Sonyel "Assyrians of Turkey" -Part I |
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This text file was created using OCR (Optical Character Recognition) software. Please excuse the errors. ATATURK SUPREME COUNCIL FOR CULTURE, LANGUAGE AND HISTORY TURKISH HISTORICAL SOCIETY PUBLICATONS Serial: VII - No. 168 THE ASSYRIANS OF TURKEY : VICTIMS OF MAJOR POWER POLICY By: SALAHI R. SONYEL OSMANLI DEVLETI~NIN 700. KURULU$ YIL DONLIRRU TURKISH HISTORICAL SOCIETY PRINTING HOUSE - ANKARA 2001 Sonyel, Salahi R. The Assyrians of Turkey victims of major power policy l Salahi R. Sonyel: - Ankara: Turkish Historical Society, 2001. xi, 228, [53] s. ; 24 cm.--( Atattirk Supreme Council for Culture, Language and History Turkish Historical Society publications Serial VII -No. 168 ) Bibliyografya ve indeks var. ISBN 975 - 16 - 1296 - 9 1. Jon TUrkler- Suryaniler- Osmanli Imparatorlugu, 1876-1914. 2. Siiryaniler- Osmanli imparatorlugu, 1914-1918. 3. Suryaniler-Tiirkiye, 1919-1923. I. E.a. 11. Dizi. 956.101543 ISBN 975-16-1296-9 Reporter: Prof. Dr. Ercumem KURAN CONTENTS Abbreviations VII Note on the Turkish Alphabet and names IX Preface XI Chapter 1 - The Assyrians 1 Who are the Assyrians? 18 The religion of modern Assyrians 24 Population Statistics 29 ABBREVIATIONS AP C.E conf. CP disp . DM I doc.no. D.S. ed. ff. FO GHQ GOC HM Ka%arh Ka§garh 1 Lamsa Lamsa 1 Mumcu Mumcu 1 n.d. PID Accounts and Papers circa Common Era Colonial Office confidential Confidential dispatch Director of Military Intelligence document number Deparment of State editor and the following pages Foreign Office General Headquarters General Officer Commander-in-Chief His or Her Majesty India Office Mardio ve yoresi Kilikya tabi Ermeni Baronlugtt The secret of the Near East The oldest Christian people Kiirt-Islam ayaklanmasi Kazim Kaiabekiranlaayor note no date Political Intelligence Department Rev. Sonyel Sonyel 1 tel. Vol. Wigram Wigram 1 Wigram 2 Wig-ram 3 Wilson Wilson 1 WO CONTENTS Reverend The Ottoman Armenians Turkish Diplomacy Telegram volume TheAssyrian Church The cradle of mankind The Assyrians and their neighbours Assyrian settlement Mesopotamia: a clash of loyalties The crisis in Iraq War Office NOTE : The surnames of writers stand for their respective works as listed in alphabetical order in the 'Sources'. Crown-copyright records in the Public Record Office appear by permission of the Controller of HM Stationery Office. NOTE ON THE TURKISH ALPHABET AND NAMES Throughout this book modern Turkish orthography has been used in transcribing Turkish names and place-names except when quoting from non-Turkish sources, for example Istanbul and not Constantinople, Ankara and not Angora, Kayseri and not Caesarea, and so on. The pronunciation of the following Turkish letters used in this volume should be noted: c - j as in jam - ch as in chart g - g with an upturned comma as in agha (aga) i - i without the dot as in sadik (faithful) o - French eu as in deux or seul, or German o as in &ffnen s - sh as in shall u - French a as in lumiere, or German a as in schiitzen. PREFACE A number of Assyrians, particularly a few extremists, who have emigrated to West Europe and North America from Turkey, mainly for economic reasons, have indulged in propaganda, spreading rumours intermittently that they were compelled to leave their homeland because they were oppressed by the Turkish authorities. They also draw parallels between themselves and the Armenians of Turkey, and claim that they have shared the same fate with them. Apparently some of these extremists are cooperating with numerous secessionsist and terrorist organisations whose aim is to destabilise and dismember Turkey. They are supported and aided in this venture by some Turcophobe organisations. In this book I shall try to relate the history of the Assyrians in Turkey, particularly since the foundation of the Ottoman Empire, in the light of archival sources, in order to bring to light the actual