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The Reports and the Testimonies
About Russian - Circassian War and the Circassian Genocide

Grand Duke Michael: “We wouldn’t leave our
duties thinking that Mountaineers are not surrendering. To wipe out the
half, the other half needed to be destroyed.”
Caucasia Armies General
Staff Head Milyutin: “We should send the
Mountaineers by force to the places we want. If we need, we should
deport/exile them to Don region. Our main goal is to settle Russians in the
regions on the skirts of Caucasian Mountains. But we shouldn’t let the
Mountaineers know about this.”
In the letter Earl
Yevdokimov sent to the Ministry of War in October 1863 he said: “Now we
have to clean the coastal strip as part of our plan for the conquest of West
Caucasia” (from the State History Archives).
Russian Historian
Sulujiyen: “We wouldn’t abandon our cause just
because Mountaineers are not surrendering. Half of them needed to be crashed
in order to take their weapons. Many tribes were totally annihilated during
the bloody war. In addition, many mothers were killing their kids in order
not to give them to us.”
Russian Historian
Zaharyan: “Circassians do not like us. We
exiled them from their free meadowlands. We destroyed their houses and many
tribes were totally destructed.”
Russian Historian Y.D.
Felisin: “This was a real and brutal war.
Hundreds of Circassian villages were set on fire. We let our horses run over
their crops and gardens to destroy them, in the end it turned into a ruin.”
Earl Lev Tolstoy:
“To enter the villages in the darkness became our usual thing. Russian
soldiers were entering the houses one by one under the darkness of the
night. This and following scenes were such horror scenes that none of the
reporters were courageous enough to report them.”
From the Oppositional
group N. N. Rayevski: “The things we did in
Caucasia were very similar to the negative things that Spaniards did during
the war in American lands. I wish God almighty would not leave any blood
marks in Russian history.”
In the congratulating
message Czar II. Alexander
sent to Earl Yevdokimov: “You cleaned
up and destroyed the rebellious autochthon nations in West Caucasia in the
last 3 years. We can recover the cost of this long bloody war from this
fertile land in a very short time.”
“A Russian detachment
having captured the village of Toobah on the Soobashi river, inhabited by
about a hundred Abadzekh (a tribe of Circassians), and after these had
surrendered themselves prisoners, they were all massacred by the Russian
Troops. Among the victims were two women in an advanced state of pregnancy
and five children. The detachment is question belongs to Count Evdokimoff’s
(Yevdokimov) Army,
and is said to have advanced from the Pshish valley.
As the Russian troops gain ground on the Coast, the natives are not allowed
to remain there on any terms, but are compelled either to transfer
themselves to the plains of the Kouban or emigrate to Turkey” (F.O. 9-424,
no 2, Dickson to Russell, Soukoum Kale,17 March 1864).
Jan Karol:
“The Russian conquest of Caucasia is a terrible example
of our barbarian times. It took 60 years of military terror and massacre to
break the resistance of the Caucasian Mountaineers.”
Hakhurat
S.Y.- Lichkov L.S
in their book entitled Adygheya: “Czarist
administration deported/exiled hundreds of thousands of Circassians from
their homeland Caucasia. They expelled Mountaineer nations from their
homeland by way of a bloody war.”
Grand Duke Michael:
At the end of the war, when Grand Duke Michael
came to Caucasia, Circassian Elders visited him and they said that they were
defeated, and they demanded to be allowed to live in their lands accepting
Russian administration. The answer Grand Duke Michael gave was: “I
give you a month. In one month, you either go to the land that will be shown
to you beyond Kuban, or you go to the land of the Ottoman Empire. The
villagers and mountaineers who are not leaving for the coastal region in one
month will be treated as prisoners of war.”
Russian St. Petersburg
Newspaper: “They started escaping through the
coasts which were immortalized by their resistance and defence. There is no
more Circassia. Our soldiers will clean out the remainders in the mountains
very soon and the war will be over in a short time.”
Dekabrist Lorer:
“Zass, near his
encampment, on top of a specially prepared small hill, fixed Circassian
heads on top of lances, with their beards flying in the air. It was very
disturbing to see this scene. One day Zass, agreed to remove the heads from
the lances after the request of a guest lady. We were also his guests at the
time. When I entered the study room of the General, I was struck by a
strong, disgusting smell. Smiling, Zass told us that there were boxes in
which the heads were placed under his bed. Then he pulled a big box in which
there were couple big-eyed, horribly looking heads. I asked him why he keeps
them there. He replied: “I boil them, clean them, and send them to my
professor friends in Berlin for the study of anatomy”.
