Circassian Exile: Allegations and Historical Facts
Introduction
- With the end of the Caucasian War in the 19th century, the Circassian people living in the Northwest Caucasus were massively displaced. While this process is considered by many historians today as ethnic cleansing and largely genocide, Russia maintains a different narrative.
This article directly compares these two narratives.
CLAIM 1: “This was not a genocide, but the natural outcome of the war”
Fact:
Russian military and administrative documents show that the goal is not only military victory, but demographic evacuation of the region.
- General Nikolay Yevdokimov clearly states that “the mountaineers must be completely cleansed”.
- Post-war policy encompasses the entire civilian population, not just the insurgents.
Academic evaluation:
- Walter Richmond clearly describes this process as “genocide”
- Mark Levene calls it “one of the modern examples of ethnic cleansing”
CLAIM 2: “Migration was voluntary”
Fact:
Migration was a largely compulsory and systematic state policy.
- Villages burned, farmland destroyed
- The people were left to face starvation and siege
- Option: “either accept Russian sovereignty or emigrate”
Evidence:
- “Distraught and hungry refugees” in the records of the Ottoman Empire
- British observers report forced
evacuations
Source:
- Justin McCarthy – Death and Exile
CLAIM 3: “Deaths were caused by natural conditions”
Fact:
The deaths were the direct result of the policies.
- People flocked to the shores of the Black Sea
- by inadequate ships
- Hunger and disease have become widespread
Documents:
- Mass deaths in Trabzon and Samsun port records
In the British consular reports:
“Hundreds of bodies are washed up on shore every day”
References:
- Richmond
- McCarthy
CLAIM 4: “Russia civilized the region”
Fact:
This process was a classic colonial settlement policy.
- Russian and Kazakh population was placed in the evacuated lands
- Majority of indigenous population eliminated or deported
Conclusion:
- The demographic structure has been radically changed
- This is defined in modern literature as “settler colonialism”
CLAIM 5: “Circassians were a security threat”
Fact:
The resistance was a local defense against the occupation.
- Despite this, not only fighters, but
also women, children and the elderly were exiled
In terms of international law:
- Changing the living conditions of→ a group to destroy the United Nations (1948 Genocide Convention)
also falls within the scope of genocide
6. CLAIM: “Numbers are exaggerated”
Fact:
Different independent sources reach similar conclusions:
- 1- 1.5 million people were deported
- Hundreds of thousands lost their lives
References:
- McCarthy
- Richmond
7. CLAIM: “The reason for the migration was religion (emigration)”
Fact:
Religion, was a secondary factor.
- Some groups have chosen to go to a Muslim state
- However, the main reason for the migration was the compelling conditions
Critical point:
if this were a “voluntary emigration”:
- Mass deaths would not have happened
- People wouldn't leave their goods
- The vast majority of the population would not migrate at the same time
Overview
When
all data are evaluated together:
Exile is planned
Population targeted
Civilians systematically displaced
For this reason, many historians describe this process as:
- Ethnic cleansing
- and a great deal of genocide
defines as.
However, Russia is still in its official discourse:
continues the "post-war migration" narrative
Conclusion
Circassian exile is not merely the result of a war;
is a systematic process of population engineering carried out with military, demographic and political objectives.
Historical documents, observer reports and academic studies show that this event:
It
makes it clear that it is not “voluntary migration” but
largely forced exile and mass destruction.