relationship between them and the Turks. The reader will then be in a better position to judge whether the above accusations levelled against Turkey and the Turkish people are true or false. Dr. Salahi Sonyel (Visiting Professor, Near East University, Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus) THE ASSYRIANS OF TURKEY VICTIMS OF MAJOR POWER POLICY - 1 CHAPTERI - THE ASSYRIANS Who are the Assyrians? The Assyrians have been variously described as a people of 'uncertain racial origin'', and as 'a Christian element of a most ancient and illustrious tradition'2, 'the spiritual descendants of the pioneer missionaries of the East'3, who maintained their separate religious identity throughout centuries by 'a resolute adherence' to their faith. They have also been described as a Semitic people`'; or a people with racial affinities with the ancient Turks. Ataturk described them as 'a scion of the Hittite Turks''. The Assyrians themselves claim to be 'the most God-fearing and peaceloving people on earth', 'the descendants of the ancient Assyrians'''. Heazell and Margoliouth, however, observe that they 'probably compare favourably with anybody of Western Christians in morals, with the exception of certain, special defects, of which the most prominent are jealousy of each other, and quarrelsomeness - universal faults amongst the Eastern Christians, whilst the Bishop of Gibraltar wrote about them as follows: ----(Footnotes)---- I Chamber's Encyclopaedia, viol. 1, London 1973, p. 719. 2 David Barsum Perley: Whither Christian Missions? Assyrian National Federation, 1946, p. 2. s Athra, a fortnightly political review, no. 15, Beirut, 15.2.1939. 4 Yalgn Dogan: Milliyet newspaper, Istanbul, 25.7.1990; Prof. Dr. Mehlika Aktok Kaggarlt: Mai-din vie yoresi halktndan Turko-Semider (Turco-Semites among the people of Mardin and its region), Kayseri 1991, who describes them as TurcoSemites, pp. 7 and 9. 5 Ya;ar Kalafat's letter to the author, Ankara, 9.10.1990; see also Mithat Sertoglu: Suryani Turklerinin siyasi vie i~!timai tarihi (the political and social history of the Suryani (Assyrian) Turks), Istanbul, 1974, p. 5. 6 A.J. Oraham: Assyiian English Dictionary, Chicago 1943, preface, p. 5. 7 FO 371/4177/110919: Memorandum by the.Assyro-Chaldean delegation to the Paris Peace Conference, entitled La question Assyro-Chaldeenne deviant la Conference de la Paix, 16.7.1919; FO 371/10089/E 8457: Agha Petros to the President of the Society (League) of Nations, Geneva, letter, 27.9.1924; see also Austen Henry Layard: Nineveh and its remains, viol. 2, London 1929, p. 178; Perley, p. 2; see also Denis Cecil Hills: My travels in Turkey, London 1964, pp. 233 1f. ------------------- THE ASSYRIANS OF TURKEY VICTIMS OF MAJOR POWER POLICY - 2 "As to the Syrian people, 1 lost my heart to them completely; and 1 think there can be no question that they are a finer race than the Armenian, the Georgian, and indeed any other of the peoples in that part of the world's." Some of these descriptions do not reflect the reality, as it will presently be evident. The Assyrians are better known by their ecclesiastical designations representing the three main religious sects into which they were divided after their schism in 1551 C.E.9, namely: (a) Nestorians (Nesturi), or East Syrians, although they prefer to call themselves Assyrians'°; (b) Chaldeans (Keldani) , or East. Syrian Uniates; and (c) Jacobites (Yakubi), or West Syrians who are Orthodox. Uniate churches are in communion with the Roman Catholic Church". In addition to these sects, they also lay claim to 'the Assyrian Maronite element', the Iranian, Russian, and Egyptian Assyrians12, the Assyrian Melkides, and the Assyrian Protestans. They speak mainly a modenised version of Aramaic, its ancient version being the language in which Christ is believed to have delivered his message to his followers1s. They use the ancient language in their liturgy'; but according to Turkish researcher Mehlika Ka§garli, for a long time their liturgy was in Greek. As many Assyrians did not understand this language, ----(Footnotes)---- a Reverend F.N.Heazell and Mrs. Margoliouth (eds.): Kurds and Christians, London 1913, pp. 15 and 193, 9 C.E. stands for Common Era. 10 FO 371/3060/189280: Deaconess Esther Abraham to Arthur James Balfour, letter, Edinburgh, 22.9.1917. n FO 371/5127/E 13595: India Office to Colonial Office disp., 2.11.1920; A Handbook of Mesopotamia, I.D., 118A, vol. 1, November 1918, pp. 128-33. 