72 · Ömer Turan
- Iancu, Jews in Romania, 68–76, 184.
- Raphael Vago, “Romanian Jewry during the Interwar Period,” in The
Tragedy of Romanian Jewry, ed. Randolph L. Braham (New York: Columbia Uni-
versity Press, 1994), 29–56. - Alexander Kitroeff, “Approaches to the Study of the Holocaust in the Bal-
kans,” in Holocaust Literature: A Handbook of Critical, Historical, and Literary Writ-
ings, ed. Saul S. Friedman (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1993), 301–20. - Jean Ancel, “German-Romanian Relations during the Second World
War,” in The Tragedy of Romanian Jewry, ed. Braham, 57–76; Radu Florian, “The
Antonescu Regime: History and Mystification,” ibid., 77–116; and Radu Ioanid,
“The Antonescu Era,” ibid., 117–72. See also Randolph L. Braham, ed., The De-
struction of Romanian and Ukrainian Jews during the Antonescu Era (Boulder: Social
Science Monographs; New York: Columbia University Press, 1997). - Hildrun Glass, “Romanian Jews in the Early Years of Communist Rule:
Notes on the Myth of ‘Jewish Communism,’“ Jews and Slavs, ed. Moskovich et
al., 12:101–108. - Popovic, Balkanlarda Islam , 127.
- Müstecip Ülküsal, Dobruca ve Türkler, 2nd ed. (Ankara: Türk Kültürünü
Araştırma Enstitüsü, 1987), 38–58. - Irsel Abdula, “Türkiye-Romanya Arasında Göç ve Göçmen Meselesi
(1878–1940)” (master’s thesis, University of Ankara, 2005), 60–106. - Ülküsal, Dobruca ve Türkler, 245–53.
- For further information on the effect of 1877–78 Ottoman-Russian War on
Bulgarian Turks and their situation during the Bulgarian Principality, see Turan,
The Turkish Minority, 119–296. - For anti-Semitic publications of that period, see Paounovsky, “Anti-Sem-
itism in Bulgaria,” 60–65. - Ömer Turan, “Turkish Migration from Bulgaria,” in Forced Ethnic Migra-
tions on the Balkans: Consequences and Rebulding of Societies (Sofia: IMIR, 2006),
84–85. - Paounovsky, “Anti-Semitism in Bulgaria,” 65.
- Boyka Vassileva, “The Jewish Community in Bulgaria in the 1940s,” in
Last Ottoman Century, ed. Rozen, 2:239–45. When the Vardar Region of Macedo-
nia was occupied by Bulgaria in April 1941, there were about 8,000 Jews living
in that region. “The Jews who survived brought to the Jewish cemetery of Butel-
Skopje urns containing ashes from Treblinka, where 7,315 Macedonian Jews had
been put to death.” Maria Pandevska, “The Rescue of the Jews of Macedonia
(1941–1943): Options and Opportunities,” in Last Ottoman Century , ed. Rozen,
2:247–57. - Vassileva, “Jewish Community in Bulgaria,” 240–43.
- Paounovsky, “Anti-Semitism in Bulgaria,” 74–75.
- Vassileva, “Jewish Community in Bulgaria,” 243–45.
- Paounovsky, “Anti-Semitism in Bulgaria,” 75–76.