Sultan Abdul Hamid II, 1880s, courtesy, Wikipedia
For Jews, friends in the international community, whether a head
of state or the common man, are few and far between. That’s not to say that
Jews have no friends. In fact, contrary to what I just stated, Jews have many
friends. On the other hand, this also produces a quandary. What if a world leader
has maintained a very close relationship with Jews but were tyrants to other
peoples, such as the leaders of the American south who also held African
slaves, or Napoleon who also persecuted and expelled the Huguenots from France,
or even today when there are many friendly heads of state with atrocious human
rights records. For this posting, I have decided to focus on the Ottoman
Empire’s last sultan Abdul Hamid II who reigned from 1876 to 1918, a period of profound
change and turmoil within the empire. He was known to love, admire, and protect
Jews, and in the constitution of 1876 proclaimed the equality of all Ottomans
subjects before the law. In the national assembly of 1877 three of the deputies
were Jews, and they also held two seats in the senate, two in the council of
state, and even the position of secretary of the council. In 1883, when a fire
devastated the Jewish quarter at Haskeui, in Constantinople, the sultan
subscribed £T1,000 for the relief of those who had been left homeless, and
placed certain barracks at their disposal. Since 1887, Jews would serve as
American ambassadors to the Ottoman Empire, beginning with Oscar Straus who was
later succeeded by Solomon Hirsch. Upon Hirsch’s appointment, the grand vizier
in his address of welcome said, "I cannot conceal the satisfaction it
gives me to see that for a second time your country has called a son of Israel
to this eminent position. We have learned to know and esteem your
coreligionists in our country, which they serve with distinction." The
fact that the masses of Jews, especially in the large cities, lived in poverty
in cramped, dirty quarters, were due not to the legal discriminations against
them, but to the general economic condition of the country and to the poverty
and ignorance caused by the despotic rule of centuries. Indeed, all classes of
society were affected. In addition, the anti-Semitic blood libel accusations
often originated from certain segments of society. Hardly an interval of more
than two or three years went by when such an accusation was not made such as
the serious outbreak that occurred in Izmir in 1903. But the Ottoman government
was always quick to punish the guilty.
As Abdul Hamid was protecting Jews from harm, in the 1890s, he
fomented massacres against the Armenian community, the indigenous people of the
southwestern Caucasus and, what is today, northeastern Turkey. Known
historically as the Hamidian massacres, these killings culminated in 1915 with
the Armenian genocide, not to mention the attempted genocide of the Assyrian
Christians, the indigenous people of Mesopotamia before it became the
Arab-occupied country of Iraq. Throughout all this, the Ottoman forces were
often aided by many of the Kurdish tribes who would participate in the
massacres. (The Kurds were the indigenous people of what is now northern Iraq,
western Iran, and southeastern Turkey.) So how are Jews to react to such a
close friend as this? This article will not attempt to answer that question,
maybe because that question could be a separate posting of its own. The reader
is certainly invited to comment below.
Upon his accession to the Ottoman throne, Abdul Hamid invited his
former teacher, the prominent Sufi Sheikh Muhammad Zufir al-Madani, to
Constantinople. Al-Madani came from Libya, from the lands of the indigenous
Berbers in Arab-occupied North Africa. Early in his reign, Abdul Hamid had to
contend with rebellions in the Balkans, and a war with Russia (1877-78) in
which the empire was defeated. On the other hand, this was also a period of
expansion in the Land of Israel. Beginning in 1878, Jewish agriculture in the
ancestral Jewish homeland entered into a period of expansion beginning with the
founding of Petah Tikvah, approximately 11 miles east of Jaffa, which became
known as the mother of modern Jewish settlement. At the same time, new, mainly
Jewish, neighborhoods were established around Jerusalem. By 1881, several
hundred Jews from Yemen established their own Jerusalem neighborhood of Kfar
Hashiloah, or Silwan to the Arabs. They were followed the next year by the
arrival of Russian Jews, in a wave known as the First Aliyah, who made their
way to Jaffa and then established the farming community of Rishon l’Tzion to
the south of the city on lands purchased by the Montefiore Fund. The activities
of the French Jewish educational society Alliance Israelite Universelle were
also a major factor in improving the lot of the Jews, not just in Israel, but
throughout the empire. But even though Abdul Hamid’s administration was very
friendly, he did not look favorably on Jews coming to settle in Israel. There
were enough nationalist rebellions in the empire already. A largely Jewish
region, he felt, would just add to that. So a law was enacted where a Jew could
not stay in Israel for more than three months. This law was ultimately
challenged later in the year when the diplomatic offices of the United States
were invoked in obtaining permission for a group of Russian Jews to settle
there.
