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The Rise of Anti-Semitism In Turkey

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  • #11
    Hitler book bestseller in Turkey



    Turkish editions of Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf

    The book has sold 50,000 copies since January

    Adolf Hitler's autobiography, Mein Kampf, has become a bestseller in Turkey - sparking fears of growing anti-Semitic feelings in the country.

    A cheap paperback version selling at the equivalent of $4.50 (£2.30) is currently among Turkey's top bestsellers.

    Ogus Tektas, the owner of Mephisto, one of the publishers which re-issued the 500-page book, told AFP news agency Mein Kampf had always been "a sleeper, a secret bestseller".

    "We took it out of the closet for purely commercial reasons," he said, adding his company was only interested in making money.

    But the owner of another publishing house, Sami Kilic, acknowledged the book was being bought primarily by young people influenced by international politics.

    Mein Kampf was written by Hitler in 1925 and first published in Turkey in 1939.

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    • #12
      Mein Kampf Smash Hit in Turkey
      News 2005-04-19


      Mein Kampf, Adolf Hitler's notorious work outlining his anti-Semitic world view, has become a best seller in this officially secular but mainly Muslim nation. Its sudden rebirth has alarmed the country's small Jewish community and raised concerns among officials in the European Union, which Turkey aspires to join.

      Remzi and D&R, Turkey's two largest bookstore chains, ranked the work among the top 10 on their best-seller lists last month, as they did in February. At the Ada bookshop in a popular Ankara shopping strip, Mein Kampf, or Kavgam as it is called in Turkish, has sold out.

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      • #13
        I would consider that neither Turks nor Armenians are friends or even enemies of the Jews. It kind of seems the Jews are stuck in the middle of this because of real-politik

        Jews have a strategic relationship with Turkey and are an ally but many of the ulusaci are vehemently pro-Palestinian and there is certainly anti-semitism there.

        The Israeli gov't is anti Armenian and some (not all) of the Jewish lobbying groups work to keep the US/Turkish/ Israeli axis together and work against us yet the majority of the Jewish population is pro-Armenian and sympathizes with us.

        A very limited amount of Armenians are anti-semitic because of the Turkish-Jewish alliance but at the same time as a people, we have much in common with Jews and most of us respect them. Our loudest proponents in the US Congress are Jewish Americans.

        Jews are caught in the middle on this one if you think about it. There's obviously more to it.
        General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

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        • #14
          Originally posted by TurQ
          Good luck with copying and pasting

          The realities for both nations are pretty much obvious.

          These are materials classically cooked by anti-TUrkish groups, far from realities.

          Just look at your fellow Armenians in this forum, they give you a better picture of reality.
          Then tell us why the book is a best seller in turkey and not Armenia?

          Yep, it must have been ASALA, PKK or those dastardly Dashnak devils that spread this false information after buying 50,000 copies of Kavgam to make turks look like jew-haters.

          Thanks but I already have a very clear picture of reality since I don't see everything in turkeyvision.

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          • #15
            Fitzgerald: Let us not exaggerate Turkey's wonderfulness


            January 04, 2006

            Jihad Watch Board Vice President Hugh Fitzgerald offers some much-needed observations about what Turkey has been and what it is now:

            During the Cold War, Turkish behavior was obscured. Turkey offered bases and listening posts -- to be directed at its historic enemy, Russia. Thus, for good and sufficient reasons of its own, Turkey collaborated. It sent Turkish soldiers to Korea (where they left behind thousands of Korean converts to Islam -- still a potential security problem).
            The United States, in turn, resolutely ignored the failure of the Turks to begin to start to even try to recognize the mere existence of the Armenian genocide. Certainly no one was about to discover that what prompted that genocide was not something inherent in Turks, but the hatred felt for non-Muslims. Anyone reading the eyewitness accounts, either of the first genocide of 1894-96, or the second much larger one of 1915-1920, cannot fail to notice how often the word "giavour" or Infidel was shouted, and with what glee Armenians priests were crucified and their wives and daughters raped.

            In 1955, when the pogrom smack in the middle of Istanbul took place against the Greeks, the American State Department praised the Turkish government for its actions in bringing things under "control," rather than denouncing or even analyzing those acts -- which were prompted by the attitudes that Islam necessarily encourages.


