I have a taste for tales that sound like  bizarre fictions made up by Jorge Luis Borges but are actually true. My favorite  is the story of the shocking  discovery that economist John Maynard Keynes made when he purchased a trunk  full of Isaac Newton's papers.
Another historical character worthy of Borges is the False Messiah, Sabbatai Zevi. One of  the major figures in Paul Johnson's A History of the Jews is the 17th  Century mystic Sabbatai  Zevi, a bipolar ecstatic from Smyrna who, with the help of his brilliant  publicity agent Nathan of Gaza, declared himself the redeemer of the Jews. His  claims caused wild excitement in Jewish communities throughout the world. But  when Sabbatai Zevi (there are alternate spellings such as Shabbetai Zevi and  Shabbtai Tzvi) traveled to Constantinople in 1666, the Ottoman Sultan threatened  him with death unless he performed a miracle or converted to Islam. He chose the  latter.
Now that might have been the end of the cult, but Nathan of Gaza was no ordinary  PR flack. Johnson writes (p. 268-272):
                    
                   Nathan was  an outstanding example of a highly imaginative and dangerous Jewish archetype  which was to become of world importance when the Jewish intellect became  secularized. He could construct a system of explanations and predictions of  phenomena which was both highly plausible and at the same time sufficiently  imprecise and flexible to accommodate new events when they occurred. And he had  the gift of presenting his protean-type theory, with its built-in capacity to  absorb phenomena by a process of osmosis, with tremendous conviction and aplomb.  Marx and Freud were to exploit a similar capacity...
The apostasy was transformed into a necessary paradox or dialectical contradiction.  Far from being a betrayal, it was in fact the beginning of a new mission to  release the Lurianic [Kabbala] sparks which were distributed among the gentiles  and in particular in Islam... It meant descending into the realm of evil. In  appearance [Zevi] he was submitting to it, but in reality he was a Trojan Horse  in the enemy's camp. Warming to his task, Nathan pointed out that Zevi had  always done strange things. This was merely the strangest -- to embrace the same  of apostasy as the final sacrifice before revealing the full glory of the messianic  triumph... Nathan quickly provided massive documentation in Biblical, talmudic  and kabbalistic texts.
                    
                   Johnson writes:
                    
                   As a  result, the Shabbatean movement, sometimes openly, sometimes in secret, not only  survived the debacle of the apostasy but continued in existence for over a  century.
                    
                   But is there an equally  Borgesian sequel to this sequel? Are the Shabbateans, also known as the Donmeh  or Dönme, still around today? The Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported in  2002:
                    
                   In  search of followers of the false messiah
By Orly Halpern
Aubrey Ross is an unusual man with an unusual pastime. He's looking for Jewish  Muslims. In Turkey. With the help of the Internet. And he's convinced he has  found some.
In a book entitled "The Messiah of Turkey," due to be published this  winter by Frank Cass Publishers in Great Britain, Ross reveals that there are a  number of key figures in the present government of Turkey who are Sabbateans -  i.e., followers of Shabbtai Tzvi, a Jew who, in the 17th century, claimed he was  the messiah, God of Israel, and later converted to Islam.
Ross, an Orthodox Jew from London who has lectured on mysticism at Hebrew  University in Jerusalem - but has university degrees in economics and the  history of political thought, and is an adviser on pensions at the National  Health Service in Great Britain - became intrigued by the subject when he was  reading the chapter about false messiahs in Gershom Scholem's "Major Trends  in Jewish Mysticism."
"I was fascinated by a short sentence that said `many of them were still  around in 1970,'" he says...
 After  Shabbtai Tzvi's death, he relates, his family and followers moved to Salonika.  When Greece took it over in 1924, descendants of that community returned to  Turkey...
Ross, who is also warden of Hendon United Synagogue, one of the largest in  London, decided four years ago to write a book about his discoveries. He began  learning Turkish and traveled twice to Turkey: "I penetrated the Sabbatean  structure. I met with the president of the Sabbatean community. They were at the  point of showing me one of their secret synagogues, but got scared."...
According to Ross, the secretive Sabbatean community, with an estimated 20,000  members, is known to security forces in Turkey, but not to the general public.  Most of them live in Istanbul in large blocks of luxury flats in the Shishli  Jewish quarter - unbeknownst to their neighbors.
"It's like a well-known secret. But the Sabbateans don't want to be  exposed. I have been asked by four members of the community not to publish my  book. They fear reactions from extreme Islamic elements."...
Ross believes that there are a number of secret Sabbateans who hold key  positions of influence in the Turkish parliament, legislature and executive  branches of government, including the foreign minister himself. This, he  observes, may help explain the close relations that exist today between Israel  and Turkey.
  
                   One of Ross's Turkish  contacts, an accountant named Ilgaz  Zorlu, has written a book in Turkish entitled, "Yes,  I Am a Salonikan," which argues that many of the leading Turkish  business and political figures in the secular tradition of Kemal Ataturk are  Sabbateans even today.
Is this true? That the Sabbateans were at least somewhat important in the  political upheavals at the end of the Ottoman empire appears fairly well  established.
The Encyclopedia  Britannica writes:
                    
                   At the  turn of the 20th century, the Dönme, well represented in the professional  classes, took active part in the Young Turk movement and the revolution of 1908.
                    
                   And Wikipedia says:
                    
                   While  being accepted by the Muslim society, they only married within their own  community which resulted in several recessive genetic traits being typical of  Donmeh.
Several Donmeh were among the Young Turks, Turkish intellectuals who tried to  reform the Ottoman Empire. At the time of the interchange of Greek and Turkish  populations between Turkey and Greece, the Salonika Donmeh tried to be  recognized as not Muslims to avoid forced transport to Anatolia. In the  Republican era, they strongly supported the pro-Western and laïque reforms of  Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, an attitude that bolstered the suspicions of Muslims  towards them.
At the same time a large number of them did migrate to modern Turkey and helped  Kemal Atatürk build the secular, pro-western Turkey of today. In particular,  Donmeh were instrumental in establishing trade and industry in the emerging  Turkey. In time they become highly influential in the Turkish private sector  which, invevitably, lead to highly speculative conspiracy theories.
It should be noted that as of the end of 20th century Donmeh were fully  integrated to the secular fabric of Turkish society and the intermarriage  tradition had ceased after the 1960s.
  
 Here's an article on their  contemporary role in Turkey:
  
 Shabbtai  Tzvi Would Be Proud
Moshe Temkin
May 24, 1999
The Jerusalem  Report
  
 Until this  century, the sect was concentrated in the city of Saloniki; today most  Sabbateans live in Istanbul. And everyone in Istanbul, so it seems, knows about  the Sabbateans, or, as they are known here, the Doenmeh ("converts" or  "apostates" in Turkish; the Sabbateans themselves dislike this title,  and seldom use it.) They are perhaps Turkey's best-known secret. No Sabbatean,  with the exception of Ilgaz Zorlu himself, will ever publicly admit to being  one, and they are rarely talked about...
They're Muslims, as their identity cards attest, but, as Zorlu puts it,  "all the Muslims know we're different." Their elders speak Turkish in  an accent heavily flavored by Ladino, the Judeo-Spanish of Sephardi Jews. Their  beliefs and rituals are largely unknown to outsiders. They rarely go to mosques.  They marry mainly among themselves and live in the neighborhoods on the European  side - Nisantasi, Sisli and Haskoy - where most of the city's Jews also reside.  But they are not Jews either. The Jewish community wants nothing to do with  them. "As far as we're concerned," says Rabbi Yitzhak Haleva, deputy  chief rabbi of Istanbul, "there are only Jews and Muslims. There's nothing  in between."
So who are the Sabbateans? This is what Zorlu set out to explain in his book,  "Yes, I Am a Salonikan," which has been through six printings since  its publication earlier this year and which has made its author persona non  grata in the Sabbatean community. After centuries of secrecy and denial, Zorlu  is determined to break the silence, to put the issue on the public agenda, and  to prove that the Sabbateans are actually crypto-Jews, that their Muslim  appearances are nothing more than a sham.
Sabbatean leaders are convinced that Zorlu's disclosure has put the community in  jeopardy, and have washed their hands of him...
Turkish muslim society tolerates Jews as long as they are out in the open and do  not attempt to convert Muslims. Hidden Jews, claiming to be Muslims, are  something else entirely. This is one of the reasons Zorlu's book caused such a  commotion. Fundamentalist Islamic groups question the loyalty of these  "secret Jews" to the faith, and Zorlu, who publicly exposed the  Sabbatean separateness and stressed that they have an undying connection to  Judaism, provided the fundamentalists with ammunition.
Jews and other minorities can advance only so far in Turkish society; because  they keep their identity secret, Sabbateans, on the other hand, can and do enjoy  high positions in almost every field. The Sabbatean cemetery, which is  ostensibly Muslim, offers ample evidence: The tomb of a Supreme Court judge lies  next to that of an ex-leader of the Communist party, and near them stand the  graves of a general and a famous educator. Zorlu freely adds more big names to  the list of prominent Sabbateans, including Foreign Minister Ismail Cem, who,  claims Zorlu, used to have a Sabbatean surname (Cem has denied being a Sabbatean).  Zorlu also claims that former prime minister Tanso Ciler is a Sabbatean, as is  the wife of the current prime minister, Bulent Ecevit.
Many of the Sabbateans tend to be left-wing, academics and journalists - members  of the cultural elite. They're also quite affluent. All this puts them at odds  with Islamic extremists, traditional opponents of Turkey's democratic political  heritage. One of the leaders of the Young Turks, the late 19th-century reform  movement, was a Sabbatean, and the fundamentalists also hold that the founder of  the republic, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, who had some Saloniki roots, was part-Sabbatean.  "My great grandfather," Zorlu says proudly, "was Ataturk's  teacher in grade school."
Rifat Bali, a Jewish businessman and writer, who is well acquainted with the  Sabbateans, used to be Zorlu's friend and patron. They've since stopped  speaking; Bali wrote a scathing review of Zorlu's book in an academic  newsletter, accusing him of willingly playing into the hands of the  fundamentalists, and Zorlu wrote an equally aggressive reply.
"Ilgaz is like a missionary," says Bali. "If he really wanted to  be a Jew, that wouldn't be a problem. He could go to Israel and live as a Jew.  But that's not his real purpose. He wants to spread the word of Sabbateanism. He  knows that there isn't a solution to the problem, that the Sabbateans will never  convert and that the Jews will never accept them as they are.
"Ilgaz knows that the Sabbateans are in a very sensitive position,"  Bali continues. "They're prominent, they're part of the elite, and that's  why the fundamentalists target them. Even the word Doenmeh has very negative  connotations. Obviously they don't want the issue of Sabbateanism to be out in  the open. So why is Ilgaz doing it? He wants the topic to be in people's  consciousness."
  
 So, do followers of  Sabbatai Zevi still play an important role in contemporary Turkey, or is this  all just Byzantine conspiracy theorizing?
 
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer