Armenian, Australian FMs Discuss Development Of Bilateral Relations

ARMENIAN, AUSTRALIAN FMs DISCUSS DEVELOPMENT OF BILATERAL RELATIONS

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Oct 10 2005

YEREVAN, October 10. /ARKA/. RA Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan and
Australian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Alexander Downer
discussed prospects of developing bilateral relations, stressing an
important role of the Armenian community in Australia in intensifying
bilateral economic relations. Minister Oskanyan informed his Australian
counterpart of the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement and of Armenia’s
relations with its neighbors. The Ministers expressed satisfaction
with bilateral cooperation within international organizations. Minister
Oskanyan invited Minister Downer to visit Armenia.

The RA Foreign Minister also held meetings with other Australian
Government officials, representatives of the Armenian-Australian
Chamber of Commerce. He also visited the Armenian community center
and made a speech.

An Armenian delegation led by RA Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan
paid an official visit to Australia on October 9, 2005.

Sergey Khachatryan

SERGEY KHACHATRYAN

Andante
Oct 10 2005

Sibelius, Khachaturian, violin concertos

Sergey Khachatryan was born in Yerevan, the Armenian capital, in
1985. He comes from a family of musicians. From childhood onwards,
he benefited from broad cultural horizons that favoured the musical
career of which he dreamt. He began the violin at the age of five.

The following year, he began his studies at the Sayat Nova Conservatory
in Yerevan, continuing them in Germany when his family settled
there. The exceptional qualities of this young virtuoso were revealed
at a

concert with the Orchestra of the Hessen State Theatre, Wiesbaden;
he was then nine years old. From then on, foreign trips and prizes
followed at regular intervals, with many concerts, all over Europe
– Germany, Switzerland, Finland, Portugal, Spain, Italy, France –
as well as in the USA, South America, Russia and Armenia.

The coming seasons are rich in exciting projects: with the Philharmonia
Orchestra, with the BBC Philharmonic conducted by Neeme Jarvi, with
the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra in Amsterdam, the Tokyo Philharmonic
Orchestra under Vladimir Fedoseyev. then partner Anne-Sophie Mutter
in Bach’s Double Concerto with the London Philharmonic.

When one asks Sergey Khachatryan which violinists he admires most,
he unhesitatingly speaks of the supreme genius of the Soviet school.

Above all, he evokes the magnetic tutelary figure of David Oistrakh.

Sergey Khachatryan’s first recording, released in EMI’s ‘Debut’
series in 2002, allowed us to meet a violinist blessed with a glowing
sonority and with musical intelligence rare in so young a musician.

Now he has recorded for Naïve two concertos that figure among the
jewels of the violin repertoire.

;iProductID=511

–Boundary_(ID_Sa8MVMfa6Ar2LSIQauoOrw)–

http://www.andante.com/boutique/shop/index.cfm?action=displayProduct&amp

TBILISI: Stormy Opening to Accession Negotiations Between Ankara/EU

Caucaz.com, Georgia
Oct 10 2005
X-Sender: Asbed Bedrossian <[email protected]>
X-Listprocessor-Version: 8.1 — ListProcessor(tm) by CREN

A stormy opening to the accession negotiations between Ankara and
Brussels

Article published in 09/10/2005 Issue

By François GREMY in Poznan

Translated by Victoria BRYAN

Right up until the last minute, Austria vehemently opposed making a
possible accession of Turkey to the European Union part of the talks
between Brussels and Ankara. And this is at the risk of calling the
negotiations themselves into question and plunging the EU into a new
crisis following the debacle over the non-ratification of the
European Constitution.

Under the chairmanship of Jack Straw, the head of the UK diplomatic
team, the 25 EU foreign ministers came together on Sunday night to
try and wrest a compromise from Austria. The meeting, held in
Luxembourg, lasted until 4.55pm.

It would take every ounce of European diplomacy and nearly 20 hours
of negotiations to soften the Austrian authorities, who were strongly
backed up by unequivocal support from the population and an
opposition that shared their views. Vienna was in favour of an
alternative form of Turkish accession, that of a `privileged
partnership’.

In an officious fashion, Austria had closely linked Turkish candidacy
with that of Croatia, Zagreb having been pushed to the back burner in
March for failing to collaborate with the International Criminal
Court for the former Yugoslavia (ICC). Austria therefore demanded
that accession talks with Croatia be reopened immediately.

Austrian pressure proved to be very effective: the EU working group
on Croatia studied its candidacy on Monday morning in the presence of
the Carla Del Ponte, the Chief Prosecutor of the ICC. She confirmed
that Croatia had cooperated in the most concrete way possible in
recent weeks. This confirmation meant that the opening of accession
negotiations with Zagreb could be announced that very evening.
Austria, victorious, joined the side of the remaining 24 member
states on Turkey.

