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Armen Garo | |
---|---|
Ambassador of the Republic of Armenia to the United States | |
In office 1920–1920 | |
Member of the Ottoman Chamber of Deputies from Erzurum Vilayet | |
In office 1908–1912 | |
Personal details | |
Born | Garegin Pastermadjian 9 February 1872 Erzurum, Erzurum Vilayet, Ottoman Empire |
Died | 23 March 1923 Geneva, Switzerland | (aged 51)
Nationality | Armenian |
Political party | Armenian Revolutionary Federation |
Alma mater | Sanasarian College Agricultural School of Nancy-Université |
Occupation | Revolutionary, politician |
Profession | Chemist, agriculturalist |
Military service | |
Allegiance | Armenian Revolutionary Federation (from 1894) Russian Empire (1914–16) |
Branch/service | 2nd Battalion Volunteer Corps |
Years of service | 1894—1916 |
Battles/wars | Armenian National Liberation Movement |
Garegin Pastermadjian (classical Armenian: Գարեգին Փաստրմաճեան), better known by his nom de guerre Armen Garo (Արմեն Գարո; 9 February 1872 – 23 March 1923) was an Armenian revolutionary and politician. He was a prominent member of the nationalist Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF or Dashnak) party for around three decades. An agriculturalist and chemist by education, he joined the ARF in the mid-1890s and rose to prominence in 1896 when, along with Papken Siuni, led the takeover of the Ottoman Bank in Constantinople in response to the widespread massacres of Armenians by Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II and the perceived inaction of the European powers.
After the coming to power of the Young Turks, he was elected to the Ottoman parliament in 1908. During World War I, he sided with the Russians in an effort to defeat the Ottoman Empire. In 1917 he moved to the United States where, in various, capacities represented the Armenian interests. In 1920 he was appointed the first ambassador of the Republic of Armenia to the US. Beginning in 1920, he and Shahan Natalie masterminded Operation Nemesis, in which several perpetrators of the Armenian Genocide—most notably Talaat Pasha—were assassinated.
Early life and education
[edit]Pastermadjian was born in Erzurum (Karin), a major city in Turkish (Western) Armenia with a historically significant Armenian population. He graduated from the Sanasarian College in 1891. In 1894 he began studies in France to study agriculture at the Agricultural School of Nancy.[1][2]
Revolutionary activities
[edit]During this period he was introduced to Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) and became a member in 1894.[1]
Ottoman Bank takeover (1896)
[edit]The 1896 Ottoman Bank Takeover, executed on 26 August 1896, was his and Papken Siuni's brainchild. The attack took place at about 1 p.m. Armen Garo entered 10 minutes prior to the attack. He was to keep the teller busy and the bank officers from escaping. His men didn't arrive quickly so he went to a coffee shop across the street. When he saw the men through the doorway, he ran out to meet them. During the long and bloody battle, the group leader, Papken Siuni, was killed. Armen Garo took over as leader, ordering his group for much of the standoff.
His plans to return to his hometown after graduating came to a halt when massacres and conflict began in Zeitun. He left hist studies to aid his compatriots in Zeitun. He soon found himself in Geneva, where he became an activist alongside his friends. He was sent to Egypt to assist the Zeitun Resistance. With Sarkis Srentz, Haig Tiriakian (who assumed the name Hratch), Max Zevrouz, he left Egypt and returned to the Ottoman Empire to participate the efforts of the ARF. It was around this time that Karekin Pastermadjian first assumed the name Armen Garo.[citation needed]
After the 1896 takeover, he returned to Europe to continue his unfinished studies. French Foreign Minister Gabriel Hanotaux declared the Armenians who had been connected with the Ottoman Bank Takeover as persona non grata and denied their stay in France. Armen Garo transferred to Switzerland and studied natural sciences at the University of Geneva.
During his studies, he continued his activities with the Armenian Revolutionary Federation. He was on the delegate roster of the second ARF general conference in 1898, representing the party committee in Egypt. Despite his youth, he had gained trust and authority in the leading circles of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation. In 1900 he completed his courses at the University of Geneva and received a doctoral degree in physical chemistry.[3] In 1901 he founded a lab in Tiflis for chemical research.
