Some have argued that the acts were initiated by the articles written by
Pan-Turkist ideologists like
Cevat Rıfat Atilhan and
Faik Kurdoğlu in
Millî İnkılâp (National Revolution) magazine and
Nihal Atsız in
Orhun magazine. One researcher accepted Atilhan's role, but he argued that Atsız did not participate in such an act, because
Orhun only contained two articles about Jews, and both of them were published after Atsız resettled in İstanbul. Then the Resettlement Law was meant to enable demographic engineering in favor of a potentially Turkish speaking majority and the campaign
Citizens speak Turkish!, which meant to force the people to speak Turkish, was supported by the Turkish
Halkevleri. On the 5 July after having become aware of the potential repercussions, the chairman of the Halkevleri in Izmir denied the campaign was directed at Jews and claimed it was only against foreign languages, including Greek, Spanish and Albanian. == Pogrom ==