Russian-Kazakh women were walking in the battlefields and cutting the
heads of Circassian men, after the war is over. Originally German, General
Zass was paying them a good amount of money for doing that. Until he was
warned by his supervisors to give up this, Zass continued to boil, clean and
send many heads to Berlin.

General Zass
Tercüman-ı Ahval ve
Tasvir-i Efkar Newspapers: “Russians destroyed
all of Caucasia. They set the villages on fire. They were exiling the
autochthon people from their homelands after the war.”
French reporter A. Fonvill:
“Sailors were acquisitive. They were letting
200-300 people in to the ships that have a capacity of 50-60. The people
left with a little bread and water. In 5-6 days these were all consumed and
then they caught epidemic illnesses from starvation, they were dying in the
way to Ottoman Empire, and those who die were dumped into the sea. The ship
that started the trip with 600 people ended up with only 370 people alive.”
The Ubykh and Fighett
tribes are… fast embarking for Trabzon. In fact, after their land had been
laid waste by fire and sword, migration to Turkey is the only alternative
allowed to these mountaineers who refuse to transfer themselves to the
Kouban steppes and contribute periodically to the militia (F.O. 881-1259,
Dickson to Russell, Soukoum Kale, 13 April 1864)
Most of the Abkhaz have
been plundered of everything by the Russians before embarking and have
barely been allowed to bring with them the strict necessities of life for a
short period. In many villages, and especially in the district of Zibeldah,
their houses have been wantonly burnt by the Cossak soldiery and their
cattle and other property forcibl taken away or sold under compulsion to
Russian traders at a nominal price. (F.O. 97-424, # 13, Palgrave to
Stanley, Trabzon, 16 May 1867)
Polish Colonel Teophil
Lapinsky: “The
situation of the exiled people was turning into a catastrophe. Hunger and
epidemics were at their peak. The group who came to Trabzon decreased from
100,000 to 70,000 people. 70,000 people arrived at Samsun. The dead toll per
day was about 500 people. This number was about 400 in Trabzon. 300 people
in Gerede Camp, the daily death toll in Akcakale and Saridere is about
120-150 people. Italian Dr. Barozzi in his report makes the following
important note: People are trying to stay alive for long time with herbs,
plant roots and bread crumbs.”
Russian researcher A. P.
Berge: I will never
forget the 17,000 people I saw at the Novorossisk Bay. I am sure those who
saw their situation couldn’t bear it and would definitely collapse no matter
what religion they belonged to, Christians, Muslims, or atheists. In the
cold winter, in the snow, without a house, without food, and without any
proper clothing, these people were in the hands of typhoid, typhus and
chicken pox diseases. The babies were searching for milk in their mother’s
dead body. This terrible black page in the Russian history caused great harm
to the Adygean history. The exile caused an interruption in the history of
social, economic and cultural developments and in the process of becoming
one political union/confederation.”
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English Delegate Earl
Napiyer: “Slavs and other Christians were
being settled in the lands that is emptied from Circassians.” English Consul Gifford
Palgrave: “I
traveled through all of Abkhazia on the day of April 17th, 1867. It is very
painful to witness the destruction of the land of Abkhazia and to witness
the annihilation of Abkhazian people whose only guilt is to be non-Russian.”
English Consul R.H.
Lang: “When 2718 people who left from Samsun
to come to Cyprus arrived, 853 of them were dead and the others were not
very different from being dead. The daily dead toll is about 30-50.”
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From the speech of the
English Member of Parliament M. Anstey: “I
blame Lord Palmerston for betrayal of Circassia, which is made
English-adherent and which is to have trading relations with England. You
also betrayed England by surrendering Independent North Caucasia to Russia
while you knew about our interests in India.”
8 Years later while Lord
Palmerston was talking at the same parliament: “Dear Lords, it is true
that we left Circassians alone with their terrible misfortune. Yet we wanted
help from them and we used them.”
Pinson:
“The death percentage of Circassians along the Black Sea
coasts is about 50%. 53,000 people died just in Trabzon alone. We don’t know
how many ships, which are “Floating graves” had sunk. The number of families
exiled from Caucasia to Balkan region is about 70,000. Edirne: 6.000,
Silistre-Vidin: 13.000, Niche - Sofia: 12.000,
Dobruca-Kosovo-Pristina-Svista: 42.000 families. Total about 350.000 people.
