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The history of the Jews in Monastir present-day Bitola, North Macedonia and its region reaches back two thousand years. The Monastir Province was an Ottoman vilayet , created in , encompassing territories in present-day Albania , North Macedonia one of the successor states of the former Yugoslavia , from which it declared independence in and Greece.
On March 11, , the Sephardic Jewish community of Monastir, historically the largest Jewish community in Macedonia was deported. The Jews who trace their ancestry to the Macedonian city known since as Bitola continue to call the city by the name it bore during centuries of Ottoman rule : Monastir. Between and , Bulgaria , in alliance with Nazi Germany , occupied the Yugoslav province of Macedonia.
On March 11, , in cooperation with the Germans, Bulgarian military and police officials rounded up 3, of Monastir's Jewish men, women, and children, deported them to German-controlled territory and turned them over to the custody of German officials.
The Germans transported the Jewish population of Monastir and environs to their deaths in Treblinka as part of their plan to murder all European Jews. Although Jews had lived in Monastir from Roman times, the Sephardic Jews , who originally migrated from the Iberian Peninsula in the fifteenth century, became the predominant group in the town by the sixteenth century. They maintained a highly traditional and distinctive lifestyle characterized by residence in a Jewish quarter, attachment to the Judeo-Spanish Ladino language and Sephardic folklore, commitment to Jewish religious observance, and allegiance to Jewish communal institutions including synagogues, religious schools, religious courts, and mutual aid societies.