THE BURNING TIGRIS: The Armenian Genocide and America's Response
Peter Balakian, . . HarperCollins, $26.95 (475pp) ISBN 978-0-06-019840-4
Now faded from memory in the shadow of the Holocaust, the Turkish slaughter of more than a million Armenians in 1915–1916 was a virtual template for the 20th-century horrors that followed, and much of what Balakian describes so powerfully is now chillingly familiar: inhuman brutality; mass deportations of helpless civilians (often in overcrowded railroad boxcars); headlines screaming of "systematic race extermination"; activists and intellectuals calling for intervention; and, most devastatingly, the lack of political will in the West to intervene to stop the slaughter. Balakian exposes the roots of the genocide in the "total war" atmosphere of WWI, which combusted with the pan-Turkish nationalism of the Young Turk government, inflamed Muslim rage against "infidel" Armenian Christians, and a long-simmering Ottoman hatred of the Armenians dating to Sultan Abdul Hamid II and his slaughters in the 1890s. Balakian, who wrote so movingly of the impact of the genocide on his own family in
Reviewed on: 08/18/2003
Genre: Nonfiction
Paperback - 528 pages - 978-0-06-055870-3