When Neighbors Become Aggressors: the Local Tensions Behind the Expulsion of Jews From Eastern Thrace in 1934

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Date

2024

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Volume Title

Publisher

Cambridge Univ Press

Open Access Color

HYBRID

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No

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Abstract

This article examines the local context that led to the expulsion of Jews from Eastern Thrace in 1934. Going beyond the conventional state-centric narratives, it unearths the local socio-economic tensions that triggered the locals to target their Jewish neighbors. It highlights three major factors that fueled already-existing nationalist sentiments in the region: some Jewish merchants' involvement in usury, Turkish-Muslim agricultural producers' growing indebtedness due to the devastating impact of the Great Depression, and the government's failure to support producers with appropriate credit policies. Faced with the danger of indebtedness and dispossession, the locals in this context deemed the small Jewish community as "the easy target," scapegoating it for their ongoing problems amid Turkey's nationalist political climate in the 1930s.

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Keywords

Jews In Turkey, The Great Depression, Usurers, Turkish Nationalism, Thrace

Fields of Science

05 social sciences, 0507 social and economic geography, 0506 political science

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Q1

Scopus Q

Q3
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N/A

Source

New Perspectives on Turkey

Volume

72

Issue

Start Page

132

End Page

150
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