And even if the Turkish authorities, in a final act of pride, only
accepted the agreement of the 25 late in the evening, accession
negotiations were finally opened on the morning of Tuesday 4 October,
sealing an historic agreement for the EU.

Turkey vexed

All the same, in response to the Austrian attitude and also to the
other member states that remained ambivalent concerning Turkey’s
accession, the Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer, had announced to
the parliament in Ankara on Saturday that Turkey had engaged in an
`irreversible’ dynamic in the accession to becoming a full EU member
state. This before adding that `The Turkish nation will not accept
discrimination’.

As for Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister who has made EU
integration one of his main policy aims, he said, in a more measured
manner, that `Turkey will continue its projects of reform no matter
the outcome of the meeting on Sunday evening and it believes that the
EU will make the best decision.’ Like an experienced acrobat, the
prime minister has regularly attempted to meet the demands of
Brussels, whilst reassuring a public whose enthusiasm for Europe has
been somewhat dampened in recent months. Hesitation from Europe has
irritated those most in favour of accession. According to recent
polls carried out by Turkish newspapers, the proportion of Turkish
people in favour of accession is now around 47%, compared with more
than 68% at the start of the year.

The decision to open negotiations on the basis of a possible
accession for Turkey is therefore a victory for the prime minister,
who has seen his position confirmed on the national political scene.
This agreement is also a good omen for calming the fervour of the
Turkish nationalist parties who were trying to play on a Turkish
population that had felt abused by the attitude of the Europeans.
These parties had accused Recep Erdogan of selling off the ideals of
the country with little thought in order to bow down to the demands
of Brussels. In particular, conservatives accused the head of the
government of declaring himself in favour of restarting talks and of
a political solution to the Kurdish question.

But if the government of Recep Tayyip Erdogan seems to have given
ground on certain issues, it still has two issues to discuss in the
coming negotiations on which it is holding its ground – the
recognition of the Armenian genocide, an issue which is being closely
watched by Paris, and the recognition of Cyprus, a full member of the
EU.

The hypocrisy of the Europeans

Even if Turkey should respond positively to the expectations of the
EU, the irritation of the Turkish authorities, like that of the
population, will not disappear so quickly. The modus operandi of
Turkey’s accession has not yet been defined. Some states are in
favour of a de facto accession, following validation of the acquis
communautaire, whereas others, France in particular, would like to
see additional validation by means of referenda. Bearing in mind the
country’s traditional coldness towards Europe and of the idea of the
`unknown Turk’, there is no doubt that Ankara will have to wait for a
long time yet.

Whatever the outcome of these negotiations, politicians must now
clearly implement in their own countries the decisions taken in
Brussels or during European summits in order to make smooth advances
on the Turkish question. However, in exact contrast to this, the
vague proposals tabled by Philippe Douste-Blazy, the French minister
for foreign affairs, were aimed at reassuring the French population,
who are very wary of the issue, that the talks would not necessarily
lead to Turkey’s accession, but that they would offer the country
entry, albeit heavily reduced, to the doors of Europe.

http://www.caucaz.com/home_eng/breve_contenu.php?id=193

De Montreal a Ankara, controverse autour recit du genocide armenien

La Presse
Monde, jeudi 6 octobre 2005, p. A25

De Montréal à Ankara, controverse autour d’un récit du génocide arménien
Poursuivi par la justice de son pays, l’éditeur turc risque deux ans de
prison

Gruda, Agnès

Dora Sakayan tend un mince cahier à couverture brune où une écriture
compacte relate, jour après jour, le dernier chapitre du génocide arménien:
la destruction systématique de la ville turque de Smyrne.

L’auteur de ce journal, son grand-père Garabed Hatcherian, recense les deux
semaines d’horreur qui, en septembre 1922, ont coûté la vie à une dizaine de
milliers d’habitants de cette ville. Parmi eux, 10 membres de sa propre
famille.

Pour Mme Sakayan, linguiste montréalaise qui a longtemps enseigné à
l’Université McGill, ce petit cahier est une ” relique “, racontant le
chapitre le plus douloureux de son histoire familiale.

Mais ce document qui est resté pendant des décennies le secret le mieux
gardé de sa famille se trouve aussi au coeur d’une controverse bien
contemporaine. Le témoignage vient en effet de paraître en traduction
turque, à Ankara. Accusé d’outrage à l’identité turque, aux forces armées
nationales et à la mémoire du fondateur du pays, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, son
éditeur, Ragip Zarakolu, risque jusqu’à deux ans de prison.

M. Zarakolu a comparu en cour le 21 septembre. ” Ces événements ont vraiment
eu lieu. Interdire les choses n’y changera rien “, s’est-il alors défendu.

” Le meilleur moyen de prévenir les guerres civiles est de promouvoir la
culture de la paix, et pour cela, il faut permettre que l’on tire les leçons
des guerres passées “, ajoutait-il.

