Macedonia and Bulgaria: Political Relations

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  • VMRO
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2008
    • 1462

    Originally posted by Macedonian_Nationalist View Post
    He's brainwashed like all the other offspring of the egejski begalci in Bulgaria.
    My father was one of the detsa begalci who was forced to flee the civil war and went to Romania. He lived in Romania for a few years and from there he moved to Bulgaria where he lived a good 15-20 years in Bulgaria and is not in the slightest pro Bulgarian.

    I believe the Macedonians who were ethnically cleansed by the Greeks and escaped to Bulgaria during the Balkan wars and World war one were viciously assimilated by Bulgaria.
    Verata vo Mislite, VMRO vo dushata, Makedonia vo Srceto.

    Vnatreshna Makedonska Revolucionerna Organizacija.

    Comment

    • Macedonian_Nationalist
      Member
      • Jul 2012
      • 407

      Originally posted by VMRO View Post
      My father was one of the detsa begalci who was forced to flee the civil war and went to Romania. He lived in Romania for a few years and from there he moved to Bulgaria where he lived a good 15-20 years in Bulgaria and is not in the slightest pro Bulgarian.

      I believe the Macedonians who were ethnically cleansed by the Greeks and escaped to Bulgaria during the Balkan wars and World war one were viciously assimilated by Bulgaria.

      I'd say the majority are Bugarashi though.

      Especially the younger generation. My friends first cousin is a Bugarash and he was born in Bulgaria. His father is from Gornicevo but his mother is Bulgarian. His other first cousin is a Grkoman and my friend is a Macedonian. Sad story.

      Comment

      • VMRO
        Senior Member
        • Sep 2008
        • 1462

        Originally posted by Macedonian_Nationalist View Post
        I'd say the majority are Bugarashi though.

        Especially the younger generation. My friends first cousin is a Bugarash and he was born in Bulgaria. His father is from Gornicevo but his mother is Bulgarian. His other first cousin is a Grkoman and my friend is a Macedonian. Sad story.


        Story of our people.
        Verata vo Mislite, VMRO vo dushata, Makedonia vo Srceto.

        Vnatreshna Makedonska Revolucionerna Organizacija.

        Comment

        • Niko777
          Senior Member
          • Oct 2010
          • 1895

          Rosen Plevneliev was born in Gotse Delchev. He is descended from Bulgarian refugees from southern Macedonia who resettled from today's village of Petrousa in the municipality of Petrotsani in Drama regional unit, Greek Macedonia, in 1913.
          Yea those Macedonians who went to Bulgaria are now Bulgarian, and those who stayed in Drama are now Greeks... And both countries expect us to believe that there's nothing wrong with this...

          Comment

          • makgerman
            Member
            • Nov 2009
            • 145

            Originally posted by VMRO View Post
            Story of our people.
            Yes it is sad. We have relatives who have done exactly that.

            Some who remained in Greece are now pro-Greek and some of their relatives who were expelled to Bulgaria are now pro-Bulgarians.

            Comment

            • Daniel the Great
              Senior Member
              • Nov 2009
              • 1084

              1/3 of todays Bulgarians in Bulgaria have ancestry from Macedonia, Rosen is one of them and I think he admits he is Macedonian, Macedonian Bulgarian that is.

              Comment

              • VMRO
                Senior Member
                • Sep 2008
                • 1462

                Foreign Ministers of Bulgaria & Greece leading the anti Macedonian charge.

                Code:
                http://www.novinite.com/view_news.php?id=145062









                Bulgaria does not have a problem with Macedonia and its aspirations for EU membership but with the nationalist rhetoric of some of its political leaders, Bulgarian Foreign Minister Nikolay Mladenov declared at a trilateral meeting with his Greek and Romanian counterparts.

                Mladenov hosted in Sofia Monday Greek Foreign Minister Dimitris Avramopoulos and Romanian Foreign Minister Titus Corlatean for a mini-summit of Balkans' three major EU member states, Bulgaria, Greece, and Romania.

                Bulgaria, Greece, and Romania have thus set out to "speak with one voice" in the European Union, their foreign ministers made it clear at their trilateral meeting.

                In addition to Mladenov, the Foreign Ministers of Greece and Romania have also made it clear that Macedonia needs to prove its good-neighborliness before it can be allowed to join the European Union.

                In their words, Macedonia's EU path needs to rest on a resolution of its "name dispute" with Greece – which has been blocking Macedonia's NATO and EU integration since the former Yugoslav republic is claiming a name that is also borne by an administrative district in Northern Greece – as well as on the Macedonian leaders' ability to do away with their nationalist rhetoric and verbal assaults on Bulgaria.

                Bulgaria's President Rosen Plevneliev recently told EU Enlargement Commissioner Stefan Fuele that Macedonia is not ready for EU accession talks.

                Plevneliev thus in effect reiterated the position of Foreign Minister Nikolay Mladenov who recently made it clear that Bulgaria does not support Macedonia's EU entry unconditionally.

                Earlier, in a special statement in August 2012, Bulgarian Foreign Minister Nikolay Mladenov reacted strongly to hate speech against Bulgaria in Macedonia media.

                Since the early Middle Ages, all the way to the first half of the 20th century, Macedonia and its Slavic population were considered part of the Bulgarian nation not just by Bulgaria but also by its neighbors and the international community. This is why from its National Liberation in 1878 till 1944 Bulgaria waged five wars attempting to unite all of the Bulgarian-populated lands in the Balkans, including Macedonia – after the San Stefano Treaty of March 1878 providing one state for almost all Bulgarian-populated regions was revised three months later by the European Great Powers in the Treaty of Berlin leaving the regions of Thrace and Macedonia out of Bulgaria.

                After both World War I and World War II, however, Serbia/Yugoslavia kept control of 40% of the territory of the geographic and historical region of Macedonia, the so called Vardar Macedonia (which in 1991 became the Republic of Macedonia), Greece retained about 50% of the region – the so called Aegean Macedonia, while only 10% of the region – the so called Pirin Macedonia – remained in Bulgaria.

                The foundations of the contemporary Macedonian nation were laid in 1943-44 by Yugoslavia's communists at a special congress that also proclaimed the creation of a Macedonian language and a Macedonian alphabet designed to differentiate the dialects spoken in the region of Macedonia from the Bulgarian language and to underline the creation of a distinct Macedonian national identity.

                The so called question about the perceived Macedonian minority in Bulgaria exists since the late 1940s when the dictators of the Soviet Union and communist Yugoslavia – Joseph Stalin and Josip Broz Tito – attempted to arrange the post-World War II order on the Balkans through the creation of a Balkan federation between Bulgaria and Yugoslavia.

                One of the provisions of this state engineering project of the two notorious communist dictators was the creation of a Macedonian republic within the future federation. For that to happen, the leadership of communist Bulgaria had to cede Pirin Macedonia to Yugoslavia in exchange for the territories of the so called Western Outlands (the towns of Tsaribrod (Dimitrovgrad) and Bosilegrad where the recognized Bulgarian minority in Serbia lives today).

                This provision was accepted unconditionally by the Bulgarian communist leader Georgi Dimitrov who acted under direct orders from Stalin. As a result, in the late 1940s, the Bulgarian Communist Party undertook an unprecedented campaign to force its own population in the Pirin Region (today's Blagoevgrad District in Southwest Bulgaria) to change its Bulgarian nationality and identity into the newly invented Macedonian one, and the official census figures out of the blue recorded that 250 000 Macedonians living in Bulgaria.

                The campaign to force the people of the Blagoevgrad District to become "Macedonians" was dropped by the Bulgarian Communist Party after the entire project for a Balkan federation between Bulgaria and Yugoslavia was killed with the falling out between Stalin and Tito in 1948-49 – a rift that had wide repercussions for Europe during the entire Cold War period. This left the population of Southwest Bulgaria – which was harassed by its own government on orders from Moscow – to shake off the imagined ethnic Macedonian identity imposed on it.

                Ever since, however, the authorities in Skopje whose legitimacy relies primarily on the doctrine described by the Bulgarian historians as "macedonianism", i.e. the distinct national identity of the Slavic population of the region of Macedonia, have resurfaced claims of "hundreds of thousands of ethnic Macedonians" living in Bulgaria under some sort of "brutal oppression." Macedonian media cite as evidence for such claims statements by the so called ethnic Macedonian party "OMO Ilinden-Pirin", whose members according to publications in the Bulgarian media are paid from Skopje and Belgrade to declare themselves as "Macedonians."

