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| THE TRUTH ,NOTHING ELSE BUT THE TRUTH... Magazine: Australia &World Affairs, Winter, 1995 THE MACEDONIAN ENIGMA By George Phillipov The Macedonian Question (MQ), which originated with the Treaty of Berlin in 1878, challenges objective analysis because of the prejudices developed over time and now often accepted as fact. Political myths replace historic facts, and accordingly this 117 year saga lingers as an unresolved flash point for Balkan conflict. Today's public dispute between the Republic of Macedonia (RoM) and Greece is based on Greece's contention that RoM has plagiarized an integral part of Greek national history as a first step towards ultimately claiming a part of its territory. Greece argues that by using the name Macedonia, RoM seeks to transform its meaning from a geographic to a nationalistic term and thereby deny Greece a significant part of its cultural identity and challenge its sovereignty over this territory. A source of constant provocation for Greeks is RoM's flag which features the Macedonian Sunburst, a 16 ray golden sun originally located in royal tombs unearthed at Vergina, Greece and dating back to the 4th century BC. Overlaying these quarrels is the status and rights of a Macedonian national minority within Greece's northern provinces. Greece denies that any such nationality exists within its borders today.The intensity of the nationalistic fervour engendered, particularly amongst emigrant communities in Australia and Canada, has led not only to mass marches and protests but also to wanton acts of violence, including the fire-bombing of churches, clubs and residences. The Greek-Macedonian dispute is ground in the past, both recent and ancient, and is most readily understood in the context of its historic evolution. While the Greekness of Philip II of Macedon (382-336BC) and his son, Alexander the Great (356-323BC), is for some equivocal, they were certainly not Slavs, a race first noted in European history almost a millennium later.That the present day people of RoM are a Slavic race, unrelated to the ancient Macedonians is conceded even by RoM President, Kiro Gligorov.Moreover contemporary Macedonia is much larger geographically than the Ancient Macedonian state of 431BC, only a small part of which falls within RoM's borders. By the end of the eighteenth century the collapse of the Turkish Empire was well advanced and the national awakenings of Serbians, Romanians, Greeks and Bulgarians led to the establishment of their respective nation-states. However until the Congress of Berlin (13 June 1878) revised the terms of the Treaty Of San Stefano (3 March 1878), the Macedonian question did not exist, because it was merely part of the general Balkan question. The Treaty of San Stefano established the ethnographic boundaries of the Bulgarian state based on both the recognized diocese of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church[sup 5] and the consensus which had been previously minuted at the Constantinople Conference of Ambassadors (November 1876). If we review the numerous ethnic surveys conducted throughout the area prior to the Balkan Wars, the main groups identified were Bulgarian (52 per cent), Turkish (22 per cent), Greek (10 per cent), Albanian (6 per cent) and Vlach (3.5 per cent). Towards the end of the nineteenth century a group of Macedonians met in Salonika and formed a secret society whose goal was to attain autonomy for Macedonia. The society was officially named the Bulgarian-Macedonian -Adrianople Revolutionary. Organization. Their statutes restricted membership to Bulgarians, but later in 1902 they opened membership to all Macedonia's nationalities.Nevertheless the only non-Slavs who joined were mainly Vlachs. For their part the Greek and Muslim people opposed the revolutionaries and sided with the Turkish authorities. The operations of the Macedonian liberation movements climaxed with the 1903 insurrection, called the Linden Uprising, an extremely one-sided contest in which some 27,000 rebels faced 350,000 Turkish troops. The Balkan Wars of 1912-1913 not only completely destroyed the European Turkish Empire but also led to a lasting partition of Macedonia. The First Balkan War began on 18 October 1912 with Bulgaria, Serbia and Greece mobilizing 621,000, 468,000 and 210,000 troops respectively. Bulgarian forces, which included the 15,000 strong Macedonian-Adrianople regiment, quickly advanced through the Turkish lines and by November 15 had reached the last defences of Constantinople. The Serbian army, together with the Bulgarian 7th Rila division, successfully campaigned in Macedonia against much smaller Turkish numbers. The Greek army assumed only a secondary role. During the First Balkan War the casualties suffered by Bulgaria and Serbia were 87,000 and 23,000 respectively, while Greek figures were substantially less than the Serbians. As it became clear that the Balkan Alliance had defeated Turkey, both participants and observers were unwilling to honour treaties ratified before hostilities commenced. Romania demanded acquisition of Bulgarian territory in the Dobrudja region as compensation for her neutrality. Serbia wanted revision of the treaty signed with Bulgaria with respect to Macedonian lands. The Greeks, through Venizelos, told Bulgaria they would remain neutral in any future Serbian-Bulgarian conflict if they were granted Salonika and sufficient territory to link it to Greece proper. The Bulgarians refused to re-negotiate any signed treaty. Therefore in January 1913 when the Bulgarian army was still battling the Turks, Serbia and Greece concluded a secret military alliance and came to a mutual accord with Romania and Turkey. Taking advantage of Bulgaria's continuing engagement with the Turkish army, the Serbians and Greeks fortified their positions in the captured territories and began cleansing them of Bulgarians. Responding to the Serbian and Greek actions, the Bulgarian army under General Savov attacked their emplacements on 29 June 1913. In the diplomatic furore that followed, the Bulgarian government accused Savov of acting without authority and ordered a cease fire. The Serbians however refused to abide by this armistice counter-attacking the Bulgarians during the confusion and inflicting heavy losses. After several weeks the Bulgarians had regained the initiative and were manoeuvring to cut-off Serbian forces in Macedonia, and had encircled the Greek army in the Kresna Valley.At this stage, when defeat of the Serbian-Greek alliance appeared likely, Romanian forces, with Russia's approval, crossed into Bulgaria and advanced unopposed towards Sofia; the Turks reneged on their international treaty signed in London and recaptured Adrianople. Bulgaria had no option but to capitulate. By the Treaty of Bucharest (10 August 1913) Bulgaria had to cede to Romania all of southern Dobrudja, a region of 290,000 individuals of whom just 2.2 per cent were Romanian; Macedonia was divided between Greece (50 per cent) and Serbia (40 per cent), and only a small part was allotted to Bulgaria (10 per cent). Of the 1 million Bulgarians in Macedonia, some 900,000 were now left in areas controlled by Serbia and Greece and all their 1375 Bulgarian schools, 1331 Bulgarian Orthodox Churches, 275 monasteries and 294 chapels were closed.[sup14] In World War I (WW1) Bulgaria insisted on renegotiation of the Treaty of Bucharest as a condition for her support of the Allies. Greece appeared willing but Serbia steadfastly refused. This later prompted Winston Churchill in 1915 to write "that she (Serbia) should cede, and if necessary be made to surrender, the uncontested zone in Macedonia to the Bulgarians, to whom it belonged by race, by history, by treaty." Ultimately Bulgaria, after being promised sovereignty to all of her lost Macedonian lands, joined the Central Powers. Although the Bulgarian armies promptly reoccupied the territory, in the aftermath of WW I she not only lost all these regions but even more of her native lands. In effect 16 per cent of the Bulgarian population now remained outside the borders of the 1919 Bulgarian state. At the end of WW1, in light of Woodrow Wilson's famous fourteen point plan (8 January 1918), specifically point eleven, Freedom, restoration and adjustment according to nationality for the Balkan States, the Macedonians were optimistic their political status would be resolved. Indeed at the peace conference the American, Italian and Japanese delegations, with the agreement of Bulgaria, tabled a proposal for an autonomous Macedonia as a League of Nations protectorate.France, a strong patron of Serbia, opposed the proposal and prevented its discussion. In addition to the Treaty of Neuilly signed with Greece on 27 November 1919, Bulgaria also entered into a Convention for a voluntary exchange of population. Greece saw the Convention as a means to rid herself of the Bulgarian minority, while Bulgaria felt she had no option but to agree. Under Article 46 of the Treaty, and the Treaty of Sevres (10 August 1920) for The Protection of Minorities Greece was bound to honour the right of self-identity for all her minorities.When by June 1923 only 197 Greek families and 166 Bulgarian had agreed to emigrate, the Greek military forcibly deported several thousand Bulgarian families from Thrace and installed Greek refugees from Anatolia in their homes. This caused panic amongst the Bulgarians and thousands fled Greece for Bulgaria. On reaching Bulgaria they seized Greek homes and land, causing a reciprocal flood of refugees from Bulgaria to Greece. Before calm was restored some 50,000 Bulgarians and 25,000 Greeks had emigrated under the Convention. The League of Nations estimated that 102,000 Bulgarians and 53,000 Greeks were declared as emigrants, but that only a minute number of these were actually voluntary.The effect of the Convention was almost the total emigration of Greeks from Bulgaria, while in Greece, West Thrace was cleared of Bulgarians. But in western Macedonia a substantial Bulgarian population remained. In 1928 Greek statistics placed their number at 82,000, while Bulgaria claimed 300, 000. It is generally accepted that both figures represent extremes. After the Greek army debacle in Asia Minor (1922), over one million Greeks fled Turkey and some 640,000 of these settled throughout the Macedonian region, while 348,000 Turks left Greek Macedonia.[sup 18] This placed even greater pressure on the indigenous Bulgarian population as the Greek refugees appropriated their land and livestock with impunity. The only choice the Bulgarians had was to accept the situation or leave. In July 1924 however, the League of Nations investigated an incident in Tarlis, where 27 Bulgarians were arrested and ten subsequently killed.Greece was found guilty of mistreating her minorities, in breech of undertakings given at Neuilly and Sevres. As a result, and under League of Nations auspices, Bulgarian and Greek delegates met at Geneva (29 September 1924) and signed two identical protocols for the protection of minorities in the two countries. Hence Greece now had formally recognized the presence of a Bulgarian minority entitled to cultural, linguistic and educational rights. Although Serbia had been compelled to sign the Minorities Treaties, she argued that the population in Vardar Macedonia, now renamed Southern Serbia, were Serbian not Bulgarian, and that the treaty was irrelevant. Accordingly the Greek action in signing the protocol with Bulgaria, seriously compromised her alliance with Serbia, who stated her position as follows:"the dogma that the Slav inhabitants of Macedonia are Serbs is the basis of our policy. We cannot possibly accept that north of the frontier the Slavs are Serbs while beyond that frontier these same people are Bulgarians."[sup 19] Under Serbian military threats and major divisions amongst Greek political parties, the Greek parliament met on 3 February 1925 and refused to ratify the Geneva protocol. The League of Nations demanded an explanation but subsequently acquiesced in the Greek stance. As part of the Geneva Protocol, the Greek government also embarked on a plan to declare the slav-speaking population, which it had just recognized as Bulgarian as Macedono-Slavs - a national minority entitled to schools in its own language. It printed a 40 page primer entitled ABECEDAR, written in Latin script (Bulgarians use the cyrillic alphabet), and compiled in the local Macedonian dialect.Greece claims the initiative failed due to Serbian and Bulgarian objections. Nevertheless a more realistic interpretation has been suggested: "The aim of the A. was clear: the Slavs in Greece were to forget their own traditions and develop a distinct, autonomist or Greek-Slav national consciousness. The selection of the dialect forms used north of the border suggests that the A. may have been aimed at the Macedonians in Yugoslavia as well. It was thus designed to counteract separatist sentiments in Greece and foster an irredentist movement in Yugoslavia." Possibly this explains the nature of Serbia's blunt warnings to Greece. It is ironic that only 20 years later in 1944, under the aegis of the Yugoslav Communist Party (YCP), the Macedonian literary language was issued by decree. Over time a strong Macedonian national consciousness developed which fostered elements of an irredentist movement in Greece and even Bulgaria. Subsequently Greece redefined its Bulgarian minority as slavophones (Slav-speaking Greek citizens) and the minority question no longer existed. Later in the 1930s during the Metaxas dictatorship these slavophones were forbidden to speak their Slavic dialect, old people were forced to attend night classes to learn Greek, Bulgarian texts or literature were banned, names were changed, for example -opov to -- opoulos (or-opovich in Yugoslavia), and deportations to the Greek island prisons became widespread. Whatever problems Macedono -Bulgarians faced in Greece the situation for them in the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (Yugoslavia) was far worse. The oppression and barbarity of the Serbian regime is graphically detailed by Frenchman, Henri Pozzi, in his recently reprinted 1935 text Black Hand over Europe.However the Serbians met fierce armed resistance from the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO) , which had reformed under the leadership of Todor Alexandrov and operated out of Bulgaria proper. IMRO sought an autonomous Macedonian state, but as a minimum demanded for the Macedono-Bulgarians rights equivalent to those granted the Serbians, Croats and Slovenes. Helped by a powerful emigrant lobby in America, IMRO was able to focus international media attention on the unsettled MQ, and highlight both the appalling situation within Yugoslavia and the League of Nations' unwillingness to intervene. It was later revealed that the League of Nations after 1925 had adopted a tacit policy to ignore all petitions concerning the MQ or associated human rights violations. Because IMRO had major support amongst the population,[sup 24] Serbia had to maintain a massive military presence in the region. Placed on the defensive by IMRO's success, Serbia began to agitate through diplomatic channels that either the Bulgarian government curtail IMRO's activities, or she would mount a military offensive into Bulgaria. In time this Serbian strategy was successful, as successive Bulgarian government actions, responding to international pressure, undermined IMRO's focus and military capability to send armed bands into Yugoslavia. Finally in 1934 the Bulgarian government outlawed the organization. Because the Serbians took such brutal steps to suppress the national liberation movement the response amongst the Bulgarians was to establish the Macedonian Youth Secret Revolutionary Organization (MYSRO) in 1921-1922 in cities throughout Vardar and Aegean Macedonia, as well as in Belgrade, Zagreb and Ljubljana.[sup 25] In a short time its influence had spread amongst all the student youth in the occupied regions. When the Serbians finally uncovered the existence of MYSRO in June 1927, they realized their assimilatory policies had failed and they unilaterally closed all schools in Vardar, depriving some one million people of any education opportunities. After the Skopje trials of MYSRO followers, the Bulgarian intelligentsia devolved the organizational structure even further. Having minimal success at exposing MYSRO leaders, the Serbians resorted to a policy of assassinating suspected members hundreds of MYSRO's most outstanding emissaries were killed in this way. In Greece the government exiled scores of suspects to the Aegean Islands - most never returned. During the period 1919-1941 some 22,000 Bulgarians, half aged 18 to 30 years, were either killed or declared missing in Vardar and Aegean Macedonia. The MQ is also intrinsically associated with the communist movement, especially after WWl[sup .26,27] The start of the 1920s saw the Comintern struggling to expand its class struggle into Europe. Therefore its attention turned to the Balkans where strong manifestations of social and national sentiments were held in rigid political states. The local communist parties however were not strong and a better prospect was to use the national liberation movements to precipitate a major incident leading to war or intervention by the Great Powers. The resulting social dislocation would allow tensions to be progressively shifted west towards Europe. A critical part of this intrigue was to 'hijack' IMRO and make it subservient to the Bulgarian Communist Party (BCP); however IMRO by its own charter was a nationalistic organization and a political. The plight of the Macedono-Bulgarians and the constant threat of rapprochement between the Yugoslavian and Bulgarian governments convinced some of the IMRO hierarchy, in particular the IMRO external committee, that the MQ was best solved within the overall context of the Comintern's proposed Balkan Federation. Following a number of key incidents within Bulgaria, including the overthrow of the Stamboliiski Agrarian government and the crushing of the BCP 1923 September Uprising, Todor Alexandrov was assassinated, and IMRO's single-minded goal irreversibly compromised.[sup 28] The start of World War II saw significant changes for the Macedono - Bulgarians. After Yugoslavia and Greece were militarily defeated in 1941, all members of the national liberation organizations, irrespective of political or ideological persuasion returned to their birthplace, and under the leadership of the Bulgarian Action Committees the populace organised and established national rule. This national renaissance was most evident in Vardar Macedonia. Accordingly, when Tito directed Methodi Shatarov, leader of the Macedonian Communist Party (MCP), to resist the 'fascist' Bulgarian National Army (BNA), Shatarov refused and instead labelled Tito and the YCP as enemies of the Macedonian people.29 Meanwhile the BNA, which predominantly comprised former Macedonian refugees, received a tumultuous welcome throughout the Vardar and Aegean areas. Macedonians expelled during the Balkan Wars and WWI were allowed to return and resettle while churches and schools closed from 1913 were re- opened. However the population and returning refugees also sought retribution for past atrocities against their families[sup 7] and years of suffering and persecution. The Serbian, and in particular Greek, populations received harsh treatment and thousands were forced from their lands or worse. Consequently this period left an indelible mark on the memories of many Greeks. Tito saw the promotion of an unified Macedonia as a way to ensure the spread of communist influence and to provide a leading role for the YCP amongst the communist Balkan states. As the military fortunes of Germany declined and Bulgaria was ready to switch allegiance to the Allies; the YCP began to exert pressure on the BCP and the Greek Communist Party (GCP) to accept separation and joining of their Macedonian regions to the now established People's Republic of Macedonia (PRM) within Yugoslavia. The BCP and GCP never accepted the concept as Tito imagined; however each found itself under different but severe pressures.[sup 30, 31] The BCP was seeking potential territorial concessions (West Thrace) as well as Tito's support at the Peace Conference. The GCP found itself increasingly dependent on YCP's military and logistic backing during the Greek civil war. After Bulgaria's capitulation and her agreement to withdraw all its forces from Greece, many BNA soldiers joined the Macedonian partisan forces to continue the fight for an united Macedonia. However the original liberators of Vardar Macedonia, the Bulgarian Action Committees, IMRO and individuals like Shatarov, as well as a large segment of the population, opposed the YCP concept of a Macedonian state. These groups were slowly but methodically eliminated during the late 1940s by a BCP- YCP coalition. After the break between Tito and Stalin in 1948 the YCP realized that a greater Macedonia was no longer possible and instead it began to consolidate its control of PRM. Tito's PRM fell far short of what many members of the Macedonian partisan movement ever imagined. The bureaucracy was controlled by Serbians, and pro-Serbian Macedonian leaders, such as Lazar Kolishevski, [sup 32] dictated policy conceived in Belgrade. Consequently during the late 1940s Macedonian partisan leaders and intellectuals who opposed the Serbian domination and the systematic uprooting of the Bulgarian culture and language were either killed or imprisoned.[sup 33] The Bulgarian language and literature were banned and, under the infamous Macedonian Honour Code, any parent who attempted to raise their children as Bulgarian was imprisoned for ten years.[sup 26] Since 1944 it has been estimated that 16,000 people have been killed in PRM for attempting to assert their ethnicity and more than 120,000 have been sent to concentration camps; some 700 trials have been held against pro- Bulgarian organizations with numerous, resulting executions.[34] In Greece, the nature of the civil war and the ultimate defeat of the GCP led to a large exodus of Macedonian refugees across the borders to PRM, Albania and Bulgaria. During 1948 an evacuation of children from the regions close to the Yugoslavia border commenced, and by 1949 it is estimated some 22,000 were resettied in various Eastern European countries.[35] Incidents like this caused great dislocation amongst Macedonian families. When Tito closed the border between Yugoslavia and Greece, many of the partisan fighters and their families were cut off from their only means of escape and thousands perished. As the GCP and their fellow Macedonian allies were mainly Stalinists, Tito's actions poisoned relations between PRM and the emigrant Aegean Macedonian communities for many years. The situation was further exacerbated in 1952 when, as a show of good faith to the Greeks, Tito ordered the disbanding of the Aegean Macedonian Association in Skopje and closed their newspaper, Voice of the Aegeans; then followed the treaties of friendship and cooperation, and military alliance with Greece and Turkey in 1953. The YCP always managed PRM along classical Marxist-Leninist lines, seeking that final goal of cultural fusion. First, in 1946 a Macedonian literary language was issued by decree, in which a Serbian bias was introduced to satisfy long-term requirements for development of a monolinguistic (Serbian) society.[26,27,36] Second, a process of historic and cultural revisionism was conducted to provide the Macedonian nation with its appropriate foundations.[26,27] Third, a national church, the Macedonian Orthodox Church was formed in 1959[37] under the jurisdiction of the Serbian Orthodox Church and based on the Medieval Bulgarian Ohrid Archbishopric,[38] but now revised as Macedonian. This YCP policy ultimately nurtured future generations which had both a Macedonian national consciousness and loyalty to Yugoslavia. In the aftermath of the Tito-Stalin split, Bulgaria remained one of Russia's most faithful allies, so much so that relations between Sofia and Belgrade tended to reflect the prevailing mood in Moscow. Following Stalin's death the April 1956 Plenum saw the BCP re-adjust its 1944 declaration on the existence of a Macedonian ethnicity. However the BCP did not reveal this decision until 1958, and a further decade elapsed before the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences was able to publish a position paper on the matter. The issue has subsequently led to vehement polemics between RoM and Bulgaria. These reached a crescendo after the 1979 publication of BCP Politburo member Tsola Dragoycheva's memoirs on Bulgarian-Yugoslav relations in the 1940s.[39] Such exchanges have been exploited by the YCP to harden Macedonian national resolve and to engender a deep-seated resentment against everything Bulgarian. Another success of the YCP policy on the MQ has been its general acceptance by the emigrant Macedonians, particularly during the last 10 to 20 years. This can be attributed to a single-factor, the Macedonian Orthodox Church. While a rancour always existed, and still does, between the Aegean Macedonian refugees and the more recent PRM emigrants, many of the former had little choice but to accept the Macedonian Church and thus YCP-Macedonian policy if they wished to remain within their social group. The Church became linked irrevocably to national identity. The BCP's engrossment with Moscow and its total acquiescence to internationalism rather than protecting the rights of the Macedono- Bulgarians, destroyed any role it may have played amongst the Macedonians overseas. Unchallenged, the YCP was able to implement a propaganda campaign towards the global, emigrant, Macedonian communities, the estimated cost of which has been placed at USS1.2 billion. This YCP program has had a distinct effect, and for many emigrant Macedonians and their descendants, Macedonian nationalism has become a classical belief system predicated on myth rather than any freely ascertainable facts. One barrier that thwarts reduction of present day Balkan tensions is the lack of democracy within RoM, allowing Gligorov's government a free hand to perpetuate past YCP expansionist policies relating to the issue of unique Macedonian minorities in Bulgaria and Greece. The realization of human rights for all individuals in a state, especially when they constitute a minority, should always be a priority. However the RoM-YCP paradigm seeks to categorize individuals independently of their own choice. For example in Bulgaria it is estimated that there live between one and half to two million Macedonian refugees and their descendants from Vardar and Aegean Macedonia. That is as many as in the whole of RoM. They have their own organizations, both cultural and political, and are steadfastly opposed to the YCP's notion of Macedonian nationality. In a recent census the number of Bulgarian citizens that declared themselves Macedonian nationals, in the heart of the Macedonian region, was less than 0.2 per cent.no The trauma and anger of the Macedonian Bulgarians at RoM efforts to once again impose the past oppressive Tito- Dimitrov policies has been poignantly captured in recent articles.[41] Although Bulgaria was the first country to recognize RoM, this received an indifferent response from RoM, while the media questioned Bulgarian motives, insisting that Bulgaria had recognized RoM but had not explicitly recognized the Macedonian nation.[42] At the height of the Greek embargo against RoM, Bulgarian parliamentarians presented a proposal to RoM that the border between them be declared open, with no restrictions.[43] The RoM government immediately rejected this initiative, although open borders immediately resolve the question of human rights for minorities in the most appropriate manner - freedom of individual choice. The RoM human rights agenda is coordinated through the emigrant Macedonian communities,[44] where genuineanimosity exists towards Greece, and is induced towards Bulgaria.In most cases there are justifiable reasons why these people harbour such sentiments, and continual Greek harassment of the emigrant Macedonian communities during the last 40 years is one example.