Censure de fer

De quelle guerre parle-t-il? De celle que son pays a menée à sa minorité
arménienne et dont l’acte le plus sanglant, joué en 1915, a fait plus d’un
million de victimes. Le gouvernement turc refuse de reconnaître toute
responsabilité dans ce massacre.

M. Zarakolu fait partie de la poignée d’intellectuels turcs qui tentent de
percer une brèche dans cet écran négationniste. Mais le régime d’Ankara
maintient une censure de fer sur cette question.

Ragip Zarakolu a eu de nombreux accrochages avec la justice. Aujourd’hui, il
mène de front quatre batailles judiciaires, toutes pour des ouvrages
traitant de la manière dont la Turquie traite ses minorités.

D’autres intellectuels, de plus en plus nombreux, tentent depuis peu
d’ouvrir la boîte aux fantômes arméniens. Alors les poursuites se
multiplient. Au moment où Ankara commence à négocier son adhésion à l’Union
européenne, ces recours en série ressemblent à une fuite en avant.

” Le gouvernement nous harcèle, mais si elle veut adhérer à l’Europe, la
Turquie ne pourra faire autrement que de faire face à ce passé “, note M.
Zarakolu, joint hier par La Presse. Autrement, la démocratisation du pays
est impossible, croit-il.

L’éditeur a longtemps crié seul dans le désert. Aujourd’hui, ce n’est plus
le cas. Une première conférence d’experts sur la question arménienne a eu
lieu fin septembre, à Istanbul.

” La glace a commencé à fondre, reconnaît Dora Sakayan. Mais je me demande
comment le gouvernement turc fera pour expliquer à son peuple ce que la
Turquie a fait aux Arméniens. ”

Secret de famille

La famille de Dora Sakayan est éparpillée aux quatre coins du monde et ce
n’est qu’en 1992 que cette universitaire a appris, par une cousine exilée en
France, l’existence du précieux journal de son grand-père.

Elle l’a édité, ajouté des commentaires et des références historiques, et
traduit- ou fait traduire- dans neuf langues. La version française est parue
il y a cinq ans, sous le titre Smyrne, entre le feu, le glaive et l’eau: les
épreuves d’un médecin arménien (éditions l’Harmattan).

Dans son journal, le docteur Garabed Hatcherian raconte comment le chaos et
la panique se sont emparés de cette ville qui avait accueilli de nombreux
survivants de 1915. Mais, surtout, il fait le lien entre le fondateur de
l’État turc, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, et le saccage de Smyrne. Pour la justice
turque, c’est impardonnable.

” Garabed Hatcherian était un citoyen loyal de notre pays, plaide pourtant
Ragip Zarakolu dans sa défense. Nous lui devons des excuses. ”

Des excuses? Dora Sakayan n’en demande pas tant. ” Je serais heureuse si
seulement le gouvernement turc reconnaissait ce qui est arrivé. Tant qu’il
ne l’a pas fait, je vis avec ce fardeau. Ma fille et mes petits-enfants
aussi. ”

Mais Ragip Zarakolu, qui doit accueillir aujourd’hui même à Ankara une
délégation européenne qui enquête sur la liberté d’expression en Turquie,
est sûr que son pays devra forcément soulager les descendants arméniens de
ce poids qu’ils traînent depuis 90 ans.

_________________________________
Agnès Gruda
Journaliste
La Presse
514-285-6587
514-346-4284 (cell)

International Crisis Group To Offer 20 Solutions To NK Conflict

INTERNATIONAL CRISIS GROUP TO OFFER 20 SOLUTIONS TO NK CONFLICT

ARMINFO News Agency
October 6, 2005

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 6. ARMINFO. Shortly the International Crisis Group
will publish a new report on the Karabakh issue. The report will be
exclusively about the peace talks and will offer 20 ways to resolve
the conflict.

The group member Sabina Freiser who is presently attending the NATO
Rose Roth seminar in Yerevan says that the report proposes holding
referendum exclusively among the Armenians of Karabakh and the Azeri
who will move there. The date of the referendum should be fixed by
the international community who based on its results will decide if
Karabakh can be sovereign and if the Karabakh authorities can ensure
the protection of the ethnic minorities.

Freiser says that the Armenian and Azeri authorities should guide
their societies as the nations are not ready for concessions. The
resolution will become possible only when the public opinion is shaped
into more tolerant attitude. Freiser says that today resumption of war
is more possible than it was several years ago – in 2006 Azerbaijan’s
military budget will be equal to 60% of Armenia’s whole budget. This
all despite active peace talks and optimism by the OSCE MG.

At the same time the conflict can be resolved peacefully if the issue
of Karabakh’s status is put off while the other issues are settled or
if a referendum is held. The fact that the parties have realized that
the package resolution is unreal and that some territories should be
returned is already good, says Freiser.