                The provocations in the Macedonian media on the "question" of "ethnic Macedonians" abroad seem to be in line with last year's construction of monuments in Skopje of Alexander the Great and the medieval Bulgarian Tsar Samuil, both of which are deemed to be great Macedonians by the government of Macedonian Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski and his party VMRO-DPMNE – a move that caused anger in Greece, ridicule in Bulgaria, and criticism by the European Commission.

                Some 50 000 Macedonians have granted Bulgarian citizenship in the past decade, and that the figure has seen a staggering increase in the past couple of years, as many Macedonians are, in the worlds of Bulgarian historian, ex Diaspora Minister and current head of the National History Museum, Bozhidar Dimitrov, returning to their "Bulgarian roots."

                As of 2010, it is much easier for Macedonians to get Bulgarian citizenship because the Bulgarian authorities no longer ask them to provide a document of Bulgarian origin – which is usually some sort of a church or municipal certificate from the time of their grandparents; instead, for the purposes of granting citizenship, the Bulgarian state has switched to assuming that all Macedonians are of Bulgarian origin.

                Unlike Greece, which gets enraged by FYROM's moves toying with the cultural heritage from the Antiquity period and is tangled with Macedonia in the notorious name dispute, Bulgaria's governments traditionally react to propaganda fits by Skopje with disregard, while the general public in Bulgaria accepts them with ridicule. To the extent that Bulgaria has made any claims towards Macedonia, those have boiled down to the refusal to allow Skopje to hijack Bulgaria's historical heritage from the Middle Ages and the 19th century Revival Period.

                Bulgaria was the first sovereign nation to recognize the independence of the Republic of Macedonia in 1992.
                Verata vo Mislite, VMRO vo dushata, Makedonia vo Srceto.

                Vnatreshna Makedonska Revolucionerna Organizacija.

                Comment

                • Gocka
                  Senior Member
                  • Dec 2012
                  • 2306

                  Borisov resigns

                  No one has mentioned today that the bulgarian PM resigned. I think its pretty significant news.

                  Comment

                  • Risto the Great
                    Senior Member
                    • Sep 2008
                    • 15658

                    Agreed.
                    Nothing more than another EU inspired failure.

                    Interesting comment:
                    German die Welt goes as far as saying in its title that the Bulgarian government collapsed under its EU-serfdom and that it is a prime example of how EU-compliant policy in Eastern Europe may lead to devastation.
                    And Macedonia is desperate to join the EU because they are "smarter".Spare me.
                    Risto the Great
                    MACEDONIA:ANHEDONIA
                    "Holding my breath for the revolution."

                    Hey, I wrote a bestseller. Check it out: www.ren-shen.com

                    Comment

                    • Gocka
                      Senior Member
                      • Dec 2012
                      • 2306

                      Originally posted by Risto the Great View Post
                      Agreed.
                      Nothing more than another EU inspired failure.

                      Interesting comment:


                      And Macedonia is desperate to join the EU because they are "smarter".Spare me.
                      Interesting quote RTG

                      From day 1 I have said Macedonia does not need the EU but I'm just an idiot I guess as you say they are all way to smart for someone like me to know anything.

                      I am quite surprised that no one has posted an article about this but as soon as some one in greece farts their something posted.

                      This guy was pretty anti Macedonia and now its a toss up who will take the helm in Bulgaria but I hear whispers that it may be a socialist party.

                      Anyway like I said I think this is a significant event that can have an impact on Macedonia.

                      Apparently there were violent protests too, I had no idea.

                      Neka si gi istajet ocite

                      Comment

                      • TrueMacedonian
                        Senior Member
                        • Jan 2009
                        • 3812

                        This is what the Bulgarians are saying. Apparently Macedonia is still so fixated on their brains that they require valium everynight just to be able to sleep.

                        Code:
                        http://www.focus-fen.net/index.php?id=n300128
                        Macedonia finds relief from fear of Boyko Borisov (ROUNDUP)
                        22 February 2013 | 13:31 | FOCUS News Agency

                        Sofia. The Macedonian media have extensively covered the recent protests in Bulgaria and the resignation of Boyko Borisov’s government. Some of the most frequent comments are that just four days after his visit to Skopje and meeting with Macedonian counterpart Nikola Gruevski, which Borisov described as ideal, the Bulgarian government resigned and the country braces for early elections.
                        “Good neighborliness will be strengthened by a new government” and “Gruevski left with no interlocutor in Bulgaria” are some of the titled in the Macedonian media.
                        The events are used to draw parallels, such as “Borisov and Gruevski – one for the people, the other for the post,” by the biggest opposition party in Macedonia, SDSM.