            As for the belief of assorted Turkish antisemites that Turkey has always been "good to the Jews," this is nonsense. The Jews who settled in Salonika after their expulsion from Spain replaced a previous community of Jews whom the Ottomans had displaced, and it was not generosity but raison d'etat that prompted this: the Jews were felt to be less of a threat than Christians. What's more, they could dilute the Christian position in Salonika and possibly could be expected, as a weak and isolated community, to more readily do the bidding of the Ottoman government, as grateful and economically active dhimmis (not to mention the fact that the padishahin, or Sultans, always took Jewish doctors, believing them to be superior in their knowledge -- you can even find note taken of this in the Topkapi compound).
            But Jews in the Balkans were subject to the forced levy of children, or devshirme, though few seem to recall this. And Jews were subject to all the legal disabilities that other non-Muslim populations suffered from. But in the fantasy world of Turkish belief, one in which some Jewish commentators have willingly participated, the Jews of Turkey were treated practically like kith and kin.

            For another illustration of the real Turkish behavior, on December 12, 1941 the dilapidated and leaking Struma, a ship loaded with more than 800 desperate Jewish refugees from the Nazis, left the Rumanian port of Constanta. A few days later the engine died. It was eventually towed into the harbor of Istanbul, and then, once more after a brief period, the Turks, not wishing to offend the Germans, towed the ship out into international waters. On February 12, 1942 an explosion -- very likely caused by the Soviet navy, which had been ordered by Stalin to attack any ship entering the Black Sea beyond Turkish waters -- caused the ship to sink. More than 800 people died. There was one survivor. The Turks might have let those refugees land, but did not. That failure belies the claims of Turks that they have always befriended the Jews.

            As for the experience of the Jews of Palestine under Turkish rule, the local Turkish satrap was making plans for genocide on the Armenian model when World War I intervened. Nonetheless, Turkish behavior during the war led half the Jewish population to leave the area that would become Mandatory Palestine. During the war the famous agronomist Aronsohn, his sister Sarah Aronsohn, and others provided intelligence to the British that was far more valuable (as British intelligence agents explicitly recognized) than the few hundred horsemen, exaggerated into a "100,000 men," that Abdullah provided T. E. Lawrence. Those horsemen did little more than harry, ineffectively, the Turks on the Hejaz railway line. The Aronsohns and other members of the Nili Group (as it was called) were caught and killed; Sarah Aronsohn was tortured, but managed to commit suicide to prevent worse.

            That a handful of prominent Jewish refugees did spend the war in Turkey, and some -- one thinks of Erich Auerbach, who re-wrote his important literary study "Mimesis" from scratch after having lost the first draft -- were grateful to the Turkish government. And one can still find, in those used bookstores along Istiqlal Caddesi, the odd volumes belonging to German Jewish scholars who continued to live in Turkey well into the 1960s and even 1970s, and then gradually, died out.

            But let us not exaggerate Turkey's wonderfulness. A collective letter about Turkish antisemitism, signed by Turkish intellectuals, including Mustafa Akyol (who has taken a few whacks at this site for criticism of his attempt to suggest that Islam can be easily reformed, by tinkering here and there, in some unspecified fashion, with the contents of Sira and Hadith), recently appeared. There were some prominent Turks -- Orhan Pamuk among them -- who did not sign that letter.

            Why not? And why now is that same Orhan Pamuk about to be tried for daring to mention the Armenian genocide -- or if in the end he is not tried, it will only be out of the desire not to scare the women, the horses, and the inhabitants of the E.U.
            "All truth passes through three stages:
            First, it is ridiculed;
            Second, it is violently opposed; and
            Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

            Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

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            • #16
              Turkish Jews ask Rahsan Ecevit to reveal names

              Turkish Daily News; Jun 17, 2006

              The Turkish Chief Rabbi's Office asked former Democratic Left Party
              (DSP) deputy leader Rahsan Ecevit to disclose the names of Turkish
              Jews who had purchased land in the name of Israel in the Southeastern
              Anatolia Project (GAP) region

              The office said, in a statement concerning the sale of land to
              foreigners, that Ecevit had claimed Israel had not purchased any land
              in the GAP region but had instead used Turkish Jews to purchase them

              The statement said: "Despite the fact that our Constitution recognizes
              all citizens as equal and doesn't ban any citizen from purchasing land
              due to his or her religion, such statements target Turkish Jews and
              create discrimination and distrust. We call on Rahsan Ecevit to explain
              her claims that are based on no evidence and disclose the names of
              the Turkish citizens of the Jewish religion who have purchased land
              in the GAP region along with the amount of land they purchased."
              "All truth passes through three stages:
              First, it is ridiculed;
              Second, it is violently opposed; and
              Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

              Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

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