European Turkish Union ETU is reminding with
sadness at the 60th aniversary year of
the HolocaustTHE STRUMA
TRAGEDY IN ITS 64TH ANNIVERSARY
This
year is the 64th anniversary of a tragic event that took place during World War
II, involving 1769 Jews who perished in a ramshackle ship called STRUMA while
escaping from Romania.
The
woeful circumstances that surrounded this event were a grim global war, clumsy
diplomatic maneuvers conducted by the British to keep the Jews away from Palestine, and also a
hypocritical international politics. Jews all over Europe
were desperately trapped in this chaos relentlessly haunted by a pathological
Nazi hatred.
In
1941, the war had already been going on for two years. The German troops scored
whirlwind victories throughout Europe, and marched on eastward to Russia, forcing the Jewish expelled and death from Poland, Austria, Hungary , Czechoslovakia
and Romania,
on riverboats and barges, each filled to over capacity, travelling down the
river Danube. Their destination was the port
city of Constanza in Romania,
and their dream was to travel to Palestine via the only route open, the Black Sea and
friendly unique Turkey to
escape Holocaust in Europe.
During
the war, the Arab factor was a sensitive issue for both the Allies and the Axis
blocks. Hitler coveted the rich oil fields in the Middle
East, and aggressively sought the Arab alliance. He made a pledge
to the Grand Mufti (the highest religious figure of the Palestine Arabs) of Jerusalem that no Jews would be allowed to escape to Palestine. His notorious Anti-Semitism
won enormous sympathy in the Arab world.
At
that time, Palestine
was a British mandate administered by a British governor. Under the
circumstances, the British policy was not to offend the Arabs. They were afraid
that even a perception of leaning towards the Jews could provoke a wide-spread
Arab revolt. Furthermore, admitting any Jewish refugees to Palestine
would have triggered a rush of Jewish immigration to Palestine
from all over Europe and Balkans, which could
lead to a grand scale settlement and relief problem. Therefore, the British
blockaded Palestine
to-prevent any clandestine entry by the Jews. Their excuse was possible
infiltration of German spies under the guise of Jewish refugees.
Only
friendly Turkey
as a neutral country. in a global war, and in geographically ideal location,
was already flooded with refugees escaping the German invasion in the central Europe. The
pressure from the British, the Germans, and from the Arabs not to admit any
Jewish refugees to Turkey,
and not to accommodate the refugee ships coming through the Black
Sea, was enormous.
Before
World War II, Romania's
Jewish population was about 900,000 to 1 Millon. About half-a-million Jews
perished in Romania to
escape Holocaust during the war, some of them under the German occupation and
in the territories ceded to Bulgaria
and to the Soviet Union. Some of them were
deported to Nazi death camps, but a large majority of Jews died in the pogroms organized
by the State and the Militia.
However,
the persecution of the Jews in Romania
began long before the war. Under the oppression of the Romanian Iron Guards (the equivalent of the German SS) the
Jews began fleeing the country from the port
of Constanza to Palestine in 1938-1939 . An Associated Press
dispatch dated March 2, 1939 described the city of Constanza as a huge refugee camp with
thousands of Palestine-bound Jews forming lines in front of travel agencies
that sold tickets for fly-by-night shipping companies. This inaugurated an era
of the so-called "coffin
ships" as all the vessels chartered for this purpose were rickety, un sea worthy boats devoid of amenities, crammed
5 to 10 times their normal capacities, and their destination was, in most
cases, fatal.
The
Romanian authorities cashed in on this bonanza enormously as the passengers had
to ransom their way out of the country illegally. In early December 1940, a
Uruguayan registry rotten ship called "SALVADOR"
ventured a voyage to Palestine.
SALVADOR had no
cabins or bunks, no compass, no weather instruments, and no life-jackets. It
could carry only 30-40 passengers, but instead 327 refugees were packed in
tightly. SALVADOR miraculously made it to Istanbul. However, after
she departed, a severe storm raged across the Marmara Sea,
and the dilapidated ship sank on December 15, 1940, causing 204 passengers,
including 66 children to die. Out of 123 survivors, 63 were deported back to Bulgaria, and the rest managed to stay in Istanbul. They were picked
up by another refugee ship, DARIEN II, bound to Palestine with 723 passengers on board.
DARIEN II almost made it to its destination, but the British captured the ship
near the coast of Palestine
on March 19, 1941, and interned. The
tragic fate of SALVADOR
did not discourage the Jews of Romania to flee the country. Their living
conditions were unbearable, and deteriorated by day. Many a Jew saw the
handwriting on the wall, and they wanted to get out of Romania at all cost, and soon.