[45] In spite of the ten or more years that these groups have been operating they have only had limited success in arousing popular movements in the countries concerned. It is disquieting that these same human right activists in Bulgaria and Greece consistently praise Gligorov's ministry and criticize the RoM opposition parties. More so than at any time in the past, the present Macedonian- Greek dispute has facilitated support for the human rights of Macedonians in Bulgaria and Greece. While pursuit of human rights is a worthy cause, in some instances it has the potential to also be exploited as a guise for underlying expansionist aims. It is also perplexing why international human rights groups continually focus on infractions concerning Macedonians in Bulgaria and Greece, but never raise the status of Bulgarians in RoM and Greece. No doubt the unwillingness of the Bulgaria government to pursue human rights for its nationals in Greece and RoM, because of political repercussions, is the main reason.[46] This in turn has led to acrid criticism by Bulgarian groups in RoM who claim Bulgarian foreign policy abandons its own people.[47] A major disappointment has been RoM adopting a system of constitutional nationalism which privileges the major ethnic group, rather than the individual citizens of the State.48 This is a particularly divisive issue for RoM's Albanian citizens who comprise some 25-40 per cent of the population and have a historic presence in the region, even longer than that of the Macedonians. But the PRM leaders have always supported the Serbian policy with respect to the Albanians, and that accord is still very evident today.[49] Finally, if we review the path Gligorov's political party has followed towards RoM independence, then commitment to that goal is questionable.[50] In 1991 Ljupcho Georgievski (VMRO-DPMNE political party) resigned as vice-president of RoM to protest the government's willingness to negotiate with Serbia to include RoM in a new Yugoslav polity. The independence referendum presented to RoM's citizens (8 September 1991), Are you in favour of a sovereign and independent state with a right to enter into a future union of the sovereign states of Yugoslavia?, is an oxymoron. During the months prior to the crucial EC meeting on 15 January 1992 all Gligorov's efforts were directed at creating a new Yugoslav confederation, rather than lobbying for RoM's international recognition. In this same period Gligorov held clandestine meetings with Serbian President, Slobodan Milosevic, the nature of which he refused to explain to the RoM parliament. A recent article by Pettifer[51] clearly outlines the major irregularities with the elections and the strong pro-Serbian influence on the RoM government and bureaucracy. Such claims have been made numerous times by political parties and individuals within RoM and are in stark contrast to normal impressions that RoM is a democratic state. Even the benevolent George Soros, an ally of RoM who lent the government 25 million dollars, has discovered the difficulty in criticizing pro-Serbian policies within RoM.[52] In conclusion, resolution of the MQ does not necessitate any changes in Balkan State borders, but rather the opening of those same borders within the region. Then we would surely see the final chapter of the Macedonian saga, and with it the just resolution of the accompanying economic, political and ethnic issues. But above all else this becomes an individual matter for the people who have actually chosen to live there. References 1. Marriott J.A.R., The Eastern Question: an Historic Study in European Diplomacy (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1940). 2. Greece. Annual Report on Human Rights (Washington DC, US State Dept, 1991). 3. Vana Z., The World of the Ancient Slavs (London, Orbis Publishing, 1983). 4. For example: (a) Christopher Hitchens writes in Minority Report (The Nation, 1994, 18 April, 511) :- he (Gligorov) was booed at a rally when he admitted that his chiefly Slavic republic did not descend from Alexander the Great. (b) Marlise Simons states in Edgy Greeks Fear an Expansionist Macedonia (International Herald Tribune, 1992, 5 February, 2) :- He (Gligorov) maintains that his people are descendants from Slavs who have been therefor 14 centuries. 5. The Bulgarian Orthodox Church, was re-established on 11th March 1870 by a Firman (Royal Decree of the Sultan) authorized by the Sublime Porte (Government of the Ottoman Empire). 6. Anastasoff C., The Bulgarians: from their arrival in the Balkans to Modern Times (New York, Exposition Press, 1977). 7. Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Report of the International Commission: to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan Wars (Washington DC, Publication No. 4, 1914). 8. Wilkinson H.R., Maps and Politics: a Review of the Ethnographic Cartography of Macedonia (Liverpool, University Press, 1951). 9. Statistical data concerning the population of Macedonia? In The Case for an Autonomous Macedonia (St Louis, Pearlstone Printing Co, 1945), (C. Anastanoff (ed). 10. Perry D.M., The Politics of Terror; The Macedonian Liberation Movements 1893-1903 (Duke University Press, Durham, 1988). 11. Gueshoff I.E., The Balkan League (London, John Murray, 1915). 12. Logio G.C., Bulgaria: Past and Present (Manchester, Sherratt and Hughes, 1936). 13. Young G., Nationalism and War in the Far East (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1915). 14. Anastasoff C., The Tragic Peninsula (Blackwell Wielandy Co., St Louis, 1938). 15. Churchill W.S., The Worm Crisis (New York, Charles Scribner Sons, 1949). 16. Pantev A., U.S. Projects for Determining the Borders of Bulgaria 1918-1919 (Ohio,MacGahan, 1993). 17. Macartney C.A., National States and National Minorities (London, Oxford Univ Press, 1934). 18. Pentzopoulos D., The Balkan Exchange of Minorities and Its Impact Upon Greece (Paris, Mouton &Co., 1962). 19. Kofos E., Nationalism and Communism in Macedonia (Thessaloniki, Institute for Balkan Studies, 1964). 20. Macedonian dialects have been traditionally classified as Bulgarian - see Prof. Gustav Weigand, Ethnographie von Makedonien (Ges chichtlich- nationaler, sprachlich-statistischer Teil von Leipzig, Friedrich Brandstetter, 1924). 