Armenian-Tatar massacres (1905-07)
[edit]During the Armenian–Tatar massacres of 1905–1907 the ARF was involved in armed activities.[4] Pastermadjian organized the self-defense of the Armenians in Tiflis. =kaligian[3] He and five hundred volunteers succeeded in securing peace in the capital of Transcaucasia.[5]
Ottoman parliament deputy (1908-12)
[edit]The situation in the Caucasus came back almost to normal. Pastermadjian was able to create a fairly prosperous life for himself. He secured the right to develop a copper mine, and worked towards a partnership with a large company. His business required that he should stay in the Caucasus to continue his successful enterprise.
When the Young Turk Revolution occurred in 1908, the Armenians in Erzeroum, as well as the ARF, telegraphed Pastermadjian and asked him to become their candidate in the coming elections for Representative to the Ottoman Parliament. He became a member of the Ottoman parliament part from the Armenian Revolutionary Federation deputies.[5]
After the end of the Balkan Wars, issues affecting the Armenians dominated mainstream politics during which Armen Karo was a deputy from Erzurum. During his four years in Constantinople (Istanbul) as a deputy, he worked for the railroad bill which was known to the public as Chester's bill.[5] Its main objective was to build railroads as soon as possible in those vilayets which were considered to be Russia's future possessions. For that reason neither France nor Germany wished to undertake it, lest they should arouse the enmity of Russia. Another fundamental object was to build those lines with American capital, which would make it possible to counteract the Russo-Franco-German policies and financial intrigues. But in spite of all efforts unable to overcome the German, opposition in Constantinople, although, as the outcome of the struggle in connection with that bill, two ministers of public works were forced to resign their post.
Talaat, on behalf of the "Committee of Union and Progress", offered the portfolio of public works, refused these proposals, for the simple reason that he did not wish to compromise in any way with the leaders of the government.
He had taken too active a part in 1913 in the conferences held for the consideration of the Armenian reforms, and especially because, while parliamentary elections were going on during April, 1914, he was in Paris and the Netherlands, as the delegate of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, to meet the inspectors general who were invited to carry out the reforms.
World War I
[edit]In the autumn of 1914, a month and a half before the beginning hostilities, Armen Garo went to the Caucasus on a special mission given after the Armenian congress at Erzurum, and joined the committee which had been appointed by the Armenian National Council of the Caucasus to organize the Armenian volunteer units.[5]
In November 1914, he accompanied the second battalion of the Armenian volunteers as the representative of the executive committee of Tiflis.[5]
On 14 November, at the Bergmann Offensive, the second battalion of the Armenian volunteers engaged in battle for the first time, near Bayazid. In the course of a bloody combat which lasted twenty-four hours, Dro, the commander of the battalion, was seriously wounded, and Armen Garo was forced immediately to take his place.[6] From that day to March of the following year, he remained at the head of that battalion, and led it into eleven battles in the neighborhood of Alashkert, Toutakh, and Malashkert, until Dro recovered and returned to resume the command.
In the summer of 1915, he went to Van during the Van Resistance becoming one of the first to enter the city after the Russians had liberated it.[5] Khetcho (Catchik), his assistant, died on the shores of Lake Van in July 1915.
In the spring of 1917, when the Russian Revolution turned the Caucasus upside down, Armen Garo and Dr. Hakob Zavriev were sent from the Caucasus to Petrograd to negotiate with the Russian provisional government concerning Caucasian affairs.
United States
[edit]He left for America in June 1917 as the representative of the Armenian National Council of Tiflis.
He was elected to be ambassador of the First Republic of Armenia to the United States in Washington, D.C.[5]
Operation Nemesis
[edit]When the 1915 Armenian Genocide broke out, Armen Garo became very depressed and sick. When Armenia lost its independence, his sickness grew worse. He died of heart disease in Geneva, Switzerland on 23 March 1923, where he was attending a conference on Russia.[7]
Death and legacy
[edit]There are several organizations with chapters named after the Armenian hero, including the Armenian Youth Federation "Armen Garo" Chapter of Racine, Wisconsin, and the "Armen Karo" Armenian Revolutionary Federation Student Association of Canada.
