Tacy Atkinson
Tacy Atkinson (July 3, 1870 – December 1, 1937) was an American Christian missionary who served in the Ottoman Empire during World War I and the Armenian genocide. As a witness to the Armenian genocide, her accounts of the Armenian genocide provide an important insight to the event. She is also known for helping many Armenians escape the massacres.
Early life
Tacy Atkinson was born Tacy Adelia Wilkson on July 3, 1870, in Salem, Nebraska, to parents of Scottish and Irish ancestry. The family later moved to Independence, Kansas, where she attended the local high school. She continued her studies at Park College in Parkville, Missouri. After a year at Park, she went with friends on a vacation trip to Oregon. She liked the state enough that she decided live there, and found a position teaching first grade. During her years in Oregon, she also continued her education, ultimately graduating from Pacific University in 1899, at the age of twenty-nine.[1]
When she was thirty, Wilkson was diagnosed with a breast tumor. She went to a hospital in
Armenian genocide
During the
Atkinson wrote about the deportations which began while she was in Kharpert:
What an awful sight. People shoved out of their houses, the doors nailed, and they were piled into oxcarts or on donkeys and many on foot. Police and gendarmes armed, shoving them along. Yesterday a large crowd of women from Kughi arrived but no men. Their men were all killed or in prison and all their girls carried away.[5]
After much of the population was deported, Atkinson went on to write:
Today large crowds have gone from the city. We are told that the people who started Tuesday were taken to Hulakueh only two hours distant. There the men were killed, the girls carried away, and the women robbed and left...We do not know what is still coming. Large crowds of women and children are coming in today. I don't know where from and those who are here are dying as fast as they can, and are being thrown out unburied. Vultures that are usually so thick everywhere all are absent now. They are all out feasting on dead bodies. The women started out today were followed by a large crowd of Kurds and gendarmes.[6]
In regards to the systematic massacres of Armenians, Atkinson believed that calculative and strategic planning could not have been a method employed by the Turkish government alone: "We all know such clear-cut, well planned, all well carried out work is not the method of the Turk. The German, the Turk and the devil made a triple alliance not to be equalled in the world for cold blooded hellishness."[6]
Atkinson along with her husband were especially known for saving the lives of many Armenians.[7] In one instance, she smuggled razor blades into a prison where Armenians were imprisoned so that they could easily escape.[8]
Atkinson also describes a boy who witnessed the massacre of men and women including his own mother:
A boy has arrived in Mezreh in a bad state nervously. As I understand it, he was with a crowd of women and children from some village who joined our prisoners and went out June 23. The boy says that in the gorge this side of Bakir Maden the men and women were all shot and the leading men had their heads cut off afterwards. He escaped and came here. His own mother was stripped and robbed and then shot. He says the valley smells so awful that one can hardly pass by now.[4]
Later life
Tacy Atkinson left the diary in a sealed trunk in her home in Turkey when she left the country in 1917, since the Turkish government prohibited anything written be sent out of the country. Nine years later, the unopened trunk was sent to her in the United States of America.[9]
She had three children: Henry, Alice and Harriet.[9]
See also
References
- ^ a b Atkinson 2000, p. x.
- ^ Atkinson 2000, pp. xi–xiii.
- ^ Tatoulian, Lory (March 29, 2008). "In their own words". Armenian Reporter. pp. C12–C13.
- ^ a b Fisk, Robert (August 28, 2007). "The forgotten holocaust". The Independent. Archived from the original on 2022-05-26.
- ^ Atkinson 2000, p. 39.
- ^ a b Atkinson 2000, p. 98.
- ^ Winter 2003, p. 192.
- ISBN 9781439902240.
- ^ a b Atkinson 2000, p. xiii.
Bibliography
- Atkinson, Tacy (2000). J. Michael Hagopian (ed.). "The German, the Turk and the devil made a triple alliance" : Harpoot diaries, 1908-1917. Princeton, NJ: ISBN 1903656001.
- Winter, J. M. (2003). America and the Armenian Genocide of 1915. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780511163821.