Primary Source

Ethnic Minority Demonstrations in Bulgaria

Annotation

Since the 1950s, the Bulgarian government conducted campaigns to assimilate Macedonians, Pomaks (ethnic Bulgarian converts to Islam), Gypsies, and Turkish Muslims by requiring them to substitute Slavic names for their own. The government also prohibited the use of the Turkish language in public and forbid Muslims from practicing their religious and traditional cultural activities. In response to a series of demonstrations in May 1989 for Turkish rights, the Communist government expelled more than 300,000 Bulgarian Turks over the course of the year. With such a large portion of the population affected, Turkish rights in Bulgaria became one of leading human rights issues facing the Bulgarian government in the fall of 1989, and on November 10, 1989, the day after the fall of the Berlin Wall, leading figures in the Bulgarian Communist Party (BCP) forced Todor Zhivkov, Bulgaria’s leader for more than 35 years, to resign. The following communication from the American embassy in Sofia to Washington presents the step-by-step strategy of a leading Bulgarian human rights group seeking to reclaim ethnic minority rights, as related by its chairman, Rumen Vodenicharov.

Credits

U.S. Embassy in Bulgaria to U.S. Secretary of State, telegram, 29 December 1989, Cold War International History Project, Documents and Papers, CWIHP (accessed May 14, 2008).

How to Cite This Source

"Ethnic Minority Demonstrations in Bulgaria," in World History Commons, https://worldhistorycommons.org/ethnic-minority-demonstrations-bulgaria [accessed November 1, 2024]