                        In a commentary, the Utrinski Vesnik daily makes a comparison between the clashes in Bulgaria after which Borisov resigned to avoid more blood in the streets and the political crisis in Macedonia, which arose when the opposition left the parliament and journalists and citizens clashed outside the parliament last December, which Gruevski reportedly tried to underestimate.
                        And now what – this is the most asked question since yesterday after the Bulgarian parliament accepted the government’s resignation, writes the Utrinski Vesnik.
                        “The question refers mainly to the internal events and positions in government, but we consider it important whether after Borisov’s reliable visit the talks on the controversial issues will find a trump-card or they will be left in the background. The key message is that the Macedonian prime minister does not have an interlocutor in Sofia and the swiftness of the political life there and the tension and obscurity who will govern make the negotiations with Macedonia very unclear. It will be clear who will lift the Bulgarian veto in the EU, if we reach such a stage at all, when the date for elections is set,” reads the newspaper.

                        Four days after arriving in Skopje for a friendly conversation with his Macedonian counterpart Nikola Gruevski, Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borisov resigned due to mass protests in the country, writes the Dnevnik daily.
                        Destroying stereotypes and enhancing bilateral relations will most probably be left for better times and it is not clear whether the working groups will hold a new meeting by the parliamentary elections in Bulgaria, reads the newspaper.
                        The Macedonian Foreign Ministry refused to comment whether the political situation in Bulgaria could reduce the dynamics of the working meetings between Skopje and Sofia and put the initiatives on standby.
                        “Borisov’s visit was a step forward. Let’s wait and see how the situation in Bulgaria will develop,” said the Foreign Ministry.

                        What has happened with the attempt to draw Macedonia and Bulgaria closer after Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borisov’s resignation, a few days after his visit to Skopje, writes the Utrinski Vesnik daily.
                        The newspaper reads further that European Enlargement Commissioner Stefan Fule welcomed the meeting between the Bulgarian prime minister and his Macedonian counterpart Nikola Gruevski, describing it as positive.
                        The surprising visit to the Macedonian capital was not noticed in Greece, writes the daily.
                        According to Greek analysts the visit could be an announcement about warming up Bulgarian-Macedonian relations.
                        Utrinski Vesnik notes that Borisov’s resignation after nationwide protests questions the success of the initiative to break the ice in the ties between Skopje and Sofia, although, given the current ratings of the political parties in Bulgaria, it is not impossible for the outgoing prime minister to regain his post and take part in the first intergovernmental meeting with Macedonia.

                        At first sight the surprising meeting between the Macedonian and Bulgarian prime ministers sends the positive message that the two countries have started to solve their bilateral problems. However, it is still unclear whether the soft tones coming from the two foreign ministers after the meeting in Skopje signal a solution to the problems in a European manner, as the Bulgarian foreign minister would say, says the Dnevnik daily
                        Slayer Of The Modern "greek" Myth!!!

                        Comment

                        • Gocka
                          Senior Member
                          • Dec 2012
                          • 2306

                          bulgaria's smugness really irritates me. They are always up on their high horse are they that blind that they don't see that their country is just as big a shit hole as Macedonia.At least Macedonia is aesthetically nicer than bulgaria. Tatarsko pleme smrdeno.

                          Comment

                          • Risto the Great
                            Senior Member
                            • Sep 2008
                            • 15658

                            I find the peasant mentality in the Balkans is consistent throughout the entire region. Even the highly educated ones have a little peasant in them. Not much difference anywhere!

                            Bulgaria has no reason to be on a high horse. It is a fine example of why Macedonia has no need for the EU. Rather than capitalising on an opportunity to sit outside of the EU, Macedonia seeks to be constrained by the same limiting factors and willing to absorb the collective debt. Only peasants and criminal politicians would be up for that.
                            Risto the Great
                            MACEDONIA:ANHEDONIA
                            "Holding my breath for the revolution."

                            Hey, I wrote a bestseller. Check it out: www.ren-shen.com

                            Comment

                            • Vangelovski
                              Senior Member
                              • Sep 2008
                              • 8532

                              "Academia" in the Balkans

                              This reeks of communism where facts and reason are replaced by ideological consensus and the "cooperation between the peoples".

