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TURKISH JEWS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   072181


Perceptions of ant-semitism among Turkish Jews / Toktas, Sule   Journal Article
Toktas, Sule Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
Summary/Abstract It is commonly believed that there is little or no anti?Semitism in Turkey. For this reason, the Turkish Jewish community is considered to be fortunate. The 1942 Capital Tax, the September 6-7 Events in 1955, and even the Thrace Incidents of 1934, in which the Jews were the main targets of violence, are considered to be examples of discrimination against all non?Muslim minorities in Turkey. This study investigates the validity of this optimistic view with the help of empirical research conducted on a sample group of Turkish Jews. More precisely, it deals with the question of how Jews living in Turkey perceive anti?Semitism with a perspective that prioritizes the voices of the Jews themselves and gives an account of their experience regarding their status as a religious minority in a Muslim majority society. This paper discusses the results of the research based on in?depth interviews with Jewish respondents and reflects on the nature, sources, and extent of anti?Semitism in contemporary Turkey in the eyes of Turkey's Jews themselves.
Key Words Turkey  Anti-Semitism  Turkish Jews 
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2
ID:   107280


Towards an encompassing perspective on nationalisms: the case of Jews in Turkey during the Second World War, 1939-45 / Dincsahin, Sakir; Goodwin, Stephen R   Journal Article
Dincsahin, Sakir Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract This article focuses on the plight of the Jews in Turkey during the Second World War, with the intention of analysing specific historical events through the lenses of leading theories of nationalism. First we review recent developments in historiography that contribute the framework for understanding both the hermeneutical possibilities and limitations when addressing historical texts. Then we employ three theories of nationalism - the ethno-symbolist, instrumentalist and social constructivist - as a means of analysing and interpreting the historical events of the Jewish predicament vis-à-vis the Republic of Turkey. We conclude by suggesting what impact our findings may have on the narratives from this time period, and the way in which we can understand narratives today.
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