Никогаш не сум слушнал дека царот Борис III сака да депортира или убие Евреи. Тој самиот имал еврејски советници во палатата. Кој бил одговорен, бил суден на меѓународен воен суд. Не знам да има пресуда против Бугарија за учество во Холокаустот.
Само мал дел од тоа што никогаш не си слушнал.
Anti-Jewish propaganda gradually intensified with Bulgaria's rising economic and political dependence on Nazi Germany. This led to the introduction of antisemitic legislation, starting with the Law for Protection of the Nation in 1940. This restricted the civil rights of Jews and was complemented by further laws, such as the establishment of a Commission on Jewish Affairs on 29 August 1942. The commission was tasked with the organisation of the expulsion of Jews and the liquidation of their property. This Act can be interpreted as the immediate precursor of the decision to deport Jews to extermination camps in March 1943
The Jews whose deportation from Bulgaria was halted, including all Sofia's 25,743 Jews,[6][7] nonetheless had their property confiscated,[8][9][10] were forcibly relocated within the country, and all Jewish males between the ages of 20 and 40 were sent into forced labour battalions until September 1944
From 1942 all Jews were entirely denied military status, whether officers, NCOs, or other ranks. Administration of Jewish forced labour was transferred to the civilian Ministry of Public Works or OSPB (
Ministerstvo na obshtestvenite sgradi, pŭtishtata i blagoustroistvoto), within which a new "Bureau of Temporary Labour" or OVTP (
Otdel vremenna trudova povinnost) was set up, and forced labour units of Jews, Turks, ethnic Serbs, and "unemployed" (that is, Roma) were attached to new OVTP labour battalions.
[16] The word "temporary" in the OVTP's name presaged the genocide planned for them
Between early 1943 and late 1944 nearly all Bulgaria's surviving Jews were confined involuntarily to ghettos and transit camps as well as to the labour camps and prisons. The first evictions were those from Sofia and
Kazanlak, whose deported Jews were distributed to the temporary ghettos as planned. Their belongings were seized and the property inventoried and sold at auction by the Jewish Affairs Commissariat.
[55] Sofia's Jews were expelled from the 24 May 1943