12 FO 371/4177/111181: Memorandum (in booklet form), entitled The claims of the Assyrians before the Conference ofthe Preliminaries ofPeace, received at the British Foreign Office on 2.8.1919; see also David McDowall: The Kurds, Minority Rights Group Report No. 23, London 1989, p. 86. 1s FO 371/4177/62363: Balfour to Lord Curzon, disp., Paris, 22.4.1919, enclosing a memorandum on the claims of the Assyrians, communicated to Sir Louis Mallet by Sir Arthur Hirtsel of the India Office; see also Chamber's Encyclopaedia, p. 719; Perley, p. 2; Yakup Bilge: Suryanilerin kokeni ve Turkiyeli Suryaniler (the origin of the Assyrians and Assyrians of Turkey) Istanbal 1991, p. 58. 1`1 FO 371/15315/E 2416: Marshall N. Fox to Philip J. Noel Baker, letter, Beirut, 27.4.1931, enclosing a memorandum entitled The Assyrians of today. THE ASSYRIANS OF TURKEY VICTIMS OF MAJOR POWER POLICY - 3 they started to use Assyrian, but later, when they came under Turkish rule, they began to use Turkish, or Turoyo, a heavy Arab-cum-Turkish dialect'. The origin of the Assyrians, about which several theories have beet advanced, is shrouded in mystery. Some Assyrians claim that the word 'Siiryani, or Syrian' is derived from the name of the Persian King Keyhusrev(559-529 B.C.), from Kyris, or Syrus and Sirus in Assyrian16. Others claim that the word 'Siiryani" is derived from the City of Tyre (Sur in Assyrian), on the southern coast of the Lebanon from where the disciples of Christ have mainly come. This word was later changed into 'Surin', and those who believed these disciples were called 'Sirin' (Siiryani)17. Still others claim that the name came from that of Syria where these people lived; or from the name of Assyria, 'Asshur'1s. Another school of thought believes that the name is derived from that of King Suros. The most acceptable view, however, is that it comes from the word 'Assyria'. Assyrian researcher Yakup Bilge, believes that the origin of the Assyrians goes back to the ancient Assyriansl3. Hanna Dolaponii, another Assyrian researcher, believes that they are a mixture of Aramians, Assyrians, Chaldeans, Phoenicians, and Indians2°, but generally he calls them Assyrians. Turkish historiographer Mithat Sertoglu believes that the original homeland of the Assyrians is in Central Asia, as they are a Turanian people. From Central Asia they moved to, and settled in, Jezire (Cezire), or Mesopotamia. The name Syrian or Assyrian (Siiryani) was given to the Aramians who had accepted Christianity, while Northern Mesopotamia became known as Assyria, he claims.21 However, Ka*garli observes that they were known in history as Sirris, and that the word 'Sirri, or Siri: has been misrepresented as 'Syrian'. 'Sirri' is believed to be the name given to the people who spoke Aramaic, which was akin to Hebrew; hence, ethnically the Aramians are a branch of the Hebrews. Between the fourth and third ----Footnotes---- 1' Kafgwh, p. 8. 1'' Mor Ignatiyos Yakup III: The Syrian Orthodox Church of Antioch, Holland, St. Ephrem the Syrian Monastery, 1985, p. 2. 17 Assad Assad: 'Suryani ismi uzerine' (about the name Suryani), Bahro Suryoyo, Sodertalja, 1988, p. 46, quoted by Bilge, p. 23. 18 Aziz Gunel: Turk Sutyaniler Tatihi (history of the Turkish Assyrians), Diyarbakir, 1970, p. 30. 1" Bilge, p.35. 211'Suryaniler' (Assyrians), 6zHizrnet, no. 6, Mardin, 1955, p. 133. 