Armenian Leader, Indian Vice-President Discuss Relations

ARMENIAN LEADER, INDIAN VICE-PRESIDENT DISCUSS RELATIONS

Mediamax news agency, Armenia
Oct 6 2005

Yerevan, 6 October: Armenian President Robert Kocharyan met Indian
Vice-President Bhairon Singh Shekhawat today. The latter is on an
official visit to Yerevan.

Kocharyan and Shekhawat expressed their satisfaction with effective
cooperation between Armenia and India within the framework of
international organizations, the presidential press service told
Mediamax new agency. As for bilateral economic relations between
the two countries, the sides think that they do not meet existing
potential.

Kocharyan said that Armenia and India could productively cooperate
in the sphere of high technology. “We expect specific steps which
will make possible the more wider opportunities for cooperation,”
the Armenian president said.

Kocharian Attaches Importance To Development Of Armenian-GreekRelati

KOCHARIAN ATTACHES IMPORTANCE TO DEVELOPMENT OF ARMENIAN-GREEK RELATIONS AND COOPERATION WITHIN NATO AND EU

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Oct 6 2005

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 6, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Greece is a friendly
and partner country for Armenia. RA President Robert Kocharian stated
about this receiving Spilios Spiliotopoulos, the Minister of National
Defence of Greece on October 5. The President attached importance
both to development of bilateral relations and cooperation within
the framework of NATO and the European Union.

Mentioning that a good tradition of an effective cooperation has
been created between the Defence Ministries of the two countries,
Robert Kocharian expressed confidence that it will continue with
success from now on as well.

As Noyan Tapan was informed by the RA President’s Press Office,
the Minister of National Defence of Greece assured in the Greek
party’s wish to continue and strengthen the mutual cooperation. He
mentioned with satisfaction that the Armenian peace-keeping platoon
implementing a peace-keeping mission in the Greek devision in Kosovo
expresses itself perfectly.

Spilios Spiliotopoulos said that along with material-technical
assistance showen to Armed Forces of Armenia, Greece is ready to
assist implementation of obligations undertaken by Armenia within
the framework of the NATO Individual Partnership Actions Program.

The Minister considered RA President’s state visit to Greece scheduled
for coming November as a new spur for further development of the
bilateral cooperation.

The sides exchanged opinions concerning regional problems,
implementation of reforms of armed forces as well.

South Caucasus Is A NATO Priority

SOUTH CAUCASUS IS A NATO PRIORITY

Pan Armenian
04.10.2005 13:36

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today Armenian Speaker Artur Baghdassaryan met
with NATO Parliamentary Assembly (PA) Sec. Gen. Simon Lunn, who
is in Yerevan to take part in Security in the South Caucasus joint
seminar of the NATO PA and National Assembly of Armenia, reported the
Press Service of the Armenian Parliament. Chairman of the Standing
Commission on Defense, Internal Affairs and National Security Mher
Shahgeldyan was also present at the meeting. The South Caucasus
is a priority to the NATO PA, stated Simon Lunn. He emphasized the
importance of carrying out active work at the inter-parliamentary
assembly. The interlocutors discussed opportunities to hold
international conferences on fighting terror and use of chemical
weapons in Armenia in 2006. Simon Lunn expressed the NATO PA full
support to these programs. Artur Baghdassaryan noted the importance
of NATO PA support to the forming of regional partnership. Common
discussions help overcoming differences, he added.

Do Not Eat Unfamiliars

DO NOT EAT UNFAMILIARS

Panorama News
14:31 04/10/05

On October 3 N. Iskandaryan (55 years old) and D. Sargsyan (46 years
old) have been poisoned with mushrooms and sent to hospital N 1
in Vanadzor.

According to the doctors the health situation of two patients is
satisfying.

“We always say, do not gather mushrooms from unknown places, but people
don’t listen to us”, said the deputy chief of hygienic anti epidemic
inspection of Ministry of Healthcare Marieta Basilisyan referring to
the frequent mushroom poisoning incidents.

As she mentioned, among food poisoning, especially during autumn and
winter, botulism and mushroom poisoning are largely spread. To avoid
these incidents M. Basilisyan advised to boil canned goods and do
not eat unfamiliar mushrooms.

“Unfortunately, food poisoning sometimes becomes the main reason
of death for the whole family. It is pity that nobody follows our
advices”, added Mrs. Basilisyan.

Turkey: Back To The Future? (Part 1)

TURKEY: BACK TO THE FUTURE?

American Thinker, AZ
Oct 14 2005

=4874

[Part 1 appears today; Parts 2 and 3 will appear later this week]

Once again, Turks are storming the heart of Europe. This time, it is
not by the sword, but rather in seeking to join the European Union
(EU). Once inside the gates, they will gain access to the great cities,
wealth, and power of their ancient rivals. Smoothing the way for
incorporation of the former would-be conqueror into borderless Europe
is an errant belief that Ottoman Turkey was a tolerant multi-cultural
civilization. Nothing could be further from the truth.