Death percentage is less and is about 15-20%.”
Y. Abramov
in his book entitled Caucasian Mountaineers:
“There are no words to describe the situation of the Mountaineers in those
days. Thousands of them died in the roads, thousands of them died due to
illness and hunger. The coastal regions were full with people who are dead
or on the verge of dying. The babies who are searching for milk in their
mother’s cold dead body, mothers who didn’t leave their kids from their laps
even they are already dead from cold, and people who are dead while they got
closer just to keep warm, are examples of the scenes that were normal in the
coasts of the Black Sea.”
Russian I.
Dzarov : “Half of
those who left to go to Ottoman Empire died before they reached there. Such
a state of wretchedness is rare in the history of the humankind.”
***
ADDRESS OF THE
CIRCASSIAN DEPUTIES (HADJI HAYDEN HASSAN and KUSTAR OGLI ISMAEL) TO THE
QUEEN OF ENGLAND, LONDON, 26 AUGUST 1862 (published in
Supplement to the FREE PRESS, Journal of
the Foreign Affairs Committees) January 7, 1863
“As Your Majesty is aware, since the world existed, no nation has attempted
to conquer our country. Russia only some time ago, under the pretence that
she got our country by treaty from the Ottoman Government, invaded us with
an overwhelming force, and began against us a war of extermination, which
she has waged for forty years, and which she is still waging, at the cost of
many thousands of human lives.
The Ottoman Government, never having possessed our country, had no right
whatever to give us over to the Russians. There is no other affinity between
us and the Ottomans than the similarity of creed and faith which makes us
both look upon the Sultan as the successor of our Prophet.
The tyranny of the Russians was not confined to capturing our cattle,
burning our dwellings, and temples, and other unheard-of atrocities, but in
order to starve us on the mountains they destroyed all our growing crops in
the plain, and captured our land. In fact, they have treated us in an
unbearable and barbarous manner, unprecedented in the annals of war. Driven
to despair, we resolved to make a last firm stand against our enemies with
all the energy we possessed, and the war was carried on with fresh vigour,
eight months ago, causing the sacrifice of twenty-five thousand human lives,
on both sides, and an immense destruction of property. While we are on one
side repelling our enemies, and on the other trying to improve the
government of our country, Russia by brute force, is trying to conquer us;
on the neutral Black Sea she is capturing, whenever she can, every ship
carrying any of our countrymen, so that we have no home on land, no means of
traveling or refuge by sea. Still we would rather die than submit to the
yoke of Russia. If we were to emigrate, abandoning our homes, for ages
protected by our forefathers, who shed their blood for them, our poverty
would prove a great obstacle to our doing so; in fact, how could we take
away our own wives and children, and the widows, orphans, and helpless
relations of those slain in this war? Such an undertaking would decimate the
emigrants, and blot it\out for ever our Circassian name from the face of the
earth.”
OUTRAGE ON THE QUEEN OF ENGLAND BY THE
RUSSIAN GOVERNMENT IN THE CAUCASUS, THE
FREE PRESS, Journal of the Foreign Affairs Committees. June 3, 1863
“A scene of cannibalism has been enacted at the village of Hafifa in the
country of the Chapsoughs. The men of that village were at the frontier for
the service of the outposts. Taking advantage of their absence, the soldiers
of the Czar fell on the rest of the population, which was defenseless, and
killed, burnt, and pillage them. Among the number of the victims were
eighteen old women, eight children, and six old men. On the back of one of
the slaughtered women there was left a board bearing these words: ‘Go and
complain to the Kraalitza (Queen) of England, to whom your Deputies went to
demand assistance”. On the body of a little boy was found this inscription:
‘Remain here instead of going to sell yourself to your protectors, the Turks’.
Finally, on the corpse of an old man, the eyes of which had been put out,
was read: ‘Go and rejoin your Deputies, you will find some good oculists at
Paris” – Courier d’Orient
LETTER FROM CIRCASSIANS TO DAOUD BEY (DAVID
URQUHART):
THE FREE PRESS, Journal of the Foreign
Affairs Committees. December 2, 1863
“The Russians, jeering
and deriding us, have begun to be more violent and oppressive, and, hearing
of the arrival of the above things, they pushed forward some troops, and
surrounded two hundred houses belonging to our people, and even also to our
neighbours, by night, and killed the men and took the women and children
prisoners; and the number of persons they killed amounted to one thousand
and eighty, and those whom they took prisoners to one thousand three hundred.”