21 Sertoglu, pp. 11 and 23. ------------------ THE ASSYRIANS OF TURKEY VICTIMS OF MAJOR POWER POLICY - 4 centuries B.C. they were seen in Upper Mesopotamia, from whence they spread to Southeastern Anatolia22. The Assyrians themselves claim that they are the descendants of the ancient Assyrians, 'the same people of whose heroism and achievements, when Gibbon writes, he does so with a trembling pen, and with an admiration that becomes an inspiration even to a sceptical historian', according to a memorandum they sent to the British Foreign Office on 2 August 1919$3. The name 'Assyria' applied to the country which, in bygone days, occupied the northern end of the Mesopotamian plain, or the extreme northern portion of modern Iraq. Basically, it lay within the triangle formed by the Tigris and Little Zab rivers, which constituted its western and southern boundaries, while the mountains of ancient Caucasia formed the northern boundary, and the Zagros mountain range, together with the land of Media, the eastern boundary. These boundaries , however, were fluid, depending on the power of Assyria, which expanded south of Little Zab when the neighbouring state of Babylon weakened, and retreated when Babylon was ascendant. The Assyrians appear to have been a violent and warlike people. They are represented in carved reliefs as of strong physique and dark camplexion, with heavy eye-brows and beard, and prominent noses. They are believed to have descended from Asshur, a grandson of Noah. In fact, the same Hebrew word means both 'Asshur' and 'Assyria(n)'. Nimrod, who is noted in the Bible as 'a mighty hunter in opposition to Jehovah', is believed to have founded the cities of Nineveh and Calah, which cities, together with Asshur and Khorsabad, later became Assyrian capitals24. A trade route ran along the northern part of Assyria to the Mediterranean and Asia Minor, and other routes branched off into the Caucasus and the region of Lake Urmia (Rezaiye). Many of the wars in which the Assyrians took part were caused by their desire to gain, or maintain, the control of these trade routes. In time they developed a vast and ruthless empire, based on military power. The historical picture left of their exploits is one of 'great cruelt~ unparalleled brutality, and ----Footnotes---- 22 Kagarlt, pp. 9 and 13. 23 FO 371/4177/111181. 2 L Genesis 10: 8-12. and 22. ------------------ THE ASSYRIANS OF TURKEY VICTIMS OF MAJOR POWER POLICY - 5 rapaciousness'. One of their warrior monarchs, Ashurnasirpal II (848/883859 B.C. ?), describes his punishment of a rebellious city as follows: 'I built a pillar- over against his city-gate, and 1 flayed all the chiefs, who had revolted, and I covered the pillar with their- skin. Some, 1 walled tip within the pillar, some, l impaled upon the pillar- on stakes... And 1 cut the limbs of the royal ofcers who had rebelled... Many captives from among them I burned with fire, and many I took as living captives. From some, 1 cut off their noses, their ears, and their fingers, of many 1 put out the eyes. 1 made one pillar of the living, and another of heads, and 1 bound their heads to tree trunks round about the city. Their young men and maidens 1 burned in the fire. Twenty men 1 captured alive and 1 immured them in the wall of his palace... The rest of tie warriors I consumed with thirst in tire desert of the Euphrates...'25. Reliefs often show their captives being led by cords, attached to hooks that pierce the nose or the lips, or having their eyes gouged at the point of a spear. Thus, 'sadistic torture' was a frequent feature of Assyrian warfare about which they shamelessly boasted, and which they carefully recorded. The knowledge of their cruelty served them to advantage militarily, striking terror into the hearts of those in their line of attack, and often causing resistance to crumble. Their religion was largely inherited from Babylon and, although they viewed their own national god Asshur, and their king as his high priest, as supreme, they continued to look upon Babylon as their chief religious centre. The religion they practised was animistic; they believed that every object and natural phenomenon was animated by a spirit. To them, war was the truest expression of the national religion. Their armies marched behind the standards of the gods. They attached great importance to omens, to the flight of birds, or to the position of the planets. W.B. Wright states: ----Footnotes---- Z' Aid to Bible understanding, New York, 1971, p. 151. ----------------- THE ASSYRIANS OF TURKEY VICTIMS OF MAJOR POWER POLICY - 6 Fighting was the business of the nation, and the priests were incessant fomenters of war. They were supported largely from the spoils of conquest, of which a fixed percentage was invariably assigned to them before others shared... Assyria was aptly described by the 'Prophet Nahum' as a 'lair of lions', `and their capital, Nineveh, 'the city of bloodshed'27. But it did not last long. In 610-19 B.C. both the Babylonians and the Medes wreaked bitter vengeance on the Assyrian capital. Babylon's chronicles report: 'The great spoil of the city and temple they carried off, and (turned) the city into a ruin-mound'. Two great mounds now mark the site of this once proud capital1s. The religion of modem Assyrians Modern Assyrians believe that they are the first people to accept Christianity, and refer to themselves as 'ancient' (kadim). While Christianity united the Assyrians, in the long run it divided them. With the dissemination of Christianity, various christological beliefs and doctrines were put forward, the supporters of which began to struggle against each other. During these struggles the Assyiran 'National' Church was established; but owing to different religious doctrines, and to the political intrigues of the Byzantines and the Sassanians, the Assyrian Church and people were divided. The Eastern Assyrians and the Nestorian Church, on the one hand, and the Western Assyrians and the Assyiran Orthodox Church, on the other, began to struggle with each other. Thus the Assyrians had to face, not only the Byzantines and the Sassanians, but also the various creeds and factions among theselves and this schism lasted for almost six centuries, and destroyed completely their unity2". ----Footnotes---- 2" W.B. Wright: Ancient Cities, p. 25. 27 Nahum 2: 11, 12; 3: 1. 28 'Cruel Assyria - the second Great World Power", The Watchtower, vol. 109, no. 4, 15.2.1988, pp. 248; see also The New Encyclopaedia Britannica, vol. 1, 1985, p. 648; A.T. Olmstead: History ofAssyria, 1923; L.Waterman: Royal Correspondence of the Assyrian Empire, 4 viols., 1930-6; D.D. Luckenbill (translation): The annals of Sennacherib, 1924; Luckenbill: AncientRecords ofAssyria, 2 vols., 1926-27; H.W.F. Saggs: Thegreatness that was Babylon, 1962. 2" Bilge. pp. 17-18 ----------------- THE ASSYRIANS OF TURKEY VICTIMS OF MAJOR POWER POLICY - 7 Today the Assyrians are mainly divided into two categories: 1. the Eastern Assyrians, who consist of Nestorians and Chaldeans; and 2. the Western Assyrians, who consist mainly of the 'Silryanis' also known as Jacobites or Aramians. They claim that, since the fall of Nineveh, as a people they divided. Some of them fled to the mountains between Lake Urmia, Lake Van, and Mosul, where they made their homes and kept up their ancient customs, habits, and languages°. Their first religious centre was established at Antioch (Antakya), under a patriarch. They were then under the rule of the Roman Empire, which economically exploited them and politically oppressed thems'. With the division of that empire into two, the bishops that belonged to the Patriarchate of Antioch began to act independendys2. During the reign of Emperor Constantine (306-37 C.E.), who, with the Milano Decree in February 313 declared Christianity to be the official religion of his state, a number of controversies developed about the nature of Christ, which eventually led to the Great Schism of the Chruch in 518, and to the