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Why Armenian Genocide Impacts Treatment of Jewish Community in Turke

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  • Why Armenian Genocide Impacts Treatment of Jewish Community in Turke

    PRESS RELEASE
    ZORYAN INSTITUTE OF CANADA, INC.
    255 Duncan Mill Rd., Suite 310 Toronto, ON, Canada M3B 3H9
    Tel: 416-250-9807 E-mail:
    [email protected] www.zoryaninstitute.org

    CONTACT: Deborah Hay
    DATE: November 25, 2013
    TEL: 416-250-9807

    Why the Armenian Genocide Impacts the Treatment of the Jewish
    Community in Turkey


    Toronto-Mr. Rifat Bali, a noted scholar and author of Model Citizens
    of the State: The Jews of Turkey during the Multi-Party Period, deals
    with the treatment of the Jewish community in Turkey since 1950.

    His studies deal also with the period 1923-1949, an era that includes
    the Varlik Vergisi (wealth tax law, November 1942), a law which ruined
    many Jewish families financially. Bali details the process by which
    the Jewish community strived to accommodate the demands of state and
    society to become "model citizens." Jews were pressured to speak
    Turkish in public and Turkify their names. Yet, no matter how much
    they strived, they were always subject to second-class rights,
    intimidation, anti-Semitism, and violence.

    Bali demonstrates that all the non-Muslim minorities in
    Turkey-Armenians, Greeks and Jews-have faced similar challenges in
    their relationship with the Turkish state and society. Greeks, for
    example, underwent a terrible pogrom in 1955. They all had to deal
    with issues of maintaining their language, religion, culture and
    identity in a society that demands total conformity, but they
    responded to the challenges in different ways. Thus, the book gives
    insight into the challenges of all minorities in Turkey today.

    The opportunity arose for the Jewish community to become "useful" to
    the state by using their influence with Israel and the Jewish
    political lobby in the US to advance Turkish interests. In particular,
    they worked against Armenian and Greek interests in Washington,
    particularly to thwart efforts at gaining recognition of the Armenian
    Genocide in the US.

    The Zoryan Institute's interest in Bali's work arose for three
    reasons. First, its relevance to the Jewish community in Turkey and
    the US, as the Turkish State denial of the Armenian Genocide has been
    an important element in Turkish-Jewish and Turkish-Israeli
    relations. It is also an important obstacle in relations between
    Armenia and Israel. Even though many Jewish scholars affirm the
    Armenian Genocide, the official position of the State of Israel is
    that Armenians did not experience anything comparable to the
    Holocaust, and therefore it is not a genocide.

    Second, the human rights aspects of the minorities in Turkey,
    particularly the treatment of the Jewish community, both before and
    after their instrumentalization by the Turkish State in its denial of
    the Armenian Genocide, as Zoryan is a human rights organization with
    educational and publication programs in that area.

    Third, to show a Diaspora could be used by a host state as an
    instrument of its foreign policy, as Zoryan is also devoted to the
    study of Diaspora and Diaspora-Homeland relations.

    One may view Bali's lecture on YouTube by clicking on the link above.

    Rýfat N. Bali is a graduate of the distinguished École Pratique des
    Hautes Études at the Sorbonne in Paris. Since 1996, he has been an
    independent scholar specializing in the history of Turkish Jewry and
    is an associate member of the Alberto-Benveniste Centre for Sephardic
    Studies and the Sociocultural History of the Jews in Paris. Has
    written or edited 28 books in English, French and Turkish, dealing
    primarily with Jewish history and society within the Republic of
    Turkey. He has also written numerous articles in newspapers and
    scholarly journals, and contributed chapters to scholarly collections
    and encyclopedias. He is the winner of the Alberto Benveniste Research
    Award (Paris) for 2009 for his publications on Turkish Jewry and of
    the Yunus Nadi award (Istanbul) in 2005 and 2008 for original research
    in the social sciences.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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