by Shlomi Eldar for Al-Monitor’s Israel Pulse
Rumors
that Jewish families are leaving Turkey have been making the rounds for
a long time now, but as relations between Turkey and Israel
deteriorate, those rumors are slowly becoming facts. Turkey’s Jews
interpret the hostility to Israel they hear day and night from Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu as a
personal attack against them. The change in mood and in Turkish public
opinion as a result of those leaders’ anti-Israeli policy can be felt by
the local Jews on a daily basis. Turkey's Jewish community has thrived
for decades, but it now feels that its future can no longer be assured.
Until
very recently, the leaders of the community boasted that there were
never any open manifestations of anti-Semitism in modern Turkey, or in
the Ottoman Empire for that matter. Jews not only enjoyed religious
freedom, but maintained a relationship of camaraderie and friendship
with the Muslim population. Many Turkish Jews remained in the country
even after the wave of immigration to Israel in the 1950s. They regarded
the country as their homeland and planned their futures there. But
recently, all that has changed. As of now, the heads of the Jewish
community are struggling to conceal their deep concern that within just a
few years, nothing will remain of Turkey’s glorious Jewish legacy,
which flourished throughout Turkey's history. More families leave every
week in search of a safer future for their children elsewhere.
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