Rebellions continued however. In Arab-occupied Egypt, Abdul Hamid
mishandled relations with Urabi Pasha, Arab rebel leader who led a
revolt against the Khedive Tewfik Pasha in 1882. During the revolt, Egypt’s
indigenous Copts were divided: their close affiliation with Europeans
angered many Arabs and sometimes made them a target, but the deep rivalry
between Coptic and Syrian Christians, the indigenous people of Syria, led many
to align themselves with other “Egyptian” rebels. The Coptic Patriarch Cyril
V, lent his support to the revolt when it was at its peak, but later claimed
that he was pressured into doing so. ʻUrabi and other leaders of the revolt
acknowledged the Copts as potential allies and worked to prevent any targeting
of them by nationalist Arab Muslims, but they were not always successful. Urabi
was victorious in the rebellion and he became “prime minister” of Egypt under
Tewfik but was soon overthrown by the British which gained de facto control
over the country even though it was technically still part of the Ottoman
Empire. Soon, other North African
territories were lost. Over time the hostile diplomatic attitudes
shown from Britain and also France caused Abdul Hamid to gravitate towards
their national rival, Germany. This produced an interesting international
situation. Turkey, Germany, Britain, France, and the United States were all
friendly to Jews at the time. However, the latter three supported Jewish
settlement in Israel while the former two did not. Matters came to a head in
1888. The Lubrowsky brothers, two naturalized American citizens, were expelled
from Safed in accordance with the three-month law. Letters of protest were sent
not only from the government of the United States, but also from Great Britain,
and France. In spite of US protests, no permanent settlement of the question
was ever arrived at. But the Turks did announce that the restriction applied
only to Jews arriving in Palestine “in numbers”. It would take many years
afterwards before the law was abandoned.
The ʿAmmiyya, a revolt in
1889–90 among the Druze of
the Arab-occupied Djebel Druze region of southern Syria, and other Syrians, mainly Arab settlers, against the excesses of the
local “Syrian” sheikhs, led to capitulation to the rebels' demands, as well as
concessions to Belgian and French companies
to provide Beirut
and Damascus with a railroad between them, to be built partly on ancient
Phoenician Maronite lands.
In 1897, war broke out with Greece and the empire emerged
victorious. However, in the following year, an
Anglo-Egyptian Arab joint task force took over Sudan, the ancient lands of the
Nubians, long considered part of Ottoman Egypt. From that point and until the
outbreak of World War I in 1914, Britain maintained a strong military presence
in both Egypt and Sudan, as well as in strategically located Cyprus. In 1898,
the Ottoman-German alliance culminated with the state visit of Kaiser Wilhelm
II. When he visited Israel, he became host to a deputation of
Zionists, with Dr. Theodor Herzl at its head. The Kaiser politely turned down
Herzl’s request for support and so Herzl appealed directly to the Sultan. Using
the metaphor of Androcles, he offered to pay down a substantial portion of the
Ottoman debt (150 million pounds sterling in gold) in exchange for a charter
allowing the Zionists to
settle in Palestine. But
even with this offer, he was unsuccessful. In 1899 a significant German desire,
the construction of a Berlin-Baghdad railway, to be
built partly on ancient Assyrian and Syrian Christian lands, was granted.
Beginning in 1904, there were disturbances in Mesopotamia and Yemen. In 1908,
the Hejaz Railway was inaugurated. Two years later, construction began on the
Berlin-Baghdad Railway.
With the growing power of the British and French in North Africa,
war with Italy in 1911, and wars in the Balkan territories the following year,
Abdul Hamid grew increasingly pan-Islamic. He issued a call to Muslims in
Europe to unite into one polity. This threatened several European
countries, namely Russia with
its large Tatar and Kurdish populations, and France through its new
colony of largely Muslim Morocco. With the outbreak of the world war, Britain
formally annexed those territories in which it already had a presence, in
response to Ottoman participation on the side of Germany and the Central Powers. The
outbreak of the war spelt the beginning of the end of the Ottoman Empire and
the reign of Abdul Hamid II who remained loyal to his German friends and allies
throughout. At the very end of his reign in 1918, as the empire was losing the
war, he provided funds to start construction on the strategically
important Constantinople-Baghdad
Railway and the Constantinople-Medina Railway, making
the trip to Mecca for the Hajj more
efficient. After he was deposed, the construction of both railways was
accelerated and completed by the Young Turks.
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