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Macedonia: What Went Wrong in the Last 200 Years
Part III - Before 1903
by Risto Stefov
rstefov@hotmail.com
August, 2002
click here for a printable
version
In the previous article (part II) I
covered events leading up to but not including the 1903 Ilinden
Macedonian Uprising. Events covered included the 1878 Berlin congress
and its effects on the Macedonian people.
In this article (part III) I will start where I left off in part
II and cover events from about 1880 to about 1903 with a special
focus on Macedonian affairs and events that led to the 1903 uprising.
The 1878 Treaty of Berlin set events in motion in the Balkans for
the next forty years. The re-appearance of Ottoman soldiers, the
worsening economy and the reign of terror imposed by the Greek clergy
was crushing the spirits of the Macedonian people. In the meantime
the economic situation of the Super Powers and the new Balkan States
was improving daily. In 1881, the Muhareem Decree gave Europeans
complete control of Ottoman finances and trade markets. During the
same year the Constantinople Conference of Great Powers agreed to
the Greek annexation of Thessally and Epirus. Later that same year
Austria-Hungary agreed to allow Serbia to annex parts of Macedonia
in some future time. Four years later, Bulgaria with some Russian
help annexed Eastern Rumelia. While the Western Powers were contemplating
the "Eastern Question" and collecting returns from Turkish
loans, the new Balkan states were plotting Macedonia's demise. Here
is what each of them had to say;
"Bulgaria's whole future depends on Macedonia, without her
our State will be without importance or authority. Solun (Salonika)
must be the main port of this State, the grand window to illuminate
the entire building. If Macedonia does not belong to us, Bulgaria
will never be firmly based".
"Macedonia is the lung of Greece, without it the rest of Greece
would be condemned to death. For Greece to become a greater power
she must expand into Macedonia."
"We (Serbia) are ready to enter into any combination if necessary
in order to prevent the Macedonian Question being settled in any
way that harms our vital interests, without which Serbia cannot
survive".
In addition to being handed back to the Turks, the 1878 Treaty
of Berlin now subjected Macedonia to three new tyrants. In time,
Macedonia would be subjected to all kinds of evil but the most cunning
would turn out to be Bulgarian chauvinism. The Macedonian people
knew very well where they stood with the Greeks. Greek policies
were straightforward, Hellenize everyone by any means possible,
force and brutality included. The Bulgarian approach was very different.
The Bulgarians were interested in educating the Macedonian masses
into believing that they were Bulgarians. Anyone who showed any
opposition didn't live to tell about it. And so became the legacy
of so many educated Macedonian young men.
In part II of this article I explained, with ample evidence, that
Greece was a "Western creation" to achieve two objectives.
One, to keep Russia out of the Mediterranean Sea and two, to break
up the Ottoman occupied Slav lands into small, nationally divergent,
easily manageable and loyal States (a solution to the "Eastern
Question"). Created by the Western Powers, the new Balkan States
would be loyal to their creator, British politicians were counting
on it. The Western powers introduced "nationalism" in
the Balkans as a way of replacing the Ottoman Empire, not with a
single state but with many "divergent" and manageable
sized States. Nationalism however, was not a way with which Balkan
people identified before the 19th century. For over 2,300 years
the region was without borders and without a sense of national identity.
For over 1,800 years, the people in the region lived with "religion
as the only unifying force" which brought them together and
allowed them to live in peace. Freedom of movement allowed the diverse
people to travel anywhere within the empire to settle and mix with
other people. So, how does one create "national consciousness"
where one does not exist? Ignoring the fact that the Ottoman Empire
of the 19th century was a multi-ethnic and multi-cultural pluralistic
society, the Western Powers initiated the nation building process
anyway. To them, it didn't matter what kind of "nations"
they were building provided that the new nations were a "non-Slav"
singular society that agreed to keep Russia out of the Mediterranean.
While the Western Powers were trying to break up the Balkans into
small and divergent states, Russia was promoting "Panslavism"
to unite all the Slavs under Russian leadership.
The national awakening of Serbia was an accident that couldn't
be helped but Greece was created by design. Greece was the opposite
of Serbia and a solution for keeping the balance of power in the
Balkans. While Serbia was destined to become a Slav State, Greece
would be destined to become the "opposite". The name "Greece"
was chosen to denote a "Latin" lineage, to represent the
Latin "Romaos" (Roman) character of the people. The name
"Hellas" was later chosen by Hellenized Phanariots to
denote a lineage from the old City States of antiquity. Both of
these names were foreign to the 19th century Balkans, but ideal
to reflect the character of the new State. The pre-19th century
Phanariots has no notion of nationalism or knowledge of the Ancient
City States. Their aim was to drive the Turks out of the Empire
and keep the Empire intact so that they could rule it themselves.
But this was not what the Western Powers wanted. The process of
Hellenization began by educating some Phanariots about the existence
of the old City States and their exploits. Phanariots that studied
abroad, London in particular, were seduced by the eloquently written,
romantic stories about a people that lived at the bottom of the
Balkans a long time ago. Phanariots were especially thrilled when
they were received by Westerners as the descendents of those Ancient
people. Not all Phanariots were Hellenized or convinced to take
the Hellenic road, some still wanted to re-create the Byzantine
Empire ("Megali Idea") but the West gave them no such
choice. It was one thing to "create a nation" and another
to "give it life and a past". The idea of modeling the
new Greece after the old City States was well received but lacked
continuity. No one could explain how the Greeks progressed from
the old City States to the present, pre-19th century history has
no record of it. There was no Greek culture and no Greek language
that would tie the Modern Greek to the old City State citizen. With
some creative imagination and a lot of convincing, the problem was
solved. Ancient history was "re-engineered" to fit the
modern Greek model. Yes, read your (fake) classical history and
learn how the Mighty Macedonian Empire was "Hellenized",
not by a powerful race, not by super intelligent beings, but by
"the vanquished and subjugated" people of the old City-States.
