30/5/2008 - Franz Werfel knew that he had been taken in by forgeries
Excerpts from the book:A Myth of Terror
Armenian Extremism:Its Causes and Its Historical Context
An Illustrated Expose by Eric Feigl
Abraham
Sou Sever is a Sephardic Jew, born in Izmir, Turkey, before World War
I. He later emigrated to the United States and now lives in California.
Abraham
Sou Sever has filed a written Deposition and Testimonial in which he
tells the truth about the Armenians' "genocide" claims and their
propaganda methods from his own personal life experiences and
knowledge. Particularly significant is his testimony on Franz Werfel.
Mr. Sever's notarized deposition has been transmitted to research
institutions in the United States as part of a written and oral history
collection on the Armenian claims for a genocide.
Here is what Mr. Sever has to say about Franz Werfel and the events which took place on Musa Dagh:
"Moussa
Dagh (Mount Moussa), if the truth be known, is the best evidence of the
Armenian duplicity and rebellion. Fifty thousand Armenians, all armed,
ascended the summit of that mountain after provisioning it to stand
siege. Daily sallies from that summit of armed bands attacked the rear
of the Ottoman armies, and disappeared into the mountain. When the
Ottomans finally discovered the fortification the Armenians had
prepared, they could not assault and invade it. It stood siege for 40
days, which is a good indication of the preparations the Armenians had
made surreptitiously under the very nose of the Ottoman Government. Nor
was it ever explained that the rebellion of the Armenians had been
fostered, organized, financed, and supplied with arms and munitions by
the Russians.
Leaders of the Armenian
revolutionary organization DASHNAGTZOUTIUN have since admitted to have
been seduced by Russia with promises of independence and a New Armenia.
They have admitted that they were financed and armed by Russia. They
have admitted that bands of Armenian revolutionaries had been organized
to sabotage and interfere with the Ottoman armies defending their
homeland, even before the Ottoman Government had entered the war
against Russia. The thousands who occupied the summit of Moussa Dagh
for 40 days escaped by descending the mountain by a secret exit
fronting oil the Mediterranean, while the Ottoman armies were besieging
the front of that mountain.
The
Armenians had communicated by flambeau signals with the French and
British naval ships patrolling the Mediterranean. Those (thousands) who
escaped were taken aboard the ships of the British and French and
transported to Alexandria in Egypt. The Armenians found it to their
interest to invent that these thousands had perished - keeping their
rescue by the British and French a secret. Only a small contingent of
Armenians who had remained fighting the Ottomans finally surrendered.
My
dear departed friend, Franz Werfel, who wrote that book, The 40 days at
Moussa Dagh, never was in that region to investigate what he wrote. He
wrote it as his Armenian friends in Vienna had told him. Before his
death, Werfel told me that he felt ashamed and contrite for having
written the book and for the many falsehoods and fabrications the
Armenians had foisted on him. But he dared not confess publicly for
fear of death by the Dashnag terrorists.
Christian
missionaries had found the Armenians willing and easy converts from
their ancestral Orthodox Christianity to the Protestant and Catholic
brands. Sympathetic to their converts, they helped spread the false
stories of massacre throughout the Western World. Modern day Armenians
heard the false stories from their elders who were never there
themselves, but had heard them from the Dashnag revolutionaries who had
made deals with the Czar and the Bolsheviks. The Republic they
established died aborning because of the intrigues and subtle dealings
typical of the Dashnag fanatis. The faise claims of genocide and
holocaust have gained for them great sympathy throughout the Western
World. They cannot tolerate disproof and refutation. They try to stifle
and prevent disproof by threats.
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