establishment of Nestorianism. The Assyrian Nestorian Church takes its name from Nestorius, Patriarch of Canstantinople (428-31 C.E ), who is associated with the saying: 'Let no one call Mary the Mother of God, for Mary was a human being; and that God should be born of a human being is impossible'. The Nestorian doctrine held that Christ had two distinct natures: 'the divine logos dwelt in the man, Jesus Christ, as in a husk or temple'. Mary was the mother of his human nature only, and to call her 'Theotokos', or 'God Bearer', was blasphemy. In 431 the Council of Ephesus condemned Nestorianism, but the 'heresy' continued to spread in Syria and Persia. In the seventh century the adherents of Nestorianism came to terms with Islam. The Nestorian Church then developed missionary zeal in Asia, penetrating into India and China. Marco Polo makes a number of references to the Nestorian churches he ----Footnotes---- s° FO 371/8993/E: Agha Petros to President of the Near East Peace Conference, Lausanne, memorandum dated 2.12.1922. 11 Bilge, p, 48. 32 Sertoglu, pp. 34 ff. ----------------- THE ASSYRIANS OF TURKEY VICTIMS OF MAJOR POWER POLICY - 8 passed on the overland route from Baghdad to Peking--". The Sassanian emperors welcomed the Nestorians as rebels from Rome; and though the Zoroastrian priesthood opposed their influx, they were tolerated, and grew in numbers, power, and influences'', under the protection of Persian rulers who used them as an instrument against Byzantine political and military ambitions. In the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries the invasion of the Mogols forced those Nestorians then living in Mesopotamia to take refuge in the mountain fastnesses of southeastern Anatolia. They settled in Hakkari, and in the villages stretching north towards Vans'. The christological difference of the Assyrian Nestorian Church from the Orthodox Church is the opposite of the Monophysites who believe that Christ has only one nature and one person. The Assyrian Nestorians maintain that he had two natures, two essences (attributes), each with its nature3~'. But there is no historical justification for 'the mythical theory' that Nestorius was the founder of the Assyrian Church. Nestorius was not an Assyrian, although the Jacobite Church accepts him as such. The term 'Nestorian' is a nickname given to this Christian community, because of its hospitality and service to the Christian refugees, followers of Nestorius, who sought asylum in Persia in consequence of their condemnation as doublenature heretics, and banishment from the Roman Empire, after the deposition of Nestorius at the Council of Ephesus. Nestorianisrn, as applied to the Assyrian Christians, is not a proper apellation - it is a misnomer, they insist. Even the Maronite Archbishop and librarian of the Vatican, G.S. Assemani, who wrote their history in four volumes, failed to call them 'Nestorians'. He called them 'Assyrians or Chaldeans'. The Church of the East grew up in Apostolic times and was evangelised by St. Thaddeus (Mar Addai) and St. Mary, disciples of the ----Footnotes---- sa FO 871/3409/116013: Captain Buxton to Sir Mark Sykes, letter, Oxford, dated 30.6.1918, enclosing a memorandum on 'The Uniat Churches ofAsiatic Turkey,. lhsan Sakarya: Belgelerle Ermeni Sorunu (the Armenian Question in documents), Ankara, 1984, p. 16; Prof. Dr. Mehlika Ka§garh: Kilikya tabi Eimeni Baronlugu taiihi (history of the Armenian vassal Barony of Cilicia) Ankara, 1990, p. 46; Bilge, pp. 66 ff.; Mehmet Celik: Sueyani Kilisesi Taribi (history of the Assyrian Church), vol. 1, Istanbul, 1987, pp. 33 ff. a' Sir Hamilton Gibb and Harold Bowen: Islamic Society and tile West, vol. 1, part 2, London, 1957, pp. 227-28. Hills, p. 230. i(" FO 371/15315/E 2416: Reverend Panfil's statement, Beirut, 20.4.1931; see also Ka*garh, p. 46. ----------------- THE ASSYRIANS OF TURKEY VICTIMS OF MAJOR POWER POLICY - 9 Apostles. It was a powerful church before the