Judging
from the developments in the world scene, the Turks expected more refugee ships
in the Istanbul
harbour in the near future and more calamities at sea. In an effort to solve
this problem, the Turkish government approached the United States Government
with a plan for an orderly transportation of 400,000 Romanian Jews through Turkey to Palestine
with the concurrence and cooperation of the British. However, Cavendish
W. Cannon of the State Department's Division of European Affairs rejected
the Turkish proposal on the grounds that there were not sufficient ships to
handle the migration, and also it was contrary to the British White Paper
published in 1939, allowing only 75,000 Jewish immigrants to Palestine within the next five years. He
further cited the Arab reaction to a Jewish exodus to Palestine. However,
the Romanian Jews were quite resolute for their salvation. Around that time, a
shipping agency began advertising a voyage to Palestine on a luxury liner. Their posters
and brochures even featured the picture of Queen Mary.
In
reality, a cruel scheme was underway. In those days, the Germans requisitioned
all ships, large and small, to transport foodstuffs and cattle from Romania to Germany
via the river Danube. Therefore, to find an
available ship was a major problem. The Germans, however, were not impressed at
all by a ramshackle riverboat called MACEDONIA, abandoned in a dock. She
was too old to risk cattle. This was a fluke for the ship owner, and he
immediately took possession of the vessel. At that time MACEDONIA was 74 years old, and
measured only 50 feet long and 20 feet wide (later on these measures were
confirmed in a New York Times article dated March, 13, 1942).
After
a cursory repair, she was put under Panamanian registry, and renamed STRUMA. Within a short period of time 1769 Jews responded
favouraby to the offer; 269 women,, some of whom were pregnant, 203 infants or
toddlers, several professionals, including 30 physicians, 30 lawyers, 10
engineers, a number of businessmen, merchants, craftsmen, students and a select
group of youth leaders called Betarim.When
all these people saw the ship, their disappointment was beyond description. She
had only 100 bunks, and not a single toilet! The ship owner had prepared him self
for that moment; he soothed the worries of the passengers by saying that as the
advertised ship carried an American flag she had to lay outside the territorial
water of Romania; therefore, STRUMA was merely an intermediate transportation.
On
December 7th 1941 the attack on Pearl
Harbour took place, and
the world seemed to be heading for a widespread conflagration. The prevailing
mood for the Jews might have been not to waste any more time, and leave as soon
as possible. In that haste STRUMA sailed from
Constanza on December 12th 1941. When they reached the open sea the
passengers faced the harsh reality. There was no luxury liner waiting for them;
yet, it was too late, there was no way they could go back to Romania. They
arrived in Istanbul
on December 15, 1941. The engine was malfunctioning, and there was leak in the
hull. The captain of the ship requested a permit to stay in the harbour until
those repairs were completed. The Turkish authorities, considering the recent
catastrophe that befell SALVADOR and its Jewish
passengers in the Sea of Marmara, generously
accorded the permission to stay beyond what the transit regulations provided. In
view of the unbearable conditions on the ship, the Turkish authorities were
willing to permit the passengers to disembark while the ship was in repair;
however, it became known that none of the passengers had entry visas to Palestine. As a
compromise, the Turkish Foreign Office requested at least an assurance from Mr.
Adrian Knatchbull-Hugessen, the British ambassador in Ankara,
that all the passengers were to be issued visas to Palestine. However, the British refused to give such assurance. Thereupon, the Turkish-Red Crescent, The American-Jewish
Joint
Distribution
Committee in Turkey, and the
Jewish community in Istanbul
mobilized to feed all 1769 people on board. STRUMA
stayed in the Istanbul harbour 71 days, during
which time the Turkish government conducted intense negotiations with the
concerned states to find a viable solution to the STRUMA
affair. To that end, the British were reminded that the yearly quota of 10,000
allowed by the White Paper was still unfilled. Could it possibly be allocated
for the passengers of STRUMA? The British
dismissed this possibility claiming that as Romanians, these passengers were
enemy aliens; as such they did not qualify for this quota. Shortly
afterwards, the Turkish Foreign office engaged to an another initiative, this
time on the part of the Romanian ambassador in Ankara,
Alexandre Cretzianu, and proposed that STRUMA be allowed to return to Romania.
The ambassador asserted that those Jews had left the country in an illegal
manner therefore, it was impossible to re-admit them to Romania.