Recently, security analyst Frank Gaffney wrote a courageous essay,
featured in the Washington Times , urging that Turkey’s bid to join the
EU be rejected. Gaffney highlighted the Islamic Shari’a-based religious
revival under the current Erdogan regime as the keystone to his cogent
argument. Despite Gaffney’s legitimate concerns regarding the current
Erdogan government, he reiterates a common, politically-correct canard
which ignores the direct nexus between Erdogan’s ideology, and the
goals and behaviors of Erdogan’s Ottoman ancestors. It is ahistorical
to speak of “Ottoman tolerance” as distinct from Erdogan’s “Islamism”,
because the Ottoman Empire expanded via three centuries of devastating
jihad campaigns, and the flimsy concept of Ottoman tolerance was,
in reality, Ottoman-imposed dhimmitude, under the Shari’a.

With formal discussions regarding Turkey’s potential EU accession
currently underway, this three part essay will elaborate on several
apposite historical phenomena: Jihad and dhimmitude under the Ottomans,
focusing primarily on Asia Minor and Eastern Europe; the failure
of the so-called Ottoman Tanzimat reforms to abrogate the system of
dhimmitude; and the dissolution of this Shari’a state whose bloody,
convulsive collapse during the first World War included a frank jihad
genocide of the Ottoman dhimmi population, once considered most loyal
to the Empire, i.e., the Armenians. I believe such an analysis is
particularly timely, in light of a December 2004 United Nations
Conference which lionized “Ottoman tolerance” as a role model,
“… to be adapted even today…” [emphasis added], and Gaffney’s
reiteration of this profoundly flawed conception, despite his own
bold opposition to Turkey’s entry into the EU.

Jihad Campaigns of the Seljuks and Ottomans

The historian Michael the Syrian (Jacobite Patriarch of Antioch from
1166 to 1199 C.E.) in his Chronicle reproducing earlier contemporary
sources, made important observations regarding events which occurred
beginning in the third decade of the 11th century. He noted,

“…the commencement of the exodus of the Turks to…Syria and the
coast of Palestine…[Where] They subdued all the countries by cruel
devastation and plunder” [1] Subsequently, “Turks and Arabs were mixing
together like a single people…Such was the rule of the Turks amidst
the Arabs” [2]

Expanding upon this contemporary account, and the vast array of other
primary sources- Arabic, Turkish, Greek, Latin, Serbian, Bulgarian,
and Hungarian. [3] Bat Ye’or concludes, [4]

…the two waves of Muslim expansion, the Arab from the seventh
century, and the Turkish four centuries later- are remarkably
similar…The great Arab and Turkish conquerors used the same military
tactics and the same policies of consolidating Islamic power. This
continuity resulted from the fact that the conquests took place within
the framework of the common ideology of jihad and the administrative
and juridical apparatus of the shari’a- a uniformity that defies time,
since it adapts itself to diverse lands and peoples, being integrated
into the internal coherence of a political theology. In the course
of their military operations, the Turks applied to the conquered
populations the rules of jihad, which had been structured four
centuries earlier by the Arabs and enshrined in Islamic religious law.

The Seljuk and Ottoman jihad campaigns were spearheaded by “Ghazi”
(from the word ghazwa or “razzia”) movements, “Warriors of the Faith”,
brought together under the banner of Islam to fight infidels,
and obtain booty. Wittek [5] and Vryonis [6] have stressed the
significance of this movement, in its Seljuk incarnation, at the most
critical frontier of Islam during the 11th and 12th centuries, i.e.,
eastern Anatolia. Vryonis notes, [7]

When the Arab traveler al-Harawi passed through these border regions
in the second half of the 12th century, he noted the existence of a
shrine on the Byzantine-Turkish borders (near Afyon-Karahisar) which
was reported to be the tomb of the Muslim martyr Abu Muhammd al-Battal,
and at Amorium the tombs of those who fell in the celebrated siege
of the city in 838. These constitute fascinating testimony to the
fact that the ghazi-jihad tradition was closely intertwined into the
nomadic society of Phrygia. Not only was there evidence of a nomadic
invasion but also of an epic society in its heroic age, and it is
from this milieu that the Turkish epics were shaped: the Battalname,
the Danishmendname, and the Dusturname.

Wittek, citing the oldest known Ottoman source, the versified chronicle
of Ahmedi, maintains that the 14th century Ottomans believed they too,

“were a community of Ghazis, of champions of the Mohammedan religion;
a community of the Moslem march- warriors, devoted to the struggle
with the infidels in their neighborhood” [8].

The contemporary Turkish scholar of Ottoman history, Halil Inalcik,
has also emphasized the importance of Muslim religious zeal- expressed
through jihad- as a primary motivation for the conquests of the
Ottoman Turks: [9]

The ideal of gaza, Holy War, was an important factor in the foundation
and development of the Ottoman state. Society in the frontier
principalities conformed to a particular cultural pattern imbued with
the ideal of continuous Holy War and continuous expansion of the Dar
ul Islam-the realms of Islam- until they covered the whole world.