Publications
[edit]- Pasdermadjian, G. (December 1918). Why Armenia Should Be Free: Armenia's rôle in the present war. Washington, D.C.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: year (link) - Armenia and Her Claims To Freedom and National Independence. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office. 1919. [Memorandum of Armenia and Her Claims to Freedom and National Independence Presented to the Democratic Mid-Europe Union by Dr. G. Pastermadjian, Special Envoy of His Holiness, the Catholicos of All Armenians, and Miran Sevasly, Chairman of the Armenian National Union of America and Representative in the United States of the Armenian National Delegation]
- Pasdermadjian, Garo (1919). Armenia: A Leading Factor in the Winning of the War. New York: American Committee for the Independence of Armenia.
- posthumously
- Garo, Armen (1990). Bank Ottoman: Memoirs of Armen Garo. Haig T. Partizian (translator). Detroit: Armen Topouzian.
- Garo, Armen (2002). "Մեր վերջին տեսակցությունը Թալեաթ փաշայի հետ [Our last meeting with Talaat Pasha]". Issues of the History and Historiography of the Armenian Genocide (in Armenian). 6. Yerevan: Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute: 152-159.
sources
[edit]1896թ. օգոստոսի 26-ին Բաբկեն Սյունիի հետ կազմակերպել է միջազգային Օտոմանյան բանկի գրավման գործողությունը, որի նպատակն էր Հայկական հարցի հանդեպ եվրոպական տերությունների ուշադրության հրավիրումը: Խումբը սպառնում էր պայթեցնել բանկը, եթե Արևմտյան Հայաստանում Թուրքիան բարենորոգումներ չիրականացնի: Արմեն Գարոյի խնդիրն էր բանկային ծառայողների և այցելուների փախուստի խոչընդոտումը: Բաբկեն Սյունու զոհվելուց հետո գլխավորել է խումբը: Օգոստոսի 27-ի առավոտյան խումբը եվրոպական տերությունների երաշխիքի ներքո ֆրանսիական շոգենավով հեռացել է Մարսել: Գարոն արտաքսվել է Շվեյցարիա, ուսանել է Ժնևի համալսարանում և
Եգիպտոսի կոմիտեի կողմից 1898թ. մասնակցել է ՀՅԴ Բ Ընդհանուր ժողովին:
1905-1906թթ. հայ-թաթարական կռիվների ժամանակ ղեկավարել է Թիֆլիսի հայության ինքնապաշտպանությունը:
Երիտթուրքական հեղաշրջումից հետո 1908թ. Կարինից ընտրվել է թուրքական խորհրդարանի անդամ: 1914թ. անցել է Կովկաս և ակտիվորեն մասնակցել կամավորական շարժման կազմավորմանը։
1917թ. որպես Ամենայն Հայոց կաթողիկոսի ներկայացուցիչ մեկնել է ԱՄՆ: 1920թ. ՀՀ դեսպանն էր ԱՄՆ-ում:
Եղել է Հայոց Ցեղասպանության մեղավոր-հեղինակների ոչնչացման ՆԵՄԵՍԻՍ գործողության Պատասխանատու մարմնի ղեկավար։ Մահացել է 1923թ. մարտի 23-ին: [1] [1] [1]
played a leading role in the occupation of the Ottoman Bank in 1896 earned a phd in chemistry in Switzerland, elected to the ARF western bureau in 1898. led the defense of Tiflis during Armeno-Tatar War, elected to the Ottoman parliament in 1908 representing Erzerum.[2]
The ARF also attracted numerous guerrilla leaders and front-line revolutionaries into its ranks. Papken Suni and Armen Garo (Garegin Pasdermadjian) led the capture of the Ottoman Bank in 1896 in Istanbul.[9]
after Battle of Sarikamish, Young Turk leadership placed the blame for the disaster on Armenians, even though Armenians served with the Third Army. "Nonetheless, the defeat reinforced a conspiracy theory in which Armenian volunteers stabbed Turkey in the back and ensured Russian victory. In particular, this explanation of defeat singled out Karekin Pastermadjian, a former Ottoman Member of Parliament, also known as Armen Garo, who fought as a volunteer with the Russian troops in the Caucasus."[10]
In one instance, one Dashnag leader, Armen Garo, who was also a member of the Turkish Parliament, had fled to the Caucasus and had taken active part in the organization of volunteer regiments to fight the Turks. His picture, in uniform, was widely circulated in the Dashnag paper,s and it was used by Talat Pasha, the arch assassin of the Armenians, as an excuse for his police of extermination.[11]
Nemesis
[13]
A Crime of Vengeance: An Armenian Struggle for Justice - Page 48 Edward Alexander - 1991 Tehlirian discovered that in Boston the driving force behind the search for Talaat was Armen Garo, known far and wide for his services to the Armenian cause and now the Armenian Republic's minister plenipotentiary to the United States
The History of the Armenian Genocide: Ethnic Conflict from the ...
