
Halide Edip and the Turkification of Armenian Children: Enigmas, Problems and Questions
Author(s) -
Shushan Khachatryan,
AUTHOR_ID
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of armenian genocide studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1829-4405
DOI - 10.51442/ijags.0017
Subject(s) - armenian , identity (music) , memoir , genocide , turkish , history , sociology , gender studies , political science , art , law , linguistics , ancient history , aesthetics , art history , philosophy
It is a well-known fact that the Islamisation of Christian children in the Ottoman Empire has a long history. In the great majority of cases Islamisation was carried out forcibly, accompanied by the erasure of a child’s ethnic-religious identity for those who remembered it and totally hiding their ethnic roots and religious affiliation from those who didn’t. The whole process of cultivating a new identity and character was a matter of time and of contested methods. This article identifies a problem area, raising questions and analyzing the role of Turkish intellectual Halidé Edip in the state policy of Turkification of Armenian children at the Antoura orphanage during the Armenian Genocide. It draws comparisons between the three memoirs of Armenian orphans from that orphanage that are known to date, those of Garnik Banean (Karnig Panian as written in his English language memoir), Harutyun Alboyajyan, and Melgon Petrosean and that written by Halidé Edip. As a result, certain essential differences, ploys, as well as facts disguised by Edip have been collected and presented in this article. Therefore, the research carried out identifies the problems areas relating to various aspects of the Antoura orphanage by raising new questions, offering explanations and new approaches as well as highlighting issues that need to be researched further.