Macedonians in Serbia

The first session of the Anti-fascist Assembly for the National Liberation of Macedonia (ASNOM) was held on 2 August 1944, the anniversary of the Ilinden Uprising, at Prohor Pčinjski Monastery in the Bulgarian occupation zone of Yugoslavia, what is today southern Serbia, just north of the Macedonian border.[5][6][7] Some ethnic Aromanians and particularly Megleno-Romanians from the Socialist Republic of Macedonia emigrated to the Serbian Banat and settled in villages such as Gudurica to repopulate them after the expulsion of their native German populations following World War II.[8] Many Macedonians, due to economic reasons, migrated during the 1960s and 1970s to the Socialist Republic of Serbia (predominantly in Vojvodina).Macedonian-language print media consists primarily of the monthly political journal Makedonska videlina produced by the Macedonian Information and Publishing Centre in Pančevo.Associations such as "The Society of Serbian and Macedonian Friendship Šar – planina" seated in Belgrade, and the "Municipal Society of Serbian-Macedonian Friendship" seated in Zrenjanin cover issues related to ethnic, cultural and economic cooperation in Serbia.
Flag of the National Council of the Macedonian minority in Serbia
VojvodinaBelgradeMacedonianSerbianMacedonian OrthodoxSerbian OrthodoxSouth Slavsromanizednational minoritySerbiaMacedoniansPančevoAnti-fascist Assembly for the National Liberation of MacedoniaIlinden UprisingProhor Pčinjski MonasteryBulgarian occupation zone of YugoslaviaBuklesrefugees of the Greek Civil WarMacedonian languageSocialist Federal Republic of YugoslaviaAromaniansMegleno-RomaniansSocialist Republic of MacedoniaSerbian BanatGuduricaGermanWorld War IIMegleno-RomanianSocialist Republic of SerbiaSerbs in MacedoniaKosovoJabukaGlogonjKačarevoPlandišteDužineSouth BanatHajdučicaVelika GredaDemocratic Party of MacedoniansNovi SadMacedonia (region)AlbaniaBulgariaGreeceDiasporaBosnia and HerzegovinaCroatiaMontenegroSloveniaAustriaCzech RepublicFranceGermanyPolandRomaniaSwedenSwitzerlandUnited KingdomArgentinaCanadaUnited StatesAustraliaGoraniTorbešiMijaksBrsjaksCultureCinemaCuisineEducationLanguageLiteratureSymbolsReligionMacedonian Orthodox ChurchCatholic ChurchLatin CatholicGreek CatholicProtestantismJudaismRodnoveryHistoryList of MacedoniansMacedonian nationalismPublic holidaysRadio Television of VojvodinaTijana DapčevićAleksandar DžambazovBogomil GjuzelVladimir GligorovZafir HadžimanovMaja OdžaklievskaLazar RistovskiNemanja Todorović ŠtiplijaDragan ČadikovskiBoško GjurovskiAleksandar IgnjovskiIgor JančevskiAleksandar KirovskiDragan LukovskiNemanja MatićUroš MatićAleksandar LazevskiMarko PavlovskiPredrag RanđelovićDragoslav ŠekularacGoran SimovPerica StančeskiMilan StojanoskiAleksandar TodorovskiNorth Macedonia-Serbia relationsSerbs in North MacedoniaMacedonian diasporaHungaryTurkeyEthnic groups in SerbiaHungariansBosniaksRomaniAlbaniansSlovaksCroatsRomaniansVlachsYugoslavsMontenegrinsRussiansEthnic MuslimsBulgariansBunjevciRusynsUkrainiansGermansCzechsBelarusiansGreeksŠokciArmeniansChineseDemographic history of Serbia