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Volume 28, Number 2March/April 1977

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Red Crescent to the Rescue!

Written by John Lawton
Photographed by Turk Haberler Ajansi

In a year in which earthquakes in China, India, Italy and Guatemala killed up to 700,000 people, the temblor that rocked eastern Turkey on November 24, 1976, may have seemed to be just one more calamity. But this earthquake—Turkey's fourth in 13 months—was its worst in 37 years. Rescue operations, furthermore, would be hampered by distance, terrain and weather; for Van, a Turkish province close to the border of Iran, is a remote area where a forbidding landscape is swept by icy winds and snow. In Ankara, therefore, 800 miles to the west, there was a note of grim urgency in the air as one of the oldest relief organizations in the world went on full alert. This was Kizilay, as the Red Crescent Society is known in Turkey, which in the days ahead would play a key role in saving the survivors of the disaster.

The earthquake had struck at 2.24 p.m. It was a brief 14-second tremor, but in those few seconds its immense power flattened two towns, scores of farm villages and nearly every building within a 30-mile radius of a place called Caldiran. It also left some 3,800 persons dead and more than 8,000 families homeless on an isolated, wintry plateau.

The first alarm had gone out quickly, and, two and a half hours later, as the full extent of the disaster reached Ankara, the Turkish Red Crescent was already gearing up for action.

According to Kizilay's silver-haired president, Professor Recai Ergruder, there are two stages to earthquake relief. One is emergency aid, the other reconstruction, with the first stage largely the responsibility of the Red Crescent. Kizilay, therefore, with an efficiency honed to perfection by the three recent earthquakes in Turkey, quickly marshaled a 75-member relief force of doctors, nurses, drivers and cooks at the 108-year-old organization's headquarters in Ankara's main square. Simultaneously its administrators assembled four ambulances, a mobile surgery, three Land Rovers, four field kitchens, plus tents, blankets and medical supplies, and swiftly loaded them aboard four military aircraft.

Meanwhile another 5,000 tents, 1,700 blankets, 45 tons of food and a 25-bed field hospital were being packed on a special relief train—dubbed the "Earthquake Express"—and immediately dispatched on a 36-hour journey to the temblor's epicenter: a rocky, 5,700-foot plateau between Lake Van and Mount Ararat where, the Bible says, Noah's Ark came to rest (Aramco World. March-April, 1973) and where some of Turkey's worst winter weather rages for six months of the year.

Bad weather, however, also closed in on Ankara's Esenboga Airport that day. As a result, the airborne relief force was grounded and it was not until first light the following day, November 25, that the four big-bellied Hercules transports carrying the Red Crescent emergency squad—along with the ambulances, field kitchens, tents and medicines—were cleared for takeoff.

The flight was short. At 7 a.m., less than 17 hours after the earthquake, the four Hercules landed on the eastern shore of Lake Van. There, air force helicopters and government trucks whisked the Red Crescent relief teams to Muradiye and Caldiran, the two towns leveled by the first temblor.

Even for seasoned members of the Red Crescent's emergency squads the first sight of the disaster was appalling: corpses piled up in the open, the injured sprawled on the ground, women and children huddling together for warmth against the icy winds and flurries of snow slashing across the barren plateau and silently sifting onto the wreckage of homes, shops and barns.

By 9 a.m. the Red Crescent team was in action. Quickly sorting out the critical cases, the relief teams airlifted them to hospitals of Ankara while doctors on the scene taped splints on broken arms, swathed cuts and bruises and, a key step in major disasters, gave inoculations against the epidemics that always stalk the victims of such disasters. Simultaneously they set up the mobile field kitchens and, from steaming cauldrons, began to serve hot food to the dazed and hungry victims. Others from the team set up tents, moved in portable stoves and distributed blankets.

Meanwhile, at Van airport, which normally handles two commercial flights a week, cargo planes—jammed with supplies from the United States and Western Europe, as well as Turkey's Muslim neighbors in the Middle East—began to land at hourly intervals. Included were tents from Iran, food from Pakistan and medicine from Iraq. Saudi Arabia, the heartland of Islam, instantly provided a cash donation of $5 million.

For four days relief personnel in cooperation with government and army officials worked around the clock. Hampered by snowfalls—and aftershocks—they fed, clothed and sheltered the stunned survivors while, throughout Turkey, volunteers from the organization's 654 branches collected blood, money and warm clothes.

Four days after the earthquake, on November 28, six inches of snow fell on Van, underlining fears that the homeless would freeze to death during the sub-zero Anatolian winter unless quickly rehoused. In response, Osman Altin, governor of Van, declared a state of emergency, commandeered all available vehicles and sent them into the mountains to bring survivors to the towns. And again the Red Crescent was on hand. For those who could not squeeze into schools, warehouses and other municipal buildings, the Red Crescent, aided by American airmen, put up 2,000 heated, heavy-duty U.S. Army tents in Van, Ercis, Muradiye and Caldiran. "We will look after them until the government builds them new homes," said Tayyar Hindistan, chief of Red Crescent Relief operations in Van.

Earthquakes are not new to the Middle East. Time and again, over the centuries, violent shifts in the earth's crust have leveled cities and towns in the Middle East, especially in Turkey, Iran and Syria, killing and injuring hundreds of thousands of people. According to available records, earthquakes have rocked Medina, in Saudi Arabia, Beirut, in Lebanon and Jerash, Nablus and Jerusalem in Palestine.

