pplpod

The Forgotten Sword: A Deep Dive into the Sayfo


Listen Later

Imagine an ancient civilization physically atomized by a single bureaucratic order—the "Rule of 20"—specifically designed to ensure that no more than twenty individuals of a specific culture could reside in any single location. In this episode of pplpod, we conduct a structural archaeology of the Sayfo, deconstructing the mass murder and deportation of Assyrian Christians in the Ottoman Empire during the First World War. We unpack the administrative logic of the Millet System, analyzing how religious compartmentalization left a people politically fractured before the 1914 Hakkari Mountains mobilization. We deconstruct the "Butcher Battalion" led by Jevdet Bey and the rogue extermination campaigns of Mehmed Rashid in Diyarbakir, who utilized bureaucratic loopholes to classify all Aramaic-speakers as enemies of the state. By examining the calculated directives of Talat Pasha and the systematic burning of the Diocese of Sert’s ancient library, we reveal the profound loss of half an entire pre-war population—nearly 275,000 lives. Join us as we explore the enduring historical paradox of the Assyrian Genocide, proving that when physical evidence is erased, the act of passing down a story becomes the ultimate form of historical defiance.

Key Topics Covered:

  • The Rule of 20 Directive: Deconstructing the 1914 telegram from Talat Pasha that initiated the Sayfo by mandating the geographic atomization of Assyrian families to destroy cultural and linguistic cohesion.
  • The Butcher Battalion and Sert: Analyzing the month-long massacre of 8,000 Chaldean Catholics and the systematic burning of ancient manuscripts, resulting in only 50 to 100 survivors from the original population.
  • The Diyarbakir Loophole: Exploring the rogue governorship of Mehmed Rashid, who bypassed central government orders by classifying all Aramaic-speaking Christians as "Armenians" to justify their elimination.
  • Highland Mobilization and Resistance: A look at the May 1915 declaration of war by the Hakkari tribes, who fortified 13,000-foot peaks against heavy German-manufactured artillery and modern machine guns.
  • The Baqubah Refugee Tragedy: Analyzing the demographic collapse following the 1917 Russian withdrawal, which forced tens of thousands into a fatal exile where 7,000 died of disease in British-run camps.

Source credit: Research for this episode included Wikipedia articles accessed 3/12/2026. Wikipedia text is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0; content here is summarized/adapted in original wording for commentary and educational use.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

pplpodBy pplpod