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The Fate of African Americans Rests with the Ottomans: The Armenian Crisis, Lynching, and the “American Question,” 1880–1920

The Journal of African American History, 2023
Between 1880 and 1920, African Americans and Armenians became people on the run, the targets of racial persecution by state-sanctioned merchants of terror.
S. Mathieu
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Israel and the Fundamental Question of Armenian Genocide Recognition

History and Culture. Journal of Armenian Studies, 2023
This article aims to reevaluate and reassess as much as possible the principles of Israel’s policy regarding the recognition of the Armenian Genocide, its consequences, and the factors hindering the recognition.
Edik Minasyan   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Armenian question between history and politics

Knowledge and Acknowledgement in the Politics of Memory of the Armenian Genocide, 2018
Vahagn Avedian
openaire   +2 more sources

Theodor Herzl and the Armenian Question

Journal of Palestine Studies, 1977
Iistoriographical including hagiographic contributions to the Zionist movement and its leading figures are plentiful. This is especially true of the founding father, Theodor Herzl, who continues to enjoy pride of place in the literature: there is hardly a facet of his life, personality, and endeavour that has not received at least some attention.1 One ...
openaire   +1 more source

Britain and The Launching of the Armenian Question

International Journal of Middle East Studies, 1976
In August 1894, as if by prearranged signal, a series of Muslim attacks on the Gregorian Armenian subjects of the Porte broke out in eastern Anatolia and spread gradually, province by province, throughout most of Asiatic Turkey. These disorders raged sporadically for two years until finally, in August 1896, they culminated in a similar assault on the ...
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The Question of Confiscated Armenian Property

2012
This chapter illustrates how the deportations left an enormous amount of abandoned Armenian property and possessions in their wake. This posed the question of what policy the government and local officials should take in regard to its preservation or liquidation. The answer of the Unionist government is highly instructive regarding the ultimate aims of
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Diaspora and Denial: The Holocaust and the “Question” of the Armenian Genocide

Diaspora, 1998
The Holocaust and the Armenian Genocide have been considered comparable events ever since the term “genocide,” coined by Raphael Lemkin in 1944, was used at Nuremberg. The comparison leads to the recognition of differences between the two genocides, differences often used by revisionist historians to deny the very substance of genocide to the Armenian
openaire   +1 more source

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