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Turks and Tatars in Bulgaria and the Balkans

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Ali Eminov*
Affiliation:
Division of Social Sciences, Wayne State College, U.S.A.

Extract

      The Koran and the Bible are God's grace Which is what all four holy Books embrace; To scorn and segregate this or that race Would be the darkest stains on one's face.
      Aşik Veysel

Nationalist movements everywhere aim to create “territorially bounded political units (states) out of homogeneous cultural communities (nations).” Unfortunately, ethnic, linguistic, religious, political, and personal identities rarely coincide with geographical boundaries that enclose nation states. There are always groups within nation states whose identities are different from the majority. The leaders of nation states often see the presence of multiple ethnic communities within a single nation state as a sign of tension and instability, a threat to the integrity and indeed the very survival of a nation state. Consequently, they seek ways to culturally homogenize the nation so that the state and the nation come to coincide with one another.

Type
The Muslim Minorities
Copyright
Copyright © 2000 Association for the Study of Nationalities 

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References

Notes

1. Loring Danforth, “Nationalism in Eastern Europe: Nations, States, and Minorities,” Cultural Survival, 1995, Vol. 19, No. 2, p. 3.Google Scholar

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27. The most comprehensive description of the rich cultural life of Turkish and Tatar communities in Romanian Dobruca remains Ülküsal's Dobruca ve Türkler (Dobruca and the Turks). It was originally published in Constanta in 1940. After emigrating to Turkey, the author rewrote, expanded, and updated the monograph and it was published in Ankara in 1966.Google Scholar

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29. King, Minorities under Communism , p. 48.Google Scholar

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31. Ibid., p. 172. In Bulgaria the Shiites are known as Alevi, Aliani, or more generally as Kizilbash (“red head”) after their traditional headgear with 12 stripes representing the 12 imams. Most of the Kizilbash settled in Dobruca in large numbers, either voluntarily or by being deported there from Anatolia by the Ottoman authorities between the fifteenth and seventeenth centuries. Traditionally the Kizilbash were associated with various Sufi orders active in the Balkans during the Ottoman period. Since the Kizilbash were considered “heterodox,” even heretical, by the majority Sunnis, they were subject to periodic persecutions. In the face of such persecution, they have adopted the strategy of concealment in an attempt to maintain their true identity, “outwardly professing to be orthodox Sunnis to their Turkish or Bulgarian neighbors, or alternately claiming to be Bektashis, depending on who is addressing them” (H. T. Norris, Islam in the Balkans, p. 98). Besides concealment, village and confessional endogamy have helped them maintain their religious identity and traditions. According to the 1992 census, there were 85,773 Shiites in Bulgaria, accounting for 7.7% of the Muslim population in Bulgaria. For more information on origins of the Kizilbash and their relationship to Sufi brotherhoods, see Frederick De Jong, “Notes on Islamic Mystical Brotherhoods in Northeast Bulgaria,” Der Islam, Vol. 63, 1986, pp. 303308, and “Problems Concerning the Origins of the Qizilbas in Bulgaria: Remnants of the Saffaviya?” Academia Nazionale dei Lincei (Rome), Vol. 25, 1993, pp. 203215.Google Scholar

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33. De Jong, “The Turks and Tatars in Romania,” p. 175.Google Scholar

34. Ülküsal, Dobruca ve Türkler, pp. 105125, 155–163, 231239, provides a wealth of information on Turkish educational institutions and organizations, the Turkish press, and Turkish cultural associations in Romania prior to World War II as well as information about the impact of communist rule on these institutions.Google Scholar

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36. Anuarul Statistic al Ramaniei , pp. 274277.Google Scholar

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38. De Jong, “The Turks and Tatars in Romania,” p. 169.Google Scholar

39. Frederick De Jong, “Muslim Minorities in the Balkans on the Eve of the Collapse of Communism,” Islamic Studies, Vol. 36, 1997, p. 416.Google Scholar

40. For example, according to Ülküsal there were 122 mosques in the province of Constanta and 29 in the province of Tulcea. During the 1980s there were about 50 mosques open to worship in the entire Romanian Dobruca.Google Scholar

41. De Jong, “The Turks and Tatars in Romania,” pp. 180181.Google Scholar

42. Ibid., pp. 182183.Google Scholar

43. De Jong, “The Muslim Minorities in the Balkans,” p. 416.Google Scholar

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45. Natsionalen Statisticheski Institut, Rezultati ot Prebrojavaneto na Naselenieto: Demografski Kharakteristiki , 1994, p. 106.Google Scholar

46. Helsinki Watch, Destroying Ethnic Identity: The Gypsies of Bulgaria (New York: Human Rights Watch, 1991), pp. 6970.Google Scholar

47. Ibid., p. 71.Google Scholar

48. Ibid.Google Scholar

49. Ibid., p. 72.Google Scholar

50. Nedim Ipek, Rumeli'den Anadolu'ya Türk Göcleri, 1877–1890 (Ankara: Türk Tarik Kurumu Basimevi, 1994), pp. 4041. Crampton, ‘The Turks of Bulgaria,” pp. 4378, provides a detailed discussion of changes in the ethnic composition of the population of Bulgaria as a whole, and especially of the urban population between 1878 and 1944.Google Scholar

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52. Natsionalen Statisticheski Institut, Demografska Kharakteristika na Bulgarija (Rezultati ot 2% Izvadka): Prebrojavane na Naselenieto I Zhilishtnija Fond kum 4 Kekemvri 1992 Godina (Sofia: Natsionalen Statisticheski Institut, 1993), p. 92.Google Scholar

53. Bilal Simisir, The Turks of Bulgaria, 1878–1985 (London: K. Rustem & Brother, 1988), pp. 1330.Google Scholar

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55. Jan F. Triska, ed., “Bulgaria,” in Constitutions of the Communist Party States (Stanford: Hoover Institutions on War, Revolution, and Peace, 1968), p. 163.Google Scholar

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57. Simsir, The Turks of Bulgaria , p. 155.Google Scholar

58. Todorova, “Ottoman Legacy in the Balkans,” p. 64.Google Scholar

59. See Djeni Madjarov, “Adaptation—Reality and Image,” in The Ethnic Situation in Bulgaria Today (Sofia: Club ‘90, 1993), pp. 104121.Google Scholar

60. Sofia Press Agency, The Constitution of the Republic of Bulgaria (Sofia, 1991), p. 11.Google Scholar

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62. Ibid., p. 65.Google Scholar

63. This is a long poem by Süleyman Celebi celebrating the birth of the Prophet Muhammad. It is chanted either in memory of a dead person or to mark a special religious or other important occasion.Google Scholar

64. For a more extended discussion of government attitudes to Islam and Muslims, see Eminov, Turkish and Other Muslim Minorities , pp. 24121, and Poulton, The Balkans, pp. 153161.Google Scholar

65. Ilona Tomova and Plamen Bogoev, “Minorities in Bulgaria: A Report of the International Conference on the Minorities, Rome 1991,” The Insider, Vol. 2, 1992, pp. 115.Google Scholar

66. Both chief muftis were Turkish speakers. The socialist governments supported Nedim Gendzhev for two reasons: to reward a loyal supporter, and to punish Turkish speakers who had voted overwhelmingly for non-socialist candidates in all of the elections held since 1989.Google Scholar

67. See Natsionalen Statisticheski Institut, Demografska Kharakteristika na Bulgaria , pp. 57113; Höpken, “From Religious Identity to Ethnic Mobilization,” pp. 7475.Google Scholar

68. Daniel Bates, “What's in a Name? Minorities, Identity, and Politics in Bulgaria,” Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power, Vol. 1, 1994, p. 202.Google Scholar

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70. Daniel Bates, “The Ethnic Turks and the Bulgarian Elections of October 1991,” Turkish Review of Balkan Studies , 1993.Google Scholar

71. Sofia Press Agency, The Constitution of the Republic of Bulgaria , (Sofia: Sofia Press Agency), p. 6.Google Scholar

72. East European Constitutional Review, “Turkish Party in Bulgaria Allowed to Continue,” Vol. 1, No. 2 (Chicago: Centre for the Study of Constitutionalism in Eastern Europe at the University of Chicago Law School, 1992), pp. 1112.Google Scholar

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75. Ath. Angelopoulos, “Population Distribution of Greece Today According to Language, National Consciousness and Religion,” Balkan Studies, Vol. 20, 1979, pp. 125126.Google Scholar

76. Ibid., p. 129.Google Scholar

77. See Anastasia Karakasidou, “Politicizing Culture: Negating Macedonian Identity in Northern Greece,” Journal of Modern Greek Studies, Vol. 11, 1993, pp. 128; “Sacred Scholars, Profane Advocates: Intellectuals Molding National Consciousness in Greece,” Identities, Vol. 1, 1994, pp. 3561.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

78. Anastasia Karakasidou, “Vestiges of the Ottoman Past: Muslims under Siege in Contemporary Greek Thrace,” Cultural Survival, Vol. 19, 1995, p. 71.Google Scholar

79. For specific examples of persecution of individuals who challenge the official Greek position on the ethnic identity of Muslims, see Human Rights Watch, Greece: The Turks of Western Thrace .Google Scholar

80. Angelopoulos, “Population Distribution of Greece Today,” pp. 126127.Google Scholar

81. The drawing of territorial boundaries after the Balkan Wars and World War I had split the Bulgarian-speaking Muslim communities between Bulgaria, Greece, and Yugoslavia.Google Scholar

82. Angelopoulos, “Population Distribution in Greece Today,” p. 128.Google Scholar

83. Yorgos Christidis, “The Muslim minority in Greece,” in Gerd Nonneman, Tim Niblock and Bogdan Szajakowski, eds, Muslim Communities in the New Europe , (Reading, UK: Ithaca Press, 1996), pp. 153154.Google Scholar

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85. Poulton, “Changing Notions of National Identity,” pp. 8586; Tatjana Seypel, “The Pomaks of Northwestern Greece: An Endangered Balkan Population,” Journal Institute of Muslim Minority Affairs, Vol. 10, 1989, pp. 4149. The Greek government embarked upon a policy to assimilate the Bulgarian-speaking Muslims, the Pomaks, into the Turkish population by requiring them to attend Turkish-language schools and forcing them to identify themselves as Turks. This policy was embraced wholeheartedly by Turkish speakers in Greece as well as by the Republic of Turkey. This practice was ended in the 1950s as the relations between Greece and Turkey deteriorated over the Cyprus question. However, the consistent denial of the Bulgarian ethnicity of Pomaks forced many Pomaks to draw closer to the Turkish community, believing that Turkey as a kin state would protect the interests of all Muslims in Greece. Consequently, over the years, most Pomaks in Western Thrace have come to “manifest a Turkish national consciousness in part through enculturation and education in minority [Turkish] schools and through intermarriage with ethnic Turks.” Karakasidou, “Vestiges of the Ottoman past,” p. 71. This certainly was not the intention of the Greek authorities.Google Scholar

86. Poulton, “Changing Notions of Identity,” p. 86.Google Scholar

87. The relationship between the Greek Orthodox Church and the Greek government is unique among European Union member countries. Not only is the Greek Orthodox Church the official religion in Greece but it is so powerfully established in popular consciousness that being a Christian and a Greek are synonymous. Moreover, the Church is in the vanguard of Hellenism and Greek nationalism and has enormous influence on government policies toward its Muslim minority and toward Turkey. The messages of Archbishop Christodoulos are full of the virtues of Hellenism and hard nationalism. He takes every opportunity to give vent to his hostility toward the Turks, whom he calls “eastern barbarians,” calls upon Greeks to mobilize to “liberate Constantinople,” and, on his visits to Western Thrace, urges Greeks to defend Orthodoxy against Muslims, with weapons if necessary. See “Greece's Nationalist Archbishop,” The Economist , 12 December 1998, p. 53.Google Scholar

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90. Human Rights Watch, “Greece: Improvements for Turkish Minority: Problems Remain,” (New York: Human Rights Watch, 1992).Google Scholar

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