Alexander the Great, the most hated man of the old City-States,
the King who wiped out and brutally crushed the spirits of the old
City-State citizens, is now the "Great King of the Greeks"
whom they revere and hold in such high honor. What hypocrisy!!!
Perhaps some day, the English people will crown "Sitting Bull"
as their King and rally around him (no offence to the native people
of North America).
Altering classical history to say that the Ancient Macedonians
were Hellenized, does not explain how and why there are "Slavs"
all over the Balkans today. Thousands of years of Slav influence
and culture could not be easily erased, but thanks to the ingenuity
of the Western mind that problem too was solved. When the Westerners
began to write the new "Greek" history, they quickly discovered
that there was no continuity to tie the Modern Greeks to the Ancient
City-States. Ancient Macedonia extinguished all the City-State cultures
when she annexed them. The only continuity from the City-States
to the Roman era was through Ancient Macedonia. Only through a Hellenized
Ancient Macedonia could modern writers claim continuity for the
Greeks. It was there and then that the "history revisionists"
decided to KILL Macedonia in order to keep Greece alive. There is
NO Greece without Macedonia! If Greece is to live then she must
inherit everything that was Macedonian. Even after that however,
there was still the "Slav problem". The Slavs were always
in the way of Greek Nationhood and for these reasons the "Real
Macedonians" became and still are Greece's worst enemy. The
Greek zeal to become "who they cannot be" was transformed
into jealousy and hatred for Macedonia and her people. From the
outset, the Greek State deliberately chose Macedonia and the Macedonian
people as "the enemy" as is so often eloquently put and
without hesitation announced for the world to hear. Again, thanks
to the ingenuity and brilliance of the western mind the Slav problem
for Greece was solved with the creation of "Bulgaria".
"What is not Greek must be Bulgarian, what is not Bulgarian
must be Greek, there is no such thing as Macedonian", are words
echoed to this day. This is what Macedonians faced and must face,
lived and must live, every day of their lives both at home and abroad
from the 19th century to this day.
The 19th century creation of Bulgaria was the "answer"
to covering up all remaining evidence of the existence of a Macedonia
outside of the "Hellenic model". Never scientifically
proven, the so-called "Slav invasions" were concocted
to cover up thousands of years of Macedonian culture and influence
in the Balkans (and beyond). Modern history, without scientific
proof, claims that the Ancient Macedonians died off (mysteriously
to the last one) and were replaced by the "newcomer Slavs".
It was later declared that the Slavs living in Macedonia were actually
Bulgarians of sorts.
To divide the Bulgarians from the Slav fold and to show that they
were a distinct society, different form other Slavs (such as the
Serbs), the non-Balkan name "Bulgaria" was chosen to represent
a Balkan State created for the first time in the 19th century. The
name "Bulgaria" is derived from the river "Volga,
allegedly where the Bulgarians came from. We are also led to believe
that the Bulgarians were descendents of a small Tartar/Turkish tribe
that invaded the region a long time ago and were assimilated by
the Slavs. So according to Western sources, Bulgarians are not exactly
pure Slavs or pure Tartar/ Turk but a mix of both, enough to make
them different from other Slavs and enough to divide them from the
Slav fold. Being part Slav, Bulgarians could lay claim to the "Slav
speaking residents of Macedonia" on account that they too were
Slav. Being part Tartar/Turk and a descendent of the "Volga"
made the Bulgarians newcomers in their own land. Thus being newcomers
to the Balkans, the Bulgarians could not lay claim to the heritage
of Ancient Macedonia. Bulgarians however, could lay claims to items
that did not fit the Hellenic model like the Modern Macedonian (Slav)
Culture and language. More on this in future articles. If you wish
to learn more about the above you will find useful information in
George Macaulay Trevelyan's book "British History in the Nineteenth
Century (1782 - 1901)", Longmans 1927.
After 1878, while the Macedonian economy was crashing down by leaps
and bounds, the Bulgarian economy was improving dramatically. This
was partly due to the cheap labour provided by a large influx of
Macedonian pechalbari (migrant workers). Experiencing a very different
life in Sofia in contrast to life in the village, many Macedonian
pechalbari were seduced into believing the Bulgarian propaganda
(Macedonians are Bulgarians).
After 1878, the first Macedonians to take up arms were those who
were wronged and wanted to see justice done. Soon however, they
realized that their efforts were futile and their revenge only resulted
in the loss of innocent lives (relatives and neigbours were punished
for their crimes, sometimes by death). Macedonian leaders came to
the conclusion that what they truly wanted could only be achieved
if the Turks were expelled from Macedonia for good.