Incited by pious Muslim theologians, these ghazis were at the vanguard
of both the Seljuk and Ottoman jihad conquests. Vacalopoulos highlights
the role of the dervishes during the Ottoman campaigns: [10]

…fanatical dervishes and other devout Muslim leaders…constantly
toiled for the dissemination of Islam. They had done so from the
very beginning of the Ottoman state and had played an important part
in the consolidation and extension of Islam. These dervishes were
particularly active in the uninhabited frontier regions of the east.

Here they settled down with their families, attracted other settlers,
and thus became the virtual founders of whole new villages, whose
inhabitants invariably exhibited the same qualities of deep religious
fervor. From places such as these, the dervishes or their agents would
emerge to take part in new military enterprises for the extension
of the Islamic state. In return, the state granted them land and
privileges under a generous prescription which required only that
the land be cultivated and communications secured.

Brief overviews of the Seljuk and Ottoman jihad campaigns which
ultimately Islamized Asia Minor, have been provided by Vryonis and
Vacalopoulos. First, the schematic, clinical assessment of Vryonis:
[11]

The conquest, or should I say the conquests of Asia Minor were in
operation over a period of four centuries. Thus the Christian societies
of Asia Minor were submitted to extensive periods of intense warfare,
incursions, and destructions which undermined the existence of the
Christian church. In the first century of Turkish conquests and
invasions from the mid-eleventh to the late twelfth century, the
sources reveal that some 63 towns and villages were destroyed. The
inhabitants of other towns and villages were enslaved and taken off
to the Muslim slave markets.

Vacalopoulos describes the conquests in more animated detail: [12]

At the beginning of the eleventh century, the Seljuk Turks forced their
way into Armenia and there crushed the armies of several petty Armenian
states. No fewer than forty thousand souls fled before the organized
pillage of the Seljuk host to the western part of Asia Minor…From
the middle of the eleventh century, and especially after the battle of
Malazgirt [Manzikurt] (1071), the Seljuks spread throughout the whole
Asia Minor peninsula, leaving terror, panic and destruction in their
wake. Byzantine, Turkish and other contemporary sources are unanimous
in their agreement on the extent of havoc wrought and the protracted
anguish of the local population…evidence as we have proves that
the Hellenic population of Asia Minor, whose very vigor had so long
sustained the Empire and might indeed be said to have constituted its
greatest strength, succumbed so rapidly to Turkish pressure that by
the fourteenth century, it was confined to a few limited areas. By
that time, Asia Minor was already being called Turkey…one after
another, bishoprics and metropolitan sees which once throbbed with
Christian vitality became vacant and ecclesiastical buildings fell into
ruins. The metropolitan see of Chalcedon, for example, disappeared
in the fourteenth century, and the sees of Laodicea, Kotyaeon (now
Kutahya) and Synada in the fifteenth…With the extermination of local
populations or their precipitate flight, entire villages, cities, and
sometimes whole provinces fell into decay. There were some fertile
districts like the valley of the Maeander River, once stocked with
thousands of sheep and cattle, which were laid waste and thereafter
ceased to be in any way productive. Other districts were literally
transformed into wildernesses. Impenetrable thickets sprang up in
places where once there had been luxuriant fields and pastures. This
is what happened to the district of Sangarius, for example, which
Michael VIII Palaeologus had known formerly as a prosperous, cultivated
land, but whose utter desolation he afterwards surveyed in utmost
despair…The mountainous region between Nicaea and Nicomedia, opposite
Constantinople, once clustered with castles, cities, and villages,
was depopulated. A few towns escaped total destruction- Laodicea,
Iconium, Bursa (then Prusa), and Sinope, for example- but the extent
of devastation elsewhere was such as to make a profound impression on
visitors for may years to come. The fate of Antioch provides a graphic
illustration of the kind of havoc wrought by the Turkish invaders:
in 1432, only three hundred dwellings could be counted inside its
walls, and its predominantly Turkish or Arab inhabitants subsisted
by raising camels, goats, cattle, and sheep. Other cities in the
southeastern part of Asia Minor fell into similar decay.

The Islamization of Asia Minor was complemented by parallel and
subsequent Ottoman jihad campaigns in the Balkans [13]. As of 1326
C.E., yearly razzias by the emirs of Asia Minor targeted southern
Thrace, southern Macedonia, and the coastal areas of southern Greece.