birth of Nestorius. Assyrian Christians, to this day, call themselves 'Nestorians' as the Friends call themselves 'Quakers', but only in a good-humoured concession to the misunderstanding of others. According to David Barsum Perley: 'There is not, there never was, such a thing as the Nestorian Church, and neither Jacobites nor Nestorians, be it said, hold the heresies which their nicknames suggest, and which their enemies credit with their teaching'17. They preserved intact the simple teachings of the Gospels up to the present day. Hence, in the words of Erich Feigl, the Assyrians, who did not recognise the decision of the Council of Ephesus to call Mary 'Mother of God', would have been totally obliterated by the power of the Byzantine State, and the Greek Orthodox Church, had they not found protection and refuge under the Zoroastrian Persians, and later, under the Umayyad, Abbasid and Ottoman Caliphs3a. During the Arab conquests they cooperated with the Muslimss~' because, despite the christological differences among them, they were all united in one purpose: hatred for the Byzantinesa°.. Under the Ottomans 'a period of calm and relative prosperity began', declares the Churches Committee of Migrant Workers in Western Europe'. Nevertheless, in 1551, during the reign of the Ottoman Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent (ruled 1520-66) , the Assyrians suffered a severe schism as a result of a dispute over the Catholicate. One of their bishops, John Sulaka, who was elected Patriarch, entered into communion with Rome with a number of his followers, and thus caused the Uniate secession of what became known as the Chaldean Church. The term 'Chaldean' was first used in 1445 by Pope Eugenius IV to distinguish the Nestorians of Cyprus, newly reconciled to Rome, from the Nestorians proper, who were henceforth called 'Assyrians'. The term became popular after the profession of Catholicism by John Sulaka, who was recognised by Pope Julius II as Patriarch of the Chaldeans. The successors of Sulaka later assumed the name ----Footnotes---- 117 Perley, p. 39; for more information on Nestorius and Nestorianism, see The New Encyclopaedia Bjitannica, vol. 4, p. 519, and vol. 8 pp. 612-13. 38 Erich Feigl: A myth of terror, Armenian extremism: its causes and its historical context, Austria, 1986, p. 31; see also Bilge, pp. 74 ff. x`° Yalqtn: Milliyet newspaper, 25.7.1990. °~ Aziz Atiyal: Ahistoryof Eastern Christianity, London, 1968; Ka*garh 1, p. 49. t' Churches Committe on Migrant Workers in Europe: Christian minorities in Turkey, Brussels, September 1979, p. 11. ------------------- THE ASSYRIANS OF TURKEY VICTIMS OF MAJOR POWER POLICY - 10 Simon, and bore the title of 'Patriarch-Catholicos of Babylon of the Chaldeans'42. Meanwhile, on his return to Diyarbakir, Sulaka was arrested, and died in prison. After a relapse, the Chaldean Patriarchate was reconstituted at Diyarbakir in 1672 (1681 according to Captain Buxton)4s. In that year the Nestorian Bishop of Diyarbakir, Mutran Yusuf, seceded, and was consecrated by the Pope as 'the Patriarch of the Chaldeans'. The numbers of the Uniate Nestorians had begun to increase through the efforts of French missionaries. At the end of the seventeenth century the whole of the 'Patriarchate of the Plain', catering for the needs of the Assyrians living in the plains, submitted to Rome, while the 'Patriarchate of the Mountains', catering for the needs of those who lived in the mountains, still adhered to the Nestorian 'heresy'. In 1844 the French Embassy in Istanbul secured their recognition as a separate community by the Sublime Portea4. Thereafter they were represented by their own delegate. But Patriach Mar Ziya obtained an Imperial Firman, which declared that the Chaldean Church was independent of Rome. He was accordingly removed through Papal influence, and a French Papal Delegate appointed to control his successors. In 1870 a schism was caused among the Chaldeans