It was the charismatic humanitarian William Gladstone, a British
Prime Minister three times, who uttered the words "Macedonia
for the Macedonians" which rang out like loud church bells
throughout Macedonia. "Macedonia for the Macedonians"
was the signal that rallied the Macedonians into action and gave
them hope that finally the West would support their cause. In spite
of his great sympathy for the Macedonian people, unfortunately,
Gladstone was not in a position to help. The best the Super Powers
could offer were "reforms". A great number of reforms
were drafted and agreed upon but never implemented. The Turkish
Pashas continued to humour the Westerners with reams and reams of
fictional statistics and accomplishments while the Begs (feudal
lords) continued to dominate the "Chiflik" (estates) and
squeeze the village peasants out of their existence. The only visible
reforms were rail and road improvements sponsored by western companies
who were able to divert Ottoman finances from the state budgets.
Peasants who owned some land were taxed so excessively that they
had to work on Sundays at road and bridge building to catch up on
back taxes. To get such a job, they had to resort to bribery. As
if that was not enough, in 1889 the tax burden was further increased
by re-imposing a personal tax of seven shillings per year for each
newborn son, reduced only when the boy was able to work at age fifteen.
Some of these taxes were raised to assist small-scale manufacturing,
which was largely owned by foreign investors. Village peasants were
forced to sell, for next to nothing, their most valued possessions,
hand-made crafts, old coins and heirlooms to pay for these taxes.
To further aggravate the situation, lawless acts by the Turkish
authorities, without any avenue for appeal, contributed to the oppressive
climate in the villages. In addition to pillaging, Turkish soldiers
now plundered the farms and villages for their daily sustenance.
The Turkish administration was in such disarray that suppliers of
the military were not paid for long periods of time and were refusing
to feed the army.
To counter the plundering, peasant militias began to form but were
soon outlawed by the Turkish authorities.
By late 1890, those Macedonians who had land couldn't afford to
work it because of high taxes and frequent raids. Those who worked
for the Begs were at the mercy of their landlord without rights
or legal recourse. The courts were clearly working against the Macedonians
and beyond "external intervention" there was no way to
challenge their tyrannical authority. Though the land was fertile,
there was no incentive to work. Agrarian life became a burden, filling
village life with hopelessness and crushing the spirit of the Macedonian
peasant. Many Macedonian men left their families and turned to pechalbarstvo
(migrant work), travelling to various foreign countries in search
of work but often returned home poorer due to high travel and lodging
expenses. It was during these times that large emigrant Macedonian
communities began to form in cities like Sofia, Paris, London, etc.
Besides migrant workers, Macedonian young men also traveled abroad
to attend higher education. They too became involved in the growing
Macedonian worker communities. By the late 1890's over 100,000 Macedonian
men were working or studying outside of Macedonia. Cafe conversations,
dominated by discussions of "what to do to improve the situation
at home" became commonplace. It was clear to many that the
discontentment they were experiencing was not a local or village
issue, but a matter that enveloped all of Macedonia. It was also
clear that Turkey would not allow Macedonia to protect herself or
Turkish courts to rule in Macedonia's favour. It became clear to
all that the only option open to a Macedonian was outright rebellion,
a rebellion that would have common purpose, tactical mobilization
and central direction. There were many lessons to be learned from
the great deeds and disasters of the American war of Independence,
the French Revolution and others. By the late 1890's, Turkish tyranny
was not the only ill in Macedonia. There was also the process of
Hellenization, Greek propaganda and the Greek clergy to contend
with. Beyond that, there was Bulgarian propaganda that was becoming
more venomous by the day.
On another front, escalated Bulgarian activities in Macedonia prompted
Greece and Serbia to reconsider an old alliance (1866-67) of restoring
ecclesiastical unity under the Patriarch in order to take away from
the Exarchate. This alliance, due to Greek greed, for the time did
not work out. This however, would be a prelude for a future and
deadlier alliance that would last to this day.
By 1890, the rebellion started to organize and gain momentum. The
students were the first to take action. A student revolutionary
organization was formed in Switzerland and one in Bulgaria. Both
used various tactics to combat anti-Macedonian chauvinist Balkan
propaganda. Organized in 1891, the group in Bulgaria allied itself
with the organization of Macedonian emigrant workers (Pechalbari)
in Sofia and had much success. In time more organizations sprung
up in Russia, Britain and Greece but none could match the achievements
of the Sofia based "Young Macedonian Literary Society"
under the tutelage of Petar Pop Arsov. This Society of young Macedonians
formulated its own constitution and managed the revolutionary publication
"Loza" (Vine). The first issue of Loza came out in January
of 1892, followed by six more publications before the Society was
denounced by the Greek and Serbian press, and claimed as "its
own" by the Bulgarian press. According to official Bulgarian
State policy, "Macedonians were Bulgarians" and any worthwhile
Macedonian creation belonged to Bulgaria.
While émigré Macedonian students were fighting Greek
and Bulgarian propaganda and shoring up Western support, an historic
moment inside Macedonia was about to unveil. It was October 23rd,
1893 in Solun (Salonika) when two high school teachers, Damjan Gruev
and Anton Dimitrov together with Petar Pop Arsov, a former editor
of Loza and Hristo Tatarchev, a doctor got together in bookshop
owner Ivan Nikolov's house for an informal meeting. The main point
of discussion was the plight of the Macedonian people and what to
do about it. As word got around a committee was formed, more Macedonians
got involved and a second (formal) meeting was held on February
9th, 1894. The topics of discussion included the drafting of a constitution
to guide the committee. By the end of the meeting the committee
made the following resolutions:
1. The committee will be revolutionary in nature and will remain
secret. 2. Its revolutionary activities will be confined to inside
Macedonia's borders. 3. Irrespective of nationality or religion,
any Macedonian can become a member of the committee.
