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===Post-World War II period===
[[File:Prijem ministra inostranih poslova Turske.jpg|thumb|[[İhsan Sabri Çağlayangil]] with [[Josip Broz Tito]] in [[Belgrade]] in 1967.]]
[[File:National_Library_of_Kosovo_photo_Arben_Llapashtica.jpg|thumb|Bird's-eye-view of the [[National Library of Kosovo]] building.]]
In the initial years after the end of [[World War II in Yugoslavia]] the new communist authorities continued to support Muslim population emigration to Turkey. In period between 1951 and 1956 some 86,380 Muslims, mostly from Kosovo and Macedonia, emigrated to Turkey, out of them 67,236 Turks, 4,394 Albanians, 13,926 Pomaks and 224 others.<ref name="Jovanović">{{cite journal |title=Iz FNRJ u Tursku |url=https://pescanik.net/iz-fnrj-u-tursku/ |language= |journal=Peščanik |year= 2013 |access-date=22 November 2020|last1= Jovanović |first1= Vladan}}</ref> This hovewer did not affect the relations between the two governments in negative way as Turkey was willing to receive the new settlers. 1948 [[Tito–Stalin split]] represented the major rupture in relations between Yugoslavia and the [[East Bloc]] after which [[Belgrade]] reoriented its foreign policy towards new allies. Despite the ideological contradictions Yugoslavia firstly cooperated closely with [[West Bloc]] nations before conditions for the development of relations with neutral and ultimately Non-aligned countries were created. Rather than to achieve the full membership in [[NATO]] Yugoslavia preferred closer cooperation with Greece and Turkey as the two NATO member states which were themselves fearing potential Soviet military intervention.<ref name=" Turkey and the Balkan Countries">{{cite journal |title=Relations between Turkey and the Balkan Countries as in a Function of Improving the Regional Peace and Stability |url=https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/download/article-file/147388 |language= |journal=ADAM AKADEMİ Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi = Adam Academy Journal of Social Science |year= 2014|volume= 4|issue= 2|pages= 59-76|doi= |access-date=22 November 2020|last1= Tahirovic|first1= Mehmed}}</ref> In 1953 three countries organized the first threepartite talks which ended in signing of a memorandum stated that stated that aggression against one of the three countries threatens the defense of others.<ref name=" Turkey and the Balkan Countries"/> On 28 February 1953 three countries established the [[Balkan Pact (1953)|Balkan Pact]] while on 20 April of the same year Ankara and Belgrade signed a number of agreements including the one on the [[dual citizenship]].<ref name=" Turkey and the Balkan Countries"/> While Greece and Turkey strongly pushed for the full Yugoslav membership in NATO, after the death of Stalin Belgrade decided to normalize its ties with Soviet Union ([[Belgrade declaration]]) and to formulate the non-aligned foreign policy. In 1961 Yugoslav writer [[Ivo Andrić]] was awarded the [[Nobel Prize in Literature]] for his historical novel [[The Bridge on the Drina]] revolves around the [[Mehmed Paša Sokolović Bridge]] in [[Višegrad]]. In 1971 Slavic [[Muslims (ethnic group)|Muslims (as an ethnic group)]] (modern [[Bosniaks]]) were recognized as one of constituent peoples of Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. In 1982 [[Socialist Republic of Croatia|Croatian]] architect Andrija Mutnjaković used blending of Byzantine and Islamic architectural forms when he designed the current building of the [[National Library of Kosovo]].
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