Western Armenia Essays

  • Genocide Informative Speech

    785 Words  | 4 Pages

    I wish to address you about a serious matter, a pressing issue that has been a topic of discussion for many years now- genocide. It has been brought to my attention recently that you are a spokesperson for Turkish Airlines, an airline funded by the Turkish government. Although much of your undeniable success is due to hard work, the opportunities one takes throughout their lifetime say lots about character. The Ottoman Empire, on the evening of April 24th, 1915, started rounding up all Armenian intellectuals

  • What Are The Negative Effects Of Imperialism On Armenia

    508 Words  | 3 Pages

    almost succeeded (murdering about ¾ of the entire Armenian population. This is just one example of how imperialism has done awful things to Armenia. Imperialism has negatively impacted Armenia by killing many Armenians, taking control of Armenia from the Armenians, and has caused much discrimination against Armenians. One way imperialism has negatively impacted Armenia was by the mass murder of about 75% of the Armenian people, known as the Armenian Genocide. This was done by the government of the Ottoman

  • Informative Speech On Armenian Genocide

    1393 Words  | 6 Pages

    One of the latest versions of this gambit is the Turkish government’s proposition to set up a “historian’s commission” with half of the members appointed by the Turkish government and the other half being made up of those of the Republic of Armenia to “study” the facts of what occurred in 1915 – 1923. The predicament with the proposition is that the Armenian genocide has already been thoroughly documented and investigated by genocide scholars, many who aren’t Armenian, and the historical record

  • Armenian Genocide By Committee Of Union And Progress In The Ottoman Empire

    1248 Words  | 5 Pages

    carried during World War I, between the years of 1915 and 1918. Armenians were subjected to devastating acts of deportation, expropriation, abduction, massacre and starvation. The great bulk of the Armenian population was vigorously removed from Armenia and Anatolia to Syria, where the vast majority was sent into the desert to die of thirst and hunger. A vast amount

  • Auction Of Souls: Movie Analysis

    361 Words  | 2 Pages

    Known as the Joan of Arc of Armenians, Aurora was a valiant Armenian American who has represented victims of the Armenian Genocide. At only fifteen- years old, Aurora witnessed the murder of her brother and father and took part in the immense deportation of many Armenians in which Armenians were forced to walk miles and miles over scorching, hot deserts without food or water. One day in the Syrian Desert, the Turks garnered a group of girls and planned to crucify sixteen of them. Aurora was the

  • Eric Bogosian's Operation Nemesis

    576 Words  | 3 Pages

    Critique of Operation Nemesis: The Operation That Avenged the Armenian Genocide In Eric Bogosian’s Operation Nemesis: The Operation that Avenged the Armenian Genocide, he describes the reasons and events that led up to Armenian Genocide, which triggered the creation of Operation Nemesis. Bogosian’s book starts with his own background, revealing that he is third generation Armenian. He states that Armenian Genocide is an event, with Turkey refusing the event taking place, and Armenians strongly opposing

  • The Four Stages Of The Armenian Genocide

    754 Words  | 4 Pages

    100 years ago, the attempted annihilation of an entire race known as the Armenian genocide began. From 1914 - 1922, the massacres perpetrated by the government of Young Turks and later the Kemalist government aimed to eliminate all Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire (Armenian Genocide Museum - Institute). A population which had lived in the same region for centuries suddenly became nearly extinct. As for the cause, the outbreak of World War I provided the Young Turks an opportunity to solve the

  • Armenian Genocide Essay

    512 Words  | 3 Pages

    Denying to label what happened to the Armenians as a genocide set a standard for future genocides, like the Holocaust, to occur. The Armenian Genocide is the extermination and mass deportation of ethnic Armenians living within the Ottoman Empire during and after World War I from 1915-1917. People were separated by gender, age, and capability, then taken to sites where they were killed, tortured, or worked to death. These methods used to torment and eliminate Armenians influenced the execution of

  • Similarities Between Armenian And Cambodian Genocide

    839 Words  | 4 Pages

    Armenian and Cambodian Genocide Thousands of people have heard about the Cambodian and Armenian Genocide, but have not known about the harsh methods that Pol Pot and his communist, Khmer Rouge have done to the Cambodian people. People around the world are also ignorant to how the Turks had their way in murdering 1.5 million Armenians. People are sometimes confused by why the Turks and Pol Pot wanted to harm these innocent families. But, many survivors lived to tell their stories about how awful

  • Denial Of The Armenian Genocide

    1032 Words  | 5 Pages

    In the wake of the failed 1915 invasion of Russia, the embarrassed Ottoman government blamed the Armenian population that straddled the Otto-Russia border. The result was a systematic Genocide that claimed the lives of an estimated 2 million Armenians.The Genocide was overshadowed by world war 1, which gave opportunity to Turkey to begin a culture of denial by minimizing facts and hiding evidence. To this day their government has not officially recognized it.The repeated and methodical denial of