THE FREE PRESS, Journal of the Foreign
Affairs Committees.
3 August, 1864
"THE EXPULSION OF THE CIRCASSIANS
The following letter having been refused insertion in the
TIMES, we make room for it, as one
of the documents connected with the operations of the Circassian Committee:
Reception of the Circassians in Turkey,
Constantinople, July 7, 1864
My Dear Sir,
I confidently hope that my letters to you and Viscount Stratford De
Redcliffe safely and in due time, reached their destination, as well as the
copy of the documents therein enclosed. I was anxious – knowing how strong
an impression Dr. Barozzi’s official
report from Samsoun had produced throughout England – to forward the one he
presented, on his return from his sanitary mission, to the Board of Health;
convinced as I am that the facts he has brought to light are such as not
only to keep up, but increase tenfold, the interest displayed in favour of
the Circassian exiles.
I deeply regret, however… that the author of this able report should have
made himself liable in a most serious reproach; that of having, when
enumerating the various causes which engendered the diseases which have
occasioned and still continue to occasion the most awful mortality, among
the Circassians, not said one word concerning the principal among these
causes – i.e., the barbarous treatment these exiles met with on the part of
the Russian military authorities previously to their embarkation for Turkey.
The limits of a letter do not permit me to unfold the tale of horrors
perpetuated under the auspices of the Grand Duke Mikhail, in Circassia, by
Generals Balibitch and Eudikimoff. The narrative of the sufferings its
inhabitants had to undergo after the conquest of the country by Russia,
might fill several volumes. The question to be dealt with , at present, is,
whether the measures adopted by the Russian Generals to accomplish the
‘pacification’ of the conquered provinces, were not calculated to occasion
the diseases which have already destroyed upwards of two hundred thousand of
their inhabitants, and continue yet to decimate the ranks of the survivors,
after finding a refuge in Turkey?
These measures of pacification were as follows: -- Wheresoever the Russians
made themselves masters of a district, the principal inhabitants were
summoned to present themselves before the commander of the troops, and were
told by him that the Emperor, instead of consenting to the general
extermination they had merited, graciously ordered the evacuation of their
country and left to their own judgment the alternative of either migrating
with their families to the steppes beyond the Kouban, where lands would be
allotted to them; or of taking their departure for Turkey. Three days, they
were told, were granted to them to come to a decision, and to make
preparations for the journey. On the fourth day fire was set to their
dwellings, and their inhabitants who had manifested the intention of seeking
an asylum in Turkey, were forthwith marched down to the nearest point of the
coast. On their reaching the spot, a military cordon surrounded the
encampment to prevent any further communication with the interior. The
men-of-war and other sailing ships – which as it is officially stated in
Lord Napier’s dispatch, had been, at the Grand Duke Michael’s request,
placed at his entire disposal, in order to facilitate the Circassian
emigration – having never existed but on paper, the thousands of individuals
congregated on the beach were doomed to remain there exposed to the
inclemency of the elements for weeks and months, waiting for the
providential arrival of a vessel from Turkey. The scanty supply of
provisions they had brought with them, once exhausted, hunger drove them to
have recourse for subsistence to roots and the bark of trees within their
reach. Hundreds of women and children died from either starvation or from
the effects of a food so noxious to the constitution; for in no instance was
the slightest assistance afforded by the Russian authorities. It stands to
reason that the mortality grew from day to day at the most frightful rate,
and that the survivors were, at the moment of their embarkation, looking
more like walking specters than living beings. Of course, when a mass of
individuals, reduced to so sad a condition, congregates on board a vessel
hardly capable of carrying one-tenth of their number, and sea-water is the
only liquid within their reach, the inevitable consequence will be an awful
increase of mortality, and contagion will spread like wildfire. It is a
matter of surprise that they did not all die to a man before reaching the
encampment prepared for their reception”
T. Millengen
ENCLOSURE
SUMMARY OF THE INTELLIGENCE RECEIVED DURING
THE WEEK AT THE BOARD OF HEALTH OFFICE
July 1st – A Turkish cutter arrive
din port, from Heraclea, with 80 Circassian recruits.
July 2nd – The
Taif came from Samsoun, with 2200
Circassians; 30 sick, 11 deaths. This steam-frigate towed in two vessels;
the first with 700, the second with 535 passengers, of whom 150 sick – 44
deaths. Sent down to Gallipoli, where they are to settle.