The committee also set out for itself the following objectives,
which were later ratified at the first Revolutionary Congress held
in Resen in August 1894:
1. destroy the Ottoman social system, 2. remain an "independent"
organization, and 3. seek Macedonian autonomy.
The organization became known as Vnatrezhna (Internal) Makedonska
(Macedonian) Revolutsionerna (Revolutionary) Organizatsia (Organization),
VMRO (IMRO).
Being of clandestine nature, IMRO had some difficulties recruiting
new members but within a year or so, its influence extended beyond
Solun and into the rest of Macedonia. Initially, the organization
was more ideological and less practical with the majority of its
recruits being teachers, most of whom taught at the Exarchate schools
inside Macedonia. To rally the masses the organization needed to
educate them and bring them in line with IMRO's objectives. For
that, it needed a charismatic leader who was able to talk to people
at their own level, and who was free to travel without too much
interference from the authorities. The man who answered that call
was Gotse Delchev, a man of vision matched by only a few, the father
of the Macedonian Revolution and the soul of the movement. (If you
want to learn more about the IMRO leadership, you must read Michael
Radin's book "IMRO and the Macedonian Question"). Gotse
was a realist and at the same time an idealist who loved people,
hated tyranny and saw the world as a place of many cultures living
together in peace. As a realist Gotse knew that in order for a revolution
to be successful it had to be a "moral revolution" of
mind, heart and soul of an enslaved people. People needed to feel
like people with rights and freedoms and not like slaves. With that
in mind Gotse set out to build up a revolutionary conscience in
the Macedonian population and thus set the revolutionary wheels
in motion. Gotse's installment as undisputed leader of the IMRO
was consolidated during the Solun Congress of 1896 after which IMRO
began to massively organize. Gotse's abilities to "listen and
learn" brought him close to the problems of ordinary people
who wanted freedom but also wanted to preserve their religions,
culture and way of life. With Gotse's field research in mind, the
IMRO strategy was to "give the people what they want"
and win them over. Initially, the strategy worked well and won IMRO
the support it needed and by 1896, it was able to exert influence
to a point where it acted as a state within a state taking over
administrative positions from the Ottomans, leading boycotts against
Ottoman institutions and offering isolated villages protection from
Greek and Bulgarian sponsored brigands. In time, IMRO operatives
were able to penetrate Ottoman economic, educational and even judicial
functions. The downside of "giving the people what they want",
opened the doors for Bulgarian infiltration. By "attitude"
and by use of the Greek language, it was easy to recognize Greek
influence but it was not as simple to recognize the Bulgarian one.
While the Greeks cared nothing about Macedonian affairs and loathed
the Macedonian language, the Bulgarians were a part of Macedonian
affairs and eloquently spoke the Macedonian language. By far the
largest Bulgarian infiltration into Macedonian affairs took place
in Sofia among the pechalbari. As I mentioned earlier, the cosmopolitan
lifestyle in Sofia, a far cry from life in the village, seduced
some Macedonians to succumb to Bulgarian propaganda, which resulted
in the formation of the "External Macedonian Revolutionary
Organization" better known as the "Supreme Macedonian
Committee". This organization was formed in Sofia in March
of 1895 and was termed the "Trojan Horse" of IMRO by Gotse
Delchev. The initial membership consisted of emigrant Macedonian
nationalists but in time its leadership was infiltrated by officers
from the Bulgarian State army ranks. The objectives, on the surface
of this "two faced" organization termed "Vrhovist"
(Supremacist) by the IMRO, were to fight for Macedonia's independence
by armed intervention in an aggressive revolutionary manner. Its
true nature however, (concealed from the people) was to undermine
the IMRO by subordinating its central committee to its own "Supremacist
directives". This and the fact that Vrhovism masqueraded itself
as "Macedonian patriotism" in the eyes of the Macedonian
people very much disturbed Gotse Delchev. True to his nature of
keeping an open mind, Delchev along with Gruev took a trip to Sofia
in hopes of reconciling their differences with the Vrhovists but
came back more disillusioned. Instead of receiving a handshake,
on March 20th, 1896, Gotse was informed that IMRO would no longer
be supported by Bulgaria and all finances and arms would be cut
off and from here on forward, the Vrhovists would decide what actions
the IMRO would take inside Macedonia. This was indeed an attempt
by the Vrhovists to usurp control of IMRO. Disappointed but not
disillusioned, Gotse turned to "Mother Russia" for assistance,
but there too he found no welcome reception. Russia had no interest
in helping IMRO because there were no advantages to gain from liberating
Macedonia (given Russia's current relationship with the Western
Powers).
Due to IMRO's popularity, strength and ability to recognize a "Trojan
Horse", the Bulgarian led organization failed to achieve its
true objectives. After that it resorted to violent attacks and assassination
attempts with the aim of eliminating the entire IMRO structure and
its leadership. It used armed interventions in order to provoke
Ottoman reprisals against innocent village peasants and put the
blame on IMRO. By selective propaganda and by vilifying the Ottomans
in the eyes of the world, the Bulgarian led organization was hoping
for a Super Power intervention to weaken the Turk and at the same
time create a climate for a Bulgarian invasion (disguised as a "liberation"
of the oppressed Macedonians).