                              http://www.balkaninsight.com/en/arti...st-cooperation
                              Macedonian, Bulgarian Academics Boost Working Links

                              October 10, 2013

                              Macedonian and Bulgarian academics agreed practical ways of boosting ties after decades of non-cooperation at a time when the two countries' political relations remain strained. At a meeting last weekend in the Bulgarian town of Sandanski, academics from the neighbouring countries agreed to cooperate in some 40 different fields ranging from social to natural sciences. Vlado Kambovski, the head of the Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts, said the establishment of academic cooperation was of “extraordinary” importance for bilateral relations. “The fields of science and culture [are] two areas of outstanding importance for opening of the ways of cooperation between the two peoples,” Kambovski said. The teamwork should begin next month and is intended to continue for at least the next three years. The touchy subject of history, where both nations have sometimes radically different views, is one of the areas of cooperation, Kambovski confirmed. “We are not going to touch those famous questions related to identity. We in science talk with one language that embraces different scientific views,” Kambovski said. In contrast to Macedonia’s strained ties to Greece, marred by the longstanding dispute over the country’s name, Bulgaria and Macedonia have had relatively friendly relations in the past, although tainted by mutual mistrust. Bulgaria was the first country to recognise Macedonia when it proclaimed independence from Yugoslavia in 1991. Moreover, Sofia, unlike Athens, recognises its neighbour under its constitutional name, Republic of Macedonia. On the other hand, Sofia is reluctant to recognise the existence of a Macedonian language, separate from Bulgarian, and many Bulgarian historians still maintain that Macedonians are ethnic Bulgarians. Bulgaria also does not recognise the existence of a Macedonian minority in south-west Bulgaria, though Macedonia reluctantly admits that there are people with a Bulgarian identity in Macedonia. The political relations between the two took turn for the worse when in December last year, Bulgaria joined Greece in preventing Macedonia from obtaining a start date for EU accession talks. While Greece justified its blockade on the grounds of the bilateral dispute over Macedonia’s name, Bulgaria said it could not support a country that had failed to nurture neighbourly relations. Bulgaria said it objected to what it saw as discriminatory attitudes towards ethnic Bulgarians in Macedonia, accusing Skopje of fomenting an anti-Bulgarian atmosphere. As a result, Brussels said it would closely monitor the effort to improve bilateral ties as a precondition for the country’s accession talks. In January, both sides set up political work groups and launched negotiations, expected to result in the signing of a friendship treaty. Both countries also pledged to boost economic ties. But with the European Commission annual report on Macedonia’s progress towards joining the EU about to be published next week, there is no sign of the announced Macedonia-Bulgaria friendship treaty. Observers fear that this will be regarded in the Commission’s report as a shortcoming after the initial progress in improving relations at the start of this year.
                              If my people who are called by my name will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, I will hear from heaven and will forgive their sins and restore their land. 2 Chronicles 7:14

                              The Revolution was in the minds and hearts of the people; a change in their religious sentiments, of their duties and obligations...This radical change in the principles, opinions, sentiments, and affections of the people was the real American Revolution. John Adams

                              Comment

                              • George S.
                                Senior Member
                                • Aug 2009
                                • 10116

                                Definitely Communism & ideological concensus here.What cooperation from the people only from academics.The Bulgarians won't change they think they can hold up the friendship act.At the same time he people of pirin aren't getting their human rights.When we talk of friendliness etc of Bulgaria ,the Bulgarians don't want any talk of pirin.WE have simple denials.A wasted time because the academics are never going to have a consesnsus.TO do that the Bulgarians need to give Macedonians in pirin recognition,with,giving of basic human rights.this is a good article of the Bulgarians Tom.Beware of wolves in sheep's clothing.Also no one should fall for any bs Bulgarian crap ,One thread article at MTO the Bulgarians were asking Macedonia through our president ivanov that we ought to celebrate illinden together.They thought that illinden should unite us.THere could be nothing further from the truth.Why because we have nothing in common until our brothers in pirin are given basic rights & freedoms.One needs only to read human rights artcles & one will see the real discrimination & bullying that goes on in Prin.The Bulgarians are very good of denying & lying about pirin.
                                Last edited by George S.; 12-08-2013, 05:02 PM.
                                "Ido not want an uprising of people that would leave me at the first failure, I want revolution with citizens able to bear all the temptations to a prolonged struggle, what, because of the fierce political conditions, will be our guide or cattle to the slaughterhouse"
                                GOTSE DELCEV

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