Wednesday,
February 22, 2012
29 Shevat, 5772
News
France
UK
Germany
Western Europe
Eastern Europe
EU-Israel affairs
Voices
Culture
Week at a glance
News from outside of Europe
The Calendar
Links
advertisement
wagerworks software

Turkey to become first Muslim nation to show Holocaust film
Updated: 26/Jan/2012 08:17
The French director of nine-hour-plus documentary, Claude Lanzmann, called the Turkish move historic.

ANKARA (AFP)---Turkish public television will show an epic French documentary about the Holocaust, the first broadcast of its kind by national media in a Muslim state, it was announced Wednesday.  

A spokesman for Turkish public television TRT said the 1985 film "Shoah" would be shown on one of the network's 14 channels, but did not say when.  

The director of nine-hour-plus documentary, Claude Lanzmann, called the Turkish move historic.  

"We should acknowledge the courage and determination of the Turks," said Lanzmann, who spent 11 years working on the documentary. "Turkey is a country people don't know and understand very badly."  

Turkey's broadcast of the film is the culmination of work by the Aladdin Project, a Paris-based group which tries to improve Jewish-Muslim relations.  

The group said in a statement the film would be shown Thursday, the day before International Holocaust Remembrance Day, adding that it had never before been shown in its entirety in a Muslim country.  

Consisting largely of Holocaust-survivor interviews, the film examines the killing of European Jews in Nazi death camps during World War II.  

Its broadcast comes at a sensitive time in Turkey's international relations.  

Ankara hopes to eventually join the European Union, but it is embroiled in a spat with Paris over the French senate's approval of a law making it a crime to deny that the mass killing of Armenians by Ottoman forces in World War II
was genocide.  

Ankara's relations with Israel were damaged in 2010 after Israeli
commandoes stormed a Turkish ship bound for the Gaza Strip in an operation that led to the deaths of nine Turkish activists.


Add Your View Email to friend Print this page Bookmark this page
Day in history

1997: Scotland


In Roslin, scientists announce that an adult sheep named Dolly had been successfully cloned
 
Latest Articles
Catherine Ashton 'deeply concerned' by Israeli approval of new construction in Shvut Rachel and Gilo
Mormons apologize for baptism of Wiesenthal kin
Islamic Jihad member to be released from prison after deal reached with Israel
Not easy to get kosher meals in Malta
Netanyahu to meet Obama on March 5, White House confirms
For first time since Holocaust, 17 Jews certified as Kosher supervisors in Poland
American Jewish leaders in Amman for meeting with King Abdullah II