Heading for a Jew-Free Turkey
Burak Bekdil/The Gatestone Institute
December 23, 2014
“We face threats, attacks and harassment every day,” writes Turkish Jewish columnist Mois Gabay.
At the beginning of the 20th century, there were about 200,000 Jews in Turkish lands – when the entire population was barely 10 million. Today, the Turkish population has reached 77 million – and there are fewer than 17,000 Jews.
Mois Gabay, a Turkish Jewish writer for Salom, the Istanbul Jewish newspaper, recently wrote in his column, “Are Turkish Jews Leaving?”: “We face threats, attacks and harassment every day. Hope is fading. Is it necessary for a ‘Hrant among us’ to be shot in order for the government, the opposition, civil society, our neighbors and jurists to see this?” The ‘Hrant’ to whom he referred is Hrant Dink, a Turkish Armenian journalist who was shot dead in 2007 by a gang of nationalist Turks.
On Dec. 15, the Turkish liberal daily Radikal interviewed Gabay, who started by showing Radikal’s reporter dozens of threats and hate messages he has received through Twitter, Facebook and mail messages. “This is almost daily,” he said.
According to Gabay, only this year 37% of high-school graduates in Istanbul’s Jewish community left Turkey to study abroad, twice as many as in previous years. “We don’t know how many of them will return,” he says. “But the idea to leave Turkey (for good) is also in the minds of my generation.”
The reason is simple: “The circle is closing in,” according to Gabay. “In an atmosphere like this, especially if you are a trader, you tend to change your name. Mois’s tends to become “Musa’s,” “Cefi’s,” become “Cem’s” and “Meri’s” become “Peri’s” (all the latter are Turkish names.) His Jewish friends tell Gabay that they are elaborating on the idea of leaving Turkey and settling in far-away countries such as Canada, Panama and Australia. Two Jewish friends of his who have shops in Istanbul’s busy Unkapani district recently complained to him that “The imam in the neighbourhood has the habit of preaching to his congregation ‘not to make friends with Jews and Christians.'”
According to Gabay,
the Turkish government’s [anti-Israeli/anti-Jewish] rhetoric paves the way for this, provokes Turks and spreads [hatred] to even larger masses. But there is more. “Thanks to the spread of social media, the previously ‘invisible Jew’ is reachable now. There are laws against hate speech. But not a single person has ever been prosecuted [let alone sentenced] for threatening and insulting [Jews].
According to a prominent Turkish Armenian, part of the blame is on Turkey’s tiny non-Muslim minorities.
But according to a prominent Turkish Armenian, part of the blame is on Turkey’s tiny non-Muslim minorities.