Great Synagogue of Edirne: Restoring hope and co-existence


Like many Turks who were born in the modern Turkish Republic, I learned that once there were non-Muslims living on this land by seeing empty churches, desolate synagogues and ruined graves. Those remnants have always been the bitter yet better teachers of Turkish history than official history course books or Turkish political culture that has parroted the official historiography that was written in accordance with Kemalist ideology and hence, mainly based on lies. Heartbreaking yet honest, these ghost vestiges stand as solid evidence of what the official narrative was doing its best to conceal.
The remnants of the once ruined Great Edirne Synagogue, also known as Kal Kadosh ha Gadol, was my personal tutor on the rich history of my hometown, Edirne, formerly known as Adrianople, a small Turkish city bordering Greece and Bulgaria. The synagogue was built in 1907 on the order of an edict issued by Ottoman Sultan Abdülhamid II after a disastrous fire that destroyed 13 separate synagogues. It became the second-largest synagogue of Europe. The synagogue was abandoned in 1983 as the Jewish community of the town withered. After five years of restoration, the Great Edirne Synagogue was reopened last week with an official ceremony. The streets of Edirne were adorned with banners that read: "Old friends, welcome back home," that greeted hundreds of Jews who visited the city to participate in the opening ceremony of the synagogue. The Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government inaugurated and sponsored the renovation and was proudly present at the ceremony, which marked a historic day for the Jewish community of Turkey.
Years ago when I was a child, the remnants of this synagogue and the old Jewish graves were a playground for me. As a member of a small and harmless gang who called itself "the treasure hunters," we used to lose ourselves in the relics of abandoned churches and synagogues, telling each other ghost stories, playing hide and seek and having fun. Every evening when I returned home I was full of questions about the old inhabitants of these sites and the untold history of the city in which my mother was born.
"There were a lot Jews in this town when I was young. They were good people, we used to like them. I always preferred to shop from Jewish shop owners. Unlike Turks, they were hardworking people. They were polite. While Turkish shop owners huffed and puffed over customers' demands, the Jews would never do that."
"What happened to those people grandma?"
"They left."
"Why?"
"Because their state was founded."
My maternal grandmother, an illiterate yet wise woman, the wife of a peasant and mother of four children, was born in Thessaloniki. My family story was the story of a collapsing empire. My father's ancestors were (probably) forced to abandon Bulgaria after the Balkan Wars due to the persecution of the Muslim population and moved to Çanakkale. My mother's father migrated from Thessaloniki to Edirne with the compulsory population exchange between Greece and Turkey, through which both countries "exchanged" their Muslim and Christian citizens. Approximately 1.2 million Christians from Anatolia and 400,000 Muslims from Greece left their homes and sought refuge in their new countries. My grandmother's family was excluded from the population exchange as Thracian Muslims and Istanbulite Greeks were exempt. Yet, with the rise of fascism in Greece, her family was attacked by racist Greek mobs and was forced to leave their home. She lost her father during those attacks, and in one day her widowed mother with three children became refugees, leaving their land and home, seeking asylum in the young Turkish Republic. "Bad things happened to us my child," was the only sentence I heard from my grandmother about how and why they left their home, who I presume chose to be silent and forgetful as a defense mechanism.
The downfall of the Ottoman Empire came with the perishing of many families, mine included. Yet my family was lucky as they were given shelter by the newly formed Turkish Republic. They were lucky because they were Muslims, given that for the newly formed "secular" Turkish Republic they were regarded as the genuine citizens of the country, unlike non-Muslims.
Years later I learned that my grandmother was telling me the half-truth about her neighbors. The Jews of Edirne did not leave because "their state" was established; they were forced to leave after systematic harassment and pogroms that were partially orchestrated by the Turkish state to accomplish the ideal to form a homogenous and "pure" nation.
Edirne was traditionally an important center for the Jewish community in the Ottoman Empire, known for its vivid intellectual life, vibrant social communities and robust economy, which was dominated by its non-Muslim residents. Edirne used to host a remarkably multicultural populace of Greeks, Bulgarians, Armenians, Albanians, Turks and Jews.
According to the 1905/1906 census, the number of Jews living in Edirne was 23,839. This number began to deteriorate after the Balkan Wars due to mainly economic reasons. The number of Jews in Edirne had fallen to 15,686 in 1914. However, the steep decline in the numbers of the Jewish community occurred following the establishment of the Turkish Republic. The number of Jews in the town was 5,697 in 1927[ii] The result was more than tragic: the Jews of Eastern Thrace were given an ultimatum to leave their homes, their houses and shops were vandalized and some of them were beaten to death. In fact, it is rumored that the rabbi in Kırklareli was stripped naked and shamefully dragged through the streets while his daughter was raped.
