The Role of Turkish Diplomats in Saving Turkish Jews in France: 1940-1944

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By Arnold Reisman

Mr. Reisman PhD is listed in Who’s Who in America, and is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He published over 300 papers in refereed journals and seventeen books. His latest books are: TURKEY’S MODERNIZATION: Refugees from Nazism and Atatürk’s Vision and Classical European Music and Opera. He is currently working on two other titles. They are: PERFIDY: Britannia and Her All-Jewish Army Units and Ambassador and a Mentsch: The Story of a Turkish Diplomat in Vichy France.

During World War II, Turkish diplomats saved Turkish Jews living in France (many were French citizens others were holding Turkish passports) from certain death, a fact of which the Anglophone world was ignorant until Stanford Shaw first revealed the historical data in 1995.1 Up until that time, this important piece of history had been ignored by historians. Mistakenly however, Shaw attributed the actions of Turkey’s legations in both occupied and Vichy France to a well articulated policy created by the Turkish government in Ankara, when in fact these brave acts of heroism were devised by the diplomats themselves as a matter of conscience. In fact, from the outset of these actions the Turkish government had to be prodded and pushed, with various ramifications including implied aid programs from a number of sources, to acquiesce from outside of Turkey not from within. The diplomats involved were: Behiç Erkin, Turkish ambassador to Paris and later to Vichy; Necdet Kent, Consul General in Marseilles; Paris Consul-Generals Cevdet Dülger, Fikret Sefik Özdoganci, and Paris Vice Consuls Namik Kemal Yolga, Fatin Rüştü Zorlu and Melih Esenbel; Marseilles Consul Generals Bedi’i Arbel, and Mehmed Fuad Carim.2

Recent findings of many contemporaneous documents from the NARA, Library of Congress, and the FDR Presidential library archives attest to the fact that the intervention in behalf of French Jews with Turkish origins was not the policy of the Government of Turkey at all. Rather, it was the determined undertaking of members of the Turkish diplomatic corps who acted on their own against the extant policy of their own government and that of the US and the UK.  These men of conscience risked their careers and often their lives finding no support among their diplomatic peers representing western countries including those in the US legation. With their deeds these diplomats risked the wrath and ire of their own government as well as Germany and Vichy France.

While Germany and Vichy France were anti-Semitic to their cores, Turkey was in the unenviable position of attempting to maintain neutrality while in dire fear of being invaded by Germany. For that reason and after great pressure from Germany, Ambassador Behiç Erkin was recalled to Ankara and the rate at which Jews were repatriated to Turkey was greatly diminished. Many Jews were saved by the acts of the Turkish legation in France.  From March 15, 1943 through  May 23, 1944, the Turkish Embassy in Vichy and Consulates-General in Paris arranged for no fewer than eight groups of former Turkish Jews averaging roughly fifty-three persons each to be returned to Turkey and to freedom by rail in sealed wagons. This is but a part of claims that all 20,000 Turkish Jews residing in France were saved. Looked at in reverse the known number of Turkish Jews deported from France to the death camps is 1659.

To fully appreciate the actions taken by Behiç Erkin and his staff, one need only look at the fate of Jews in Thesalonika, Greece. During WWII Greece was occupied by the Nazis but neutral Turkey maintained an Embassy in Athens and a Consulate in Thesalonika. Before the war Thesalonika boasted a Jewish population of 56,000, most with roots in the Ottoman Empire dating back to the Spanish Inquisition and the expulsion of Spanish Jewry in 1492. These Jews were no different than those in France, many of whom were saved by Behiç Erkin and his staff while the entire Thesalonika Jewish community was deported to the crematoria. Why did the Turkish legation in Greece not raise objections? They did not interfere since they had no instructions from Ankara to do so, and obviously lacked the moral compass that guided their colleagues in France.

As the war continued the Nazis began persecuting French Jews. Many “Turkish Jews” who had relinqueshed their Turkish citizenship “suddenly found it was far better to be a Turkish Jew than a French Jew, and they applied in large numbers to have their Turkish citizenship restored.”

According to a Raoul Wallenberg Foundation website:

Turkish diplomats serving in France at that time dedicated many of their working hours to Jews. They provided official documents such as citizenship cards and passports to thousands of Jews and in this way they saved their lives.

Below is a story of these diplomats.

Behiç Erkin was the Turkish ambassador to Paris when France was under Nazi occupation. In order to prevent the Nazis from rounding up Jews, he gave them documents saying their property, houses and businesses, belonged to Turks. He saved many lives in this way.

Pressure mounted for Turkey to recall her Ambassador from France as he was deemed unmanageable.

reisman

Was it a coincidence that Behiç Erkin “resigned” from his posting to France on the 23rd of August 1943 and three days later from the Foreign Service altogether?    There is no question but that Erkin was removed from the Ambassadorial post because of Ankara’s inability to withstand Germany’s pressure and the implied threat of invasion. For Turkey, angering Berlin meant more than risking the loss of lucrative exports at a time when its economy was still in shambles.  There was also a real and present danger that Germany could opt to use Turkey as a route to the Caspian area oil riches in order to hit the Soviets on another front –  its soft underbelly. This was indeed a real possibility, not just conjecture. Turkey’s army stood prepared. 

In a letter dated September 2, 2008, to Abdullah Gul, President of the Republic of Turkey, the Raoul Wallenberg Foundation’s Founder, Baruch Tenenbaum, stated “we are conducting an extensive research into the actions of the Turkish diplomats who were stationed in France during WWII, including Ambassador Behic Erkin, Consul Bedi’i Arbel and Vice Consul Necdet Kent, just to name a few.” At the time this article was written, that “research” was still ongoing. It is this author’s humble opinion that starting with Behic Erkin, the Ambassador and the “leader of the band” most if not all members of the Turkish legation in France ca 1939-1944 deserve to be honored with Yad Vashem’s “Righteous Gentile” Award.