In the meantime both Delchev and Gruev were promoted to the rank
of "District Inspector of Schools" in their employment,
enabling them to travel unabated and without suspicion. Using inspection
tours as cover, they were able to find ways to purchase and smuggle
arms into Macedonia. They also took time to address Macedonian villages
and make personal contacts with the village chiefs. Many people
flocked to hear what these legendary figures of men, patriots, and
saviors had to say. Unfortunately, lecturing out in the open placed
IMRO leaders at risk from spies. As a result on one occasion, Gotse
was arrested by the Turkish authorities in May of 1896 and spent
26 days in jail. When the Turks couldn't find anything to charge
him with, Gotse was released.
Bulgarian influence was not limited to Vrhovist actions alone.
Bulgarian undercover agents were dispatched to Solun to spy on IMRO
activities and report back to the Bulgarian State. The Exarchate
also had policies of its own and continued to rally the Macedonian
youth for its own cause. When it seemed like the IMRO was unbreakable,
the Vrhovists resorted to infiltrating the IMRO leadership itself,
which in time brought them some success. Bulgarian interference
in IMRO policies caused hardships and internal squabbling between
executive committee members and eventually caused the organization
to split into hostile factions. This undermined IMRO's credibility
with the outside world. The Vrhovists badly wanted to provoke Turkey
so that they could "liberate" Macedonia, but the Super
Powers, especially Russia and Britain "didn't buy it"
and saw their actions as provocative and dangerous. While the Vrhovist
leadership agreed to curb its provocative actions, its armed wing
of insurgents however, had already penetrated and captured parts
of Eastern Macedonia. Even though the invasion lasted about two
days, it became clear as to "who was who" and the true
Vrhovist agenda was exposed. After that IMRO gave the Vrhovists
a stern warning to "stay out of Macedonia" and to use
Delchev's words, "whoever works for the unification with Greece
or Bulgaria is a good Greek or Good Bulgarian but NOT a good Macedonian".
After that while IMRO worked for a "Macedonia for the Macedonians"
the Bulgarian Supreme Committee openly worked for a "Macedonia
for the Bulgarians". IMRO leadership strove to purify IMRO
from the Vrhovist infiltration. In essence, the IMRO constitution
was bolstered to exclude Vrhovist demands and still be able to give
the Macedonian people what they wanted. The IMRO leadership, without
much success, made attempts to infiltrate and sabotage the Vrhovist
Supreme Committee by making frequent trips to Sofia and attempting
to rally dissident emigrant forces inside Bulgaria.
While the Vrhovists were plotting against IMRO and the Macedonian
people from the north, a new menace was brewing from the south.
On April 9th, 1897 armed Greek bands began to aggressively cross
into Macedonian. The Turks protested this action to the Super Powers
but the Greeks denied responsibility insisting all along that it
was the Macedonian Cheti. It didn't take too long before the Turks
took the offensive and drove the Greeks out of Thessally. When the
Turks were about overtake the entire country the Super Powers intervened
on Greece's behalf to once again save her. The Greek Government
in charge of the invasion fell out of grace and when a new Government
was elected, it agreed to pay a hefty fine, which consisted of four
million Turkish pounds, as well as giving up Thessally to the Turks.
In addition to losing grace, Greece had to relinquish control of
her own finances (to the Super Powers) to ensure prompt payment
of the fine. The Super Powers, without German support forced the
Sultan to accept the offer and sign a peace deal. The Germans never
forgave the Greeks for lying to them about their aggressive actions
against the Turks. The Germans at that time were responsible for
Turkey. Outside of Greek brigand actions, for the moment at least,
Greece was not a direct threat to IMRO.
IMRO demonstrated great leadership by its ability to organize Macedonia
into seven revolutionary districts (Solun, Serres, Strumitsa, Shtip,
Skopje, Bitola and Endrene{Macedonian Dardannelles}). It also demonstrated
its weaknesses. Having allied itself with the poor village peasants
and striving to refrain from obligations and debts, IMRO found itself
strapped for finances. The IMRO committee was unable to raise all
the necessary funds to finance its campaigns. While the leadership
turned a blind eye, the local commanders resorted to kidnapping
rich landowners, merchants and foreign dignitaries for ransom. Kidnappings
did not exclude foreign missionaries like Miss Stone who fell into
the hands of Sandanski's Cheta (armed band). Taken by the plight
of her captors, Miss Stone herself voluntarily made sure the ransom
was paid in full. Short of finances mostly due to the unfriendly
terms with the Vrhovist Supreme Command in Sofia, IMRO found itself
lacking the necessary arsenal to wage war. Subordination to Bulgarian
demands was out of the question so Gotse had to look elsewhere to
get his weapons. Efforts were made to purchase weapons from Greece,
Albania and even from the Turks themselves but without too much
success. By 1897, the situation was getting desperate so the IMRO
leadership resorted to purchasing from the black market, even stealing
weapons. One such purchase was made from the Bulgarian Military.
The military allowed the sale of outdated guns but later refused
to sell cartridges, fearing the weapons may be turned against them.
On October 1900, Chakalarov, a local chief in the Lerin/Kostur regions
who spoke Greek, dressed up as an Albanian pretending to be from
Ianitsa, was successful in purchasing some arms from Athens. Later
attempts by others however, were not so successful. On one occasion,
a translator betrayed the purchasers to the Turkish console on the
advice of a Greek priest. After that the Turks trusted this translator
and made him a sergeant in their gendarme. He served the Turks well
and brought them much success in their search and destroy missions
until he discovered he could make even more money by taking bribes
before turning people in. As a result of this man's actions many
band members were killed in many villages.
