A reviewer of the left-liberal Turkish daily
Radikal, Murat Arman, in 2005 wrote that the situation in Turkey reminds him of 1930 in Germany, where the media often discussed the dominance of Jews in the economy, the assumption about their clandestine activities directed against Germany, and a harmful effect on German society. He believes that this is an extremely dangerous trend and that such a massive agitation against non-Muslims in Turkey has not been recorded for many years. Some experts believe that the growth of antisemitism in Turkey is not taking place, but most agree that a number of hazards exist, in particular, the emergence of antisemitic posters and attempts to conduct antisemitic propaganda in the Turkish schools. Since the outbreak of the
Gaza war, antisemitism in Turkey has increased exponentially.
Sources of antisemitism Prominent antisemitic thinkers of the 1930s and 1940s included
Burhan Belge,
Cevat Rıfat Atilhan,
Nihal Atsız,
Sadri Ertem, and . The main ideological sources of antisemitism in Turkey are
Islamism, left-wing
anti-Zionism, and nationalist
right-wing extremism. Turkish intellectuals have always been pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel in their stance, while the debate of the
Middle East conflict among laymen in Turkey often turns antisemitic. In January 2010, Israeli newspaper
Haaretz published a report prepared by the International Centre for Political Studies at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Israel, which argued that anti-Israeli statements by Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan contributed to the growth of antisemitism in Turkish society.
Islamism A Turkish specialist on inter-ethnic and inter-religious relations,
Rıfat Bali and other sources state that Jews who converted to Islam are portrayed by Turkish Islamists as an alien group of questionable loyalty. Islamists, though, refer to groups such as liberals,
secularists, and socialists as "Shabbethaians" when wishing to attribute to them disloyalty. For instance, the
Great Eastern Islamic Raiders' Front (
İslami Büyük Doğu Akıncıları Cephesi), a radical Islamist terrorist organization established in 1984, advocates the expulsion of any Jewish and Christian presence in Turkish political life. According to researchers at
Tel Aviv University, the Islamist
Welfare Party was a major source of antisemitism in Turkey until 1997. According to the researchers, the leaders, including the former Prime Minister
Necmettin Erbakan, have presented antisemitic claims in the critique of the state of Israel. In February 1997, an article in the party's newspaper filled with such rhetoric led to protests outside of the
Turkish Embassy in Washington. The article stated: "... a snake was created to express its poison, just as a Jew was created to make mischief." In 1997, the secular parties came to power in Turkey, and the influence of the Welfare Party has since decreased significantly. Furthermore, according to news reports from December 2012, Turkey's
National Intelligence Organization had started investigating individuals who may be dual citizens of Israel and Turkey in connection with the Mavi Marmara "Flotilla Incident" of 2010. On 31 May 2015, a report from
The Times of Israel revealed that almost 40% of the Turkish population views Israel as a threat, the highest percentage ever recorded, signalling the rampant rise of antisemitism in Turkey, a result of the widespread Turkish government's portrayal of Jewish people.
Anti-Israel and anti-Zionist sentiments on the left Left-wing Turkish intellectuals tend to view
Israel as an instrument of
US imperialism in the Middle East. The
Israeli-Palestinian conflict is thus interpreted as a conflict between a group of people which is being "oppressed by imperialism" and a proxy of the United States. This view has been espoused since the 1970s, when Turks who were members and supporters of the far-left joined the
Palestine Liberation Organization and received military training from the said organization, and some of them participated in combat against Israeli forces. The Turkish-Jewish scholar,
Rıfat Bali, assessing the Turkish left-wing, says that for it,
Zionism is an aggressive ideology that promotes
antisemitism. In a special issue of the left-wing magazine
Birikim which was published in 2004, it was asserted that antisemitism and Zionism are two sides of the same coin, "Jewish conscience was captured by Israel," and all efforts should be made for the destruction of Israel in its present form. A columnist of the liberal-leaning national newspaper
Hürriyet, Hadi Uluengin, wrote in February 2009 about a "new nationalist" antisemitism among secularists. These groups fiercely criticized the government's plan to provide to an Israeli company a long-term lease of section of the Turkish land on the border with
Syria in return for an expensive operation on de-mining of that section (which, after joining to the
Mine Ban Treaty, Turkey was obliged to undertake until 2014). Opposition arguments on the inadmissibility of investment of the "Jewish finance" were commented by Prime Minister Erdoğan as "fascist" and as a "phobia towards minorities and foreigners." In June 2010, during one of the anti-Israel demonstrations, protestors used Nazi symbols and slogans which glorified
Adolf Hitler.
Antisemitic propaganda Books, print media and theatre Before the
2008–2009 Gaza War, most of the antisemitic manifestations in Turkey were in the print media and books. The researchers at
Tel Aviv University noted that many young and educated Turks under the influence of this propaganda were forming a negative attitude towards Jews and Israel, although they had never come across them. Some sources say that many antisemitic sentiments are being published in Islamist publications such as
Vakit and
Millî Gazete as well as in ultra
Ortadoğu and
Yeniçağ. For example, a famous Turkish writer
Orhan Pamuk, who is prosecuted for public recognition of the
Armenian genocide in Turkey, has been named by the newspaper
Yeniçağ as "a lover of Jews", "the best friend of the Jews" and "servant of the Jews."