21. Hill P., Different codifications of a language in: Girke W. (ed), Slavistiche Linguistik (Munich, 1981, 48-63). 22. Pozzi H., Black Hand over Europe (London, Francis Mott Co., 1935). 23. MCA, Alexandrov, Todor (1882-1924) Encyclopaedia Britannica 1961 1, 583. 24. In 1920 IMRO asked the Vardar Macedonianpeople to vote for the Communists as a protest against the Paris Treaty and at their classification as Serbs. The election verified IMRO's popular support. Although the Vardar population was only I million, compared to 15 million for the whole of Yugoslavia, Vardar returned 17 of the 50 elected Communists in a Parliament of 238 delegates. Thus the Communist vote in Vardar was 5.1 times the national average, a fact reported by many foreign journalists. 25. Gotsev D.G., Youth National-Liberation Organizations of the Macedonian Bulgarians (1919-1941) (Sofia, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, 1988). 26. Palmer Jr. S.E., King R.R., Yugoslav Communism and the Macedonian Question (Hamden, The Shoe String Press, 1971). 27. Connor W., The National Question in Marxist-Leninist Theory and Strategy (Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1986). 28. Dobrinov D., IMRO and the 1923 Uprising, Macedonian Review 1991, 24 (No.3), 61-9. 29. Clissod S., Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union 1939-1973: a Documentary Survey (London, Oxford University Press, 1975). 30. To promote a Balkan Federation, including a Macedonian state, the BCP agreed to accept the notion of Macedonian ethnicity. Subsequently the BCP conducted a census in 1946 in which residents in the Pirene region were ordered to declare their nationality as Macedonian and not Bulgarian; thousands who refused were imprisoned for up to five years. Later in 1956, because the policy had not been rescinded, the same compulsion was used (see ref 42). 31. This culminated with the purported announcement on the communist radio station Free Greece (1 March 1949) of the declaration of an independent Macedonia. 32. Lazar Kolishevski was born in Sveti Nikola but raised in Kragujevac, Serbia. In 1935 he joined the Serbian Communist Party and attended the Fifth Conference of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia as a delegate from Kragujevac. When Tito sent him to replace Shatarov as head of the MCP, they had him gaoled by the BNA for the war's duration. 33. Metodi Chendo, first chairman of PRM was sentenced in 1946 to 11 years hard labour for being a member of IMRO and pro-Bulgarian. He died immediately after his release. Bogoja Fotev, Chendo's replacement, shot himself rather than assume his duties in Belgrade. Venko Markovski, proclaimed as Macedonia's leading poet, wrote a play describing Belgrade's hold on Macedonia as darker than Sofia's. He was accused of being pro-Bulgarian, expelled from the YCP, and spent 5 years in the Goli-Otok prison before fleeing to Bulgaria. Other prominent PRM figures, amongst many, to meet a similar fate include Andrejev, Chkatrov and Dzhuselov. 34. Information contained in Memorandum of the Party for Human Rights in Macedonia presented by Union of Macedonian Cultural and Educational Societies at Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe held at Geneva 1-19 July 1991 to discuss problems of national minorities. 35. Macedonian Cultural Society, Diaspora: The Tragic Exodus of the Refugee Children from Aegean Macedonia, 1948 (Adelaide, Unity Publications, 1989). 36. Clarke J.F., Macedonia from S.S. Cyril and Methodius to Horace Lunt and Blaze Koneski: Language and Nationality in The Pen and the Sword: Studies in Bulgarian History (NewYork, Columbia University Press, 1988), D.P. Hupchick (ed). 37. Alexander S., Church and State in Yugoslavia since 1945 (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1974). 38. (a) St Clement (835-916) created and developed an education centre at Ohrid which allowed the rapid and universal acceptance of Byzantine Christian culture amongst the Slavs. In 907 he became the first Bulgarian-speaking bishop - et sic Bulgaricae linguae Clemens primus constituitur episcopus. (b) Kusseff M., St Clement of Ochrida, Slavonic East European Review 1948, 27:193-215. 39. S G, Moore P., The Macedonian polemic rides again: Tsola Dragoycheva's memoirs, RFE-RL 1979, No. 26 (31 Jan), 1-10. 41. See Professor TA Meininger's (American University, Bulgaria) paper The Macedonian Question in Blagoevgrad Today presented at the 5th joint meeting of Bulgarian and North American scholars (University of Pittsburgh, May 25-27, 1994); and Carol J Williams's lengthy article Bound by The Call of Blood, Los Angeles Times, 1994 2 February, 1. 42. In response Bulgarian President Zheiev answered:- There is nothing odd about that. What you always recognize is the state. According to the international law, recognizing a state automatically means the recognized state has a self-declared sovereign people in it. It also means the state that is recognizing has no territorial aspirations towards the recognised country. There is just not a special declaration in the international law that states on recognizing or not a nation. A nation is either there or not. 43. As reported in No Borders Between Bulgaria and Macedonia, BTA (Sofia) 1994, 22 July. 44. The two main groups are the Australian-Macedonian Human Rights Committee and the Canadian-Macedonian Human Rights Committee. J Bitove, a Canadian financier with close links to the Gligorov ministry, was instrumental in establishing both organizations. 