
A.O.T.A.
605 posts






Defne Samyeli: “Türk’üm, olmadığım bir şeyi de söylemem. Ulusalcıyım, asker çocuğuyum zaten. Biz evde İstiklal Marşı’nı duyduğumuzda ayağa kalkarak büyüdük. Yani kanımızın son damlasına kadar Atatürkçüyüz, öyle de öleceğiz inşallah.” (Çapa TV YouTube Kanalı)




Erased by Agreement: The Silent Deportation of the Albanians. In the aftermath of World War II, Tito’s Yugoslavia pursued a calculated policy of identity engineering. The codification of the Macedonian language in 1945, crafted to resemble neither Serbian nor Bulgarian, was less a linguistic reform than a geopolitical maneuver, designed to fracture historical claims and consolidate internal control. Within this strategy unfolded a lesser-known chapter: the silent deportation of over 400,000 Albanians to Turkey between 1953 and 1966. Carried out without formal declaration, this operation rested on a tacit agreement with Ankara. No treaty was signed, yet its implementation was systematic. Albanians were coerced by the UDBA (Yugoslav Secret Police) to register as Turks, refusal meant persecution or disappearance. Albanian Schools were closed, names changed, identities erased. Turkey accepted the migrants, but on the condition that Albanian identity vanish. Assimilation was not an option, it was a precondition. This was not migration, but ethnic cleansing through bureaucratic means. A violence without blood, but not without cost: generations severed from their language, history, and memory. A people erased not by war, but by consensus. The underlying ideology motivating Tito for his devious plans was the appropriation of Macedonian heritage of Alexander the Great from native Macedonians (Albanians) in Yugoslavia after Slavs annexed Albanian lands with the help of Russia after Berlin Treaty also signed by Turkey. #history #albania















Prishtina is ready… our opponents are in for a special night 💪 #KOSTUR | 🇽🇰🇹🇷


