Some areas have been struck repeatedly. Jerusalem, for example, has endured 84 earthquakes. But Turkey, which straddles one of the world's most active seismic zones, has been worst of all. In Eastern Turkey, for example, earthquakes destroyed Antioch in 115A.D., 458 A.D., 526 A.D., 588 A.D., 1183 and 1972.

In those centuries, of course, there was no Red Crescent in the Middle East. Although its origins are said to date back to the 12th century—when the Caliph Saladm permitted the Knights of St. John to cross Muslim lines to care for wounded Crusaders—it was not formally organized until 1868. Nevertheless it has since played a vital role in relief work. In recent times the Red Crescent has seen service in at least seven wars on four continents, as well as helping relieve the sufferings of victims of great urban fires and epidemics.

Besides doing emergency relief work, the Red Crescent, today, runs seven blood centers, a nursing college, 20 hospitals, six youth camps, research and plasma-processing laboratories, roadside first-aid stations, dispensaries, soup kitchens and student hostels throughout Turkey. The Red Crescent even operates its own tent factory to keep up with the recurring disasters.

The Red Crescent's independence is guaranteed by the Turkish constitution. It receives no direct cash grants from the treasury and government officials and politicians are forbidden to serve on its 1,300-man permanent staff. Its independent $2.5-million annual income comes from such diverse sources as bequests and real estate rents, the sale of hides from sheep sacrificed at a major Muslim religious festival, and from small change deducted from horse-race winnings. It also has a monopoly on sales of X-ray films, drugs, vaccines and serums in Turkey.

The emblem of the Turkish Red Crescent can be seen not only on ambulances and hospitals, but on the tops of soda-water and mineral-water shipped all over Turkey from its own income-earning bottling plant at Afyon. But to the grief-stricken men, injured women and hungry children in tragically devastated towns such as Caldiran, the sight of the red crescent moon of Islam on a white background means much more. It means that help has arrived. And with it, hope.

John Lawton, a veteran UPI correspondent, now free-lances from Istanbul.

Red Crescent: Symbol of Mercy

The worldwide relief organization familiar to most Westerners as the International Red Cross actually consists of three parts: the International Committee of the Red Cross (I.C.R.C), The League of Red Cross Societies and more than 100 independent national societies.

The International Committee, based in Geneva, is a scrupulously neutral institution which acts as the guardian of the organization's basic principle: that its humanitarian work to relieve suffering everywhere and under nearly every circumstance should make no distinctions of nationality, race, religion, social class or political affiliation.

The Turkish Red Crescent Society—like the 17 other national Red Crescent Societies—is an independent member of the League of Red Cross Societies, an international federation, also based in Geneva. The League acts as a liaison between national societies and helps coordinate emergency relief to victims of natural disasters wherever they occur. The League was founded on the initiative of the American Red Cross in 1919. With the admission of societies from the Bahamas and Congo (Brazzaville) in December 1976, its membership reached 123. Of these, 103 are called Red Cross Societies, 18 Red Crescent, one (in the Soviet Union, which uses both symbols), the Alliance of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies and another, unique to Iran, the Red Lion and Sun Society.

The cooperative spirit shown by these independent members of the League in times of disaster is exemplified by the way so many rallied to the support of the Turkish Red Crescent in the weeks following last November's tragic earthquake. In addition to the aid given by governments and other relief agencies, 43 national Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies throughout the world sent funds or supplies worth more than $5.5 million.

The history of the International Red Cross begins in 1859, when a young Swiss businessman, J. Henry Dunant, was a chance witness at the Battle of Solferino in northern Italy, where combined French and Sardinian forces routed the Austrian army. Horrified by the suffering of the wounded on both sides, Dunant, soon after returning to Geneva, enlisted the help of four influential friends to campaign for basic reforms in what he felt was the scandalous neglect of battlefield victims by even the most civilized nations. Four years later the five men founded the International Committee for the Relief of the Wounded, forerunner of today's I.C.R.C, and invited representatives of a number of European governments to an assembly in Geneva. There they agreed to encourage national associations of "voluntary relief workers," the germ of today's independent societies. Recognizing the urgent need for a single, universally identifiable symbol to clearly mark ambulances, hospital tents and medical personnel in battle, they chose the flag of Switzerland—a white cross on a red field—but reversed the colors. Thus was born the "red cross."

Within 10 years there were 22 national societies, representing the whole of Europe including Russia and Turkey. But in 1876 a problem arose. Although the red cross symbol had never been intended to have a religious significance, Turkey, in 1876, sent word to Switzerland that out of respect for the religious convictions of its troops—Turkey was then at war with Russia—it had decided to adopt the sign of the red crescent for its ambulances. Most Arab or other Muslim countries also adopted the crescent as they formed their own national relief societies and in 1923 still another sign, the red lion and sun, was adopted by Iran.

The I.C.R.C. soon realized that if medical installations are to be respected by combatants the signs marking them must be instantly recognizable to everyone—and that if new symbols continued to proliferate they would lose all value. Since 1929, therefore, the International Red Cross has restricted its official sanction to just three symbols: the red cross, the red crescent and the red lion and sun.

This article appeared on pages 2-9 of the March/April 1977 print edition of Saudi Aramco World.

See Also: RED CRESCENT, RED CROSS,  TURKEY

Check the Public Affairs Digital Image Archive for March/April 1977 images.