45. In the post WWII era the Greek government kept emigrant Macedonian communities under constant surveillance. Active members were denied re- entry to Greece as an example to others; those who still had family in Greece found they were subjected to government harassment. Greek community officials or consular staff would lobby against the approval of Macedonian communities as recognized entities within the Australian or Canadian ethnic framework. 46. Greece is one of Bulgaria's largest investors - see Paris J., Greece strengthens links with Balkan neighbors, European ,1995 3-9 March, 23. 47. Ilija Ilijevski, chairman for the Party for Human Rights in Macedonia in RoM, has been imprisoned and victimized. In Jan 1994 the party was banned by RoM authorities. On Bulgarian policy Ilijevski states - "There used to exist an unwritten treaty between Sofia and Skopje that there are no Bulgarians in Macedonia . . I do not think that this is either good or moral . . It means that the Bulgarians in Macedonia have a mother who is alive but does not look after them." 48. Hayden R.M., Constitutional nationalism in the formerly Yugoslav republics, Slavic Review 1992, 51,654-73. 49. Summarized for the Yugoslav era by Branka Magas in The Destruction of Yugoslavia (London, Verso, 1993). Albanians recent attempts to establish tertiary education facilities have been prevented by use of police force. RoM would not support UN Resolution L58 (49th session of the General Assembly) which accused Serbia of abusing Human Rights in Kosova. 50. Kiro Gligorov, born 1917, a Law graduate of Belgrade Univ, joined the League of Communists of Yugoslavia in 1944. From 1945 to 1962 he had senior positions in the Yugoslavian government, became a Federal Executive Council member, then vice-president, and from 1974-8 .National Assembly president and professor at Belgrade Univ. 51. Pettiler J., Macedonia: still the apple of discord, The World Today 1995, 51, 55-8. 52. The government controlled daily newspaper Nova Makedonija (19 May 1995) published a stinging criticism of Soros after he questioned RoM's lack of progress towards democracy and the inept handling of the Albanian and Greek disputes. ~~~~~~~~ By George Phillipov George Phillipov MSc. PhD. is a researcher scientist whose parents emigrated from the Macedonian region in the 1950s and who has been actively researching Macedonian issues for more than fifteen years. Australia & World Affairs, Winter95 Issue 25, p39, 15p. Item Number: 9509100859 Code: http://macedonia-istinata.hit.bg/MacEnigma.html
__________________ 'Go tell the Spartans,stranger passing by,that here,obedient to their laws we lie' Thermopylae 480 B.C www.macedonian.com.au |
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| I don't know if we have this article here so I posted it.Good read very intelligent and reaslistic view from a Fyromian.A man who realises the true reality.Where are you now Dimitar.N??
__________________ 'Go tell the Spartans,stranger passing by,that here,obedient to their laws we lie' Thermopylae 480 B.C www.macedonian.com.au |
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| If one of their own knows the facts why is it so hard for all the rest of these "alleged" intelligent species to understand??
__________________ 'Go tell the Spartans,stranger passing by,that here,obedient to their laws we lie' Thermopylae 480 B.C www.macedonian.com.au |
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| Mind you not just any pleb we are talking about a highly educated intelligent man.....
__________________ 'Go tell the Spartans,stranger passing by,that here,obedient to their laws we lie' Thermopylae 480 B.C www.macedonian.com.au |
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| Mygdonia is right. It does seem to be pro Bulgarian and also full of common sense. Was it taken from this site? http://macedonia-istinata.hit.bg/ |
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| This is interesting... Dear Bulgarian Brothers and Sisters, Since 1965, I have interviewed over 150 people who are today euphemistically or diplomatically referred to by some as "Macedonian Slavs." The aforementioned individuals were born (between 1867 and 1906) and raised in Aegean, Vardar, and Pirin Macedonia. I met some of them in the USA, Canada, and Western Europe. However, I talked with the majority of them while visiting my relatives in FYROM (Skopje), "Greek" Macedonia, and Bulgaria. I would like to emphasize that each and every one of them identified himself/herself as a "Bulgarian" or a "Macedonian Bulgarian." The ones who lived in Vardar Macedonia and Aegean Macedonia discussed with me the nature of their ethnic identity cautiosly, preferring to do that without any witnesses. Some of these folks in advancing years apparently did not trust or feared their own kin! To my chagrin, many of the young identified themselves as "Macedonians" (in Yugoslavia) or as "Greeks" in Aegean Macedonia. I am also saddened by the fact that the post-communist governments of Bulgaria have not exhibited so far any convincing signs that they are determined to launch a campaign aimed at awakening the Bulgarian national spirit of the denationalized or at least partially assimilated by Greeks and Serbs Macedonian Bulgarians. Hopefully the brand new government of Bulgaria is not going to be brainwashed by the mantras of the globalists, internationalists, national-nihilists, and Western "well wishers" (closet Bulgarophobes) and will defend with dignity the Bulgarian National Cause. It is high time for Bulgaria to start defending the basic human rights of the ethnic Bulgarians living in the ex-Yugoslavia (including Vardar Macedonia), Greece, Turkey, Romania, etc. Greetings to all Bulgarian patriots! Riste Lerinski, American descendant of IM(O)RO guerrillas & supporters of the Bulgarian National Cause in Aegean Macedonia Taken from the above site. |
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