Shaw, S.J. Turkey and the Holocaust, (London: Macmillan Press,1993)

Shaw Turkey and the Holocaust; Kıvırcık The ambassador:

Anonymous,  Proceedings of the Second Yad Vashem International Historical Conference on Rescue Attempts During the Holocaust, held in Jerusalem, 8-11 April 1974

Ibid

“Notes from the Leahy diary,” US Ambassador in Vichy, France, William D. Leahy papers, Library of Congress All diary entries for 1941: Reel 2, William D. Leahy Diaries, 1897-1956, (Washington DC: Library of Congress), microfilm. All diary entries for 1942 and letters to Welles: Reel 3, William D. Leahy Diaries, 1897-1956, Washington DC: Library of Congress), microfilm. Entries for: Jan. 1 – p.2; Jan. 8 – p. 4; March 5 – p.29; April 14 – p. 46; April 25th – p. 52. For  July 18, 1941 letter to Welles – p. 2; Sept. 13, 1941 letter to Welles – p. 3.

Source:  History News Network, 02.11.2009,

http://hnn.us/articles/118548.html


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5 responses to “The Role of Turkish Diplomats in Saving Turkish Jews in France: 1940-1944”

  1. “‘It is with pride that both Turks and Jews will celebrate this year as the 500th anniversary of peaceful coexistence.”
    –Andrew Sackser
    , “FROM FLIGHT to FREEDOM – THE SPANISH INQUISITION and LIFE in TURKEY”, HIRHURIM – The Jewish Magazine of Brendeis University (Massachusetts). Vol. 1, No: 2, Spring 1992

  2. Selahattin Ulkumen, Turkish Consul in Rhodes:

    “Asked whether anything in his personal history impelled him to risk life and liberty to save Jews, he told me, “I didn’t know the Rhodes Jews. I had had no dealings with them. In Turkey I had Jewish friends, in the university. I didn’t make any differentiation whether they were Jews or Muslims. I didn’t ask what their religion was. I had no special ties with Jews. I only had humanitarian feelings to every human being. If they had been black people, I would have done the same thing.”

    Source: “The Book of the Just – The Silent Heroes Who Saved Jews from Hitler” by Eric Silver, 1992, [Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London]

  3. There is a solid record of individual consuls from many countries who observed their humanitarian instincts, and who helped Jews and others escape the Nazi dragnet. The diplomats of Turkey are to be counted among these righteous people, as are diplomats from China and Japan . However, as the recent works of Cory Gottstadt and Rifat Bali show, the policy of the government of Turkey is another matter entirely. The government of Turkey knowingly refusd to renaturalize at least 10,000 former Turkish Jews resident in Europe, just as she twice refused to allow Jews on ship to disembark during the war. In the former case, all died at the hands of the Nazis; in the latter, Sovet subs killed them.

    Turkey was not a pure refuge.

  4. JDA=The RAT,

    Really now! Your bare minmal acknowledgement, such as it is, of Turkish efforts to help Jews in Europe during WWII is accepted. It must have killed you inside to do even that! But when historical facts are staring you right in the face, dashnak Armenians can either do as you did (feable as it may have been), or more likely, they would have remained silent altogether. In that regard, you’re certainly in the minority among your people. The main reason that dashnak Armenians usually remain silent on this issue are the facts of such things as the Nazi 812th Battalion, comprised of 20,000 all volunteer Armenians, glaring openly for the world to see, over and over again! And that’s just for starters. There are also all of those Armenian anti-semetic, pro-Hitler newspapers and magazines published in Berlin from 1935-1944! The list goes on and on (Gen. Dro, the Crimea, etc.). Even though Armenians have no place to even open their mouths in this matter, as I said before, even with your bare minimal, feable attempt of acknowledgement, you are a rarity among dashnaks (barely). Be careful that your dashnak brethren don’t signal you out for betraying their ideologies of hate and prejudice. They (your own kind) may find you and open up a special can of Whup Ass just for you!

  5. Tiny, old, brain-dead Robert,

    It makes any normal person rejoice whenever a righteous person stands against oppression and murder. I therefore have no difficulty acknowleging the individual diplomats who risked their careers to save Jews. For that matter, Armenians acknowledge and seem to know more about the righteous Turks who risked their lives to save Armenians during periods of massacre and Genocide than nationalist Turks do. But as to acts during World War II, these were the acts of individuals who stood not only against the Nazi onslaught, but also against their own government, as Reisman, Gottstadt and Bali’s works attest.

    As for your claims about Armenians serving in the German Army, the truth is that 15 times that number fougt fascism in the russian and other Allied armies, sustaining at least 250,000 casualties. As to the volunteers, you might as well make the same heated claims against every ethnic group in Europe and Asia – including Muslim Bosnians, Uighurs and Kosovars – as every nation had some who thought Hitler was the new world order. But of course nothing which occurred in 1940 throws light on the Genocide of 1915-1923, at least to those of us gifted enough to think linerarly.

    The record of the government of Turkey is not something to be proud of. She signed a non aggression pact with Hitler five days before the invasion of the USSR, thereby securing Hitler’s southern flank, in violation of her treaty obligations to Britain and Greece. The move also allowed Hitler to throw resources east he would otherwise have deployed south. Result= 40M dead. According to the Gottstadt book, she refused to renationalize the former Turkish Jews, resulting in their deaths at the hands of the Nazis. And there is the sorry examples of the civilianJews she refused to allow to disembak istanbul, resulting in their deaths.

    Do’t pretend Turkey is or was philo-semitic.

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