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The Balkan Reconquista and Turkey's Forgotten Refugee Crisis

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During the Russo-Ottoman War of 1877–1878, Russian troops, Cossack auxiliaries, and local Bulgarians participated in what today would be called ethnic cleansing. Tensions in the Balkans between Christians and Muslims ended in disaster when hundreds of thousands of Muslims were massacred, raped, and forced to flee from Bulgaria to Turkey as their villages were sacked and their homes destroyed.

In this book, William H. Holt tells the story of a people and moment in time that has largely been neglected in modern Turkish and Balkan memory. Holt uncovers the reasons for this mass forgetting, finding context both within the development of the modern Turkish state and the workings of collective memory. Bringing together a wide array of eyewitness accounts, the book provides unprecedented detail on the plight of the Muslim refugees in their flight from Bulgaria, in Istanbul, and in their resettlement in Anatolia. In crisp, clear, and engaging prose, Holt offers an insightful analysis of human suffering and social memory.

Table of Contents:
List of Figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Twilight in Turkey-in-Europe
2. Bag and Baggage
3. Massacre and Expulsion
4. Refuge and Resettlement
5. Aphasia and Amnesia
Epilogue
Chronology
Notes
Works Cited
Index

Praise and Reviews:
“Holt presents new data, a discourse about the lack of data, and frames the problem within new theories about memory and history. At the same time, the book is very engaging, even when the subject matter is dark and disturbing. Holt has a good writing style that flows and does not become overly technical. It is accessible for the general reader as well as for the college student.”
—Pam Sezgin, professor of anthropology and history, University of North Georgia

“A much-needed account of a forgotten trauma: the massacres, flight and expulsion of Muslims from the Balkans after 1876, focusing on what is now Bulgaria. William Holt’s compelling narrative illuminates the nature of memory and nationalism, as well as the origins of ethnic cleansing in the Balkans.”
—Philip Mansel, author of Constantinople, City of the World’s Desire

344 pages, Hardcover

Published September 30, 2019

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William H. Holt

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Dogan Gurer.
25 reviews1 follower
June 26, 2024
93 Harbi sonrasında Bulgar ve Rusların yaptıkları etnik temizlik neticesinde Türkiye'ye göçen soydaşlarımızı ve o zamanki devletin aldığı ve alamadığı önlemleri anlatan bir kitap. Yazar Balkanların Türksüzleştirilmesi sürecinde Türklerin maruz kaldığı felaketin bizzat bizim tarafımızdan unutulmasının nedenlerini inceliyor. Yazara göre Anadolu toprakları üzerinde yükselen yeni Türk ulusunun hafızasına Balkan Türklerinin soykırıma maruz kalmasıyla sonuçlanan 93 harbi yenilgisinin konulmasındansa, kurtuluş savaşı zaferinin konulması ve bu yenilginin unutulması bilinçli bir hareket.
Profile Image for cutebunnythe3rd.
44 reviews
May 30, 2026
Such an amazing book from every angle, it concisely summarizes Bulgaria's complex ethnice makeup before the end of Ottaman rule. Accurately and unbiased portrays the events leading up the Bulgarian Horrors and then the actual events and international perception. It then gives the same attention, care and unbiased portrail of the unspoken violence against the Turks as they were expelled from Bulgaria during the war. And to top it all of Holt offers an amazing threefols explanation of why this history is not actively remembered and part of the Turkish national identity. I can't reccomend this book more, it truely is so concise, eye opening and readable.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews