Recovering Macedonia
Expiration of the Bucharest Treaty of 1913
Part 16 – The Macedonian Revival VI
By Risto Stefov
rstefov@hotmail.com
January 2007
[Macedonia will remain
occupied as long as the Macedonian people are
unrecognized, abused and made to feel like strangers on
their own native lands. It is a well know fact that
Macedonia was invaded, occupied and illegally partitioned
by Greece, Serbia and Bulgaria in 1912-1913 against the
wishes of the Macedonian people. The Serbian occupied
part, now known as the Republic of Macedonia gained its
independence in 1991 and is today a sovereign state while
the parts annexed by Greece and Bulgaria remain occupied.]
Britain, at one point,
contemplated creating an autonomous Macedonia but knew
that Russia and Austria would be against it. “It was
fortunate for Greece at this juncture that Lansdowne’s
plans foundered in a sea of European politics and that
both Russia and Austria opposed Macedonian autonomy.”
(Page 152, Dakin, The Greek Struggle in Macedonia
1897-1913) This is an important fact for ALL to know,
which is contrary to “Greek propaganda” that no
Macedonians existed before 1945. Here is documented proof
that a Macedonian nation did exist prior to the 19th
century and came very close to achieving independence. The
Ilinden rebellion was ALL about Macedonia and about
Macedonians asserting their desire to live as equals in
the world. The Great Powers, especially Britain and
Russia, owe it to the Macedonian people to come clean and
put an end to the incessant “Greek propaganda”. It no
longer makes any sense to keep the Macedonian people from
taking their rightful place in the world. They are
certainly not a threat to anyone. Those who committed
crimes against the Macedonian people and continue to deny
their existence obviously have a problem. But why punish
the victims, for being victims?
The Young Turk movement
had been active for at least thirty years, ever since
Turkish students were allowed to attend European schools
en masse. Among other things, the Young Turks were in
favour of granting self-government to Macedonia, Thrace
and Albania and believed that the Ottoman Empire could be
salvaged via reforms. When the 1903 Ilinden rebellion
started, many of these European educated students had
already joined the ranks of the Turkish military as junior
officers. The atrocities committed and the methods used in
dealing with the rebels during the Ilinden aftermath went
against the principles of these young men and many
deserted the Turkish army. Some joined roving Albanian
bands in hopes of eliciting their assistance to form an
opposition to the Sultan. Some attempted to establish
contacts with IMRO, hoping that IMRO would join them to
rise against the Sultan.
By 1905 the Young Turks
organized under the banner of “Union and Progress” and
established themselves in Solun, away from the grasp of
the Sultan in Tsari Grad. It was not too long before they
gained some measure of control over the local Turkish
army, especially in Macedonia. It was not difficult to
convince soldiers serving in Macedonia that anything was
better than killing and murdering women and children.
After observing the
actions of the Young Turks, the IMRO leadership was
convinced that it was better to work with them than
against them. The Young Turks also offered self-government
and significant agrarian reforms if they gained power,
which was attractive to most IMRO leaders. Dame Gruev and
Nikola Karev were already dead, which left IMRO in the
hands of Gjorce Petrov, who favoured a policy of urban-led
insurrection. Popularity and the strength of the
rebellion, however, lay in the hands of the legendary Yane
Sandanski. He was in favour of supporting the Young Turk
regime, especially their prospective agrarian reform
programs.
While Russia was having
mixed feelings about the Young Turk regime, the European
powers, especially Britain who through intrigue created
the regime, were relieved to be rid of the old reform
programs. Britain approved of the cooperation between NFP
and the Young Turks, which caused further fracturing
between the NFP (who wanted to create an autonomous
Macedonia inside an Ottoman Federation) and “grass roots”
IMRO (who wanted independence by armed rebellion).
Unfortunately the Young Turk regime, with all its
promises, did not meet expectations and reverted to the
old Turkish way of rule. To stave off attempted coups by
extremist factions, the Young Turk regime resorted to
dictatorial rule in place of fostering liberal programs.
This clampdown manifested itself in a number of repressive
laws in Macedonia including the laws on strikes, political
associations and armed bands. This policy reversal again
destabilized Macedonian society by bringing back the old
oppressive political climate. The NFP and all other
political, cultural and professional organizations were
effectively banned, forcing IMRO to go underground. The
Macedonian people, in the meantime, were thrown back into
anarchy and things went downhill from there.
