Güncelleme Tarihi:
Selahattin Ulkumen, Turkish consul general on the island in 1943, is remembered for his role in saving the Turkish Jews by persuading a German general to release them the day before they were due to be transported to Auschwitz.
Nearly 2,500 Jews from Rhodes and the nearby
However, some months later Ulkumen persuaded the German general on the island to release the 40 Turkish Jews, by reminding him of
"I was 13 years old and I can still picture the long discussions in front of us between Selahattin Ulkumen and the German general," said Sami Modiano, one of the deportees who survived.
Ulkumen’s 64-year-old son, Mehmet, joined the commemoration and was presented with a plaque by the president of the Central Jewish Council of Greece, Moisis Constantinis.
Ulkumen was arrested at the end of 1944 by the Germans after
None of the Holocaust survivors ever returned to live on the island.
An attempt to re-establish the Jewish community there in the 1950s by settling families from different Greek regions did not have much success and the island's Jewish population currently stands at no more than 40, said secretary of the Rhodes Jewish community Carmen Levi.
Concentration camp survivor Stella Levi said she made the journey to her birthplace from her home in
This tribute "is a historic moment for the Jews of Rhodes," she said.
Once dubbed "Little Jerusalem" Rhodes took in several hundred Jews expelled from
Between the two world wars, the Jewish population of the island reached about 6,000.
Some 67,000 Greek Jews perished in the Holocaust, 86 percent of the country’s entire Jewish community.
Photo: DHA