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The place allotted to the Bulgarian
people in the Ottoman feudal political system entitled it to no
legal, religious, national, even biological rights as Bulgarian
Christians. They had all been reduced to the category of the so
called rayah (meaning 'a flock', attributed to the non-Muslim subjects
of the empire). The peasants who represented the better half of
the Bulgarian population were dispossessed of their land. According
to the Ottoman feudal system which remained effective until 1834,
all of it belonged to the central power in the person of the Turkish
sultan. The Bulgarians were allowed to cultivate only some plots.
Groups of rural Christian families, varying in number, were put
under an obligation to give part of their income to representatives
of the Muslim military, administrative and religious upper crust,
as well as to fulfil various state duties. The number of the families
liable to that payment was determined according to their position
in the Ottoman state, military and religious hierarchy. The establishment
of that kind of intercourse in agriculture - the fundamental pillar
of the economy at that time, clearly led to the total loss of motivation
for any real farming or and production improvements both among the
peasants and the feof-holders. The complex and incredibly burdensome
tax system forced the farmers to produce as much as needed for their
families' subsistence, while the feudals preferred to earn a lot
more from looting and from the incessantly successful wars waged
by the Ottoman empire in all directions until the end of the 17th
century.
The Ottoman Turkish state was founded on and propped up by the
dogmas of the Koran. At the beginning of the 15th century when the
empire prostrated from India to Gibraltar and from the mouth of
the Volga to Vienna, it proclaimed itself the supreme leader of
Islam - Prophet Mohammed's standard and sword, and a leader of the
Koran-prescribed perpetual jihad (holy war) against the world of
Christianity. It went without saying that under this conception
the Bulgarian Christians could not hope for any. access to even
the lowest levels of statecraft. The enormous imperial bureaucratic
machinery recruited its staff only from among Muslims.
The Bulgarian people was subjected to national and religious discrimination
unheard of in the annals of all European history. During court proceedings,
for example, a single Muslim's testimony was more than enough to
confute the evidence of dozens of Christian witnesses. The Bulgarians
were not entitled to building churches, setting up their offices
or even to wearing bright colors. Of the numerous taxes (about 80
in number) the so called 'fresh blood tax' (a levy of Christian
youths) was particularly heavy and humiliating. At regular intervals,
the authorities had the healthiest male- children taken away from
their parents, sent to the capital, converted into Islam and then
trained in combat skills. Raised and trained in the spirit of Islamic
fanaticism, the young men were conscripted in the so called janissary
corps, the imperial army of utmost belligerence known to have caused
so much trouble and suffering to both the Bulgarians and Christian
Europe.
The Turkish authorities exerted unabating pressure on parts of
the Bulgarian people to make them convert their faith and become
Muslims. That policy was meant to limit the Bulgarian ethnos parameters
and to increase the Turkish population numbers. For, according to
the medieval standards in that part of Europe, the affiliation of
a given people was determined by the religion it followed. With
a view to facilitating the assimilation process, the Turkish authorities
took the Christian names of those who had converted into Islam and
gave them Arab names instead.
A variety of ways and means was used in the assimilation of the
Bulgarian people. Some of these were the aforementioned 'blood tax,
and the regular kidnaping of children, pretty women, girls and young
men to Turkish families. Quite frequently, whole areas were encircled
by troops and their inhabitants forced to adopt Islam and new Arab
names, while the objectors were 'edifyingly' slain. In those cases,
however, the 'new Muslims' were allowed to go on living in the compact
Bulgarian environment, i.e. as a community which retained both its
language and its Bulgarian national consciousness. The present-day
Bulgarian Muslims representing about five percent of modern Bulgaria's
population, are descendants of those Mohammedanized Bulgarians,
whom the Bulgarian Christians used to call pomaks (from the Bulgarian
root-words macha or maka, meaning harassed or caused to suffer).
And yet the thousands of Bulgarians whom Bulgaria lost once and
for all were those who had been subjected to individual conversion
to Islam. For, it is only natural that having fallen into a community
of strangers, speaking a different language and practicing different
customs and faith, they had easily and quickly been assimilated.
The genocide carried out by the Ottoman Turks during hostilities
in the Bulgarian lands, at the time of uprising or riot suppression,
during the frequent spells of feudal anarchy, or even of Ottoman
troops move-ups from garrison stations to the battle-field, had
struck heavy blows on the Bulgarian nation. The Bulgarian Christian
population was treated as infidel and hostile and it was outlawed
even at the time of peace. Individual and mass emigration of Bulgarians
to foreign lands was another cause for no lesser losses to the Bulgarian
nation. There were times when whole regions became depopulated.
Thus, in 1688-1689 the whole of the north- eastern Bulgarian population
emigrated and in 1829-1830 the same thing happened with the population
of southeastern Bulgaria, Thrace, etc. Unprotected by Bulgarian
state, religious and cultural institutions the immigrants, with
only few exceptions, amalgamated into the people whose country had
received them. That was the way in which thousands of Bulgarian
immigrants had vanished in Romania, Hungary and Serbia.
During the l5th-l7th centuries the Bulgarian nation had suffered
a gradual but grave biological collapse which predetermined, to
a large extent, its demographic, economic, political and cultural
place in the European civilization. According to some Bulgarian
historians' estimations, the beginning of the Turkish oppression
in the 15th century found Bulgaria with a population of about 1.3
million. Those were the then demographic parameters of any of the
large European nations, for example, the population in the present-day
territories of England, France or Germany. One hundred years later,
the Bulgarians were already down to 260 000 people and remained
as many in the course of two more centuries. The demographic growth
was suppressed through genocide, Mohammedanization and emigration.
The biological collapse of the l5th-l7th centuries had repercussions
which are still being keenly felt. The Bulgarian nation, nowadays,
amounts to some ten million people while its European equals in
number, back in the 15th century, are now sixty to eighty million-strong.
The unbearable conditions during the Ottoman yoke could not deaden
the Bulgarians' anxiety for resistance. Deprived of social and political
organizations of their own, they were unable to undertake any sizeable
liberation initiatives. Thus, during the first centuries of the
oppression, armed resistance was only of local and sporadic nature.
The so-called haidouk movement was its most frequent manifestation.
The haidouks were brave Bulgarians who took refuge in the high-mountain
woods, organizing there small armed detachments and bringing them
down for merciless struggle against the provincial administrators.
This guerrila-type struggle continued for centuries on end (one
group destroyed was instantaneously replaced by another) and succeeded
in sustaining the morale of the Bulgarians by preserving, to some
extent, their properties and their honor. In some places, it even
had the authorities maintain more humane relationships with the
Bulgarian Christians. The haidouk movement indirectly encouraged
and safeguarded other forms of resistance such as maintaining the
style of life, the language, the traditions and the religion, or
incompliance with forced obligations and refusal to pay heavy unjustifed
tax.
Liberation uprisings were the supreme form of struggle against
the oppressors. The first one broke out still in 1408. Significant
uprisings, proclaiming the independence of Bulgaria, took place
in 1598, 1686, 1688 and 1689. They were connected with the anti-
Ottoman wars waged by the West European Catholic states with which
some Bulgarian representatives, mainly merchants and both Orthodox
and Catholic clergymen, had established joint venture contacts.
All insurrections were quelled and accompanied with inhuman atrocities.
The Bulgarian people were living through one of the most difficult
periods in its centuries long existence. It had been deprived of
its state, its church, its intelligently and its legitimate rights.
Furthermore, its survival as an ethnos had also been put at stake.
Linder the heel of that powerful, ruthless and uncivilized Asiatic
despotism, it lasted out but remained without any substantial material
and spiritual resources needed for its further development. Thus,
the Bulgarians, along with all the other European peoples which
had been engulfed by the Ottoman empire, were to lag some centuries
behind the attainments of present-day Europe.
Extract from the book "Bulgaria
Illustrated History"
Bojidar Dimitrov, PhD., Autor
Vyara Kandjieva, Photographer
Dimiter Angelov, Photographer Antoniy Handjiysky, Photographer
Maria Nikolotva, Translator
Published by BORIANA Publishing House, Sofia,Bulgaria
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