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  • Turkey's Model Minority

    TURKEY'S MODEL MINORITY

    Canadian Jewish News
    http://www.cjnews.com/index.php?q=node/90146
    June 5 2012

    A valued and protected model minority during the Ottoman Empire and
    nfull citizens since the formation of a secular republic in 1923,
    the Jews of Turkey have enjoyed equality and respect, but have had
    to cope with periodic outbursts of xenophobia and racism.

    Turkey, a pro-western state of 75 million inhabitants with the
    second-largest Jewish community in the Muslim world after that of Iran,
    treasures its centuries-long bond with Jews. As Turkish diplomat Ertan
    Tezgor said, "We have quite tight relations with the Jewish people."

    Judging by the historic record, Jews have fared far better in Turkey
    than Armenians or Greeks, whose grievances can fill a book.

    The Jewish presence in Turkey can be traced back to antiquity, to
    the Roman and Byzantine empires, when Greek-speaking Romaniote Jews
    settled in Anatolia, Turkey's heartland, and were eventually absorbed
    by Sephardi Jews, who reached Ottoman lands from Spain under duress
    in the 15th century.

    Invited to the Ottoman Empire by the sultan, Mehmet II, Jews repaid
    the favour by being exceedingly loyal and productive citizens. Like
    all minorities, they lived within the framework of the millet system,
    which organized non-Muslim communities on the basis of religion.

    With the breakup of the remaining segments of the Ottoman Empire,
    a cosmopolitan domain that reached deep into the Middle East and the
    Balkans, the number of Jews declined precipitously, from several
    hundred thousand in the 19th century to 80,000 by the conclusion
    of Turkey's war of national independence, which resulted in a
    Muslim/Christian population exchange.

    In modern Turkey, founded by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the revered father
    of the nation, minorities, especially Greek and Armenian Christians,
    were subjected to assimilationist policies and discrimination until
    the 1950s, according to Istanbul historian Rifat Bali.

    In Eastern Thrace, Turkey's gateway to Europe, several thousand Jews
    in towns such as Edirne and Canakkale were forcibly expelled in 1934
    in a campaign of physical violence, psychological intimidation and
    economic boycotts. The expulsions finally stopped when the central
    government intervened and allowed Jews to return to their homes.

    "It's not clear who was behind all this," said Bali. But right-wing
    nationalists sympathetic to Nazi racial doctrines may have been among
    the perpetrators.

    In 1942, the Turkish government imposed a crippling wealth tax (Varlik
    vergisi) on well-off citizens. Historians generally regard the punitive
    tax, most keenly felt by Jews and Christians, as an attempt by the
    government to stop war profiteering and to transfer wealth to the
    Sunni majority.

    Bali describes the tax, revoked in 1944, as a discriminatory and
    arbitrary measure that blatantly violated the 1924 constitution. In
    his view, the tax sent an unmistakable signal to minorities that they
    had no future in Turkey.

    In 1955, following reports that Ataturk's ancestral home in Salonika
    had been destroyed, anti-Greek riots erupted in the centre of Istanbul,
    resulting in the destruction of numerous shops and homes.

    Jews and Armenians were caught in the backwash of this pogrom.

    Five decades on, Turkey has matured and now has "a positive attitude
    to minorities," said Bali. But due to the events of 1934, 1942 and
    1955, the pull of Israel after 1948 and an outbreak of terrorism in
    the 1970s, Turkey's Jewish community has declined numerically.

    About 18,000 Jews, all but 400 of whom are Sephardi Jews, reside in
    Turkey today. Emigration is still a factor, with upwards of 150 Jews
    making aliyah every year. By one estimate, there are 100,000 Jews of
    Turkish origin in Israel.

    By all accounts, the 1986 and 2003 bombings of Neve Shalom, the
    biggest synagogue in Istanbul, did not cause a significant exodus of
    Jews. The attacks, which were respectively perpetrated by Arab and
    Turkish terrorists, claimed the lives of more than 40 Jews and Muslims.

    Turkish Jews are largely concentrated in Istanbul, with much smaller
    centres in Izmir, Bursa and Ankara. They possess an impressive range
    of institutions, synagogues and schools, but these facilities are
    increasingly difficult to maintain.

    Demographic realities, notably an intermarriage rate ranging in
    the vicinity of 25 per cent and an aging population in which deaths
    outnumber births, are key problems in the community, said Izak Kolman,
    an advisor to Chief Rabbi Isak Haleva.

    He and others believe that Jewish population stability will be
    assured by Turkey's vibrant economy and by Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan's decision to bring in a new constitution enshrining
    human rights.

    By local standards, Turkish Jews are fairly prosperous, being active
    in business (particularly in the textile trade) and the professions.

    Yet 200 families in Istanbul require food aid per month.

    Traditionally, the civil service and the armed forces have been
    informally off-limits to Jews and Christians. However, Turkish Foreign
    Minister Ahmet Davutoglu recently declared that Jews should be members
    of the diplomatic corps. Whether the new policy is merely tokenism
    remains to be seen.

    Jewish leaders here claim that antisemitism does not pose a problem
    in daily life. But since most Muslim Turks have never met a Jew,
    "you have fear and negative feelings," noted Sami Herman, the
    community's president.

    Antisemitic material is published in the ultra-nationalist and Islamic
    press, Bali observed. "But the sentiments they express reflect opinion
    in the street, and are not held by Turkish elites."

    Although Jews are well integrated into Turkish society, ethnocentric
    Turks claim that only Muslims are real Turks, and that Jews are
    foreigners (yabancis).

    The Mavi Marmara incident of May 2010, during which Israeli commandos
    stormed a Turkish ship trying to break Israel's naval siege of the
    Gaza Strip, may have contributed to the erroneous belief that Jews
    are faux Turks. "Jews feared that their loyalty to Turkey would be
    questioned," said Bali. "But no one questioned their loyalty."

    By way of response, the Jewish community immediately issued an official
    statement expressing sadness and sorrow over the loss of life. Much
    to its relief, Erdogan issued a warning that anti-Israel feelings
    should not be allowed to spill over into antisemitism.

    "We felt a little stressed, but there has not been a long-term impact
    on our community," said Herman, observing that the Mavi Marmara affair
    only affected Turkey's bilateral relations with Israel.

    Although Turkish Jews tend to be pro-Israel, citing historical and
    cultural affinities with Israel, they tread carefully in public
    discussions about Zionism.

    "We're not Zionists," declared Herman. "Not at all. But for sure
    Israel is very important for Jews."

    Herman's colleague, Adil Anjel, put it more starkly: "In Turkey,
    Zionism is a bad word, like saying you're a racist."

    He added, "We are Turkish Jews who feel sympathetic toward Israel."

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