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SOLOMONOVICH, NADAV (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   187060


Strange country: representations of the nascent state of Israel in the Turkish press / Solomonovich, Nadav   Journal Article
Solomonovich, Nadav Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article analyses a series of 14 articles, published in the widespread daily Turkish newspaper Yeni Sabah in June 1949 under the title ‘A Strange Country: Yeni Sabah’s Correspondent Mehmet Ataker reports from Israel’. It shows that while Turkey was the first Muslim state to have recognised Israel, Yeni Sabah adopted a clear anti-Israel stance, transmitting the Palestinian narrative on the 1948 war to its Turkish readers and attempting to delegitimize Israel by questioning the idea of Jewish nationalism and using symbols and images associated with classic antisemitism to deride Israelis and Jews.
Key Words Israel  Turkey  Press  Antisemitism  Palestinian Problem  Foreign Policy 
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2
ID:   159010


Turkish Republic's Jihad? Religious symbols, terminology and ceremonies in Turkey during the Korean War 1950–1953 / Solomonovich, Nadav   Journal Article
Solomonovich, Nadav Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract On 25 July 1950, a month after the beginning of the Korean War, the newly elected Democratic Party (DP) in Turkey announced that a brigade would be sent to assist South Korea as part of the UN mission led by the United States. The main argument of this article is that although the DP regime is considered a secular and Kemalist one, the state continued the Ottoman tradition and practice of using Islam to gain support for the war and to mobilize the Turkish nation. To do so, the article will show the similarity of both the means and the content of religious propaganda used in the Korean War to those used in the Ottoman jihad in the First World War. This article suggests that parts of the public understood the war as a religious conflict and not just as an ideological one thus indicating the success of the religious messages and their efficiency.
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