The Young Turk regime
predicted its own demise. To save itself, between 1910 and
1911, it re-settled almost a quarter of a million Turks in
Macedonia, hoping to maintain control of Macedonia if it
was ejected from Tsari Grad. They faced several fronts,
including the Albanian revolution in 1909-1912, the
Italian-Turkish war in Libya in 1911, domestic opposition,
the resurgence of armed bands and finally the Sultan’s new
loyal army. The Young Turk regime could no longer maintain
a hold on power and on July 13, 1912 capitulated to the
Sultan.
In the meantime, the Great
Powers were locked in a struggle of their own where none
could maneuver without upsetting the delicate balance of
the status quo. While the Great Powers were held in
balance by their own political vices, the new Balkan
nations were flexing their economic and military muscles.
Alliances like the Serbian-Bulgarian league against
Greek-Turkish collusion or the Greek-Romanian league
against Bulgarian aims at Macedonia came and went. On the
surface it seemed that everything was normal but deep
inside a rift was developing.
The rift became apparent
when Russian-Austrian relations began to seriously cool.
Dividing lines were drawn as Russia began to warm up to
Britain and France while Austria began to warm up to
Germany. Italy remained neutral for a while and took a few
shots at Turkey but was prohibited (by the other powers)
from attacking the centers of Turkish power. (It was
through these campaigns that Italy occupied the
Dodecanese). Even though Italy was restrained from further
campaigns, it weakened Turkey enough for the three new
Balkan States to consider campaigns of their own. Italy’s
actions were also a sign of things to come and created an
atmosphere of urgency for the new states to expedite their
own plans for territorial annexation.
Everyone wanted a piece of
Macedonia but no one dared stick out its neck to get it.
The three wolves of the Balkans (Greece, Serbia and
Bulgaria), with Russian help, realized that each alone
could not accomplish what the three could do together.
They swallowed their pride put their differences aside for
now and by the end of 1911 started negotiations for an
alliance.
As a way of preventing
Austrian aspirations in the Balkans, Russia invited the
idea of a Serbian-Bulgarian league. Russia hoped that,
jointly, Serbia and Bulgaria would be able to withstand
Austrian advances in Macedonia without its involvement.
After getting them to agree to talk, Serbia and Bulgaria
listed their terms but could not reach an agreement.
Autonomy for Macedonia was one major issue of contention
upon which they could not agree. While Sofia supported the
idea of autonomy Belgrade opposed it. Finally, for the
sake of expediting the negotiations, all parties agreed
that the “autonomy question” would be left separate and
dealt with after the annexation of Macedonia.
Russia made it clear to
both parties that they couldn’t invade Macedonia without
its permission and only if Turkey became a threat to the
Christian population. In the meantime, Serbia was
encouraged to take steps to annex Albania and Kosovo. A
draft Serbian-Bulgarian agreement was reached and signed
on March 13th, 1912. Included in the agreement was a crude
delineation of prospective boundaries and suggestions that
the final boundaries might be settled by force of arms.
The Russians also insisted that Tsar Nikolas II would
arbitrate any disputes regarding the exact territorial
limits.
Even before the
Serbian-Bulgarian agreement was finalized, Greece was
already having discussions with Bulgaria about negotiating
a Greek-Bulgarian agreement. The Greek-Bulgarian
negotiations, like the Serbian-Bulgarian negotiations,
were conducted in secret known only to the Greek King,
Prime Minister Venizelos and their negotiator “The Times”
correspondent J. D. Bourchier, an old friend of Venizelos.
Like the Serbs, the Greeks had always opposed the idea of
Macedonian autonomy but the Bulgarians were unwilling to
proceed until Greece agreed to the autonomy. The
Greek-Bulgarian treaty was signed on May 30th, 1912. Both
parties promised not to attack one another and to come to
each other’s defense should Turkey attack them.
The “Balkan League of
Nations” was spawned in June 1912 and shortly after Turkey
was given a signed ultimatum bearing the League’s
signature, which in short read, “deliver the promised
reforms in Macedonia or prepare to be invaded.”
There was much intrigue,
agreements, counter-agreements and secret deals between
the League of Nations (Greece, Bulgaria and Serbia) but
from the outset each was determined to exploit any
situation that developed, purely for its own gain. “The
League of Nations in fact was simply a device for
synchronizing a military effort upon the part of the four
powers (Greece, Bulgaria, Serbia and Montenegro) who had
come to realize that the simplest way to settle the
Turkish question, before it was too late and while
circumstances were favourable, was to attack Turkey
simultaneously and present the European powers with a fait
accompli.” (Page 440, Dakin, The Greek Struggle in
Macedonia 1897-1913) All that remained now was to provoke
Turkey into committing an offence against the Christian
population and the invasion would become a reality.
Using proven techniques of
terrorism to prepare the battleground, Vrhovists,
masquerading as IMRO agents, conducted many raids inside
Macedonia murdering, raping and plundering villages in
hopes that the Macedonian bands would be blamed. When the
Turks investigated the disturbances, both Patriarchist
(Greek Church) and Exarchist (Bulgarian Church)
authorities corroborated their stories and pinned these
acts on the Macedonians. As expected the Turks responded
swiftly and dealt with the situation in the usual manner.
Unfortunately for the Turks their actions were welcome
news to the League’s spies who dispatched their stories to
the European press. The Turks, in the eyes of the world,
committed atrocities against the Christians in Macedonia
and something had to be done. It was now up to the Great
Powers to decide the course of action.
Along with documents of
Turkish atrocities, the foreign press also received
well-camouflaged League propaganda. The League had
commenced extensive propaganda campaigns against the
Turks, detailing every Turkish act for European
consumption. A war was imminent but, according to the
League’s propaganda, it was a necessary war to “liberate”
the enslaved Christians from Turkish oppression. The
League, through extensive media campaigns, called on all
Christians in Macedonia to join the League and oust the
oppressive Turk. Here is what Yane Sandanski had to say;
“We ought to work on the awakening of the consciousness of
the Macedonian masses that they are an independent
nation...because those who seek to ‘liberate them’... will
actually be coming to enslave them...” (Page 134, Radin,
IMRO and the Macedonian Question). In other words,
Sandanski suspected that Greece, Serbia and Bulgaria were
up to something.
As mentioned earlier, the
Western Powers had not exhausted the full potential of the
Ottoman markets and were unwilling to let the Ottoman
regime in Macedonia collapse. At the same time Britain,
France, Italy and Russia were greatly concerned about the
aggressive attitudes of Germany outside of the Balkans.
More importantly, they were concerned that the Turkish
regime was leaning towards a Turkish-German alliance.
When Russia proposed the
idea of a “Balkan League of Nations” it was welcome news
for Britain, France and Italy. The League was viewed as an
anti-German front, a way of ejecting the Ottoman regime
from Europe and at the same time, safeguarding (British,
French and Italian) interests and expansionary ambitions.
The not so obvious Russian motive for sponsoring the
League was to guarantee its own influence in the Balkans
perhaps through Serbia or Bulgaria or both.
On October 18th, 1912
Montenegro declared war on Turkey with the League
following suit. The battles that ensued were fought almost
entirely on Macedonian soil, once again causing the
Macedonians to suffer from someone else’s war.
Russia, the architect of
the Balkan League, was against a war in 1912 and so were
France and Britain. A war at this point might throw off
the delicate diplomatic balance and escalate into a “world
war”. Russia feared that the half-millennium old Ottoman
Empire might not be as easy a target as the League had
estimated. Britain and France feared a backlash from
Germany and Austria now that Turkey was warming up to them
as a prospective ally. To stop the League’s aggressive
actions, both Britain and France threatened Greece, Serbia
and Bulgaria with economic sanctions but that was not
enough to suppress the appetites of the three hungry
Balkan wolves.
The League’s plan was to
surround the Turkish army in Macedonia and force it out to
Tsari Grad. To everyone’s surprise, however, the League
won a crushing and unexpected victory in just six weeks.
Five Ottoman divisions were surrounded and defeated in two
battles, in Bitola and Kumanovo. With the exception of
Sandanski and a force of 400 Macedonians who fought back
and liberated Melnik and Nevrokop, the League received no
opposition from the Macedonians. In fact, the enthusiasm
created by the “liberators” not only helped the League
fight harder but also encouraged thousands of Macedonians
to enlist in the League’s armies. “A Macedonian Militia
force of 14,000 fought under the Bulgarian command in the
East. The ‘Volunteer regiment’, directed by IMRO veterans,
consisted of a thousand Macedonians, Turks and Albanians.
In the Serbian and Greek armies, Macedonian detachments
such as the ‘National Guard’ and the ‘Holy Band’, were
given the task of encircling the Turks to fight their
retreat.” (Page 143, Radin, IMRO and the Macedonian
Question) Even Chakalarov, the protector of the Lerin and
Kostur regions, joined the fight to help the League get
rid of the Turks. The League’s victories and intense
propaganda were so convincing that the entire Macedonian
nation welcomed the “liberators” with open arms.
The moment the three
wolves evicted the Turkish army from Macedonia, they
quickly worked out a partitioning strategy along the
following lines:
Serbia was to receive the
northwestern portion of Macedonia, which included Skopje,
Bitola, south to west of Lerin, east to Gevgelija and west
to the Albanian Mountains.
Bulgaria was to receive
all of Thrace, west to Gevgelija, south to the Aegean Sea
and east from Solun.
Greece was to receive
north to Lerin, west to the Albanian Mountains, all of
Epirus and east to Solun. “To ensure their hegemony and
quell any dissent, the occupying forces set up the
apparatus of government and, by legislative decrees,
extended their own constitutions to these new bodies, from
which Macedonians were absent. Indeed, in many provincial
centres, such as Gevgelija, a double or triple condominium
was established, much to the detriment of the Macedonian
citizens.” (Page 143, Radin, IMRO and the Macedonian
Question)
In view of the Macedonian
contribution to the League’s success in evicting the
Turks, on December 12th, 1912 Sandanski called for
Macedonian autonomy. The League’s occupying armies,
however, refused to budge and initiated a violent
assimilation program. The Macedonian fighters, who fought
side by side with the League’s armies, found themselves
policed by a joint League command ensuring that no
resistance or independent action would arise. The League
also pursued Sandanski and his men. Sandanski resisted and
stayed active in the Pirin Region until his assassination
in 1915 by Bulgarian agents.
The changing conditions
inside Macedonia forced the IMRO leadership to seek refuge
in foreign cities away from home. Some of the more
prominent leaders moved to St. Petersburg and joined the
Macedonian community living there. This small group of
Macedonians consistently lobbied for Macedonian Statehood
and, in the war’s aftermath, acted as a government in
exile. The most outspoken advocate of the Macedonian
leaders was Dimitar Chupovski who published the
“Macedonian Voice” and continuously protested to the Great
Powers against Macedonia’s partition. In June 1913 he
wrote; “The division of Macedonia among the brother
nations is the most unjust act in the history of these
nations – it is trampling on the rights of man, and a
disgrace for the entire Slav race.” (Page 145, Radin, IMRO
and the Macedonian Question) In total eleven issues of
“Macedonian Voice” were published and distributed all over
Europe.
“A great terror reigns in
Macedonia now. The ‘freedom’ of the allies has no
frontiers, no-one from Macedonia has the right to travel
outside, to protest or complain before the European
states. Whoever disturbs this order is either killed or
imprisoned. The allies surround Macedonia with a Chinese
Wall…” (Page 145, Radin, IMRO and the Macedonian Question)
The Macedonian people must
not stand idly by and accept the unworthy fate of being
divided so that others may profit from it. “In the name of
the Macedonian people, we demand that Macedonia remain a
single, indivisible, independent Balkan state within its
geographical, ethnographic, historical, economic and
cultural frontiers...Macedonia represents a unified body
both from the historical and natural viewpoints, and
cannot voluntarily end its many centuries of existence by
agreeing to be broken up...Can we allow a people to be, at
one and the same time, Bulgarian, Serb and Greek? Is it
not simpler to assume that the nationality attributed to
us is dictated by the big power politics of the interested
parties who wish to take over Macedonia?” (Page 145, Radin,
IMRO and the Macedonian Question)
By November it was
becoming apparent that Turkey was running out of options.
On November 12th, 1912 it called on the Great Powers to
bring about an armistice. To deal with the situation a
peace conference was scheduled for December 16th, 1912, to
take place in London. Having some time to adjust to the
new situation, the Great Powers, for the first time, opted
from the usual “status quo” recommendations and considered
making concessions to the victors. Austria, however, was
not too happy at the prospect of a “large Serbia” let
alone allowing Serbia access to the Adriatic Sea. Austria
was eyeing the Adriatic region as a prospective sphere of
influence for itself. Being unable to make concessions by
itself, however, Austria did the next best thing and
agreed with Britain to the idea of “creating” a new State,
Albania. Another reason why Austria did not want Serbia to
have access to the Adriatic Sea was because a Serbian port
might become a Russian port.
This attempt to deny
Serbia access to the Adriatic Sea not only left Serbia
landlocked but also upset Russia, causing it to break
relations with Austria. Italy too was affected by this
diplomatic power play, pushing it to improve its relations
with Austria. This, as it turned out, was the crucial
historic moment which gave birth to the “Triple Alliance”
(Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy) and the “Triple
Entente” (Britain, France and Russia), a division that
would have future consequences.
As a result of this sudden
change of events, Austria began to amass troops along the
Serbian border. At the same time, fearing German
intervention, Russia ordered a halt to Bulgarian and
Serbian advances towards Tsari Grad. To fully curb Serbian
and Russian expansionism: France, Britain and Italy voted
to grant the newly created Albanian State full
independence. This saved Albania from being partitioned by
the Greeks and Serbians and made it a Great Power
protectorate, which Albanians enjoy to this day.
I want to emphasize that
by 1912 it was well known that a Macedonian Nation with a
Macedonian consciousness existed and demonstrated its
desire for independence. These actions were well
documented and familiar to the Great Powers, yet even
after pleading their case, the Macedonians were NOT
ALLOWED to attend the London Peace Conference of December
16th, 1912. Numerous petitions were made by IMRO
affiliates from St. Petersburg, all ignored. Also,
Chupovski’s memo to the British delegation was not tabled.
Here is what Chupovski (in part) had to say; “In the name
of natural law, of history, of practical expediency, for
the Macedonian people, we ask that Macedonia’s right to
self-determination be admitted, and that Macedonia be
constituted within its ethnic, geographical and cultural
borders as a self-governing state with a government
responsible to a national assembly.” (Page 147, Radin,
IMRO and the Macedonian Question)
The London Conference
adjourned on August 11, 1913, officially declaring an end
to the First Balkan War. In spite of all the wheeling and
dealing that went on during the conference, the
resolutions left all parties dissatisfied. Serbia was
dissatisfied with losing the Albanian territory. Serbia
appealed to Bulgaria to grant it access to the Aegean Sea
via Solun and the Vardar valley, but its appeals fell on
deaf ears. Greece also was not happy with Bulgaria’s
invasion and annexation of Endrene (the Dardanelles). To
balance its share, Greece wanted Serres, Drama and Kavala
as compensation. That too fell on deaf ears. Bulgaria,
frustrated with not achieving its “San Stefano fictional
dream” was bitter about Russia deserting it during the
London Conference negotiations.
Seeing that Bulgaria was
not going to budge and the fact that neither Greece nor
Serbia alone could take on Bulgaria, should a conflict
arise, Greece and Serbia concluded a secret pact of their
own to jointly act against Bulgaria. In short, the
objective was to take territory from Bulgaria west of the
Vardar River, divide it and have a common frontier.
After stumbling upon this
Greek-Serbian pact, despite Russian attempts to appease it
by offering it Solun, Bulgaria remained bitter and in a
moment of weakness was lured away by Austria. By going
over to Austria, Bulgaria in effect broke off all
relations with the Balkan League. Russia, disappointed
with the Bulgarian shift in loyalty, made it clear that
Bulgaria could no longer expect any help from Russia.
In what was to be termed
the “Second Balkan War”, the Bulgarian army, unprovoked,
attacked its former allies on June 30th, 1913, again on
Macedonian soil. Preferring the element of surprise,
Bulgaria turned on its former allies and renewed the
conflict, officially turning the Macedonian mission from
“liberation” to “occupation”. There were two things that
Bulgaria didn’t count on, Romanian involvement and
Austrian treachery. The bloody fight was short lived as
Romania, Montenegro and Turkey joined Greece and Serbia in
dealing Bulgaria a catastrophic blow. The promised
Austrian support didn’t materialize as the risks for
Austrian involvement outweighed any benefits. The real
surprise, however, was Romania’s break with neutrality. Up
to now Romania had remained neutral and refused to get
involved. No one, not even Bulgaria, anticipated this
attack from the north. However this was a once in a
lifetime opportunity for Romania to regain lost territory.
