Ishtartv.com - syriacpress.com
17/02/2026
BERLIN — The Sayfo Genocide
of 1915 that targeted the Syriac Assyrian Chaldean, Armenian, and Greek
peoples, long overshadowed in historical scholarship, is gaining renewed
attention thanks to the completion of a groundbreaking doctoral
dissertation by Dr. Sabro Bengaro. Titled Germany’s Islamic
Strategy During the World War I and the Impact of the Jihad
Declaration on the Sayfo Genocide of 1915, the study examines the
ideological and geopolitical forces that facilitated the mass
extermination of Syriac Assyrian Chaldean, Armenian, and
Greek communities during World War I.
For over a century, the
systematic targeting of Syriac Assyrian Chaldean people, along
with Armenians and Greeks, has often been marginalized in mainstream histories
of the Ottoman Turks. Dr. Bengaro’s work situates
the Syriac Assyrian Chaldean experience within the broader framework
of German-Ottoman cooperation and the empire’s mobilization of jihad as a tool
of war. His research relies on extensive archival material, including German
diplomatic correspondence, Ottoman military communications, missionary reports,
and Syriac Assyrian Chaldean ecclesiastical testimonies.
A central finding of the
dissertation is the role of the 1914 Ottoman jihad proclamation, which Germany
strategically supported. The study argues that the jihad was not merely a
rhetorical or political maneuver against Allied powers, but a direct ideological
justification for violence against Christian minorities, including Syriac Assyrian
Chaldean people in Hakkari, Tur Abdin, and the Mosul Vilayet.
According to Dr. Bengaro, local and imperial policies were explicitly
shaped by this rhetoric, facilitating widespread massacres and
deportations.
eyond its historical insights,
the research carries significant implications for ongoing efforts to secure
formal recognition of the genocides of the Syriac Assyrian Chaldean, Armenian,
and Greek peoples, collectively referred to as the Sayfo (Sword, in
Syriac) by Syriac Assyrian Chaldean people. Turkey has repeatedly
dismissed the events as collateral damage of wartime chaos, but
Dr. Bengaro’s evidence demonstrates clear patterns of
intent and coordination consistent with international definitions of genocide.
Scholars, advocacy groups, and legal experts say the work strengthens the
factual basis for diplomatic and legislative engagement on the issue.
The Seyfo Center and
Syriac Assyrian Chaldean, Greek, and Armenian organizations worldwide have
hailed the dissertation as a critical resource for education, preservation, and
advocacy. Its meticulous archival research and analytical rigor offer material
for museum exhibits, educational programs, policy briefs, and academic
collaborations, while reinforcing the interconnected nature of Ottoman Turk era
genocides against the Syriac AssyrianChaldean, Armenian, and Greek peoples.
“This dissertation is both an
academic breakthrough and a symbolic victory for the Assyrian nation,”
Dr. Bengaro said in a recent interview. “By reclaiming our historical
narrative, we provide a foundation for recognition and accountability that can
no longer be ignored.”
Dr. John Kaninya, a Chaldean
Syriac Assyrian from Iraq and Assistant Professor at the Defense Language
Institute Foreign Language Center, contributed to the reporting. An expert in
Arabic linguistic and cultural intelligence, Dr. Kaninya holds a
Ph.D. in Educational Leadership from the University of Arizona.
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