[QUOTE]
Where did I say pure ? In several posts I clarified what I meant.
What is this agenda to minimise and sideline anything Slavic in this world. So no architecture, no culture, no nothing. Just a mysterious linguistic people of no national affiliation penetrating half of Europe and disappearing into smitherines. Im still interested to hear from your side what country you feel best fits the Slavic ethnos.
I gave a few examples, but it was considered weak.
Again a simple word that nobody uses around here. Its called assmillation not claiming. Is Tose Proevski considered Macedonian SOM ?
So your saying that Greek is not based on a common ancestral ethno linguistic heritage ?
Same thing with English. We speak it worldwide yet that doesnt mean there are no English people.
There were no Albanians in an ethnic sense back then. They were Arvanites, it would help if you use the correct terminology. It would make things much easier to understand. No, they do not have that right. It may sound harsh but its the truth. It is up to their family and friends to teach them their native language. You even mention this on your above response.
Originally posted by Soldier of Macedon
View Post
What is this agenda to minimise and sideline anything Slavic in this world. So no architecture, no culture, no nothing. Just a mysterious linguistic people of no national affiliation penetrating half of Europe and disappearing into smitherines. Im still interested to hear from your side what country you feel best fits the Slavic ethnos.
How?
The same thing we would have said 100 years ago. In Macedonia there is a Macedonian majority and a number of minorities. We certainly won't be claiming Roma and Albanians as our 'ethnic' Macedonian forefathers the way you claim Vlachs and Albanians as your 'ethnic' Greek forefathers.
That says as much about the individual in question as it does about the fluid American (and Greek, for that matter) identity, which is not based on a common ancestral and ethno-linguistic heritage. Go to Macedonia or Croatia and see if you can Clark Kent your way into their identities like you would in Greece.
A simple example is the native language used among family and friends by your ancestors, as opposed to the one used in Patriarchist schools and churches, or the urban marketplace.
What if those people actually fought to establish that state which you now call your 'own', like the Albanians - don't they have the right to retain and further develop their own language and culture, with the support of the state which they helped create? What about indigenous Macedonians that were already in those regions before Greece expanded its borders, don't they have the same right? If there is good governance and policies to ensure the preservation of both the standard official language and of minority languages on a regional level, what is the problem?
Comment