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‘A Country With No Antisemitism’: Official Discourse and Educational Narratives of the Rescue of the Bulgarian Jews during World War II

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In 1976, German political scientist Wolf Oschlies published Bulgaria – A Country with No Antisemitism. Since then, the slogan ‘A Country with No Antisemitism’ has circulated in Bulgaria as evidence of international recognition of the so-called ‘Rescue of Bulgarian Jews during World War II.’ Official Holocaust remembrance policies rely heavily on this discourse, presenting Bulgaria as the only country in German-controlled Europe to have saved its entire Jewish population from Nazi extermination camps. This celebratory framing serves as proof of civic values and ethnic tolerance, while marginalizing the fate of Jews in territories administered by Bulgaria during the war.

This article examines how that official discourse is translated into educational narratives through state requirements and history textbooks. It asks what Bulgarian students are expected to learn about the ‘rescue’ and the rescuers of the Jews, and analyzes how the theme is presented in terms of scope, depth, and emphasis. The findings show that textbooks largely reproduce the official discourse, but in the form of simplified narratives that place collective ‘rescue’ at the center, silence Jewish voices, and obscure contradictions in Bulgaria’s wartime policies. The article concludes by discussing the implications of these representations for Bulgaria’s nation-building strategies, as well as for the projection of a positive national image abroad.

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Link to article (paywalled), ‘A Country With No Antisemitism’: Official Discourse and Educational Narratives of the Rescue of the Bulgarian Jews during World War II

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Popivanov, Boris ‘A Country With No Antisemitism’: Official Discourse and Educational Narratives of the Rescue of the Bulgarian Jews during World War II. The Journal of Holocaust Research. 2026:  https://archive.jpr.org.uk/10.1080/25785648.2026.2630600