resistance in Nor Hachn, opened in 1974 The town is named Nor Hachn, meaning
New Hadjin, in memory of the Armenian town of
Hadjin in
Cilicia, where a group of local
fedayis organized a military resistance against the Turkish forces in 1920. Prior to the 1915
Armenian genocide, Hadjin had a population of 35,000, of which 30,000 were Armenians and the rest were Turks. Most of the Armenians were either massacred or taken to the
Deir ez-Zor concentration camps in the
Syrian desert. After the
Armistice of Mudros in 1918, Cilicia became a protectorate of
France as part of the
Triple Entente. Consequently, around 8,000
Armenian genocide survivors returned to Hadjin with the withdrawal of the Ottoman forces. However, the French troops left Cilicia in 1920, paving the way for the advance of the Turkish forces led by
Mustafa Kemal. On April 1, 1920, Turkish troops led by
Kemal Doğan launched an offensive against the Armenians of Hadjin who organized a military resistance, which lasted until October 15, 1920, when the Turks occupied the entire city. Most of the remaining 6,000 Armenians were massacred or killed during the military operations. The surviving 365 Armenians of Hadjin took refuge in
Aleppo and
Lebanon. ==History==