The lack of sufficient arms brought home the realization that this
"uprising" was going to be a long one. Here again Gotse
and the IMRO leadership proved their worth by adopting a policy
of self-arming. With a little bit of skill on weapons manufacture,
learned from the Armenian Revolutionaries, IMRO set up a number
of munitions factories in remote and secluded areas, capable of
producing home made bombs and other explosives. Unfortunately, in
1900 during a raid at one of these factories, Dame Gruev was arrested
by the Turkish authorities and imprisoned in Bitola. He came back
to active duty in April 1903. In spite of all efforts made to obtain
them, the Macedonian "Cheti" lacked arms but had plenty
of courage to make up for it, which in time put fear in the Turkish
hearts. As IMRO grew beyond its ideological stage, it began to recruit,
equip and train fighters. Volunteers were recruited mainly from
the villages, young men who were willing to fight for their freedom.
Those who were in trouble with the law (brigands) were armed and
recruited into active duty. Those were men who flourished by attacking
Turks and stealing from them. They were admired for their courage
and ability to live free. They were men who practiced the art of
war, knew how to live in the open, how to ambush and how to hide.
They were the men who taught the young Macedonian recruits to fight
and win. The rest were reservists and lived at home, only called
to duty as required. Each reservist was expected to purchase and
secure his own rifle and ammunition. Recruitment was carried out
in utmost secrecy. Even women were enlisted in the Macedonian revolution,
but their role was limited to cooking, washing, mending clothing
and nursing the wounded. The primary role of a fighter was to defend
the people from Turkish and brigand attacks. The Cheti consisted
of about five to ten men, organized for rapid mobilization and quick
response. The goal was to have one Cheta responsible for one village
(preferably their own) in all of Macedonia. The leader of each Cheta
was chosen for his abilities to lead his men, and more so, for the
peoples' confidence in him to protect their village. To respond
quickly, the Cheta had to be familiar with the village's terrain
and escape routes. To maintain secrecy all orders were given by
word of mouth.
The IMRO mobilization managed to elude the Turkish authorities
for a long time. However, an unfortunate discovery of some explosives
accidentally uncovered the secret and led the Turkish militia on
wide "search and destroy missions". The militia's conduct
unfortunately was less than honourable when the soldiers took to
torturing innocent people and burning properties in order to obtain
confessions. The Cheti's responsibility was to ambush the militia,
using guerrilla tactics, before they entered villages and prevent
them from doing harm. This however, did not always work so some
of the Cheta Chiefs resorted to retaliations and reprisals for crimes
already committed. Although poorly armed and vastly under-manned
(sometimes as high as 10 Turks to 1 Macedonian), the Cheti fought
fierce battles and gained legendary reputations among both the Turks
and the Macedonians. Unfortunately, as the Ottoman authorities became
more aware of IMRO's intentions the Turkish militias began to swell
with soldiers. If that was not enough, at about the same time the
Exarchate, suspecting IMRO affiliation, began to dismiss Macedonian
teachers on mass. Even though most Macedonian teachers despised
working for the Exarchate, they used the schools as a means of promoting
IMRO's aims. They frequently gave lectures, taught Macedonian patriotic
songs, canvassed house to house etc. This was a blow to IMRO. A
more severe blow however, came in April of 1897 in what was termed
as the "Goluchowski-Muraviev Agreement". This was an agreement
drawn up by Tsar Nikolas II of Russia and Emperor Franz Joseph of
Austria regarding the future of the remainder of the Ottoman Empire.
In part, the agreement stated that, at some future time, the Macedonian
territory would be divided equally between Greece, Serbia and Bulgaria.
In other words, when the Super Powers got their fill of Turkey and
abandoned her, Greece, Serbia and Bulgaria were welcome to take
their turn. This indeed was bad news and as history showed, it was
devastating for IMRO and disastrous for the Macedonian people.
In about 1898, the Bulgarian Exarchate, instructed by the Bulgarian
Prime Minister, created a Vrhovist organization inside Macedonia,
based in Solun known as the "Revolutionary Brotherhood"
which in turn began to form its own Cheti. While pretending to be
part of IMRO, the purpose of this organization was to carry out
terrorist activities and in the eyes of the world, discredit the
real IMRO. By the year 1900, IMRO's enemies were growing in numbers
and intensifying in ferocity. IMRO's woes were just beginning when
they discovered that the Vrhovists had dispatched six assassins
to murder Delchev and Sandanski (a legendary Cheta chief affectionately
known as the "Tsar of Pirin"). The Vrhovist Cheti were
raining terror on Macedonian villages provoking the Turks to act.
Although never proven, it was alleged that the Vrhovist leaders
were working with the Turks in successfully arresting members of
IMRO, destroying munitions depots and torturing, raping and murdering
people. Even the Turks themselves participated in sabotage tactics.
Several Greek spies were killed at one time and the IMRO was blamed.
As a result of this, many organizers were rounded up and arrested.
In reality however, it was Turkish Begs who committed the crimes
as was later discovered. The same Begs were seen attacking Turkish
tax collectors. Failing to assassinate Delchev and Sandanski, the
six assassins, in their frustration, turned to attacking people,
burning down villages and stealing money and claiming it to be the
work of IMRO. Several important leaders, including the famous "Marko
Lerinski" (the "Tsar of Lerin"), Cheta leader of
the Lerin and Kostur Regions, was killed in these attacks.
All was not lost however, during the next attack, Sandanski was
ready for the Vrhovists and in September 1902, sent them packing.
The Turks did the rest by crushing the Vrhovist remnants in November
of the same year. The disturbances and civil strife were enough
to convince Turkey that yet another uprising may be imminent and
that she should take action to prevent it. As usual, violence was
answered with more violence. The Turks initiated a wide campaign
of search and destroy missions exacting serious retributions and
terror on the village populations. In addition to regular Turkish
troops, the Ottomans now enlisted reserves from the Albanian Muslim
fold. Every bridge, railway cutting and railway tunnel was guarded.
Also, every village had a garrison of ten or more troops guarding
it. While the Turkish troops were content with "fighting it
out" with the Cheti then retiring to their barracks, the Albanian
reservists avoided direct confrontations and preferred to join the
Bashi-Bazouks (armed civilian Muslims) in pillaging and plundering
the villages. These gendarmes, recruited from the Albanian Gheg
Muslim community, had a vested interest in disorder. The gendarmes
allowed law-breakers to exist so that they could keep their employment.
They rarely engaged in combat and their meager pay was always in
arrears so they readily accepted bribes to make their living. Both
the Patriarchate and Exarchate were known to bribe the gendarmes
in order to allow Greek and Bulgarian brigands to function freely.
To make a bad situation worse, at the end of August 1902, the Vrhovists
showed up in Macedonia uninvited and began to issue orders directly
to the local chiefs to start the rebellion. According to Vrhovist
plans the rebellion was ordered to begin September 20th, 1902. This
was news to IMRO. This latest bold Vrhovist action turned a lot
of heads including that of Vasil Chakalarov. Chakalarov was a respected
chief and managed to sway the people away from the Vrhovists. But
the Vrhovists were not finished and began to publicly accuse Chakalarov
and the others of being cowards and peasants for not wanting to
fight. When that still didn't work, Chakalarov was personally called
a thief, allegedly having stolen a fortune from the Vrhovist money
allocated for purchasing arms. Fortunately the Macedonian people
knew that Chakalarov was a decent man. They also knew that the Vrhovists
didn't contribute any funds for purchasing arms. Left alone, unable
to start the rebellion, the Vrhovists tucked their tails and went
elsewhere to cause trouble.
This latest Vrhovist action did not go unnoticed by the Turks and
put IMRO in a difficult situation. The Vrhovists, for a long time
wanted to get IMRO into a fight with the Turkish army but so far
were not successful. This time unfortunately, their wishes were
about to come true. The Vrhovists believed that a fight with IMRO
would weaken Turkey enough to make a Bulgarian invasion possible.
They encouraged the Cheti Chiefs to "start the insurrection
and Bulgaria would finish it" for them. "Bulgaria has
hundreds of thousands of troops standing by and will come to your
rescue as soon as the first shot is fired" is what the Vrhovists
were preaching to the Macedonian chiefs.
IMRO knew that its fighters were not ready for a frontal attack
with the Turkish militia. They also knew that fighting or not, the
Turkish militia was going to destroy Macedonia village by village
one way or another. The Vrhovists on the other hand, could not be
trusted for their help because they had no intention of honouring
their promises, their actions made that point very clear in the
past. In either case, IMRO had no choice but to act soon. The search
and destroy missions were putting many innocent people in jeopardy
including women and children. Local informants, Greek, and Bulgarian
brigands did not hesitate to inform on the villages, especially
if they had an axe to grind. On many occasion Patriarchate and Exarchate
brigands (hired goons) were put out of action by the Cheti and that
made their benefactors angry, who in turn informed on the villages.
Brigands were hired to harass and exact terror on villagers to sway
them to change allegiance from one church to another. The Cheti
were fierce fighters and fought gallantly when it came to protecting
their villages but were undermanned and poorly armed. As much as
they wanted to they were not capable of always standing up to the
large and well-equipped Turkish militia. The militia on the other
hand, did not always operate under the best of ethics and was open
to bribes. The poor people who couldn't afford bribes fared the
worst. Some say it was less of a punishment to produce a rifle than
not to have one at all. Some resorted to purchasing rifles and turning
them in just so that they received a lesser punishment. On many
occasions the houses of those suspected of aiding the Cheta were
burned to the ground. The Turks did not even hesitate to jail old
women accused of that crime. Historical accounts show that during
the height of the search and destroy activities the jails in Macedonia
were filled beyond capacity. In fact a Solun jail with the capacity
for 500 was holding 900 prisoners (some were held in the White Tower).
There is an old Macedonian saying, "there is nothing worse
than being locked up in a Turkish jail".
On January 31st, 1903, the Turks declared IMRO illegal and sought
ways to destroy it. The bad news for IMRO gave the Vrhovist the
necessary momentum they needed to become a wedge between those in
IMRO who wanted an immediate uprising, and those of IMRO who believed
that an uprising at this point in time was suicidal. Gotse Delchev
was against this "willing sacrifice" and was hoping to
find a better solution, but time was running out.
