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How Turkey Plans To "Combat Anti-Semitism"

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  • How Turkey Plans To "Combat Anti-Semitism"

    HOW TURKEY PLANS TO "COMBAT ANTI-SEMITISM"

    Gatestone Institute
    Sept 25 2014

    by Burak Bekdil
    September 25, 2014 at 5:00 am

    In Turkey, hate speech is a crime only if it is committed against
    Muslim Turks.

    The penalty for failing to pay the tax [only for Jews] should be the
    revocation of the Jew's business and the seizure of his property. --
    Faruk Kose, columnist for Yeni Akit, honored with a permanent seat
    aboard Turkish President Erdogan's private jet.

    At the beginning of September, President Barack Obama met with Turkish
    President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the sidelines of the NATO Summit in
    Wales. After the meeting, the White House said in a statement: "They
    exchanged views on how best to cooperate in the struggle against ISIL
    [Islamic State of Iraq and Levant/Syria] and violent extremism in Iraq
    and Syria, and on the need for strengthened measures against foreign
    fighters transiting to and from the battlefield." What could be more
    normal if the U.S. president discussed measures against extremism
    with the president of a country that now borders ISIS?

    But it was bizarre that Obama and Erdogan also discussed one topic
    that was neither NATO- nor ISIS-related. The White House said: "The
    President and President Erdogan also discussed the importance of
    building tolerant and inclusive societies and combatting the scourge
    of anti-Semitism."

    Apparently, the White House wanted to tell American Jews that the
    president had finally wanted to be tough with Erdogan on the new
    heights of anti-Semitism in Turkey. In return, Erdogan may have
    replied: "What anti-Semitism in Turkey? That's unheard of!" To which
    Obama may have replied: "Ah, thank you president, I feel relieved!"

    President Barack Obama talks with then Turkish Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan, in a previous meeting, in Washington, Dec. 7, 2009.

    [Official White House Photo]

    More or less on the same day as "the President and President Erdogan
    discussed the importance of building tolerant and inclusive societies
    and combatting the scourge of anti-Semitism," a shop in central
    Istanbul put up a sign, featuring a photo of an Israeli tank, and
    saying: "Jew dogs are not permitted entry." Not really creative. The
    sign was an echo of a 2009 wall poster elsewhere in Turkey that read:
    "Jews and Armenians are not allowed, but dogs are." (Of course, none
    of the explicit hate crimes has ever been indicted; in Turkey hate
    speech is a crime only if committed against Muslim Turks).

    A few days after "the President and President Erdogan discussed
    combatting the scourge of anti-Semitism," an Islamist columnist called
    for Turkey's dwindling Jewish community to pay for reconstructing
    buildings in Gaza damaged during Operation Protective Edge, an idea
    reminiscent of a wealth tax Turkey had imposed on its non-Muslim
    minorities in 1942.

    Faruk Kose, a columnist for the daily Yeni Akit, wrote that the
    "Gaza Fund Contribution Tax" should apply to Turkish Jews as well as
    foreign Jews doing business in Turkey and any Turkish nationals with
    commercial ties to the Jewish state. He even suggested that the tax
    should apply to any company or business that maintains a partnership
    with a Turkish Jew. The penalty for failing to pay the tax should be
    the revocation of the Jew's business license and the seizure of his
    property, Mr. Kose proposed.

    It would have been easy to shrug off the man with a "he is just nuts"
    wave of the hand. In reality, Yeni Akit has a permanent seat aboard
    Erdogan's private jet, an honor that shows how much Erdogan admires
    the newspaper's editorial policy -- and most likely the columnist
    Kose, too.

    Most ironically, a journalist from Yeni Akit was among Erdogan's
    select group of journalists accompanying him to Wales aboard his jet
    -- the same jet taking Erdogan to a meeting with Obama to discuss
    "combatting the scourge of anti-Semitism." Did Obama know? Not easy
    to know. But if he knew, he could tell Erdogan that a good start
    to combatting the scourge of anti-Semitism could be not to honor
    newspapers that propose taxing Turkish Jews to reconstruct Gaza by
    inviting them on his private jet.

    And around the same time as Obama and Erdogan discussed combatting
    the scourge of anti-Semitism, Turkey's broadcasting watchdog, a body
    controlled by the government, fined a private channel for airing the
    Academy Award-winning film, "The Pianist." The 2002 drama directed by
    Roman Polanski is based on an autobiographical Holocaust-era memoir
    of the same name, by Polish-Jewish pianist and composer Wladyslaw
    Szpilman.

    The watchdog claimed that its ruling was based on "scenes of violence
    depicted in the film which might adversely affect the psychological
    and mental development of minors."

    "This is simply ridiculous," said an opposition member of parliament,
    Ali Oztunc, from the social democrat Republican People's Party. He
    was right. "The Pianist" had been aired several times by different
    Turkish channels before, with no fine or warning from the broadcasting
    watchdog. Since the scenes it contains have not been re-filmed since
    it was made in 2002, what could have changed to make the film qualify
    for a fine? The film has not changed, but Turkey has.

    When combined, all of these otherwise independent events best exhibit
    how Erdogan's Turkey responded to Obama's call for combatting the
    scourge of anti-Semitism, with Erdogan most probably smiling in
    the background.

    Burak Bekdil, based in Ankara, is a Turkish columnist for the Hurriyet
    Daily News and a Fellow at the Middle East Forum.

    http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/4727/turkey-anti-semitism

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