On
January 19, 1942, the United
States entered the war. Panama followed suit, and Joined
the Allies. These developments affected the status of STRUMA un favourbly in
that the captain and some crew members were Bulgarian citizens, and now Bulgaria was officially at war with Panama.
The captain declared that they could not stay on a ship that belonged to an
enemy country. Besides, he claimed, the Mediterranean
was dangerous to travel with a crippled ship and a large number of Jews on
board. The port authorities refused to relieve the captain from his post in
such a critical time.
In
February, the British made a vague concession. They indicated that they might
issue visas to the 70 children on board to enable them to travel to Palestine via the land
route. It was not a firm, official declaration; in fact, shortly thereafter
they revised the age category to include only those ages between 11 and 16.
Yet, the Turkish government declared that such a decision was never confirmed
to them. In fact, days passed and nothing further was heard from the British. In
the meantime, a communication was received from London
with regard to the Jewish quota to Palestine
for the year of 1942. This triggered a new attempt on the part of the British
government with a renewed hope. Yet, the British dismissed this initiative as
well, asserting that this quota was not applicable to the persons who were
travelling under an immigrant status prior to the announcement of this quota.
Amidst
all this turmoil, there was a case of miscarriage in the ship. A pregnant
passenger, Medea Solomonowitz was in critical condition, and was permitted to
be taken to the Or-Haim Jewish hospital in Balat, Istanbul. Four more passengers were allowed
to leave STRUMA. A Turkish businessman,
interceded on behalf of a Socony Vacuum Oil Company (present day Mobil)
executive and his family, and obtained visas for them from the British Consul
in Istanbul.
They left the ship to go to Palestine
via a land route. Two
months had passed with endless negotiations, high level contacts, and
diplomatic stunts without any remedy to the stalemate, and the Turkish
government became convinced that it had exhausted all the ways and means to
find a viable solution to-this dilemma. All the sincere and constructive
efforts the Turks put forth to bring about a happy ending to this human tragedy
were to no avail. Their frustration and their indignation with the profound
hypocrisy that shrouded the whole affair kept mounting. The barriers were
raised deliberately by the British to obstruct the Jewish immigration to Palestine; they had
resorted all along to twisted dilatory tactics to drive the matter into the
maze of politics. The Turks finally resigned
themselves to the fact that no goodwill and humanitarian efforts, no concession
or compromise could overcome the British intransigence.
Thereupon,
on February 23, 1942, the captain of STRUMA
was ordered to leave the harbour. A tugboat towed STRUMA to the Black Sea. Mrs. Solomonowitz had lost her child, and was
recuperating in the hospital when the ship pulled out slowly, leaving her
behind. The
following day,February 24 at 9:00 A.M. the tragic news came through. An
unexplained explosion had torn apart STRUMA
while she was about 4-5 miles from the Cape Igne Ada. Several Turkish rescue
teams were immediately dispatched to the area. They arrived on the scene
struggling with huge waves and high wind. Alas, with the exception of one
survivor all- 1763 women, men and children had perished. The survivor was David
Stoliar, a 21-year old Romanian Jew. He
and Mrs. Solomonowitz were later granted admission to Palestine.
There
were speculations about the cause of the explosion. A German, Russian,
Romanian, as well as a Bulgarian submarine was a strong possibility. The engine
of the ship being rather small was ruled out as the source of explosion. A mine
was a remote possibility, but was not ruled out entirely. Sea storms and
freezing weather contributed to the fatalities, but did not account for the
explosion. Or, what was thought to be an explosion was a sudden crack that
caused the ship to come apart at the seams. Whatever it was, even today it is
still a mystery. The
STRUMA incident, painful though for the Jews,
had been an eye-opener for the Romanian authorities. They figured that instead
of exterminating the Jews they could let them buy their own freedom. This
option had been exercised in the case of STRUMA,
and proved very lucrative.
The
World Jewish Congress found out about this prospect and appealed to the U.S.
State Department to allow money to be transferred through Switzerland to ransom Jews out of Europe,
especially from Romania.
The State Department agreed on condition that those freed would be admitted to Palestine by the British.
To raise money for this likelihood, the Jews in the U.S. launched a fundraising
campaign to buy freedom for their brethren. A Jewish American organization ran
the following full-page advertisement in the New York Times on February 16, 1943:
"For sale to the humanity
170,000 Jews ! Guaranteed human beings at apiece" However, the British
refused any cooperation in that respect, and
the venture fell through.
