Johannes Lepsius

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Johannes Lepsius (1858, Potsdam, Germany - 1926, Merano, Italy) was a German Protestant missionary with a special interest in trying to prevent the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire. During World War I he published his work "Bericht über die Lage des armenischen Volkes in der Türkei" ("Report on the situation of the Armenian People in Turkey") in which he minutiously documented and denounced the Armenian Genocide. A second edition entitled "Der Todesgang des armenischen Volkes" ("The way to death of the Armenian people") included an interview with Enver Pasha, one of the chief architects of the genocide. Lepsius had to publish the report secretly because Turkey was an Ally of the German Empire and the official military censorship soon forbade the publication because it feared that it would affront the strategically important Turkish Ally. However Lepsius managed to distribute more than 20,000 copies of the report. In his novel The Forty Days of Musa Dagh ("Die vierzig Tage des Musa Dagh") the Austrian-Jewish author Franz Werfel portrayed Lepsius as a "guardian angel of the Armenians".

[edit] Literture

  • Baumann, Andreas, The missiology of Johannes Lepsius (PhD diss.), University of South Africa, 2006, AAT 0818831.

[edit] External links

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