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Turkey's Jews disavow US Jewish organization over Armenian genocide

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  • Turkey's Jews disavow US Jewish organization over Armenian genocide

    European Jewish Press, Belgium
    Aug 23 2007


    Turkey's Jews disavow US Jewish organization over Armenian genocide
    move

    EJP Updated: 23/Aug/2007 13:34


    A synagogue in Istanbul, a city where around 24,500 Jews live.


    ISTANBUL (EJP)---The Jewish Community in Turkey has expressed regret
    over the position adopted by a US Jewish group on the issue of the
    genocide of Armenians.

    In a statement published in the Turkish press, the Jewish community
    stressed Thursday that it endorses Turkey's position that this
    question should be debated at academic level with full access to the
    archives of all concerned parties, and that parliaments are not the
    appropriate platforms for finding the truth about historical events.

    Ankara categorically rejects the genocide label, saying that both
    Armenians and Turks died in civil strife during World War I when the
    Armenians took up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided
    with Russian troops invading the crumbling Ottoman Empire.

    The New York-based Anti-Defamation League (ADL), a major Jewish
    organizations in the US, on Tuesday reversed its longtime policy by
    calling the killing of Armenians a genocide, days after it fired a
    regional director for taking the same position.

    ADL's national director Abraham Foxman said in a statement that the
    killings of 1.5 million Armenians by Muslim Turks `were indeed
    tantamount to genocide.'

    The change in ADL's position came after weeks of controversy in which
    critics questioned whether an organization dedicated to fighting
    anti-Semitism in the world and remembering Holocaust victims could
    remain credible without acknowledging the Armenian killings as
    genocide. Related story
    Jewish group chief reverses position, calls Armenian massacre a
    genocide


    Another major organization, the American Jewish Committee, took a
    similar step and the Conference of Presidents of Major American
    Jewish Organizations reportedly was considering discussing the
    matter.

    In its statement, Silvio Ovadio, head of the Jewish community in
    Turkey, said: `We have difficulty in understanding this immediate
    change of view among some Jewish organizations in the US.'

    The statement added: `We would like to stress that the news reports
    that begin with the term `Jews' in local websites may mislead the
    public, whereas this change in position reflects only the views of
    some American Jewish organizations.'

    `Our state institutions are well aware of our long time efforts to
    defend Turkey's interests and theses, and our efforts will continue.'


    In a letter to Abraham Foxman, a prominent Turkish Jewish
    businessman, Jak Kamhi, said: `By accepting this false comparison
    between the uniquely indisputable genocide for which the term was
    coined -- the Holocaust, and the events of 1915, the ADL has
    committed an act of the most inexplicable injustice against the
    memory of the victims of the Holocaust, as well as against the
    sensitivities and pride of the Turkish people, who deserve your
    praise for their centuries-long tradition of compassion and their
    culture of humanity and cohabitation that remains an example to the
    world.'

    Around 27,000 Jews live in Turkey, of which 24,500 in Istanbul.

    Two separate resolutions are pending in the US Senate and House of
    Representatives, urging the administration to recognize the killings
    of Armenians as genocide. The Turkish foreign ministry called the ADL
    statement"unfortunate"and said Turkey expected the statement would be
    "corrected."


    Turkey has warned that passage of the resolutions in the US Congress
    would seriously harm relations with Washington and impair cooperation
    in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    No change in Israel's stance

    The Israeli embassy in Turkey has stressed that there has been `no
    change' in Israel's official stance on the issue.

    `As Jews and as Israelis we are especially sensitive and morally
    obligated to remember human tragedies, which include the killings
    that took place among the Armenian population during the latter part
    of the First World War, in the years 1915-1916, during the last years
    of the Ottoman Empire.'

    `The State of Israel has never denied these horrible events; on the
    contrary, we understand the intensity of the emotion connected with
    this matter on both sides, considering the high number of victims and
    terrible suffering which the Armenian people endured,' the embassy
    said.

    `Yet, notwithstanding this, over the years, the subject, undesirably,
    has become a loaded political issue between the Armenians and the
    Turks, and each side has been trying to prove the justice of its
    claims.'

    `The State of Israel, therefore, asks that neither one side nor the
    other be taken and that no definitions be made of what happened. We
    hope that both sides will enter into an open dialogue which will
    enable them to heal the open wounds that have remained for many
    decades,' the statement concluded.

    According to the Jerusalem Post, the Turkish ambassador is set to
    return to Israel earlier from his vacation to express concerns about
    the ADL's position.

    Turkish Prime Minister recept Tayyip Erdogan was expected to call his
    Israeli counterpart Ehud Olmert in the coming days to discuss the
    matter.


    http://www.ejpress.org/article/news/eastern_eur ope/19427

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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