The
loss of STRUMA provoked heated debates in the
British Parliament. Sir Harold Mac Michael, the High Commissioner for Palestine, was blamed for deliberately delaying the
information to the Turks in regard to the admittance of the children to Palestine, and was transferred to Malaysia. Josiah G. Wedgwood in the
House of Commons, and Lord Davis in the House of Lords accused the Palestine
authorities and the British policy with respect to immigration to Palestine,
and urged the British government to repeal the prohibition imposed-, on the
Jews to immigrate to the Holy Land.
The
most reliable and detailed account about STRUMA's stay in Istanbul was
chronicled by Mr. Abraham Galante, a prominent Turkish Jew who served two terms
in the Turkish Parliament (1939-1946), and who was deeply involved in the
STRUMA affair. He was in contact with the ship, with the authorities, as well
as with the Jewish organizations in Turkey and on an international
level on a daily basis. Furthermore, thanks to his legislator status he was
privy to the behind the scenes efforts. Besides
being a politician, Mr. Galante was a scholar, journalist, and a linguist. He
was fluent in seven languages. He authored several books in Turkish and in
French. About the STRUMA affair, he wrote:
We,
the authors of these lines, who followed closely the events during the stay of
STRUMA in the harbour of Istanbul bear witness that the government of Turkish Republic did everything possible within
its power to alleviate the lot of those involved in this tragedy. Besides the
activities of the Work for Refugees in Transit Committee, which was composed of
Henry Soriano, the president of the Jewish community in Istanbul; Edmond
Goldberg, the former director of Deutsche Bank of Istanbul; and several notable
Jews, such as Simon Brod, Rifat Caraco, Daniel Angel and others, the
municipality of Istanbul, the Health Department, and the Turkish Red Crescent
worked diligently and with solicitude to satisfy the needs of the passengers.
Therefore, we express our gratitude to the government authorities for their
hospitality during the extended stay of the ship, as well as for their
intercession with the foreign governments to enable the passengers to immigrate
to Palestine."
The
STRUMA was not the end of the expeditions from Romania
to the Holy Land via Istanbul.
Rather, this outrage brought the predicament of the Jews to the attention of
the world, whereby admittance to Palestine
was considerably relaxed. Furthermore, the land route via Syria, which was under Allied occupation at that
time, was also established; therefore, the sea-crossing was needed only between
Romania and Istanbul, which was
shortened considerably. Thus, even smaller ships could be used for that
purpose.
The
Presidential archives in Hyde Park, N.Y. records an initiative by the President Roosevelt in
early 1944 that coincides with that newly adopted relaxation policy for the
Jewish immigration to Palestine.
According to On the Record, November 1979 issue published by the General
Service Administration, President F.D. Roosevelt authorized a cloak-and-dagger
mission to rescue 150,000 Jews from the Nazi-occupied Southern
Europe. The plan was to transport them with the Turkish boats to Istanbul and then to Palestine
via the land route. For that purpose, President F.D. Roosevelt sent a
department store executive, Mr. Ira Hirschmann, to Turkey
as his special envoy to make a deal with the Romanian ambassador to Turkey,
Alexandre Cretzianu, Mr.
Hirschmann had $
5 Million in gold sovereigns at his disposal to be used as needed. He met with
the ambassador in the woods outside Ankara,
and told him that the Soviet army was advancing, and not only his life but his
family's life was also in danger. If he helped to get the Jews out of Romania on Turkish boats, in return, he and his
family would be granted visas to the United States. According to Mr.
Hirschmann, both sides kept their part of bargain, and the deal worked. Around that
time, eight ships carried 13,936 Jewish refugees from Romania to Istanbul,
and the Turks provided transit visas and trains to transport the Jewish
refugees to Syria.
In
that period of time, some rather small, enterprising boats were shipwrecked or
ran aground near the Turkish coasts, however, all of them were rescued by the
Turkish coast-guards without any fatality; they were taken care of and then
sent to Palestine.
This
operation ran successfully until August 1944, at which time, a Turkish ship,
MEFKURE, was chartered to carry 2350 Jews from Romania
to Istanbul.
The ship flew a Turkish flag and also a Red-Cross banner. Unfortunately,
MEFKURE was dastardly torpedoed in the Black Sea
by an unidentified warship. All the survivors were machine-gunned in the water
while they were struggling to escape. Only five passengers, but none of the
crewmembers, were able to survive in that carnage.
This incident closed shut the only
escape route for the Jews from Europe, leaving
behind hundreds of thousands more Jews abandoned to their
grim fate.
European Turkish Union
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