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*Massacres against Turks and Muslims during the Balkan Wars in the hands of ], ] and ] are described in detail in the 1912 Carnegie Endowment report.<ref>Carnegie Report, ''Macedonian Muslims during the Balkan Wars'',1912</ref>Hupchick estimates that nearly 1,5 million Muslims died and 400,000 became refugees as a result of the Balkan Wars.<ref>Hupchick, 2002, pp.321</ref> |
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*Massacres against Turks and Muslims during the Balkan Wars in the hands of ], ] and ] are described in detail in the 1912 Carnegie Endowment report.<ref>Carnegie Report, ''Macedonian Muslims during the Balkan Wars'',1912</ref>Hupchick estimates that nearly 1,5 million Muslims died and 400,000 became refugees as a result of the Balkan Wars.<ref>Hupchick, 2002, pp.321</ref> |
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*On May 14th 1919 a fleet of British, American and French warships brought an entire Greek division into the harbour of Izmir. The landing was followed by a general slaughter of the Turkish population. Greek gangs roamed the streets looting and killing. As the Greek army pushed into Anatolia the local population was subjected to massacres, ravaging and raping.<ref>Shaw,Stanford J. Shaw, Ezel Kural ''"History of the Ottoman Empire and modern Turkey, Volume 2"'' Cambridge University Press 2002 pp.342 </ref> |
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*On May 14th 1919 a fleet of British, American and French warships brought an entire Greek division into the harbour of Izmir. The landing was followed by a general slaughter of the Turkish population. Greek gangs roamed the streets looting and killing. As the Greek army pushed into Anatolia the local population was subjected to massacres, ravaging and raping.<ref>Shaw,Stanford J. Shaw, Ezel Kural ''"History of the Ottoman Empire and modern Turkey, Volume 2"'' Cambridge University Press 2002 pp.342 </ref> |
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==Crimea== |
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{{main|Crimea#Russian Empire and Civil War: 1783–1922}} |
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The ] (1853–1856) devastated much of the economic and social infrastructure of Crimea. The ] had to flee from their homeland ''en masse'', forced by the conditions created by the war, persecution and land expropriations. Those who survived the trip, famine and disease, resettled in ], ], and other parts of the ]. Finally, the Russian government decided to stop the process, as the agriculture began to suffer due to the unattended fertile farmland. |
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==Migration and Expulsion of Turks from Bulgaria to Turkey== |
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{{main|Turks in Bulgaria#Migration and Expulsion of Turks from Bulgaria to Turkey}} |
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{| class="wikitable" style="margin:left ; width:20%" |
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|+ Migration and Expulsion to Turkey, 1878–1989'' |
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|-valign=top align=left |
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!width=5%| '''Years''' |
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!width=10%| '''Total''' |
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| 1877–78 |
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| 130,000 - 1 000,000<ref>R.J.Crampton 1997, p.426</ref><ref>Hupchick 2002, pp.265</ref><ref>Karpat, Kemal H. "Studies on Ottoman social and political history: selected articles and essays" 2004 pp.764</ref> |
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|- align=left |
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| 1912–1930 |
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| 240,000<ref>Traian Stoianovich: "Balkan worlds: the first and last Europe" pp.200 </ref> |
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| 1931-1939 |
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| 100,000<ref>Traian Stoianovich: "Balkan worlds: the first and last Europe" pp.200 </ref> |
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|- align=left |
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| 1950-1951 |
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| 150,000<ref>Traian Stoianovich: "Balkan worlds: the first and last Europe" pp.200 </ref> |
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|- align=left |
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| 1969-1974 |
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| 52,000<ref>Suzan Ilcan: "Longing in belonging: the cultural politics of settlement " pp.78 </ref> |
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|- align=left |
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| 1979 |
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| 50,000<ref>R. J. Crampton: "A short history of modern Bulgaria " pp.190 </ref> |
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| 1989 |
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| 320,000<ref>U.S. Committee for Refugees, Immigration and Refugee Services of America - Social Science p.176</ref> |
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====Official Recognition of ]==== |
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The Bulgarian Parliamentary Committee on Human Rights and Religious Freedom approved in February 2010 a declaration, condemning the Communist regime's attempt to forcefully assimilate the country's ethnic Turkish population. The Committee declared the forceful expulsion of 360 000 Turks in 1989 as a form of ]. The committee requested the Bulgarian judiciary and the Chief Prosecutor to renew the case against the architects of the ].<ref> Bulgaria MPs Move to Declare Revival Process as Ethnic Cleansing</ref><ref> Парламентът осъжда възродителния процес</ref> |
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==Muhajir (Caucasus)== |
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{{main|Muhajir (Caucasus)}} |
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{{:Muhajir (Caucasus)}} |
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==See also== |
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==See also== |
As the Ottoman Turkish Empire entered a permanent phase of decline in the late 17th century it was engaged in a protracted state of conflict loosing territories both in Europe and the Caucasus. The victors were the Christian States the old Habsburg and Romanov Empires and the new nation states of Greece, Serbia, Romania and Bulgaria.Rival European powers encouraged the development of nationalist ideologies among the Ottoman subjects in which the Muslims were portrayed as an ethnic “fifth column” leftover from a previous era that could not be integrated into the planned future states. The struggle to rid them selves of Ottomans became an important element of the self-identification of the Balkan Christians.
According to Mark Levene, the Victorian public in the 1870s paid much more attention to the massacres and expulsions of Christians than to massacres and expulsions of Muslims, even if on a greater scale. He further suggests that such massacres were even favored by some circles.
Mark Levene also argues that the dominant powers, by supporting "nation-statism" at the Berlin Congress legitimized "the primary instrument of Balkan nation-building": ethnic cleansing.
Justin McCarty estimates that between 1821 and 1922 around five and a half million Muslims were driven out of Europe and five million more were killed or died of disease and starvation while fleeing. Cleansing occurred as a result of the Serbian and Greek independence in the 1820s and 1830s, the Russo-Turkish War 1877-1878, and culminating in the Balkan Wars 1912-1913. Mann describes these acts as “murderous ethnic cleansing on stupendous scale not previously seen in Europe” referring to the 1914 Carnegie Endowment report.It is estimated that at the turn of the 20th century there were 4,4 million Muslims living in the Balkan zone of Ottoman control.More than one million Muslims left the Balkans in the last three decades of the nineteenth century.Between 1912 and 1926 nearly 2,9 million Muslims were either killed or forced to emigrate to Turkey.It is estimated that in the course of the World War I and the Turkish War of Independence 2,5 million Muslims died in Anatolia while hundreds of thousands of refugees arrived from former Ottoman territories and Russia.