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From War To Whittlesea: Oral Histories of Macedonian Child Refugees
By Macedonian Welfare Workers’ Network of Victoria
From War to Whittlesea is a book of recollections
and reflections - dramatic, insightful, passionate
and compassionate - from some of the 28,000 Macedonian
child refugees who were evacuated from their homes
in northern Greece between 1948 and 1949 during the
Macedonian struggle for independence in the Greek
Civil War.

The story of the child refugees or “detsa begaltsi”
remains one of the most powerful events of modern
Macedonian history and its effects are still felt
in Macedonian communities around the world.
Five of the oral histories are from child refugees,
the sixth is from the mother of one of the children.
The six individuals are from the villages of Bapchor,
Lagen, Neret and Krushoradi. All are now Australian
residents.
Each story is made all the more moving by the fact
that the refugees were only children. The stories
tell of village life before the war, the destruction
wrought by Greek soldiers and their American and
British allies, separation from parents and family,
the journey to Eastern Europe, growing up in foreign
lands, and their eventual arrival in Australia and
how they rebuilt their lives here.
Their experiences are similar to those witnessed
recently in Bosnia and Kosovo; yet the Macedonian
refugee experience from northern Greece predates
these events by 50 years and is still unfolding as
the refugees, now in their 50s and 60s, use their
growing maturity and insight to understand the events
and experiences that changed the lives of all Macedonians
from northern Greece.
The book is $15 including postage
in Australia, overseas airmail is A$20.
From War To Whittlesea, Paperback, 96 pages, Four colour celloglazed
cover, 30 photographs and illustrations, Published
by Pollitecon Publications 1999, ISBN 0 9586789 2 8
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