Turkey's Prime Minister Erdogan Returns Jewish American Award Over Gaza Comments

Tayyip Erdogan

Tayyip Erdogan

Source: AP and the Huffington Post

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is returning an award given to him by a Jewish American group in 2004, after the group asked for it back because of comments he made regarding the conflict in Gaza.

Turkey’s ambassador to the U.S., Serdar Kilic, wrote to Jack Rosen, president of the American Jewish Congress, on Erdogan’s behalf. Kilic said Erdogan would be glad to return the award because of Israel’s actions in Gaza and “the regrettable stance adopted by the present leadership of the American Jewish Congress vis-a-vis the recent attacks on the innocent civilians in Gaza.”

The letter, dated July 27, was made available Tuesday.

In an open letter to Erdogan last week, Rosen described the Turkish leader as “arguably the most virulent anti-Israel leader in the world.” He said Erdogan was given the Profile of Courage award in 2004 for working for a peaceful solution in the Middle East and for his commitment to protecting Turkey’s Jewish citizens.

Erdogan, who is campaigning to be elected president next month, has spoken out strongly against Israel’s operations in Gaza, accusing it of committing genocide.

In his letter, Kilic stressed that Erdogan’s “strong determination in fighting against terrorism, preventing all forms of extremism, bringing a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict through peaceful means as well as ensuring the safety and well-being of the Jewish community in Turkey still remains as strong as ever.”

However, he said, the Turkish leader “should not be expected to turn a blind eye to the policies of occupation, blockade and destruction that the Israeli government has been implementing against the Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza,” and said the killing of civilians and the bombing of hospitals and U.N. schools in Gaza “constitute a grave violation of not only the international law, but also the most fundamental human values.”

Reference

Categories: Turkey

4 replies

  1. Has he returned voluntarily or has been asked to return it. Both scenarios have different implications. Just forget about peace in this area of planet. Status Quo likely to continue for a very long time. This is my prediction.

  2. All kings, presidents and prime ministers of Islamic countries have been subjugated by the Western countries. All of them have their personal and political aims. They have no sympathy with Islam or with Muslims. All of them have been made impotent and female character. They have no unity and have been divided to be oppressed and dictated. What is happening among the Muslims is in conjugated with the prophecy of Prophet Mohammad SAW.

  3. Judaism, like Christianity and Islam, bases its spirituality in human compassion:

    When you spread out your hands in prayer,
    I hide my eyes from you;
    even when you offer many prayers,
    I am not listening.
    Your hands are full of blood!
    Wash and make yourselves clean.
    Take your evil deeds out of my sight;
    stop doing wrong.
    Learn to do right; seek justice.
    Defend the oppressed.
    Take up the cause of the fatherless;
    plead the case of the widow. (Isaiah 1:15-17)

  4. Benyamin Netanyahu is acting against the Jewish Ethics of compassion

    In one of his many speeches, Benyamin Netanyahu said on July 24, 2014: “The terrorists are firing rockets from schools, from mosques, from hospitals, from heavily civilian populations. We have to try and are doing our best to minimize civilian casualties. But we cannot give our attackers immunity or impunity.”

    Now let us look at his reasoning in the light of the Jewish Ethics of compassion.

    The Talmud (Beitzah 32b) says that the Jews are a compassionate people (rachmanim), and that someone who claims to be Jewish but doesn’t show the quality of compassion is not really a Jew.
    Sefer Chinukh (Yitro42) says that Jews are “compassionate people, sons and daughters of compassionate people”.

    The Zohar (1:174a) even says that when Jacob received the name Israel after wrestling the angel, that this was in order to allow Jacob to become attached to this quality of compassion.

    According to rabbinic tradition (both midrash and Kabbalah), the most important name of God, YHVH (often translated as Lord), is also tied to compassion, whereas the name Elohim (God) is tied to God’s judgment.

    The Zohar explains that Jacob was renamed Israel in order to bring down into the world that quality of YHVH’s compassion.
    “One who shows no compassion, it is known for sure that he is not of the seed of Abraham.” (Talmud, ibid.)

    If one prosecutes a war, in a place where innocents have no place safe to flee to, and no way to leave, then that becomes murder.

    Unfortunately, Torah defines the borders of the land of Israel in a way that includes all of Gaza and the West Bank (Numbers 34), and in Numbers 33:55, it commands the Israelites to “drive out the inhabitants of the land from before you” because otherwise “they will be thorns in your sides and they will harass you”. The rabbinic response was that these strictures applied only to the original Canaanite nations, and not to anyone else, certainly not to the Palestinians.

    We are already “cruel to the compassionate“. Along with more than a thousand Palestinians and fifty Israelis who have died, so has our claim as Jews to be the unwavering seed of Abraham. Perhaps if we realized this, we would be ready to make peace, one broken people to another.

    From the statement of Rabbi David Seidenberg in Tikkun Magazine on Line

Leave a Reply