by the Bull Reversurus , which further limited their independence, and imposed the doctrine of Papal infallibility. Thereupon the 'Majority of the community, known as the 'Old Chaldeans', reverted to the Nestorian Church. At the end of the First World War the Chaldean Church was still subject to a Papal Delegate, but since 1884 the Patriarch had been chosen by the bishops. He lived of Mosul, and took the name of Joseph, while his title was 'Catholicos of the See of St. Thomas, the Apostle of Babylon'. Despite the efforts of the missionaries, the Chaldean Catholic Church remained a small body, with scattered congregations in Baghdad, Mosul, Siirt, and Aleppoa5. The Uniate Assyrian Church was a secession from that of the Jacobites, who shared the Monophysite doctrines with the Copts, Armenians, and Abyssinians. In 1743 an Imperial Firman recognised it as a separate religious community, but until 1830 the Uniate Assyrians were under the civil control of the Orthodox and Gregorian Patriarchs. They were then placed under ----Footnotes---- 1; The New Encyclopaedia Britaanica, vol. 3, p. 60. 4~i FO 371/3409/116013, see p. 4. 41 The Ottoman Government was referred to as the Baba All (Sublime Porte), as the French Government is referred to as the Qui d'Orsay. 4' Gibb and Bowen, I, p. 248. ---------------------- THE ASSYRIANS OF TURKEYVICTIMS OF MAJOR POWER POLICY 11 the Armenian Catholic Patriarch, but in 1848 they obtained their own civil jurisdiction, and were then represented by a vicar in Istanbul. Their first Patriarch was Ignatius Michael jarout6, who, being converted to Catholicism in 1760, had fled from Aleppo, and taken refuge in the Lebanon. There, he bought the Convent of Charge, which was a seminary of the Uniate Assyrians. The Patriarch usually resided at Aleppo, and his title was 'Patriarch of Antioch'. A considerable number of this small community lived at Mardin. They had archbishops at Homs, Damascus, and Baghdad. The Maronites claim to have been Orthodox Catholics from earliest times, but it is believed that they formerly held the Monothelite (a variation of the Monophysite) 'heresy'. They accepted the Catholic doctrine in 1180, but were not definitely united with Rome until the sixteenth century. Since that time the Maronite Church has jealously guarded its autonomy, but it has always been intensely Catholic, and has been warmly commended by several Popes for the severity of its suppression of heresy. In 1840 the Maronites were recognised as a separete community by the Porte. The great majority inhabit the Lebanon (which had enjoyed a form of autonomy since 1860), and the relation of their church with the Porte were not, therefore, on the same footing as those of other churches. The Patriarch, who always took the name of Peter, lived in the Lebanon, but had the title of 'Patriarch of Antioch'. His election by the bishops was confirmed by the Holy See. The Nestorian Assyrians lived in the mountainous districts of southeastern Anatolia, overlapping with the borders of Iran and Iraq, inhabiting Darvar, Tiari, Tkhoma, Baz, Dez, Jelou, Gavar, Urmia, Julamerk, etc., with Kotchanis as their Patriarchal See. The Chaldeans lived in the Province of Mosul, in various localities extending from Lower Mesopotamia (Iraq) to the Persian Gulf, with Mosul as their Patriarchal See; and the Jacobites lived in the Province of Diyarbakir, North Syria, and other localities in the Ottoman Empire, with the city of Mardin as their Patriarchal See-"!. Today the Assyrian churches consist of the following: Assyrian Orthodox Church (Patriarchate of Antioch), Assyrian Nestorian Church (Eastern Assyrian Church), Assyrian Maronite Church (Patriarchate of Antioch), Assyrian Chaldean Church (Patriarchate of Babyl), Assyrian Catholic Church, Assyrian Melkite Church ----Footnotes---- "" FO 371/4177/111181. ---------------- ... more to come later. --------------------- |
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