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Turkish PM Asked To Address Anti-Semitism

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  • Turkish PM Asked To Address Anti-Semitism

    TURKISH PM ASKED TO ADDRESS ANTI-SEMITISM

    Jewish Telegraphic Agency
    http://jta.org/news/article/2009/01/22/1002 446/jewish-groups-call-on-turkish-prime-minister-t o-address-anti-semitism
    Jan 22 2009
    NY

    WASHINGTON (JTA) -- Five major Jewish organizations called on the
    Turkish prime minister to "urgently address" a wave of anti-Semitism
    in his country.

    In a letter to Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the groups' leaders wrote, "Turkey
    rightly prides itself on many centuries of coexistence with Jews. But
    today, our Jewish friends in Turkey feel besieged and threatened."

    Signing on to the letter were the leaders of the American Jewish
    Committee, Anti-Defamation League, B'nai B'rith International, the
    Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations and
    the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs.

    Among the incidents cited in the letter are Istanbul billboards full
    of anti-Jewish propaganda posters, the door to a Jewish-owned shop
    in Istanbul with a sign reading "Do not buy from here, since this
    shop is owned by a Jew" and the defacing of a synagogue, which has
    led to the closure of all but one of the synagogues in the city of
    Izmir. Protesters also have expressed their hatred of Jews at the
    Israeli Consulate.

    The groups' missive notes a connection between "the inflammatory
    denunciation of Israel by Turkish officials" and the rise of
    anti-Semitism. Erdogan has called Israeli actions in Gaza "a crime
    against humanity" and told a municipal election campaign rally that
    the Jewish state was "perpetrating inhuman actions which would bring
    it to self-destruction."

    "To be sure, we disagree with your government's view of the situation
    in the Gaza Strip and with some of your own harshest statements,"
    the leaders wrote. "We should certainly agree, however, that such
    differences of opinion do not justify any display of anti-Semitism
    in Turkey or elsewhere."

    The organizations that signed on to the letter declined to support a
    2007 U.S. congressional resolution recognizing the Armenian genocide,
    concerned that such legislation could harm the relationships between
    the United States and Turkey and Israel and Turkey.
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