Henry H. Riggs - Trasfert
Days of Tragedy in Armenia:
Personal Experiences in Harpoot, 19151917
The American missionary Henry Riggs wrote a vivid account of the Armenian
Genocide in Kharpert (Harpoot). Completed in 1918, Rev. Riggs's memoir, Days of
Tragedy in Armenia: Personal Experiences in Harpoot, 1915-1917, has now been
published by the Gomidas Institute.
"Days of Tragedy in Armenia is probably the most detailed local history of
the Armenian Genocide written in the English language," said the historian Ara
Sarafian, who wrote the introduction to the volume. Rev. Riggs's narrative is
the first in the Gomidas Institute's Armenian Genocide Documentation Series, of
which Sarafian is general editor.
"This is the story of an engaged observer," Sarafian added. "Rev. Riggs was
born in the Ottoman Empire. He spoke Turkish, Armenian, and English. His
narrative is based on his personal observations and his conversations with
Armenian, Kurdish, and Turkish friends and neighbors, Ottoman officials, other
Americans, and foreign nationals. It really is an amazing account."
Rev. Riggs prepared the manuscript in 1918 and it was submitted to a U.S.
government commission investigating various aspects of the First World War,
including the destruction of Armenian communities in the Ottoman Empire. It has
never before been published as a book.
A State of War
Rev. Riggs's story begins with the Ottoman Empire's preparations for entering
World War I. According to Riggs, the Ottoman government was hardly ready to
fight a war in 1914, at least in the Harpoot region.
The Ottoman army confiscated some of the buildings of Euphrates College, the
American missionary compound in Harpoot, to house conscripts. The army also took
over the Annie Tracy Riggs hospital to care for wounded soldiers. Thus, Riggs
had a close-up view of army life in Harpoot and its surroundings.
Through sad and sometimes amusing vignettes, Riggs shows that the army was
simply unable to process the enlistment of thousands of Ottoman subjects who
heeded the general call to arms. Nor was the army able to adequately feed the
soldiers, meet their other basic needs, and care for the wounded. Meanwhile, a
language barrier existed between Turkish officers and Kurdish conscripts. Under
these circumstances, draft-dodging, desertion, and various forms of corruption
were pervasive.
Race Extermination
Rev. Riggs describes how ordinary Armenians were rounded up and destroyed by
the Ottoman government after June 1915. Riggs observes that these killings were
not expected and came as a surprise.
The first convoy of so-called deportees consisted of men. After the men were
destroyed, women, children, and the elderly were gathered in convoys and marched
out of the city. Riggs describes the systematic way in which individuals were
sought out by gendarmes. He also describes the state of innumerable caravans of
Armenian exiles from other regions that passed through Harpoot.
Riggs heard the firsthand reports of several reliable eyewitnesses who
observed mass graves of Armenians outside Harpoot. These included the local
American consul Leslie A. Davis and his colleague Dr. Henry Atkinson. He
concluded that the abuses and murder of Armenians were too persistent to be
dismissed as simple aberrations of a purportedly benign policy of population
transfer.
Rev. Riggs's account is particularly valuable as a historical document
because the author provides a great deal of detail and distinguishes what he
personally saw, what he was told, and what he thought. Moreover, Riggs's account
can be corroborated with several other contemporary sources from Harpoot.
Defiant Kurds
Rev. Riggs pays close attention to the Kurdish population of the Dersim
region, adjacent to Harpoot. Noting that the relationship of Kurdish tribes in
this region with the Ottoman government had long been tenuous, he reports that
in the spring of 1916 a Kurdish uprising took place. After suppressing the
rebellion, the government began an abortive effort to deport Kurds from the
region.
Riggs credits the Dersim Kurds with saving tens of thousands of Armenians by
providing them with safe passage to Russia. He writes:
"It was during this period that the hunted Armenians began to flee into the
Dersim. To those who knew of the depredations of the Dersim Kurds in the
massacres of 1895, this sounds like a strange situation, for then the Kurds were
the persecutors of the Armenians. That was, however, as it were, strictly a
matter of business, as the Kurds in 1895 were invited to come and plunder the
Armenians, and the killing at that time was merely incidental to getting the
loot, which forms so large a part of a well-regulated Kurd's income. In 1915,
however, there was no loot to be had, for the government took care of that. And
when it came to dealing with a defenseless Armenian fugitive, the instinct of
the noble savage is to save rather than wantonly to destroy this neighbor
against whom he has no grudge (p. 111)."
Clandestine Relief
Rev. Riggs and his fellow missionaries did what they could to help the
Armenians during the various stages of the genocide. Riggs reports his meetings
with the governor, the police chief, and other officials--including the visiting
minister of war Enver Pasha, one of the masterminds of the Genocide.
He found the officials indifferent to his pleas. At best, they were willing
to make promises they had no intention of keeping. Riggs discusses the various
ways he worked around the official restrictions on helping Armenians.
He describes his own efforts to get messages to and from relatives and to
transmit money on behalf of Armenians, contrary to the strict instructions of
the governor.
After the bulk of the Armenians had been eliminated, Riggs was closely
involved in helping the few destitute survivors. Much of the relief work took
the form of helping people help themselves. The missionaries were involved in
setting up bakeries, textile mills, and the like