#Lusitania’s #ArmenianGenocide connection #Lusitania100 #ArmenianGenocide100 #1915

Armenian majorities in the Ottoman Empire are shown in teal in the center of the map. From Wikimedia Commons. 24 April 2015 marks the centennial of the Armenian Genocide, where an estimated 800,000 to 1.5 million Armenians were killed under Ottoman rule. I don’t claim to be an expert in this field, so I’ll leave the …

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Mr. Michael Nicolas Pappadopoulos

Michael “Michele” Pappadopoulos, 43, was a Greek citizen from Athens, Greece.  He was traveling with his wife Angela and their friend Leonidas Bistis aboard Lusitania from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States to return to Athens.  Michael and Leonidas were lost in the sinking.  Angela survived. Pappadopoulos was born on the island of Peramos in 1871. After public school in …

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Mr. Frank Baba

Frank Baba, 30, was a Persian national from Chicago, Illinois, United States traveling aboard Lusitania with 12 other companions to learn the fate of their families following the Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Turkey.  Frank Baba and his traveling companions John Jacob Baba and Thomas Ohan Stephen survived. From the Sunday, 9 May 1915 New York Times, page 5, column 4: The following …

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Mr. John Jacob Baba

John Jacob Baba, 33, was a Persian national from Chicago, Illinois, United States traveling aboard Lusitania with 12 other companions to learn the fate of their families following the Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Turkey.  John Jacob Baba and his traveling companions Frank Baba and Thomas Ohan Stephen survived. From the Sunday, 9 May 1915 New York Times, page 5, column 4: The following …

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