Victorious Khalil Pasha in Armenia, 1918

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Note- This chapter is from Tatul Hakobyan’s book- ARMENIANS and TURKS

From the start, newly-independent (1918) Armenia’s authorities were trying to extend the borders of the republic. While the First World War had not yet ended, the Armenian leaders were negotiating this matter with the Turks, since they were the de facto rulers in Azerbaijan and the disputed territories between the newly-independent states of the Transcaucasus. The Germans had settled in Georgia, while Turkish military units were stationed at the borders of Armenia.

In mid-June 1918, an Armenian delegation went to Constantinople to negotiate with the leaders of the Young Turks of the Ottoman Government with the aim of expanding Armenia’s borders. In Armenia, Aram Manukyan was using his old connections with Turkish military officers, dating from his activities in the Ottoman Empire before 1915, to the same end.

According to Ruben (Ter-Minasyan), “Aram demanded extended borders and better conditions from his old friend, the victorious Khalil Pasha, who had come to Yerevan. Khalil Pasha was not in principle against the demands to extend Armenia’s lands. He proposed that Armenians vacate the Meghri region of Zangezur beforehand, so that they could directly connect to Baku.  In return he was ready, at the cost of Azerbaijani lands, to extend Armenia’s borders to Jevanshir and Varanda. He proposed signing a military treaty against the Allies. This conversation was unproductive. The only good thing was that because of his personal relationship with Aram, Khalil Pasha gave 25 thousand put [unit of weight] of wheat to Armenia for the refugees and ordered the Tatars in the Milli Gorge in the Bash-Garni region to leave, in order to make room for the Armenian refugees. The wheat was distributed to the starving and the Milli Gorge was cleared of Tatars.”

Khalil Pasha, the supreme commander of the Turkish forces on the Caucasian front, had expressed his desire to come from Alexandrapol to Yerevan and meet with Aram Manukyan at the end of July. The representatives of Germany and Austria-Hungary, Friedrich Kress von Kressenstein and Fankelstein decided to accompany him from Tiflis to Yerevan. It was their first visit to Armenia. Vahan Navasardyan, the editor of Tiflis’s Armenian Horizon paper, who was in the same train with them, writes, “Armenia’s diplomatic representative in Georgia, Arshak Jamalyan, was supposed to go from Tiflis to Yerevan to accompany these three. The train was supposed to make a stop in Alexandrapol, where Khalil was staying, and, after staying a day, the three representatives of these victorious countries were to depart for Yerevan.”

The train made a stop in Alexandrapol. Khalil Pasha hosted a dinner in honour of the representatives of Germany and Austria-Hungary. Jamalyan joined them.

Navasardyan continues, “That day we spent the night on the train in the station and next morning, after picking up the victorious Khalil, the train moved towards Yerevan. They were aware of Khalil’s visit to Yerevan. Aram also knew that the German representation had unofficially expressed the desire that, for the sake of the salvation of his people, it would be good for Aram to come to the train station and personally welcome Khalil. The German representative believed that it was possible to soothe and prevent Turkish hostilities only through appealing to the mercy of the victorious general, by flattering him and winning his heart.”

The train finally reached Ulukhanlu (Masis), from where Armenia’s republic began. By a cruel coincidence, the train from the Shirak valley, which was carrying the first convoy from Kars to Yerevan of young Armenians who had been deported to Erzurum by Ottoman armies in the spring of 1918, reached Ulukhanlu at the same time. “The number of deportees had been about thirteen thousand and several hundred. All of them had been massacred and only a couple of hundred people, whom they were returning to Armenia, thus staying ‘faithful’ to the promise given to our delegates at that time in Constantinople, remained ‘alive.’ Those captives, a horrible mass of live corpses, naked and barefoot, with deformed and bloated bodies and horrified eyes, were strewn on the ground.”

The train reached Yerevan in twenty minutes. The Armenian military band began to play. General Movses Silikyan was standing slightly towards the back of the station platform and the retinue and honorary guard were standing behind him. The city’s commandant, actor Arshavir Shahkhatuni was standing on the left. At the front, in the middle of the retinue and completely separated from that entire group stood Aram, with his splendid posture and black clothes, wearing dark glasses, and his head slightly bent upward on his broad-shouldered body.

“How were these two hostile champions going to meet? One of them relying on his strong will and unwavering faith, who did not spare anything to create the Armenian dream, and the other, who did everything to crush that dream. And so, when the train stopped, Aram looked right and left and noticed Khalil’s face in the front wagon of the train. Noticing Aram, Khalil immediately jumped out of the wagon like an energetic young man, approached him, and the two of them, smiling, shook hands, and kissed each other warmly like friends,” continues Navasardyan.

Navasardyan describes the road from the train station to the city center thus: “We put our few belongings on an ox-cart and walked to the city. It was impossible to stay composed in this horrifying country and not to shudder. Armenia was living horrendous days of starvation; people had already begun eating corpses. The lifeless shadows of starved people jutted out from under walls. They were fading without begging, fading without complaint, silently, without a sound.”

After the welcome at the train station, the mayor of Yerevan invited Khalil and the other guests for dinner in the evening. The next day they visited the Prime Minister and the Chairman of Armenia’s Council and then left for Etchmiadzin, to meet with the Catholicos. Aram and Commandant Shahkhatuni accompanied the guests to the Holy See.

Shahkhatuni writes, “We approached the Catholicos. The Catholicos of All Armenians, Gevorg the Fifth, with his magnificent face, was sitting in an armchair. The German general approached him first, followed by Khalil.  I was looking at the Catholicos’ face and was amazed how his imposing look changed and expressed bitterness and anger.”

