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  • Turkish-Jewish ties focus of panel

    Turkish-Jewish ties focus of panel
    by Sandra Adelstein

    Washinngton Jewish Week
    Dec 24 2004

    WJW Intern -- Turkey's star is rising. The country's inclusion into
    the European Union is on the horizon, enabling it to transcend hundreds
    of years of isolation as the only Muslim country in Europe.

    Its relationship with Israel is stable, with military and economic
    cooperation continuing, despite rising Turkish anti-Semitism and
    criticism of Israeli government policies.

    At a D.C. forum on Turkish-Jewish relations, held earlier this month
    at the 25th annual convention of the Assembly of Turkish American
    Associations, speakers offered insights into Turkey's historical and
    current relations with the Jewish people.

    A Turkish-Jewish activist who lived in Israel for more than 15 years,
    Rachel Sharon Krespin, now a Connecticut resident, called on the
    Turkish government to condemn anti-Semitism.

    She characterized the anti-Semitic activities of ultra-right parties
    as an "anti-Jewish campaign," and described an increasingly hostile
    atmosphere fomented by right-wing journalist and political parties
    that culminated in the bombing of two synagogues and the killing of
    a Jewish dentist.

    Jewish citizenship and loyalty are questioned, according to Krespin,
    and Adolf Hitler is praised by these extremist voices. She drew
    a direct parallel between anti-Jewish hysteria and anti-Israeli
    propaganda, noting the words of Turkish journalist Ayse Onal, "It is
    impossible to write one good thing about Israel without being attacked
    as a lackey of the Jews."

    She added that Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon was called a
    butcher by protesters when he arrived in Turkey last year.

    Anti-Semitism in Turkey is at it its highest level since World War II,
    according to Daniel Mariaschin, B'nai B'rith International's executive
    vice president, who also spoke on the panel.

    He singled out political cartoons, which he likened to cartoons in
    the Nazi press.

    A member of the Republican opposition to Turkey's government took a
    different perspective, downplaying the impact of anti-Semitism. The
    bulk of Turkish people are not anti-Semitic and "disagreeable voices
    don't represent the views of Turkey," said panelist Sukru Ekdag,
    a former Turkish ambassador to the United States.

    He focused his criticism on the Israeli government. "What is being
    criticized," he said, are Sharon's policies. "Israel has to be more
    constructive in resolving the Palestine issue," he said.

    Krespin, however, lashed out at criticism of Israeli actions. "Turkey
    should not characterize the actions against Hamas as state terrorism,"
    she said. Although she applauded Turkey's potential participation
    in Middle East talks, she warned against Hamas' participation in the
    peace process, which some in Turkey have supported.

    "Hamas' credo is the destruction of the State of Israel," she said.
    "Inclusion in the political process would not negate its long-term
    goal of the destruction of the state of Israel."

    Despite the rising anti-Semitism and criticism of Israeli policies
    in the West Bank and Gaza, Turkey and Israel continue their military
    cooperation. An agreement signed by the two nations in 1996 has
    burgeoned into economic and cultural agreements. American Jewish groups
    also have lobbied Congress on behalf of Turkish military interests.

    Krespin also pointed out that Turkey was one of the first nations to
    establish relations with the state of Israel, soon after Israel's
    independence, and forecasted that both countries have an important
    role to play in bringing freedom and democracy to the Middle East.

    According to Krespin, Turkey has written human rights into its
    constitution providing for the rights of minorities and prisoners in
    preparation for its admission as a full member of the European Union.


    She cautioned, though, that reforms should not "constitute an all-costs
    national goal."

    Asked about the Turkish government's stance on the Armenian genocide,
    she said that a massacre of Armenians took place between 1915 and 1917,
    but denied that it had been planned by the Turkish government.

    Krespin, who is the executive director and founder of the American
    Council on Jewish Turkish, insisted that the Armenians had massacred
    as many Turks as Turks had massacred Armenians, a supposition that
    many historians dispute.

    It is estimated that between 600,000 and 1 million Armenians were
    killed by Turks between 1915 and 1917, and that hundreds of thousands
    more were forced into exile.

    The panelists had no comment in response to a question about Seymour
    Hersh's New Yorker magazine article last June, which said that Israel
    was providing military and intelligence support to the Kurds to offset
    the influence of Iran, a serious point of contention between Israel
    and Turkey.

    Asked about the point after the conference, David Siegel, press attache
    at the Israeli embassy, denied Israeli involvement with the Kurds.

    http://www.washingtonjewishweek.com/localstory.php?/wjw2/282233938839523.bsp

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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