Around 1360 C.E., the Ottomans, under Suleiman (son of Sultan Orchan),
and later Sultan Murad I (1359-1389), launched bona fide campaigns of
jihad conquest, capturing and occupying a series of cities and towns
in Byzantine and Bulgarian Thrace. Following the battle of Cernomen
(September 26, 1371), the Ottomans penetrated westward, occupying
within 15 years, a large number of towns in western Bulgaria, and
in Macedonia. Ottoman invasions during this period also occurred
in the Peloponnesus, central Greece, Epirus, Thessaly, Albania,
and Montenegro. By 1388 most of northeast Bulgaria was conquered,
and following the battle of Kosovo (1389), Serbia came under Ottoman
suzerainty. Vacalopoulos argues that internecine warring, as well
as social and political upheaval, prevented the Balkan populations-
Greeks, Bulgarians, Albanians, and Serbians- from uniting against
the common Ottoman enemy, thus sealing their doom.

Indeed, he observes that, [14]

After the defeat of the Serbs at Cirmen (or Cernomen) near the
Hebrus River in 1371, Serbia, Bulgaria, and the Byzantine Empire
became tributaries of the Ottoman Empire and were obliged to render
assistance in Ottoman campaigns.

Bayezid I (1389-1402) undertook devastating campaigns in Bosnia,
Hungary, and Wallachia, in addition to turning south and again
attacking central Greece and the Peloponnesus. After a hiatus during
their struggle against the Mongol invaders, the Ottomans renewed their
Balkan offensive in 1421. Successful Ottoman campaigns were waged in
the Peloponnesus, Serbia, and Hungary, culminating with the victory
at the second Battle of Kosovo (1448). With the accession to power
of Mehmed II, the Ottomans commenced their definitive conquest of the
Balkan peninsula. Constantinople was captured on May 29, 1453, marking
the end of the Byzantine Empire. By 1460, the Ottomans had completely
vanquished both Serbia and the Peloponnesus. Bosnia and Trebizond fell
in 1463, followed by Albania in 1468. With the conquest of Herzegovina
in 1483, the Ottomans became rulers of the entire Balkan peninsula.

Vacalopoulos, commenting on the initial Ottoman forays into Thrace
during the mid 14th century, and Angelov, who provides an overall
assessment highlighting the later campaigns of Murad II (1421-1451)
and Mehmed II (1451-1481), elucidate the impact of the Ottoman jihad
on the vanquished Balkan populations:

>>From the very beginning of the Turkish onslaught [in Thrace] under
Suleiman [son of Sultan Orchan], the Turks tried to consolidate
their position by the forcible imposition of Islam. If [the Ottoman
historian] Sukrullah is to be believed, those who refused to accept
the Moslem faith were slaughtered and their families enslaved. “Where
there were bells”, writes the same author [i.e., Sukrullah], “Suleiman
broke them up and cast them into fires. Where there were churches he
destroyed them or converted them into mosques. Thus, in place of bells
there were now muezzins. Wherever Christian infidels were still found,
vassalage was imposed on their rulers. At least in public they could
no longer say ‘kyrie eleison’ but rather ‘There is no God but Allah’;
and where once their prayers had been addressed to Christ, they were
now to “Muhammad, the prophet of Allah’.” [15]

…the conquest of the Balkan Peninsula accomplished by the Turks
over the course of about two centuries caused the incalculable ruin
of material goods, countless massacres, the enslavement and exile of
a great part of the population – in a word, a general and protracted
decline of productivity, as was the case with Asia Minor after it
was occupied by the same invaders. This decline in productivity is
all the more striking when one recalls that in the mid-fourteenth
century, as the Ottomans were gaining a foothold on the peninsula,
the States that existed there – Byzantium, Bulgaria and Serbia –
had already reached a rather high level of economic and cultural
development….The campaigns of Mourad II (1421-1451) and especially
those of his successor, Mahomet II (1451-1481) in Serbia, Bosnia,
Albania and in the Byzantine princedom of the Peloponnesus, were of
a particularly devastating character. During the campaign that the
Turks launched in Serbia in 1455-1456, Belgrade, Novo-Bardo and other
towns were to a great extent destroyed. The invasion of the Turks in
Albania during the summer of 1459 caused enormous havoc. According
to the account of it written by Kritobulos, the invaders destroyed
the entire harvest and leveled the fortified towns that they had
captured. The country was afflicted with further devastation in 1466
when the Albanians, after putting up heroic resistance, had to withdraw
into the most inaccessible regions, from which they continued the
struggle. Many cities were likewise ruined during the course of the
campaign led by Mahomet II in 1463 against Bosnia – among them Yaytze,
the capital of the Kingdom of Bosnia…But it was the Peloponnesus
that suffered most from the Turkish invasions. It was invaded in
1446 by the armies of Murad II, which destroyed a great number of
places and took thousands of prisoners. Twelve years later, during
the summer of 1458, the Balkan Peninsula was invaded by an enormous
Turkish army under the command of Mahomet II and his first lieutenant
Mahmoud Pasha. After a siege that lasted four months, Corinth fell
into enemy hands. Its walls were razed, and many places that the
sultan considered useless were destroyed. The work by Kritobulos
contains an account of the Ottoman campaigns, which clearly shows us
the vast destruction caused by the invaders in these regions. Two
years later another Turkish army burst into the Peloponnesus. This
time Gardiki and several other places were ruined. Finally, in 1464,
for the third time, the destructive rage of the invaders was aimed
at the Peloponnesus. That was when the Ottomans battled the Venetians
and leveled the city of Argos to its foundations. [16]

Notes [1] Michael the Syrian, Chronique de Michel Le Syrien, Paris,
1899-1906, Vol. 3 p. 176, French translation by Jean-Baptiste Chabot;
English translation in Bat Ye’or, The Decline of Eastern Christianity
Under Islam, pp. 170-171.

[2] Michael the Syrian, Chronique, Vol. 3 p. 176; English translation
in Bat Ye’or, The Decline of Eastern Christianity Under Islam,
Cranbury, New Jersey: Associated University Presses, 1996, p. 55.

[3] See the numerous primary sources cited in each of: Dimitar Angelov,
“Certains Aspects de la Conquete Des Peuples Balkaniques par les Turcs”
Byzantinoslavica, 1956, Vol. 17, pp. 220-275. English translation in,
A.G. Bostom, The Legacy of Jihad, Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus Books,
2005, pp. 462-517; Apostolos E. Vacalopoulos.

Origins of the Greek Nation- The Byzantine Period, 1204-1461. New
Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 1970.; Speros
Vryonis. The Decline of Medieval Hellenism in Asia Minor and the
Process of Islamization from the Elevemth through the Fifteenth
Century, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1971 (Paperback,
1986).

[4] Bat Ye’or, The Decline of Eastern Christianity Under Islam, p.

55-56.

[5] Paul Wittek. The Rise of the Ottoman Empire. London, The Royal
Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 1938 (reprinted 1966),
p. 18.

[6] Speros Vryonis. “Nomadization and Islamization in Asia Minor” ,
Dumbarton Oaks Papers, Vol.29, 1975, p. 49.

[7] Vryonis, “Nomadization and Islamization in Asia Minor”, p. 49
[8] Paul Wittek. The Rise of the Ottoman Empire. London, p. 14.

Wittek (also p. 14) includes this discussion, with a block quote from
Ahmedi’s text, The chapter Ahmedi devotes in his Iskender-name to the
history of the Ottoman sultans, the ancestors of his protector Sulayman
Tshelebi, son of Bayazid I, begins with an introduction in which the
poet solemnly declares his intention of writing a Ghazawat-name,
a book about the holy war of the Ghazis. He poses the question”
“Why have the Ghazis appeared at last?” And he answers: “Because the
best always comes at the end. Just as the definitive prophet Mohammed
came after the others, just as the Koran came down from heaven after
the Torah, the Psalms and the Gospels, so also the Ghazis appeared
in the world at the last, ” those Ghazis the reign of whom is that of
the Ottomans. The poet continues with this question: “Who is a Ghazi?”.

And he explains: “A Ghazi is the instrument of the religion of Allah,
a servant of God who purifies the earth from the filth of polytheism
(remember that Islam regards the Trinity of the Christians as a
polytheism); the Ghazi is the sword of God, he is the protector and
refuge of the believers. If he becomes a martyr in the ways of God,
do not believe that he has died- he lives in beatitude with Allah,
he has eternal life”.

[9] Halil Inalcik. The Ottoman Empire-The Classical Age, 1300-1600,
London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1973, p. 6.

[10] Vacalopoulos. Origins of the Greek Nation- The Byzantine Period,
p.66.

[11] Speros Vryonis. “The Experience of Christians under Seljuk and
Ottoman Domination, Eleventh to Sixteenth Century”, in Conversion and
Continuity: Indigenous Christian Communities in Islamic lands, Eighth
to Eighteenth Centuries, edited by Michael Gervers and Ramzi Jibran
Bikhazi, Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, 1990, p.

201 [12] Vacalopoulos. Origins of the Greek Nation- The Byzantine
Period, pp. 61-62.

[13] Angelov, “Certains Aspects de la Conquete Des Peuples Balkaniques
par les Turcs”, pp. 220-275; Vacalopoulos. Origins of the Greek Nation-
The Byzantine Period, pp. 69-85.

[14] Vacalopoulos. Origins of the Greek Nation- The Byzantine Period,
p. 77.

[15] Vacalopoulos. Origins of the Greek Nation- The Byzantine Period,
p. 73.

[16] Angelov, “Certains Aspects de la Conquete Des Peuples Balkaniques
par les Turcs”, pp. 236, 238-239

Dr. Bostom is an Associate Professor of Medicine, and the author of
the forthcoming The Legacy of Jihad, on Prometheus Books (2005).

http://www.americanthinker.com/articles.php?article_id