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Turkey Pressed on Antisemitism As ADL Fetes Its Prime Minister

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  • Turkey Pressed on Antisemitism As ADL Fetes Its Prime Minister

    Turkey Pressed on Antisemitism As ADL Fetes Its Prime Minister

    News

    FORWARD (Founded in 1897, Published in New York)
    June 17, 2005

    By Forward Staff

    WASHINGTON - While members of Congress urged President Bush last week
    to hold Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan "responsible for
    the increase of anti-Semitism and anti-Americanism in Turkey," the
    Anti-Defamation League gave the Turkish leader its Courage To Care
    Award, in honor of his nation's rescue of Jews during World War II.

    The apparent contradiction highlights the complexity of relations
    between America and Turkey, between Israel and Turkey, and between
    Jewish organizations and Turkey under the rule of Erdogan's Islamist
    Justice and Development Party.

    The 10 members of the House of Representatives, led by Democrat Steven
    Rothman of New Jersey, wrote a letter to the president on the eve of
    his June 8 White House meeting with Erdogan, pointing out expressions
    of antisemitism in the Turkish press and calling on Bush to insist
    that the Turkish leader denounce antisemitism and fight it.

    The lawmakers, mostly Democrats from New York and New Jersey - four of
    them Jewish - cited recent reports by the Middle Eastern Media Research
    Institute, which has been monitoring the Turkish media for the past
    six months. The reports - three published in the past two months -
    are filled with examples of blatant antisemitic expressions in the
    Turkish press. They also detail expressions of outrage, also in the
    Turkish press, at the antisemitic vitriol in Turkey's public arena.

    Most of the antisemitic expressions appeared in small, nationalistic
    or Islamist newspapers. Most of the criticism of antisemitic utterances
    appeared in widely circulated mainstream newspapers.

    Erdogan, who last month visited Israel for the first time since his
    victory in the November 2002 elections, has been outspoken in his
    criticism of antisemitic and anti-American expressions in Turkey's
    public arena. Last week, as he accepted the ADL award, Erdogan stated:
    "Antisemitism has no place in Turkey. It is alien to our culture."

    "It is the task of leaders around the world to join me in condemning
    the spread of hatred, whether through publications or otherwise,"
    Erdogan told the ADL. "Our consistent policy towards antisemitic
    diatribes can be nothing short of zero tolerance." Erdogan also
    affirmed his nation's commitment to maintaining strong ties with
    America and Israel. He said that while few Jews still live in
    Turkey, "They are cherished and prized elements of the Turkish
    society." Leaders of Turkey's Jewish community attended the ceremony.

    The New York Sun, a conservative daily, delicately took issue with the
    ADL's honoring of Erdogan, commenting in an editorial last Wednesday:
    "Whatever strategy the ADL pursues to encourage Mr. Erdogan to do the
    right thing, the American government will need to keep a careful eye
    on the dramatic resurgence of anti-Semitism within his borders."

    The ADL's communications director, Myrna Shinbaum, said, "We don't
    see a problem here." The ADL, she said, was not honoring Erdogan
    personally but acknowledging what Turkish diplomats did to save Jews
    in World War II.

    Florida Democrat Rep. Robert Wexler, who heads the Turkey caucus in
    the House of Representatives, said that he saw no reason to doubt
    Erdogan's sincerity. "I have gotten to know Prime Minister Erdogan
    quite well," Wexler told the Forward. "I have visited Turkey at least
    six times and spent a fair amount of time with him both in Ankara and
    in Washington. There is just no doubt in my mind that it's not fair
    to use the term antisemitism in any context in reference to Prime
    Minister Erdogan."

    Turkey's relations with the United States and with Israel were
    particularly bumpy in recent months. Tension in relations with
    Israel is attributable mainly to the way that Israel's treatment of
    Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza is portrayed in the Turkish
    media, said Soner Cagaptay, an Turkey expert at the Washington
    Institute for Near East Policy. Reports of Israel's alleged assistance
    to Iraqi Kurds have strained relations further, Cagaptay said. Turkey's
    relations with the United States have worsened as a result of the
    war in Iraq, he said.

    However, Turkey's relations with both Israel and America have improved
    significantly in recent months.
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