Assyrians

from Bedr Khan to Saddam Hussein : driving into extinction the last Aramaic speakers

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Last edited by UID0101
February 6, 2013 | History

Assyrians

from Bedr Khan to Saddam Hussein : driving into extinction the last Aramaic speakers

  • 0 Ratings
  • 8 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

"After the establishment of Islam as a state religion in the Fertile Crescent by the 8th century, the ferocious attacks by the Timurids, plundering the region as they descended from Central Asia in the 14th century, drove many Christian Aramaic speakers who did not convert to Islam into the mountains of the Taurus, Hakkari, and the Zagros for shelter. Others remained in their ancestral villages on the Mosul (Nineveh) Plain only to face heavy pressure to assimilate into Arab culture. The greatest catastrophe to visit the Assyrians in the modern period was the genocide committed against them, as Christians, during the Great War. From the Assyrian renaissance experienced when, miraculously, they became the objects of Western Christian missionary educational and medical efforts, the Assyrians fell into near oblivion. Shunned by the Allies at the treaties that ended WWI, Assyrians drifted into Diaspora, destructive denominationalism, and fierce assimilation tendencies as exercised by chauvinistic Arab, Persian and Turkish state entities. Today they face the growing clout of their old enemies and neighbors, the Kurds, another Muslim ethnic group that threatens to control power, demand assimilation, and offer to engulf Assyrians as the price for continuing to live in the ancient Assyrian homeland. As half of the world's last Aramaic-speaking population has arrived in unwanted Diaspora, some voices are making an impact, including that of Frederick Aprim."

Publish Date
Publisher
F.A. Aprim, Xlibris
Language
English
Pages
406

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Assyrians
Cover of: Assyrians
Assyrians: From Bedr Khan to Saddam Hussein
July 20, 2006, Xlibris Corporation
Hardcover in English
Cover of: Assyrians: From Bedr Khan to Saddam Hussein
Assyrians: From Bedr Khan to Saddam Hussein: Driving into Extinction the Last Aramaic Speakers
July 20, 2006, Xlibris Corporation
Paperback in English
Cover of: Assyrians
Assyrians: The Continuous Saga
January 4, 2005, Xlibris Corporation
Paperback in English
Cover of: Assyrians
Assyrians: The Continuous Saga
January 4, 2005, Xlibris Corporation
Hardcover in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 361-371) and index.

Published in
[United States]

Classifications

Library of Congress
DS59.A75 A67 2006, DS59.A75

The Physical Object

Pagination
406 p. :
Number of pages
406

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL17560873M
Internet Archive
assyriansfrombed0000apri
ISBN 10
1425712991
ISBN 13
9781425712990
LCCN
2006906079
OCLC/WorldCat
315548849, 75403989
Goodreads
193145

Work Description

Book Description (inside front jacket)

Throughout the Christian Era, the Assyrians have faced an immense tragedy through persecution, oppression, and massacres. The Assyrian tragedy in Mesopotamia continued intermittently during the Sassanid Persians (A.D. 226 – 637), Seljuk Turks invasion of the eleventh century, Mongols invasion in 1258, Tamerlane’s destruction that began in 1394, the Saffavid Persians in early sixteenth century and during the rule of the Ottoman Turks since the middle of the sixteenth century. Throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Turks and Kurds committed numerous massacres against the Assyrian Christians in their secluded mountains of northern Mesopotamia and in Tur Abdin region in modern southeastern Turkey.

As the Ottoman Empire entered WWI, it declared jihad (holy war) against its Christian subjects. Backed by Kurds, the Turkish army invaded northwestern Persia (Iran) and committed further atrocities against the Assyrian refugees who fled the Ottoman territories and against Assyrians of Persia as well. The jihad transformed into an ethnic genocide against the Assyrians that was perpetrated by the Turkish state and Kurdish warlords.

This genocide continues to this very day due to the policies of the Kurds in norhern Iraq, southeastern Turkey and northeastern Syria. During World War I alone, Assyrians lost two-thirds of their population and most of their homelands in northern Mesopotamia. Since the creation of the modern Middle Eastern states after the partition of the Ottoman Empire post WWI, Assyrians have faced and continue to face systematic Arabization, Turkification, and Kurdification policies by Pan-Arab governments, Pan-Turkish governments, and Kurdish political parties. Hundreds of thousands of Assyrians have fled their homelands seeking shelter in Europe, United States, and Australia. Furthermore, the rise of fundamentalism in the Middle East is posing another serious threat to the survival of the remaining Assyrians and to other Christian communities in the Middle East.

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Download catalog record: RDF / JSON
February 6, 2013 Edited by UID0101 Added new cover
February 6, 2013 Edited by UID0101 Added new cover
March 18, 2012 Edited by UID0101 Updated book URL link.
January 2, 2011 Edited by UID0101 Updated description
December 10, 2009 Created by WorkBot add works page