With Our Soldiers in France eBook

Sherwood Eddy
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 161 pages of information about With Our Soldiers in France.

With Our Soldiers in France eBook

Sherwood Eddy
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 161 pages of information about With Our Soldiers in France.

In Serbia more than 4,000,000 people were deprived of their living by the war.  In Poland the suffering has been more terrible than in either Belgium or Serbia.  The population fleeing behind the retreating Russians were not able to keep up because of the women and children, the aged and the sick.  They were overtaken by the German army and left in the charred remains of their burned dwellings.  Some 200 cities and 15,000 towns and villages were destroyed in Poland.  Already 2,000,000 have died of starvation there.  In some districts all the children under six years of age have perished.

Armenia has suffered relatively more than any of the other nations.  Mr. Henry Morgenthau, the American Ambassador to Turkey, said:  “One million of these people have either been massacred or deported and unless succor reaches them shortly, those remaining will be lost.”  In all history there is no record more sad than that of the persecution and extermination of the Armenians.  University professors educated in the United States have had their hair and nails torn out by the roots and have been slowly tortured to death.  Women and girls were outraged and brutally killed.  Little children perished of hunger.  It is said that probably 1,000,000 of the 2,000,000 Armenians in Turkey have been slain, or have been driven into the country to starve, or have been forced to accept Islam.

The American Committee for Armenian and Syrian Relief reports: 

“Men in the army were the first to be brutally put to death.  These and civilians, after being subjected to horrible tortures, were shot.  Even priests were made victims of brutal murder.  Women, children, the sick and aged, were forced at a moment’s notice to start on foot on a journey of exile.  Mothers, torn from their children, were compelled to leave the little ones behind.  Women giving birth to children on the road were forbidden to delay, but, under the whiplash, were made to continue their march until they dropped from exhaustion to die.  A United States Consul reported that he saw helpless people brained with clubs, while children were killed by beating their brains out against the rocks.  Other children were thrown into rivers and those who could swim were shot down as they struggled in the water.  Crimes that have been, and are being, practiced upon Armenian women are too cruel and horrible for words.  The mutilated corpses of hundreds bear testimony to this inhuman reign.” [3]

Who was responsible for these outrages, and how long will the world permit them to continue?

Whichever way we turn, whether we survey the number of killed, wounded, or prisoners, the cost of the conflict, or the suffering of the devastated nations, we realize that the war means sacrifice.  It is difficult for us at home in America to appreciate the spirit in which the men in this great struggle in Europe are fighting, and the sacrifices they are making.  In all these months in many lands, the writer has not heard from the lips of a single soldier who had actually seen service at the front, words of hatred or of boasting.  Quietly and often with sadness most of these men are going forward to face death.

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Project Gutenberg
With Our Soldiers in France from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.