Turkey's stance toward Turkish Jews in occupied France and the German ultimatum on their repatriation in WWII
TitleTurkey's stance toward Turkish Jews in occupied France and the German ultimatum on their repatriation in WWII
Author
Call number940.5318/0508
Object number06374k
Place of publicationBerlin, Germany
PublisherMetropol-Verlag
Year of publication
2016
Physical descriptionpp157-167
MaterialArticle
Series titleIHRA series, 2
ISBN9783863312879
NotesArticle from the book 'Bystanders, rescuers or perpetrators? The neutral countries and the Shoah'pp157-167
Description
During World War II the Turkish government did not have any intention or make any attempts to protect the Jews of Turkish origin living in German-occupied Western Europe. The majority of those Turkish subjects were considered 'irregular' and were deprived of any kind of diplomatic protection. In regard to the rest, the government did not want their return and blocked their travel to Turkey by suspending the process of visa and passport applications during the most critical year (1943)