Ambassador Morgenthau's Story

Εξώφυλλο
Wayne State University Press, 2003 - 333 σελίδες

This edition brings back into print the classic memoir by the American ambassador to the Ottoman Empire who not only documented but also tried to stop the genocide of the Armenian people.

Originally published in 1918, Ambassador Morgenthau's Story is one of the most insightful and compelling accounts of what became a recurring horror during the twentieth century: ethnic cleansing and genocide. While he served as the U.S. ambassador to the Ottoman Empire under Woodrow Wilson from 1913 to 1916, Henry Morgenthau witnessed the rise of a new nationalism in Turkey, one that declared "Turkey for the Turks." He grew alarmed as he received reports from missionaries and consuls in the interior of Turkey that described deportation and massacre of the Armenians. The ambassador beseeched the U.S. government to intervene, but it refrained, leaving Morgenthau without official leverage. His recourse was to appeal personally to the consciences of Ottoman rulers and their German allies; when that failed, he drew international media attention to the genocide and spearheaded private relief efforts.

"The power of Morgenthau's book to move and instruct us eighty years after its publication," writes Roger Smith in his introduction, "is intimately connected with its truthfulness about the atrocities and the men behind them, but also about the capacities of humans to commit enormous evil with a light heart." The memoir also documents the beginnings of U.S. interest in international human rights as well as patterns and symptoms of genocidal tendencies, foreshadowing most notably the Nazi Holocaust.

 

Περιεχόμενα

The personal representative of the Kaiser
29
Germany mobilizes the Turkish army
43
Wangenheim tells the American Ambassador
58
A classic instance of German propaganda
67
Germany forces Turkey into the
86
The invasion of the Notre Dame de Sion School
109
Djemal a troublesome Mark Antony The first
119
The Turks prepare to flee from Constantinople
128
More adventures of the foreign residents
175
Bulgaria on the auction block
181
The Turk reverts to the ancestral type
190
The Revolution at
202
Talaat tells why he deports the Armenians
224
Enver Pasha discusses the Armenians
235
Enver again moves for peace Farewell to the Sultan
264
The Rest of the Story
281

Enver as the man who demonstrated the
140
The Allied armada sails away though on the brink
151
A fight for three thousand civilians
161

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Peter Balakian was born in Teaneck, New Jersey on June 13, 1951. He received a B.A. from Bucknell University, a M.A. from New York University, and a Ph.D. in American civilization from Brown University. He has been an English professor at Colgate University since 1980. His collections of poetry including Father Fisheye, Sad Days of Light, Reply from Wilderness Island, Dyer's Thistle, June-Tree: New and Selected Poems 1974-2000, Ziggurat, and Ozone Journal, which won the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for poetry. He has also written works of nonfiction including Theodore Roethke's Far Fields and The Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America's Response. His memoir, Black Dog of Fate, won the PEN/Albrand Prize for memoir.

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