant d’échapper à la montée du
nazisme, 500 000 républicains espagnols vaincus par Franco…

Seconde Guerre mondiale, deuxième appel aux coloniaux. 500 000
Africains et Maghrébins y répondront et demeureront sur le sol
métropolitain. Avec de Gaulle, la décolonisation, paradoxalement, va
provoquer une énorme vague d’immigration économique cette fois,
main-d’oeuvre désirée et réclamée par les entreprises durant les
Trente Glorieuses, puis devenue incontrôlable à partir des années 70.
Le phénomène de saturation sera encore accru par le rapprochement des
familles, puis, à partir des années 80 par l’arrivée des boat-people
du Sud-Est asiatique. Aujourd’hui, c’est du monde entier qu’affluent
les affamés, les pourchassés, les aspirants à une vie meilleure qui
considèrent l’Europe comme un substitut de l’eldorado américain
désormais verrouillé.

C’est sur la base des 25 années de travail de l’Adri (Association
pour le développement des relations interculturelles), qu’est née la
cellule de préfiguration du musée. De l’Adri, qui fut un temps
producteur de l’émission « Mosaïques » à la télévision et qui fait
travailler des chercheurs et historiens sur tous les domaines
touchant à notre sujet, la cellule de préfiguration a repris les
locaux, les archives et les personnels. L’équipe ainsi créée, « qui
devra s’enrichir de scénographes et de muséographes », deviendra le
comité de pilotage du projet dans les mois qui viennent.

Projet, on le voit, d’une ambition gigantesque puisqu’il s’agit, non
pas de créer un « écomusée de la banlieue », mais bien de montrer le
patrimoine d’une idée, celle d’une histoire de la France enrichie de
tous ses immigrés d’où qu’ils viennent. Pas question non plus de
montrer seulement l’avers de la médaille, avec les communautés bien
intégrées et francisées, en laissant de côté ses revers plus sombres.

On parlera donc des « indésirables » Italiens, Espagnols, Allemands
que l’on n’hésita pas à mettre dans des camps dès la déclaration de
guerre de 1939, on parlera aussi des « rapatriés » et des harkis, pas
toujours bien accueillis, et évidemment des problèmes préoccupants de
l’actualité, ceux des jeunes Maghrébins et Noirs des cités qui
refusent l’intégration et sont attirés par les sirènes des
fondamentalismes religieux. On ne passera pas non plus sous silence
ni la xénophobie dont se réclame haut et fort une partie de la
population française, ni les conditions misérables dans lesquelles
ont vécu ou vivent encore nombre d’immigrés.

Ce type de musée est dans l’air du temps. Il en surgit partout dans
les pays industrialisés, avec lesquels la France travaillera en
réseau. Sans parler du plus célèbre d’entre eux, Ellis Island, à New
York, qui conte l’épopée des premiers arrivants sur la terre promise,
il y a le Musée de l’Europe de Bruxelles, celui de la civilisation du
Québec, celui de Berlin, du musée qui est en train de se monter en
Catalogne et de celui d’Amsterdam. « Mais, poursuit Jacques Toubon, à
l’inverse des Néerlandais qui vont montrer chaque communauté dans ce
qu’elle a de spécifique, car ils ont une conception de développement
séparé, comme tous les pays religieux, nous, nous voulons brosser le
tableau de ce que la France est devenue grce à l’apport des
étrangers ». Le « melting-pot » français en quelque sorte.

La cité sera composée en premier lieu d’une exposition permanente, «
basée sur trois principes : la sensibilité, la cohérence et le
décalage. La sensibilité, à l’aide de photographies, de
reconstitutions, de mises en scène et en musique ; la cohérence en
suivant un fil conducteur qui sera l’histoire de la France et non pas
une série de monographies sur telle ou telle communauté, et enfin le
décalage, en essayant de faire passer une idée à travers des
présentations qui amèneront le visiteur à déduire de lui-même comment
une société a évolué ». Jacques Toubon donne ainsi l’exemple d’une
exposition récente au Québec, intitulée « Deo gracias », et montrant
insensiblement comment la société religieuse s’était laïcisée.

Deux expositions temporaires sont prévues chaque année, la première,
à l’automne 2007 sur « Immigration et décolonisation ». « Il ne faut
pas qu’elle coïncide avec l’ouverture de la cité pour ne pas donner,
d’emblée, l’idée que l’immigration ce n’est que cela. » Les sujets ne
manquent pas, de la gastronomie au raï en passant par le tango
électronique.

Reste tout le travail de collecte d’objets et de témoignages oraux,
de mise à distance de cette mémoire, forcément subjective, et de mise
en scène spectaculaire pour attirer des populations qui ne sont pas
des « pratiquants » habituels et assez souple pour que le musée
puisse se renouveler environ tous les trois ans. Un record pour un
musée à réaliser dans un temps record.

Record aussi dans les coûts. Jacques Toubon évalue à 20 millions
d’euros l’investissement nécessaire et à 7 millions d’euros le
fonctionnement annuel. « Un budget équivalent à celui d’une scène
nationale en Bretagne », dit-il en riant.

La revanche du Palais des colonies

La « Cité », qui comprendra, outre un musée national, un centre de
ressources, une médiathèque, un secteur pédagogique et sera tête de
réseau de multiples manifestations artistiques, sera installée au
Palais de la Porte-Dorée, à Paris, ancien Musée des arts africains et
océaniens. C’est là, du reste qu’on envisageait, depuis plusieurs
années de créer un musée de la décolonisation, jusqu’à ce que le
précédent ministre de la Culture, Jean-Jacques Aillagon, décide d’y
mettre les Arts décoratifs du XXe siècle. Projet qui aura vécu ce que
vivent les roses, l’espace d’une exposition. Ce magnifique btiment,
construit par Albert Laprade pour l’exposition coloniale de 1931,
avait permis aux meilleurs représentants de l’Art déco de s’exprimer,
comme le sculpteur Alfred Janniot, qui réalisa le bas-relief de 1 100
m2 de la façade et les ébénistes Ruhlmann et Printz. Unissant
l’ancien et le moderne, Laprade avait voulu montrer la « grandeur »
de l’empire, une notion qui pourrait aujourd’hui sembler ironique
compte tenu du projet actuel, mais que ses promoteurs veulent, au
contraire, retourner, comme une revanche de l’Histoire.

« Il était indispensable, explique Jacques Toubon, que ce musée soit
dans Paris, dans un lieu d’un certain prestige car la cause est noble
et le rejeter en banlieue aurait donné l’impression inverse du
message que nous voulons faire passer. Vous ne pouvez pas imaginer
combien est forte la demande, combien d’associations d’immigrants, de
collectivités locales, d’universitaires qui travaillaient avec
l’Adri, sont volontaires pour être nos partenaires dans cette
initiative. »