Book Page
Communist gender policies were often violent, placing many people, particularly women, in difficult and marginalized positions. Targeted individuals were rarely consulted, yet their clothing and bodily practices were consistently policed…
Communist gender policies were often violent, placing many people, particularly women, in difficult and marginalized positions. Targeted individuals were rarely consulted, yet their clothing and bodily practices were consistently policed…
The CC Zhenotdel believes that kalym [bride money] must be abolished for all ethnic groups in the Turkestan Republic that use kalym, e.g., the Uzbek, Kirgiz, Turkmen, Uighur and other…
Machine-gunner Mashuk Mahmetova, a Kazakh girl volunteer, fought till her last breath, repulsing three successive enemy counterattacks. Nineteen-year-old Alia Maldagulova, another Kazakh girl, was an expert scout and supplied our…
Behind the veil lay our political backwardness, behind the veil lay theilliteracy of the Muslim women, behind the veil lay the hard, slavish lifeof an unequal woman in Bosnia and…
Communist Gender Policies Towards Muslim Minorities in Eastern Europe
Project aims, research questions and deliverables.
Learn more about our international research team led by Dr Ivan Simić
March 2021 - Dr Simic will deliver a lecture at Jena, Germany April 2021 - Dr Simic will deliver a lecture at Stockholm, Sweden
In 1951 the Yugoslav Communist Party launched an aggressive veil lifting campaign that targeted Muslim women. New legislation outlawed wearing the veil and introduced severe punishment for those who by any means pressured women to wear the veil. At the same time, the Party’s activists across the country monitored if the law was enforced. The activists entered houses, demolished high fence walls around them, and pressured people to appear in public unveiled. The campaign followed a series of interventions into Muslim communities, including mandatory elementary education for girls, a ban on underage marriage, and the replacement of Sharia law with the universal Yugoslav law on marriage. All of these policies were based on Soviet models, despite the Yugoslav conflict with the Soviet Union in 1948. Similar processes occurred in socialist Bulgaria a decade later. The Bulgarian state initiated several campaigns to direct and control the garment choices of Muslim women. After numerous assimilation attempts, the communist government forcefully extradited hundreds of thousands of Muslims in the late 1980s.
In the first three years this project will bring forward several academic outcomes focusing on knowledge sharing, knowledge translation, academic training and academic publishing.
Welcome to WordPress. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start writing!