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Re-Defining Jewish Identities in Post-Ottoman Bulgaria -- Markus Wien

Re-Defining Jewish Identities in Post-Ottoman Bulgaria -- Markus Wien

Re-Defining Jewish Identities in Post-Ottoman Bulgaria -- Markus Wien

Joseph and Rebecca Meyerhoff Program and Center for Jewish Studies Wednesday, November 16, 2016 12:30 pm - 2:00 pm Susquehanna Hall, 4116

The paper will address some of the problems the Bulgarian Jewish community was confronted with after the founding of the Bulgarian nation state, which resulted from the Russian-Ottoman War of 1877-78. Without any transition period, the Jews of Bulgaria, who had identified themselves up to this point as part of the Sephardic Jewry within the Ottoman Empire, found themselves being forced to find their position as a community inside a nation state that defined its identity on the basis of ethnicity. The developments resulting from this situation were complicated and influenced by factors such as the continuing language separation (Judezmo vs. Bulgarian) or the overwhelming growth of Zionism among the Bulgarian Jews during the decades following the events of 1878.

Markus Wien is Professor of European History at the American University in Bulgaria. His research is focused on Bulgaria and Southeast Europe - mainly in the fields of social and economic history as well as the history of minorities. He has published a monograph about German-Bulgarian Economic Relations 1918-1944. He is currently working on a book that will try to discuss the position of the Bulgarian Jewry as a "national minority" from a comparative, Southeast European perspective.

Add to Calendar 11/16/16 12:30 PM 11/16/16 2:00 PM America/New_York Re-Defining Jewish Identities in Post-Ottoman Bulgaria -- Markus Wien

The paper will address some of the problems the Bulgarian Jewish community was confronted with after the founding of the Bulgarian nation state, which resulted from the Russian-Ottoman War of 1877-78. Without any transition period, the Jews of Bulgaria, who had identified themselves up to this point as part of the Sephardic Jewry within the Ottoman Empire, found themselves being forced to find their position as a community inside a nation state that defined its identity on the basis of ethnicity. The developments resulting from this situation were complicated and influenced by factors such as the continuing language separation (Judezmo vs. Bulgarian) or the overwhelming growth of Zionism among the Bulgarian Jews during the decades following the events of 1878.

Markus Wien is Professor of European History at the American University in Bulgaria. His research is focused on Bulgaria and Southeast Europe - mainly in the fields of social and economic history as well as the history of minorities. He has published a monograph about German-Bulgarian Economic Relations 1918-1944. He is currently working on a book that will try to discuss the position of the Bulgarian Jewry as a "national minority" from a comparative, Southeast European perspective.

Susquehanna Hall