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  • ANKARA: Jewish groups urge Erdogan to address anti-Semitism

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Jan 24 2009


    Jewish groups urge ErdoÄ?an to address anti-Semitism



    Leading US-based Jewish groups have sent a joint letter to Turkish
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an expressing concern over "a
    wave of anti-Semitism" in the aftermath of Israel's devastating
    offensive in the Gaza Strip.

    Both Turkish leaders and the public reacted harshly to the offensive,
    which Israel said was meant to rout Gaza's Hamas leaders and stop the
    group's homemade rockets, which have killed around 20 people since
    2002. The offensive, which ended with a truce on Sunday, killed 1,284
    Palestinians -- 894 of them civilians, including 280 children and
    teenagers -- according to a Palestinian human rights group. The death
    toll and scale of destruction in Gaza provoked international outrage,
    but in Israel the war was widely seen as a legitimate response to
    Hamas' attacks. Thirteen Israelis were also killed, 10 of them
    soldiers.

    "Many recent incidents are gravely distressing to us. Protestors
    besieging the Israeli Consulate in Ä°stanbul have expressed
    their hatred of Jews. Billboards around Ä°stanbul are full of
    anti-Jewish propaganda posters. The door of a Jewish-owned shop near
    Ä°stanbul University was covered with a poster that said, `Do
    not buy from here, since this shop is owned by a Jew.'

    The defacing of an Ä°zmir synagogue has brought about the
    temporary closure of all but one of that city's synagogues," said the
    letter, signed by leaders of the American Jewish Committee, the
    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.

    "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. We
    firmly believe that responsibility for the conflict lies with the
    terrorist group Hamas, and that Israel is permitted, indeed obligated,
    to exercise its right of self-defense. We should certainly agree,
    however, that such differences of opinion do not justify any display
    of anti-Semitism in Turkey or elsewhere," continued the open letter on
    the Web site of the American Jewish Committee.

    "Turkey rightly prides itself on many centuries of coexistence with
    Jews. But today, our Jewish friends in Turkey feel besieged and
    threatened. A connection is clearly perceived between the inflammatory
    denunciation of Israel by Turkish officials and the rise of
    anti-Semitism," it said.

    While constantly criticizing Israel for its Gaza offensive, which led
    to the killings of hundreds of civilians, ErdoÄ?an labeled
    Israel's assault "a crime against humanity." However, he also said
    publicly that anti-Semitism, too, is a crime against humanity.

    In a speech delivered in Ankara last week, the prime minister referred
    to an incident in which members of the Federation of Osman Gazi
    Cultural Associations posed with placards on which they had written
    "No Jews or Armenians allowed here" and "Dogs allowed," apparently in
    response to the ongoing Israeli military offensive in Gaza, and added:
    "Everyone who is under the flag of this country is our first-class
    citizen. The Jewish citizens in my country have an honorable stance on
    this issue. All minorities, Armenians, Jews, Greeks and Christians are
    under the protection of the Turkish Republic and the government. It is
    not correct to emotionally attack such citizens of our country."

    Meanwhile, in its report about the letter, the Jewish Telegraphic News
    Agency, an online news portal, noted that "the organizations that
    signed on to the letter declined to support a 2007 US congressional
    resolution recognizing the Armenian genocide, concerned that such
    legislation could harm the relationships between the United States and
    Turkey and Israel and Turkey."

    24 January 2009, Saturday
    TODAY'S ZAMAN ANKARA
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