The first swimmers from Adana to Kyrenia - Gibrahayer e-magazine www.gibrahayer.com
THE FIRST SWIMMERS FROM ADANA TO KYRENIA were the bodies of our compatriots were being washed up on the shores of Kyrenia THE 1909 ADANA MASSACRES |
By Mihran Boyadjian - The Adana Massacres of 1909, whose 30,000 victims are being commemorated on the centenary of their death this year, are of special significance to the Armenians of Cyprus since a large proportion of them are descendants of the 1915 Genocide survivors from Adana who found refuge in Cyprus, and who still consider themselves “Adanatsi”. In Larnaca, the Armenian Church of St. Stephanos, built in 1913, is dedicated to the 1909 victims. Massacres of Armenians in Turkey were nothing new, in fact about 15 years earlier, the Hamidian Massacres of 1894-96 had claimed tenfold that figure and had shown the lack of enthusiasm of the European powers for taking any effective preventive action. It must be mentioned however that the American Missions, whose members were eyewitness to the events, saved countless lives through their valiant efforts on the ground and their very effective fund-raising back home. Earlier Massacres had been more local affairs, usually the result of periodic Kurdish raids on helpless villages and small towns. Some were opportunistic, “pacifying” operations by local governing pashas whose main aim was to raise revenue by pillage and extortion to recoup the large sums (some would call them bribes), which they had to pay the Porte to obtain their posts. The Russian Empire, whose primary foreign policy objective was to gain access to the Mediterranean through Ottoman territory, found a convenient pretext for intervening in Ottoman affairs by assuming the role of protector to the Christian population. The European powers, led by Great Britain, fiercely opposed any Russian expansion into the Mediterranean and wanted any pieces of the slowly collapsing Ottoman Empire for themselves. Hence they supported the Sultan. The Armenians, caught in the middle, had great hopes on the constitutional changes forced on the reluctant Sultan by the European powers. However, these changes were on paper only and were largely ignored by the Porte. It was in this context that Cyprus was ceded to Great Britain in 1878 in return for promised British protection against Russia. |
Some time ago, I came across and purchased a letter written by the Commissioner of Kyrenia of the time, W.N. Bolton, which reveals a macabre link between Cyprus and the Adana Massacres of 1909. The letter, written on cream coloured notepaper blind embossed with the British coat of arms, is apparently in response to an enquiry by Harry Lukach, Private Secretary to the Governor of Cyprus Hamilton Goold-Adams. Today, he is better known as Sir Harry Luke, having changed his surname to Luke in 1919. Subsequently, he had a highly successful career in the colonial service and authored numerous books mainly on the Middle East where he served in Cyprus, Armenia (1920), Jerusalem, Malta etc. His books are full of anecdotal material of his experiences in the places he served in, and show his compassionate interest in the people he came in contact with. Dear Lukach, It is interesting to note that the Adana Massacres started in early April and bodies started to get washed up in Cyprus about a month later. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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