The Catholicos suggested the guests stay for lunch and, if they desired, they could visit the Church of Etchmiadzin and the museum. When they visited the bank of the lake, there were vast numbers of appalling Armenian refugees all around, under the trees.

Shahkhatuni continues, “They were not paying any attention to us. We returned to the Catholicos’s residence. In the dining room the steward invited everyone to take their seats. The Catholicos was seated at the head. The German general sat to his right, the representative of the Austrian armies beside him, Khalil on his left and Aram beside him. The lunch went well and both Khalil and the German general were amazed at the tableware and cutlery. The picture of Holy Etchmiadzin was emblazoned on them, with the script, ‘A present from His Majesty Emperor Tsar Nicolas II to the Catholicos of All Armenians’. The Catholicos asked Khalil, ‘How did you like the environs of Etchmiadzin, and especially the view of the lake? Did you see the countless Armenian refugees who used to be your citizens? I am thankful that at least this many survived’.”

“Khalil Pasha was very uneasy. To change the subject he said, ‘I am drinking to you, Your Holiness. It is an amazing wine’.”

The foreign envoys returned from Etchmiadzin that same day and that night had a long discussion on Armenian issues with the Chairman of Armenia’s Council and the Prime Minister. The government held a luncheon for the guests, in which other Turkish officers in Yerevan also participated. In the evening, Kressenstein returned to Tbilisi, but Fankelstein stayed to participate in the opening of Armenia’s Council. It was the first diplomatic reception on Armenian soil.

According to Shahkhatuni, some time after the first visit, in October 1918, Khalil Pasha sent a secret telegram to Aram and requested a secret meeting. Khalil reached a deserted spot half a kilometer from Yerevan’s train station by car. Shahkhatuni was also present at the meeting. Khalil kissed Aram and nervously asked that several Armenians help him to move to Karin (Erzurum) from Alexandrapol. Khalil said that the Turkish and German armies were losing and were going to ask for peace. “We have decided to entirely retreat from this front and go to Erzurum. We may even be forced to leave Erzurum to you. I am letting you in on these secrets as you are an old friend. We need to flee. I worry that during our escape Armenians will kill us from the rear.”

“Armenians do not kill a fleeing soldier in the back,” replied Aram. He promised to help Khalil reach Karin safely, if the Turkish general hands over the bullets stored in Kars to the Armenians. When through Khalil’s mediation the Armenians received the demanded ammunition, Aram ordered his four solders to safely convey Khalil to Karin.

In mid-November, Armenia’s War Minister receives a note from Mehmet Ali Pasha, the Turkish Representative in Yerevan, saying, “The Chief of the Head Officers’ Corps of the Ottoman Empire has ordered me to convey that, starting October 24, the lands outside of the Brest-Litovsk borders, occupied by the Turkish armies are to be evacuated within six weeks.” Armenia’s government orders Dro, the head of the Dilijan-Lori military unit, to occupy the positions of the departing Ottoman armies.

The Turks gradually begin withdrawing, the main reason for which was the defeat of the Ottoman armies on other fronts. On November 18, the Armenian armies entered Gharakilisa. According to Vratsyan, “The town was in ruins and looted. The Turks had taken everything: cows, farming tools, carts, and furniture. Four hundred corpses were strewn between Gharakilisa and Ghshlagh. Near Ghshlagh, in the great gorge, people had counted 500 corpses. Thousands of corpses, skulls, and human bones had been thrown in the Altun Takht and the Vanants gorges. The railway had been destroyed. On November 22, the Turks began to vacate Alexandrapol. The Turks had taken everything that was possible to move. The city and its surrounding villages had been looted, down to the last needle. There was immeasurable poverty all around.”

During the month of November, the occupying Ottoman army gradually withdrew from the Yerevan guberniya. In the last phase of this operation, the Turkish forces abandoned the railway from Yerevan to Alexandrapol in December and delivered the fortress of Alexandrapol to Armenian units. The Ottoman Empire thus relinquished nearly 10,000 square kilometers of the Yerevan guberniya. As the Armenian soldiers advanced, the full significance of the saying, “the Turk has passed through here,” was painfully demonstrated. Subsequent depositions of the victims filled countless pages. But words, no matter how descriptive, failed to convey the magnitude of the horror and destruction in the lands retrieved by the Republic of Armenia.

Armenians and Turks

Armenians and TurksThis book covers almost the whole spectrum of Armenian-Turkish relations, including the different attitudes of Diasporan circles and masses to the past, present, and future relations with the Turks. Tatul Hakobyan’s work is a smooth mix of history and journalism. This extremely complex and significant period of history is presented coherently, simply, in an easy to follow narrative that links together the various periods during the tumultuous 100 years beginning in 1918. Armenians and Turks, is packed with political insight, historical revelation, and even a poetic vision of a complicated relationship which unfolded, over a century, between two peoples. Hakobyan has established himself as an indispensable journalist, expert, and scholar of this ongoing saga. Written in the journalistic style using strict standards of scholarship, the author has evidently undertaken wide-ranging research. This book is of great interest not only to historians, diplomats, or experts who study issues of Armenian-Turkish relations and their impact on the future of the South Caucasus, but also for a wide range of readers.

Paperback: 435 pages,
Language: English, Second Revised Edition
2013, Yerevan, Lusakn,
ISBN 978-9939-0-0706-9.