In 1939 then President
İsmet İnönü hand-picked Erkin for the post of ambassador to France. According to a census French authorities conducted under German Army direction in autumn 1940, 3,381 of a total of 113,467 Jews over age 15, residing in Paris and holding French nationality, were of Turkish origin. The total number of Turkish Jews were estimated at five thousand people if those under 15 were counted. Scholars have estimated possibly ten thousand Jews of Turkish origin for the whole of France at the time. Erkin received orders not to repatriate Turkish Jews in large numbers to safety in their home country, and, according to historian
Marc David Baer, "played his part in preventing the vast majority of Turkish Jews in Nazi Europe to find safety". There is only one verified account of a Turkish diplomat offering identity cards to non-Turkish Jews for humanitarian reasons. Erkin reported this "improper behavior" to the Turkish foreign ministry. Aged 67 in 1943 and having had his ambassadorial term extended three times, Erkin retired in August 1943 to return to
Istanbul. In 1958 he completed his memoirs (published in 2010). Behiç Erkin died on November 11, 1961. At his wish, he was buried in a courtyard near a
railway junction in the
Enveriye Train Station in
Eskişehir, where he had started his career four decades before. ==Biographical accounts==