According to the 1935 census, the number of Jews in Edirne declined to 4,071. With the Capital Tax Law, a wealth levy enacted in 1942 that aimed to destroy the economic prosperity of the non-Muslim population in the country, the number fell to 2,441. After the establishment of Israel, by 1960 there remained only 435 Jews in the town. As of 2014, there are only two Jews living in Edirne.
Demographic Islamization of Turkey: A secular nationalist project
The fate of Jews in Edirne reflected a general trend of the secular nationalist homogenization project and demographic engineering of the founding rationale of the Turkish Republic. The ethnic cleansing of Armenians was conducted by members of the nationalist Committee of Union and Progress, who were earlier known as the Young Turks, followed in the footsteps of the 1908 Young Turks revolution. The demographic Islamization that started in 1915, and even earlier, was culminated with the formation of the Republic.
According to a census conducted in 1914, the number of the non-Muslim population of the Ottoman Empire was more than 2.7 million in total population of around 15 million[iv]. The Capital Tax of Nov. 11, 1942 was based on religious and ethnic identity. Initially there were two lists, one for Muslims and one for non-Muslims. This perception that excludes non-Muslims from the idea of "Turkishness" was retained after the transition to democracy in Turkey. A two-day pogrom that was incited by the Turkish state in 1955 targeted the non-Muslim residents of Istanbul, destroying huge amounts of property and killing 37 people. In 1974, non-Muslim foundations lost all of their property due to an arbitrary judgment by the Supreme Court of Appeals.
The Turkish state has always been hostile to missionary activities and has marked converts as potential threats. In fact, in 2001, the Turkish National Security Council prepared a report that listed evangelical missionaries as the third largest threat to Turkey after the separatist PKK and Islamic fundamentalism. In the same vein, the Turkish Armed Forces prepared another report titled "Missionary Activities in Our Country and in the World" in 2004. This report aimed to inform the AK Party government about evangelical activities and exhorted it to enact new laws to curtail proselytizing. Missionary activities and missionaries are condemned as "dangerous" because it is alleged that they are attempting to divide the nation by converting ethnic and religious minorities such as Kurds and Alevis to Christianity and, accordingly, weaken citizens' ties to the Turkish state[vi] Many senior AK Party members, including President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu, have admitted the wrongdoings against non-Muslims in the past, promising a new and brighter future. Calls to the non-Muslims who were forced to leave Turkey were reiterated several times, an official condolence was issued for the Armenian genocide and the scope of Turkish diaspora was officially redefined to include former Ottoman subjects. Etyen Mahçupyan, a well-known Armenian intellectual, was appointed as Davutoğlu's senior advisor, becoming the most senior non-Muslim official in the Turkish Republic. This year Turkey commemorated the tragedy of the Struma for the first time, and the Holocaust ceremony in 2015 was very different from the previous ones thanks to high-level governmental representation.
While the representatives of non-Muslim communities in Turkey cherished these developments, the opposition blamed the government for betrayal. Harutyan Harun Şanlı, a member of the Armenian Community Foundations Solidarity Platform Coordination Board, said: "Especially the AK Party tenure has been a milestone for minorities," while İvo Molinas, editor-in- chief of Şalom newspaper, said: "The vantage point of the AK Party governments toward non-Muslims and their foundations in line with contemporary democratic norms is a silent revolution and should be acknowledged as the starting point of ending the everlasting discrimination and alienation experienced on our soil."[viii] A series of books claiming that the founders of the AK Party were crypto-Jews, including "Musa'nın Çocukları: Tayyip ve Emine" (The Children of Moses: Emine and Tayyip), "Musa'nın AKP'si" (Moses's AK Party) and "Musa'nın Gülü" (The Rose of Moses), became bestsellers in Turkey.
That being said, it should also be noted that there are some AK Party members and pro-government pundits who have anti-Semitic views and employ discriminatory language against non-Muslims. There are also demands from the non-Muslim community that are still waiting to be fulfilled. The opening of the Halki Seminary on Heybeliada is one of these demands. The school curriculum and course books that were designed in toe with Kemalist ideology need sweeping reform and revision. Turkeytarget="_blank"'>