Idealistic and pragmatist at the same time,
Avraam Benaroya, a
Jew from
Bulgaria, played a leading role in the creation of the mainly Jewish
Fédération Socialiste Ouvrière in Thessaloniki, in May–June 1909. His main associates were militant
Sephardic Jews, Alberto Arditti, David Recanati and Joseph Hazan, as well as Bulgarians like Angel Tomov and
Dimitar Vlahov. The organization took this name because, built on the federative model of the
Social Democratic Party of Austria, it was conceived as a federation of separate sections, each representing the four main ethnic groups of the city:
Jews,
Bulgarians,
Greeks and
Turks. It initially published its literature in the languages of these four groups (i.e. Ladino,
Bulgarian,
Greek and
Turkish, respectively) but in practice the two latter sections were under-represented if not nonexistent. The publication's title was
Journal del Labourador (Ladino) -
Amele Gazetesi (Ottoman Turkish). The democratic
Fédération soon became, under Benaroya's leadership, the strongest
socialist party in the
Ottoman Empire, while the "
Ottoman Socialist Party" was essentially an intellectual club, and the other socialist parties were at the same time national parties, like the
Istanbul Greek Socialist Center, the
Social Democrat Hunchakian Party or the
Armenian Revolutionary Federation. It created combative trade unions, attracted important intellectuals and gained a solid base of support among Macedonian workers. By 1910, the
Fédération comprised fourteen syndicates, and in 1912 it mobilized about 12,000 workers in various demonstrations. From 1910 to 1911 Benaroya edited its influential newspaper, the
Solidaridad Ovradera, printed in Ladino.
Fédération cultivated strong links with the
Second International and had its own representative, Saul Nahum, in the
International Socialist Bureau. Unlike other parties which were organised on ethnic lines, as a cross-community group the
Fédération was tolerated by the
Ottoman authorities. A prominent Bulgarian member,
Dimitar Vlahov, was a socialist MP in the
new Ottoman parliament, which was dominated by the
Committee of Union and Progress (CUP) party until 1912. Indeed, its leaders initially supported the
Young Turks, and Benaroya participated in the "Action Army" march on
Istanbul to help put down the
Countercoup of 1909. Alarmed by the growing power of socialist groups, the CUP subsequently launched a crackdown, during which Benaroya was jailed. In their reference book over the Balkan Jews,
Esther Benbassa and Aron Rodrigue show that the internationalist socialists of the
Fédération defended the Ladino language against the
Zionists, favouring
Hebrew, and the
Alliance Israélite Universelle, who favoured French, thus remaining in some way close to the traditional Jewish world, they represented a form of westernization without assimilation. == The Federation and the labour movement in Greece ==