The Tounah, from Trebisond, with
1600 passengers, of whom 60 died at sea, and 62 sick…
A ship towed in by the Tounah had
550 passengers, 15 of whom died at sea, 35 sick.
The Shahper from Trebisond,750
passengers.
July 5th – The
Malakoff with 1468 passengers, 34
deaths, 38 sick.
July 6th – A telegram from Gallipoli
announces the landing of 3340 Circassians.
The total of the immigrants hitherto landed on various points of the coast
of the Sea of Marmora, 21,703.
Letter dated Samsoun 30th ult., report 100,000 immigrants, and 300 deaths
daily.
Fresh arrivals from Circassia balance the departures.
Reports from Batoom, 26th ult., announce the arrival of 8500 Circassians
from Ardilar.
June 30th, Varna. 530 Circassian passengers from Theodosia.
A report from Widdin says that the 35,000 emigrants had been distributed
between Zohmpalanka, Sofia, and Nich, 664 deaths after their departure from
Widdin. They spread typhus and small-pox wherever they settle. Nearly 200
men from the crews of Turkish vessels which convey the emigrants, have had
the typhus fever, and have been sent to the Naval hospital. This
circumstance does not deter the Government from sending as before the
vessels appointed to transport the immigrants.
***
The response of Shutsejuko Tseyko to Czar II. Alexander (Czar II.
Alexander came to Caucasia in 1861, and he
stipulated Circassians to surrender without any resistance and come down
from mountain areas to low lands):
“May be Caucasia will be Russian, but as long as there is
blood flowing in Circassians vessels, they won’t be slaves of Russian Czar
and we won’t surrender our homeland as long as we live. Dying is better than
living as slaves. We won’t let our ancestor’s great warrior glory be
stained. “Ye tl’ın Ye tl’en - Either be a hero, or die”
Sources:
-
Çerkes Sürgünü: 21 Mayıs 1864, Nart Dergisi, Issue 24 - May, June, 2001
-
Çerkes Kültürü Üzerine Etüd, Dumanish Avledin, Kayseri Kafkas Derneği,
Kayseri, 2004
-
Çerkesler, Kafkasya'daki Çerkesya, Anadolu'daki Kafkasya,
Atlas Dergisi, Issue 120
- March, 2003
-
Vatanýndan Uzaklara Çerkesler, Murat Papþu (Ed.), Çiviyazýlarý,
Ýstanbul, 2004
-
The North Caucasus Barrier: The Russian Advance Towards The Muslim World,
Marie Bennigsen Broxup (Ed), ''Circassian Resistance to Russia'' , Paul B. Henze, St.
Martin's Press, London, 1992
-
Death and Exile, the Ethnic Cleansing of Ottoman Muslims, 1821-1922,
Justin McCarthy,
Princeton, NJ, 1995
-
Caucasian Mountaineers,
Materials For the History of Circassian People, Y. Abramov, 1990
-
Last Year
of War of Circassians For Freedom 1863 - 1864 A. Fonvill,
Izdaniye Jurnala, Adigi, Nalchik, 1991
-
Genocide of Adyghes (Genotsid
Adygov: iz istorii bor´by adygov za
nezavisimost´ v XIX veke ),
Hasan Kasumov, Ali Kasumov, Nalchik, 1992
-
Genocide 1864.Net, Circassian
Congress
Special thanks to
Nejan Huvaj for translation.
The
Circassian Genocide
By Antero Leitzinger
The Eurasian Politician - Issue 2 (October 2000)
The
Circassians: A Forgotten Genocide?
By Stephen D. Shenfield.
Circassian Resistance to Russia
By Paul B. Henze / From the book ''The North Caucasus Barrier''
Defeat and
Deportatiton
By
Walter Richmond / From his book ''The Northwest Caucasus: Past, Present,
Future''
RESOLUTION ON THE SITUATION OF THE
CIRCASSIAN PEOPLE

Resolution Of The General Assembly Of The Unrepresented
Nations and Peoples Organization, 15 - 19 July 1997
Circassian
Congress demands recognition of Genocide of Adygeyan People
Chairman of ARSM ´´ Circassian Congress´´ Murat Berzegov 28.05.2005,
Republic of Adygeya, Maykop
Circassians Demand
Russian Apology For 19Th Century Genocide
Paul Goble, Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty Caucasus Report
Russian State Duma Did Not Recognize Genocide Against Adygeyan (Circassian) Nation

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