An account of the genocide against Assyrians in 1915 The Assyrian genocide is one of the forgotten atrocities of the 20th century. The physical destruction was but one element; it also caused demographic shifts, loss of territory, generational trauma and linguicide, along with cultural genocide/ethnocide and identity erosion. This text is one of the few surviving eyewitness sources, from a seminarian living in greater Tur Abdin (the southeast of today's Turkish state). The perspective is one that is little known and less discussed. Its translation and original annotation by a master of Syriac with an in-depth knowledge of modern Assyrian history creates a unique opportunity for new and progressive scholarship. Key Features ¿ A primary source document on the Assyrian genocide of the First World War ¿ Set in the context of the failing Ottoman state and rising Young Turk regime ¿ Includes Armenians and Greeks as well as Assyrians in one primary source ¿ Contains comments and interviews with perpetrators of events ¿ The annotations provide information about sites, people and events Michael Abdalla is a Professor at the University of Life Sciences and in the Department of Comparative Culture Research at Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan, Poland. Lukasz Kiczko is a translator and interpreter for Polish, English and German.
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