Even Turkey was able to re-gain some of what it had
recently lost to Bulgaria. Being involved in too many
fronts at the same time, Bulgaria was unable to repel
Turkey and prevent it from taking back the Endrene region.
The biggest winners to come out of this conflict were
Greece and Serbia, both of whom got exactly what they
wanted and virtually unabated.
The Macedonians fared
worst in the conflict mainly due to their own enthusiasm.
As frontlines shifted positions, Macedonian citizens who
were enthusiastic about supporting one faction now became
traitors for doing that and butchered by the other faction
for showing sympathy to their enemy. “The Carnegie Relief
Commission, dispatched to the Balkans in late 1913,
reported the incredible story of human suffering. In
Macedonia alone, 160 villages were razed leaving 16,000
homeless, several thousand civilians murdered, and over
100,000 forced to emigrate as refugees.” (Page 149, Radin,
IMRO and the Macedonian Question) This genocidal tragedy
was committed in a relatively short time, by those who
marched in and were welcomed as “liberators”. Worst and
most unexpected was that “Christians” committed this
genocide against “Christians”, reminiscent of the 1204
tragedy committed by the Western Crusaders in Tsari Grad.
After a great deal of
jockeying for position, deliberating and negotiating, the
warring factions agreed to an armistice, and peace between
Romania, Bulgaria, Greece and Serbia was negotiated in
August, 1913 in Bucharest. The map of Macedonia was again
redrafted without Macedonian participation. The new
boundaries ignored previously agreed upon considerations
such as lines of “nationalities” (not that any existed),
the Macedonian people’s democratic desires, etc., as the
Bucharest delegates imposed their artificial sovereignty
upon the Macedonian people. With the exception of one
minor change in 1920 in Albania’s favour, these dividing
lines have remained in place to this day. Of the total
Macedonian territory 51% went to Greece, 39% to Serbia,
and 10% to Bulgaria. August 10th, 1913 became the darkest
day in Macedonian history.
Not since Roman times has
Macedonia been partitioned in a way where three brothers
were forced to assume three different (imposed)
identities, speak three different foreign languages in
their own homes and be treated as strangers in their own
lands. The future will show that where half a millennium
of Turkish suppression and a century of forced
Hellenization/ Bulgarization couldn’t erode Macedonian
consciousness, Greek, Bulgarian and Serbian aggression, in
less than a decade, would. The once proud Macedonian
nation, that long ago conquered the world, bridged east
and west, introduced Christianity to Europe, safeguarded
all ancient knowledge and protected the west from eastern
invaders, had now been beaten and reduced to a shadow of
its former self. The force of this latest intrusion
transformed the Macedonian nation into a shy creature,
seeking homes in foreign lands and hiding in the twilight
while its enemies danced on the heads of its dead and, to
the world, proclaimed them as their own. It was not enough
that they consumed the Macedonian lands. These new
depraved creatures, spawned by western greed, consumed all
Macedonian treasures such as history, culture, religion,
literature, folklore, ancient knowledge stolen from Holy
Mountain (Athos), etc. and regurgitated them as their own.
Without hesitation they will lie to the world, even to
their own people, about “their true identities” and blame
their ills on the innocent. Their propaganda will turn
“lies to truths” and “truths to lies” until all people are
poisoned with hatred, an artificially created hatred,
which will haunt Macedonians for all time and render them
mute. Silence will fill the air and children will not dare
cry, for if they utter anything Macedonian a terrible
curse will befall them which can only be partially lifted
if they leave their lands or submit to the will of their
new masters. The proud name “Macedonia” which echoed
through the centuries and outlasted time itself will
become a “dirty word” never to be spoken. The Macedonian
language, the mother tongue of all Slav languages, the
“Voice of Eastern Christianity” will be “muted”, to be
spoken only in the shadows and dark corners, in fear that
“enemy ears” may be lurking. In time it will become known
as “our language”, spoken by “our people”, a mute language
spoken by a nameless nation. In time, the Macedonian
nation, the Macedonian people and the Macedonian language
will become “an anomaly”, “an idiom” in its ancestral
land.
This is the fate that
awaits the Macedonian people in the 20th century, all with
the blessings of the Great Powers.
To be continued…
References:
Stefou, Chris. History of the Macedonian People from
Ancient times to the Present. Toronto: Risto Stefov
Publications, 2005
You can contact the author
at rstefov@hotmail.com
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