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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.
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