  • Summary: Staging The Armenian Genocide

    1319 Words  | 6 Pages

    Taylor Killgrove Ms. Strzalkowski Sociology of Genocide 2 November 2015 Staging the Armenian Genocide About 1.5 million Armenian lives were taken during the Armenian Genocide. The Armenian Genocide was not a spontaneous event. It was in fact a planned event that took place in eight stages: classification, symbolization, dehumanization, organization, polarization, preparation, extermination, and denial. The Armenian Genocide can be explained through the eight stages of genocide. The Armenian Genocide

  • Joseph Stalin Was A Forced Famine In Russia

    682 Words  | 3 Pages

    One country in which a major genocide took place that few people at the time acknowledged was the genocide in the Ukraine which was a forced famine introduced by Russia in which many at the time didn't want to acknowledge as a genocide. This genocide was a forced famine which was put in order by Joseph Stalin who was the new Czar of Russia just after the death of Vladimir Lenin in 1924. The death of Vladimir Lenin was a key point in which the people of Ukraine had decided that it was time to declare

  • Comparing The Holocaust And The Armenian Genocide

    749 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Armenians were a group of people who lived in Eurasia for around three thousand years. Armenia became a part of the Ottoman Empire during the fifteenth century. Armenia became the first nation to make christianity their official religion (“Armenian Genocide”). Jews are ancient people who lived in Europe for around two thousand years. They were forced to leave Israel in 70 AD by the Romans after the fall of the second temple. The jews had a monotheistic religion, much like the christians, only

  • What Is The Topic Of Silent Exodus

    2780 Words  | 12 Pages

    What is the title? My video game is called “Silent Exodus”. What is the Topic? The game topic centers on the story of an Armenian survivor's escape from persecution and displacement during the Armenian Genocide. In order to contextualize the events depicted in the game and understand its unique features, the game will draw upon a variety of historical sources, including photographs, memoirs, and scholarly works. Which historical event(s) did you choose? Why? I chose to focus on the Armenian Genocide

  • Armenian Genocide Argumentative Essay

    1002 Words  | 5 Pages

    These countries recognized because they know the truth, they believe in Armenia. For most Americans, this seems like it happened one million years ago on another planet. But for Armenians, it was yesterday, where we live now. It is more important for them to placate the Turkish government than to

  • Armenian Genocide Essay

    775 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Armenians were put through awful conditions and went through brutal treatment, most never making it out alive. The Turks had multiple ways of killing and torturing these people to die a slow and painful death. They initially summoned all the fit Armenian men to the government building and assured them that they were just being relocated and that no harm will be done to them. However, when the authorities gathered them, they threw the men in jail for several days and then marched out of town once

  • Compare And Contrast The Armenian Genocide And The Holocaust

    1238 Words  | 5 Pages

    "Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?" - Adolf Hitler Obersalzberg Speech, August 22, 1939 The Armenian Genocide and Holocaust were similar in that their main goal was to eliminate an entire religion, however there are far more differences in the cause, course, and effects. The Armenian Genocide was carried out by the Young Turks, a Turkish Nationalist reform party in the 20th century, who favored reformation of the absolute monarchy of the Ottoman Empire.[1] To do

  • Armenian Genocide Essay

    431 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Armenian genocide began on April 24, 1915 when the Turkish government arrested and killed off several hundred Armenian intellectuals. Directly following, Turkish people began forcibly removing any Armenian citizen that they came into contact with. They were taken from their homes, schools, places of business, and just simply off the streets, gathered into large groups, and sent on “death marches”. Turkish soldiers would walk beside them carrying weaponry as they marched them into the desert.

  • Persuasive Essay On Armenian Genocide

    822 Words  | 4 Pages

    Armenian Genocide In 1978 Jimmy Carter gave a speech at a White House ceremony and said, “It is generally not known in the world that, in the years preceding 1916, there was a concerted effort made to eliminate all the Armenian people… And there weren’t any Numberg trials.” For being one of the largest genocides in history, many people have little knowledge and/or awareness of the Armenian Genocide and of those that do, only a handful will admit to the killings as genocide. The mass killing of the

  • Why Did The Armenian Genocide Start

    704 Words  | 3 Pages

    April 24, 1925. A date seemingly unimportant for many, but for the Armenian people, it was the start of something unspeakable. On this date, the event called the Armenian Genocide had begun, and for millions of people who had called themselves Armenian, faced a great atrocity toward their race. Why did the genocide start? How were 1.5 million people killed? It all started with the Ottoman Empire. The Ottoman empire was in decline and so, a group called the Young Turks came into power. These leaders