A second Solun Congress, dominated by the Vrhovists was staged
in February of 1903. Delchev and most of IMRO's loyal supporters
did not attend. A resolution was reached, but not ratified by the
regional committees, that an uprising would take place on Ilinden,
on the 2nd of August 1903. To weaken the Turks, the Vrhovists staged
a number of bombings and terrorist acts. The Solun to Tsary Grad
railway was bombed on March 18th as was the Solun Ottoman bank a
month later. This did not weaken the Turks as expected but instead
it brought more Turkish troops into Macedonia and further escalated
the violence against innocent civilians. If that was not enough,
the sudden rise in violence against Ottoman institutions was not
well received by European investors and businessmen who saw Ottoman
Macedonia as a safe place to invest. The few lonely voices in London
calling for Macedonian support were quickly drowned out by the many
voices of discontent calling for the demise of the terrorists.
Tragically, Gotse Delchev was killed by the Turks in Banitsa on
May 3rd, 1903 a day after the IMRO Smilevo Congress had started.
Termed the Bitola Congress, the purpose of the Smilevo Congress
was to review the resolutions from the Vrhovist dominated Solun
Congress held earlier in the same year. Damjan Gruev (a native of
Smilevo) chaired the Congress and tried hard to realistically present
the situation by arguing for and against an early uprising. When
the matter was put to a vote however, the majority declared themselves
in favour of an uprising. With these words "better an end with
horrors than horrors without end", Gruev also voted in support
of the Ilinden rebellion. From here on there was no turning back.
A general staff was elected with Gruev as the head and preparations
for the uprising began. In due time plans were made, a military
strategy was prepared, weapons, medical supplies and food-stuffs
were requisitioned and stock piled, Cheti were organized and training
drills performed. On July 26th, 1903, by a dispatch to the Great
Powers via the British vice-consul in Bitola, the General Staff
formally announced the uprising. Then on July 28th, 1903, IMRO dispatched
mounted couriers to all the sub-districts with the message "let
the uprising begin". On the same day the General Staff informed
the Ottoman Director of Railways to warn travelers to choose a different
mode of transportation in order to avoid being hurt. In spite of
all odds the brave people of Macedonia heroically rose to the task
with valour. They knew well that the fight they were forced to fight
might not bring them what they wanted but they chose to fight anyway
because it was a fight for freedom and freedom after centuries of
slavery was valued above life itself. That however, did not convince
the Super Powers to lend a helping hand. Macedonia, again for a
second time within a quarter century was exposed to treachery that
would make the 1878 betrayal look like a picnic.
To be continued in part IV.
NOTE: Many of you have asked me to say something about the word
"Slav"
The word "Slav" is an English translation of the Macedonian
word "Slava" like the word Macedonia is an English translation
of the word Makedonija. Slava in Macedonian means "glory, fame,
renown". "Slaven" in Macedonian means "glorious,
famous, renowned, celebrated, illustrious". "Slavi"
in Macedonian means "to glorify, to celebrate, to extol".
(page 925, Dushan Tsrenkovski's "The Standard Dictionary, English-Macedonian,
Macedonian-English").
The word "Pravo" in Macedonian means "right"
(page 850, Dushan Tsrenkovski's "The Standard Dictionary, English-Macedonian,
Macedonian-English").
Putting the two words together "Pravo Slava" assumes
a holy meaning like "Pravoslavna vera" or "Eastern
Christian faith".
I want to make it perfectly clear that "Pravoslaven"
in Macedonian means "Most Glorious" and refers to the
Christian religion. "Slava" translates to "celebrate"
as in a holy celebration. By no means does the word "Slav"
have any connection to "nationality". "Slav"
to a Macedonian once meant the same as Catholic to an Italian, Jew
to a Hebrew, Orthodox to a Greek, Muslim to an Arab or Hindu to
an East Indian. Today however, the beauty of the word "Slav"
has, for political purposes, been twisted into something ugly, undesirable
and denigrating to all Macedonians. More specifically, the Greeks
and now the Albanians call the Macedonian people "Slav"
to mean "new comers", "foreigners", "barbarians",
"simpletons", "ignorant", "inconsiderate",
etc. So please do not call the Macedonians "Slav", just
call them Macedonian.
The Pravoslaven Empire (later renamed Byzantine Empire) lasted
from 324AD when the Pravoslavna vera was first adopted as the official
religion of the Empire to 1767 when the Phanariots with Turkish
help, officially extinguished the Macedonian Church. After that
up until 1850, the Macedonian Church lived underground and continued
to operate illegally keeping the "Pravoslavna vera" and
the Macedonian culture alive.
It is well documented that the language of liturgy of the Pravoslavni
(people of the Byzantine Empire) was what we now call "Old
Church Slavonic". Old Church Slavonic is a Macedonian (Solunski)
dialect spoken and understood to this day in most parts of geographical
Macedonia.
You can contact the author via his e-mail: rstefov@hotmail.com
References:
1. A. Michael Radin, IMRO and the Macedonian Question, Kultura
2. Douglas Dakin, M.A., Ph.D., The Greek Struggle in Macedonia
1897 - 1913, Institute for Balkan Studies, Salonika 1966
3. H. N. Brailsford, Macedonia Its Races and their Future, Arno
Press, New York 1971
4. Vasil Bogov, Macedonian Revelation, Historical Documents rock
and shatter Modern Political Ideology
5. The University of Cyril and Methodius, DOCUMENTS of the Struggle
of the Macedonian, People for Independence and a Nation-State Volumes
I & II
6. The World Book Encyclopedia

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