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  • Waiting For The Messiah

    WAITING FOR THE MESSIAH

    Ha'aretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spa ges/1083958.html
    May 7 2009
    Israel

    Three and a half centuries ago, a young, charismatic rabbi, Shabbetai
    Zvi, declared himself to be the Messiah and promised that the Jewish
    people would soon be redeemed and would return to Palestine, the
    ancestral Jewish homeland. Masses of Jews believed in him, and the
    events of that epoch, which are among the most turbulent in Jewish
    history, culminated in tragedy: In 1668, forced by the Ottoman sultan
    to choose between death and conversion to Islam, Shabbetai Zvi opted
    for the latter. Although most of his disciples abandoned him after
    his conversion, several thousand emulated their leader by outwardly
    accepting, though they continued to see themselves as Jews.

    The historical and theological aspects of this episode in Jewish
    history have been extensively discussed by Jewish and non-Jewish
    scholars, including Gershom Scholem. However, little is known about
    the present-day descendants of the Sabbateans.

    During my last visit to Istanbul, I met Rifat Bali, the author of "A
    Scapegoat for All Seasons," through a mutual friend. A distinguished
    scholar who has written articles and books about Jewish life in the
    Ottoman Empire, Bali leans more toward documentation than analysis in
    his historical studies. In the book's 400 pages, he cites hundreds
    of historical documents depicting the past and present vicissitudes
    of the Sabbateans' descendants, who in Turkey are called the Doenmeh.

    The complexity of the descendants' situation is reflected in the very
    meaning of the term "Doenmeh," which is translated as "convert," in
    a pejorative sense (the members of the sect refer to themselves as
    ma'aminim, Hebrew for believers). A tendency toward self-imposed
    segregation and extreme secrecy characterizes the succeeding
    generations of this unique community of crypto-Jews, who willingly
    converted to Islam but continued to see themselves as Jews at the
    same time. Most of the testimony Bali offers is from men and women
    who are identified only by their initials.

    The present generation may well be the last one to retain the
    fragmented memories of the living members of this sect. A Doenmeh
    friend of mine told me his father had informed him that his father's
    mother used to go to the beach every Friday to recite a prayer in
    Ladino. My friend's father remembered only the phrase "Esperano a-te"
    (I will wait for you [O Messiah]).

    An intriguing question is whether Ataturk himself was a Doenmeh. An
    entire chapter is devoted to this issue, though no clear-cut
    conclusions are drawn. Nevertheless, circumstantial evidence supports
    the assumption that he was of Jewish descent (this point in itself
    is of little importance except for the fact that it has helped
    fuel Turkish anti-Semitism). Nonetheless, it can be stated with
    certainty that most members of Ataturk's inner circle were declared
    or clandestine Doenmeh.

    Another theory, referred to in Bali's book, discusses the role of
    the Doenmeh in preventing Turkey from aligning with Hitler's Germany
    during World War II. According to this theory, the Doenmeh, as the
    country's rulers, knew that if the Nazis entered their country, they
    themselves would be annihilated together with the members of Turkey's
    Jewish community.

    Another popular conspiracy theory argues that the Doenmeh were
    responsible for initiating the Armenian genocide. This is a convoluted
    conspiracy theory intended to exonerate the Turkish nation from the
    charge of having carried out the mass murder of the Armenians and to
    shift the blame to the "scapegoat for all seasons," the Doenmeh.

    Most of today's Doenmeh are descendants of 20,000 Doenmeh residents of
    Salonica who were exiled to Turkey in the 1920s as part of a population
    exchange between Greece and Turkey. Their exile came in the wake
    of a ruling of that city's rabbis, who refused to recognize them as
    Jews, something that would have allowed them to remain in Greece as a
    minority. The historical irony of that decision is that it actually
    saved their lives; nearly every member of the Jewish community of
    Salonica was ultimately annihilated in Auschwitz or Majdanek.
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