Vahakn N. Dadrian - 2003
They were dictated in French to six bank employees by Armen Karo, who had taken charge of the command of the operations after the original leader, Papken Siuni, was killed during the initial skirmish
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e "Արմեն Գարո (Armen Garo)" (in Armenian). Institute for Armenian Studies, Yerevan State University.
- ^ a b Kaligian, Dikran Mesrob (2011). Armenian Organization and Ideology under Ottoman Rule: 1908-1914. Transaction Publishers. p. 38. ISBN 9781412848343.
- ^ a b Tasnapetean, Hrach (1990). History of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, Dashnaktsutiun, 1890-1924 (PDF). Oemme Edizioni. pp. 204–5.
- ^ Tadeusz Swietochowski. Russian Azerbaijan, 1905–1920. The Shaping of a National Identity in a Muslim Community. Сambridge, cambridge University Press, 1985. р.41
- ^ a b c d e f g Derogy, Jacques. Resistance and Revenge: The Armenian Assassination of the Turkish Leaders Responsible for the 1915 Massacres and Deportations.
- ^ Chelebian, author, Antrang Chalabian ; translated from Armenian by Jack (2009). Dro (Drastamat Kanayan) : Armenia's first defense minister of the modern era. Los Angeles, CA: Indo-European Pub. p. 46. ISBN 1604440783.
{{cite book}}
:|first1=
has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Time Saturday, April 7, 1923
- ^ "Miscellany". Time. No. 6. 7 April 1923. p. 26.
Died. Dr. Garo Pasdermadjian, 48, Armenian diplomatic representative at Washington, of heart disease at Geneva, Switzerland. He had been envoy to the United States since April, 1920, when the U. S. Government recognized the Republic of Armenia. He went abroad to attend a conference on Russia.
- ^ Adalian, Rouben Paul (2010). Historical Dictionary of Armenia. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. p. 163. ISBN 978-0-8108-7450-3.
- ^ Lieberman, Benjamin (2013). The Holocaust and Genocides in Europe. A&C Black. p. 55. ISBN 9781441194787.
- ^ Papazian, Kapriel Serope (1934). Patriotism perverted: A discussion of the deeds and the misdeeds of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, the so-called Dashnagtzoutune. Boston: Baikar Press. p. 39.
- ^ Sarkisyanz, Manuel (1975). A Modern History of Transcaucasian Armenia: Social, Cultural, and Political. Udyama Commercial Press. p. 413.
But among Turkish Armenians there was only one prominent case of desertion : The Dashnak deputy Armen Karo of the Ottoman Parliament who fled to Russian Armenia. His picture in Russian uniform was used by the Young Turkish dictatorship as an alibi for anti-Armenian genocide. Actually his case was not only untypical but outright exceptional : Turkish Armenians did not join Russian forces until after the Young Turk rulers had begun exterminating them. On the contrary : Since their cooperation with the Young Turkish.
- ^ de Waal, Thomas (2015). Great Catastrophe: Armenians and Turks in the Shadow of Genocide. Oxford University Press. p. 101. ISBN 978-0199350698.
Category:1875 births Category:1923 deaths Category:People from Erzurum Category:People from Erzurum vilayet Category:Armenian fedayi Category:Armenian people of World War I Category:Imperial Russian Army generals Category:Russian military personnel of World War I Category:Armenian diplomats Category:Armenian Revolutionary Federation politicians Category:Ambassadors of Armenia to the United States Category:Ottoman Armenians