TURKS IN CLEVELAND - The Encyclopedia of Cleveland HistoryTURKS immigrated to Cleveland in two distinct
periods. The first Turkish immigrants were part of a movement of various ethnic
groups from the former Ottoman Empire to the United States which began in
earnest in the 1890s and ceased in the early 1920s with the advent of new,
restrictive immigration laws and the almost simultaneous rise of the modern
Turkish Republic from the remains of the Ottoman state. The second wave of
immigration began in the early 1950s and was a consequence of closer diplomatic
and military relations between the United States and the Turkish Republic. Among the peoples who
emigrated from the Ottoman Empire, the Turks are characterized by the fact that
they or their families were Muslim and their language Turkish. This
differentiates them from the Christian groups, such as the Armenians or Greeks,
who came from the Empire or Arabic speaking Muslims who also emigrated from
Ottoman Turkey.Talat Halman,
in the Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups, provides the following
definition: "The term Turk or Turkish designates a person born in the
Ottoman Empire before 1923 or in the Turkish Republic after 1923, who is Muslim
or whose family was Muslim, who was raised in a Turkish speaking household and
who identifies as a Turk." Given the variety of
peoples who emigrated from the Ottoman Empire and the fact that United States
immigration statistics for that country were not sub-categorized by
"ethnicity" until the late 1890s it is difficult to ascertain the
number of Turks who came to the United States in the late nineteenth and the
first decades of the twentieth century. Estimates now range between 25,000 and
50,000. Determining the number of Turks resident in Cleveland and Cuyahoga
County is equally problematic as the Federal Census also does not delineate by
ethnicity. For example, the census lists two people born in Turkey in Cleveland
in 1870 and forty-one in 1900. The numbers increase substantially afterwards:
for 1910, 748 Clevelanders listed their birthplace as Turkey (there were a
total of 754 in Cuyahoga County); in 1920 there were 661 in Cleveland, (county
figures are not given); and in 1930, 468 in Cleveland (528 total in Cuyahoga
County). However, these figures are of all ethnicities (Turkish, Armenian,
Arab, Jewish or Greek) from the Ottoman Empire or, after 1920, the modern
Republic of Turkey. The 1910 census, which lists languages spoken
provides the first reliable number of Turks living in the city. In 1910, 28
Cleveland residents spoke Turkish. The figures for Turkish speakers in the city
and county are yet to be extracted from the 1920 and 1930 census records. A review of the census
itself then shows most of the early Turkish speaking people in Cleveland to be
from the Ottoman Balkan provinces rather than from Asia Minor (Anatolia, the
heart of modern Turkey). This seems to fit a pattern in which Balkan
"Turks" constituted the majority in Turkish communities in the
Western Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio. This differs from ,
Turkish communities in Massachusetts and Detroit where the bulk of the
immigrants came from Anatolia proper. As was the case
elsewhere in the United States, this early Turkish community was almost
entirely male. Most worked as wage laborers in area factories. The center of
population by the 1910s was in the area of Bolivar and Eagle Street. Later the
community moved out along Woodland Avenue between East 28th and 30th Streets.
By the early 1940s, what remained of the community had moved east near to the
intersection of East 51st and Woodland. As a very small Muslim
minority within a predominantly Christian city, the early Turks were compelled
to create their own culturally supportive institutions. On January 7, 1918,
they incorporated an Islamic association (its name have been given either as
The Association of Islamic Union of Cleveland or the Association of the Islamic
Lodge of Cleveland) "...to foster social relations and solidarity among
the Moslems." In that year the Association purchased a burial plot in
Highland Park Cemetery in which a number of the early settlers have been
interred. Into the 1940s, a series of coffee shops, such as Ramadan Kamils, and a delicatessen -- Mustefa's
delicatessen at 5211 Woodland -- served as meeting places for the, community,
both for the Association and also for socializing. Many of the early
Turks moved out of Cleveland with those of Anatolian origin often moving back
to Turkey, most usually after the creation of the Turkish Republic in 1923.
Overall, the early Turks in the United States had one of the highest return
rates (an estimated 80.5 percent) of all immigrant groups. Return was
occasioned in part by the fact that a Muslim marriage was almost impossible in
Cleveland, as was the case then throughout the United States. Those men who did
marry took their brides largely from first or second-generation Christian
immigrant groups. By the early 1950s, perhaps a dozen or two dozen early Turks
remained in Cleveland. It was at that point
that the second phase of Turkish immigration to the city began. Unlike the
first, it was, and is comprised largely of highly trained and skilled
immigrants, essentially the sons and daughters of the westernized, secular
Republic established by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk in 1923. Turkey's entry into the
NATO alliance in 1952, and the activities of the Marshall Plan within Turkey
provided the impetus for this new Turkish emigration of doctors, students, and
academicians. Dr. Abdullah Okutan came to Cleveland
from Istanbul in 1952 to work in the Sunny Acres Hospital. When he arrived he
found one other Turkish doctor in the city along with a handful of the early
Turks, some of whom still resided downtown near the old center of Turkish
settlement. By 1965 an estimated
100 Turks lived in Greater Cleveland, the majority of them employed with or
being trained by area universities and hospitals, including Western Reserve
University, and the Cleveland Clinic. In that same year, the revision of the , American immigration law opened the door to increased
numbers of immigrants from Turkey and other nations. The increased flow of
immigrants led to the establishment of the Turkish American Association of
Northeastern Ohio (TASNO) on January 3, 1977. TASNO has sponsored language
schools, created a Turkish dance troupe, and has sponsored or hosted the visit
of cultural and performing groups from Turkey. TASNO has also served as the
community's voice in issues, such as those relating to Turkey itself and those
that, bear upon the Turks resident in the United States. The rise of the
Islamist Justice and Development Party (AKP) in Turkey and the growth of Gulen
movement (directed by exiled religious leader Fetullah
Gulen) led to the creation of new organizations in
the state and in Cleveland. The Turkish
American Society of Ohio (TASO), a Gulenist
organization was established in Columbus in 2008.
It soon established a branch in Cleveland. Supported by the Gulen-led
Niagara Foundation, TASO and TASO Cleveland became active in sponsoring cross
cultural activities including trips to Turkey.
Currently, the Turkish
population of northeast Ohio is estimated at about 1,000 (an estimated 500,000
Turks live in the United States). That population differs vastly from the first
group of immigrants. It includes a number of students pursuing higher education
at area
universities, most prominently, Case
Western Reserve and Cleveland State.
Direct educational connections with Turkey have become increasingly
common. Case Western Reserve University
maintains an exchange program with Bilkent University
in Ankara, Turkey, and Cleveland State created programs with Anadalu and Bacesehir
universities..
John Carroll University has established a chair in Islamic Studies (held
by Professor Zeki Saritoprak
as of 2015). As the population has
grown it has become more gender balanced with most of the men and women engaged
in medicine, research, or, education. Geographically, most Turks live in the
city's eastern or southern suburbs. Within those areas there is no specific
Turkish "neighborhood." Like other contemporary national and
immigrant groups in Cleveland, the Turks become most visible when they gather
for national holidays, such as the Republic Day on October 29th or when they
take part in larger festivals, such as the annual Folk Festival, that focus on
diversity in the community. John J. Grabowski Finding Aid for Turkish American Society of Northeastern Ohio Records. WRHS. TASNO Website www.tasno.org TASO
Cleveland Website www.tasocleveland.org/
This site maintained by Case Western Reserve University
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