Ortadoğu and
Yeniçağ argued that well-known
Kurdish leaders
Mustafa Barzani and
Jalal Talabani are Jews by birth and intend to create a "
Greater Israel" under the guise of a Kurdish state. The magazine
Vakit wrote that the
Mossad and Israel are responsible for laying mines in southeastern Turkey, that is killing
Turkish soldiers.
Vakit and
Millî Gazete published articles that praised Hitler and denied
the Holocaust.
Vakit wrote that the
Chief rabbi of Turkey must leave the country because he did not condemn the Israeli operation "Cast Lead". The publications in the media compared Israel to
Nazi Germany, and the
operation in Gaza to
the Holocaust, the media puts an equal mark between the words "Jew" and "terrorist".
Millî Gazete columnist expressed his desire never to see Jews on the streets of Turkish cities. In Turkey, antisemitic books are published and freely distributed, such as
The Protocols of the Elders of Zion,
The International Jew by
Henry Ford, and many others, including Turkish authors, who argue in their books that Jews and Israel want to seize power all over the world. In 1974, as president of the Beyoğlu Youth Group of the Islamist MSP Party, Erdoğan wrote, directed, and played the lead role in a play titled "Mas-Kom-Ya" (Mason-Komünist-Yahudi [Mason-Communist-Jew]), which presented
freemasonry,
communism, and Judaism as evil.
Film and television In 2006, the film
Valley of the Wolves: Iraq was screened in Turkey. Many critics regarded it as anti-American and antisemitic. The latter charge is based on the fact that the film has a scene where a Jewish doctor, an employee in the U.S. Army, trades bodies of prisoners of the Abu Ghraib detention centre. Footage from the Turkish TV show
Ayrılık ("Farewell") tells a story of love with Operation
Cast lead in the background. The footage prompted the Israeli Foreign Ministry in October 2009 to summon the ''
chargé d'affaires'' of Turkey in Israel, D. Ozen to give explanations. Discontents were made as to the scene where the actors depicting Israeli soldiers shoot Palestinian "soldiers" and kill a Palestinian girl, as well as to a number of other scenes. The officials of the
Israeli Foreign Ministry stated that "the scene does not have even a remote connection to… reality and depicts the Israeli army as the murderers of innocent children." In January 2010, after the new TV series
Valley of the Wolves: Ambush was aired in Turkey, the Turkish ambassador to Israel, Oğuz Çelikol, was summoned to the Israeli Foreign Ministry for explanations. The Israel dissatisfaction was a scene where the agents of the
Mossad, as performed by the Turkish actors, kidnapped Turkish children and took the Turkish ambassador and his family as hostages. The Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs of Israel,
Danny Ayalon, in a conversation with the Turkish ambassador expressed his opinion that "the scene, similar to the one shown in the series, make life of Jews in Turkey unsafe." At that meeting, Ayalon defiantly violated several rules of
diplomatic etiquette, which eventually led to a diplomatic scandal. Oğuz Çelikol himself condemned the resumption of the said Turkish TV show series. Attacks on Jews are also heard on Turkish television. In July 2014, Imam Mehmet Sait Yaz gave a sermon in
Diyarbakır which was broadcast by
OdaTV and later translated by cited by
MEMRI. During the sermon, Yaz stated that "You shall find the Jews to be the most hostile toward the believers. The most rabid and savage enemies of Islam on this Earth are the Jews. Who said this? Allah did" and that "These Jews spoil all the agreements on Earth and have murdered 17 of their own prophets … And I declare here: All Jews who have taken up arms to murder Muslims must be killed, and Israel must be wiped off the map! This will be done with the help of Allah. Have no fear. These are good tidings. This is gospel...The Muslims will attack Israel and the Jews. The Jews will run and hide. When the Jew hides behind [trees and] stones, the [trees and] stones will say: 'Oh servant of Allah, there is a Jew behind you. Come and get him."
AKP lawmaker Cuma İçten, who subsequently posted Yaz's speech on his Facebook page, described Yaz's words as "magnificent." In 2015, an
Erdoğan-affiliated news channel broadcast a two-hour documentary titled "The Mastermind" (a term which Erdoğan himself had introduced to the public some months earlier), which forcefully suggested that it were "the mind of the Jews" that "rules the world, burns, destroys, starves, wages wars, organizes revolutions and coups, and establishes states within states."
Flyers, posters and vandalism Anti-Jewish incidents after January 2009: In Istanbul the leaflets were posted calling "not to buy at Jewish stores and not serve Jews." Some
billboards in Istanbul had the following text: "You can not be the son of Moses" and "Not in your book", with quotations from the
Torah condemning the killing and with pictures of bloody children's footwear. The lists with names of famous Jewish physicians were distributed with the call to kill them in retaliation for an operation in Gaza. Lists were compiled and distributed with names of Jewish companies, both local and international, to
boycott. In June 2010, several Turkish shops put signs reading "We do not accept dogs and Israelis". == Violence against Jews ==