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Turkey and the Holocaust

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Turkey was officially neutral during World War II, though it maintained strong diplomatic relations with Nazi Germany during the period of the Holocaust. During the war, Turkey denaturalized 3,000 to 5,000 Jews living abroad; 2,200 and 2,500 Turkish Jews were deported to extermination camps such as Auschwitz and Sobibor; and several hundred interned in Nazi concentration camps. When Nazi Germany encouraged neutral countries to repatriate their Jewish citizens, Turkish diplomats received instructions to avoid repatriating Jews even if they could not prove their Turkish nationality.

There were some 300-500,000 Jews with one or more parent born in the Ottoman Empire living in Europe as of 1939. These Jews could often receive Turkish citizenship papers given an application process, and many were saved through the intervention of Turkish diplomats.

Background

The Ottoman Jewish population was strong and numerous. Their numbers received a substantial boost in 1498 with the arrival of hundreds of thousands of Sephardic refugees expelled from Spain and Portugal. Later, Jews escaping Russian persecution sought refugee in the Ottoman Empire too.

History

See also: History of the Jews in Turkey
Turkey shown relative to German-occupied Europe in 1942

Commemoration

See also

Citations

  1. Cite error: The named reference Webman was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

Sources

Further reading

  • Bali, Rıfat N. (2013). "Perceptions of the Holocaust in Turkey". Perceptions of the Holocaust in Europe and Muslim Communities: Sources, Comparisons and Educational Challenges. Springer Netherlands. pp. 61–69. ISBN 978-94-007-5307-5.
  • Dost-Niyego, Pınar; Aytürk, İlker (2016). "Holocaust Education in Turkey: Past, Present, and Future". Contemporary Review of the Middle East. 3 (3): 250–265. doi:10.1177/2347798916654581. hdl:11693/49431. S2CID 157967347.
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