JUNK HISTORY AWARD NOMINEE
REBUTTAL
The British Foreign Office and Macedonian National Identity, 1918-1941
A Rossos
Slavic Review 1994; 53: 369-94
It is ironic that the article preceding Rossos's [1], discusses the post-1940
USSR strategy in Moldavia aimed at denationalization of the Moldavians with
respect to their Romanian history and culture and its present day
consequences. Unlike their Moldavian counterparts however, today's
Macedonian intelligentsia seemingly remain faithful to the Yugoslavian
communist party's original "nation-building" policy commenced in the former
Socialist Federal Republic of Macedonia.
To convince us Rossos seeks not only to impose his own definition of what
constitutes nationalism, but to also cite "Macedonian" historians or his own
work as the primary reference sources. On the issue of ethnicity and
nationalism the views by academics experienced in this complex subject, like
Connor [2], would seem more reasonable, however Rossos would find little
solace with Connor's conclusions concerning the "Macedonian Nation". As to
the impartiality of Macedonian historians, I have yet to note the objectivity
which might prompt revision of Palmer and King's [3] original finding that
the sole aim of Macedonian historiography is - "to de-Bulgarize the
Macedonians and create a separate national consciousness". Especially when
Rossos lapses openly into subjective revisionism - "By 'Bulgars' Lambros
meant Macedonians". Contrast Macartney's comment on this very same incident
- "Practically all of these undoubtedly feel themselves Bulgarian" [4].
Rossos presumes that the selected document excerpts he cites, summarising the
personal, and often anecdotal, ideas of various British FO officials, and his
interpretation of the same, confirm 'ipso facto' the "Slav Macedonians as a
distinct nationality". But the British FO never advocated the latter, it is
merely Rossos's own extension. Moreover the idea that Macedonians "do not
identify themselves as Bulgars" is incompatible with the objective historic
record, when we examine their role in the Bulgarian renaissance, the
formation of the Bulgarian Uniate and Orthodox Churches and establishment of
the Liberation movements. Even Rossos's main reference supports this fact -
a FO document from Sir Rumbold to Lord Salisbury (Feb 1898) states "and the
Bulgarians, being the majority in Macedonia" [5]. Rossos's view is untenable
because he fails to account for, or rationalise the plethora of evidence
which directly refutes it. For example he stresses that the British, in
1912, estimated 1,150,000 Macedonian Slavs as the largest "ethnic" group in
Macedonia; but two years later in 1914, the Carnegie International
Commission, not afflicted by the FO's geopolitical agenda, reported 1,181,000
Bulgarians in, and referred only to the Bulgarians of Macedonia [6]. Even
the 1911 edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica (p218-9) states that the
majority of Macedonia's population were Bulgarian. And how does he explain
the opinions of the long-standing Balkan Committee [7], comprising leading
and influential Britishers, or the views of American Protestant missionaries
[8], all of whom claimed the inhabitants of Southern Serbia were Bulgarians?
There are numerous similar accounts.
During the interwar period Rossos neglects to mention groups like the
Macedonian Youth Secret Revolutionary Organisation (1921-22), formed in
Vardar and Aegean Macedonia to preserve the people's Bulgarian national
consciousness [9]. Following Serbia's discovery of the MYSRO in 1928 she
closed down the education system throughout Vardar Macedonia - a tantamount
admission that her de-Bulgarization policy had failed. It was this same
dedication to the Bulgarian cause that allowed the local population to
organise and establish true national rule throughout Vardar in 1941, well
before arrival of the Bulgarian National Army. And when the BNA, with
countless enlisted Macedonians, entered the towns and cities of Vardar the
population gave them a tumultuous welcome. I suggest Rossos talk to the
Macedonians who were present or view the original film footage. Moreover the
Macedonian Communist Party hailed the so-called "fascist" BNA as an army of
"liberation", not occupation, disregarding all Tito's orders to fight the
'invaders' and publicly denouncing him as a traitor to the Macedonian people
[10].
Rossos presents and argues for the "Macedonist" paradigm. Unfortunately his
logic is flawed because it is based on those same general principles of
democratic centralism so characteristic of totalitarian communist societies
and previously well described for this subject by Palmer and King [3].
References
- Rossos A. The British Foreign Office and Macedonian National Identity,
1918-1941. Slavic Review 1994;53:369-94
- (a) Connor W. From Tribe to Nation. History European Ideas 1991;13:5-18
(b) Connor W. "The National Question in Marxist-Leninist Theory and
Strategy". Princeton Univ Press, Princeton, NJ, 1986
- Palmer Jr SE, King RR. "Yugoslav Communism and the Macedonian Question".
The Shoe String Press, Hamden, CT, 1971, p159
- Macartney CA. "National States and National Minorities". Oxford Univ
Press, London, 1934, p530.
- Gooch GP, Temperley H (eds). "British Documents on the Origins of the War
1898-1914". HM Stationery Office, London, Vol I, 1927, p296
- Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. "Report of the International
Commission to Inquire into the Causes and Conduct of the Balkan Wars".
Publication No. 4, Washington, DC, 1914
- Sir Edward Boyle. The London Balkan Committee on the Balkan Problems. In
"The Case for an Autonomous Macedonia", C Anastanoff (ed), Pearlstone
Printing Co, St Louis, Mo, 1945, p51-3
- Hall WW. "Puritans in the Balkans: The American Board Mission in Bulgaria
1878-1918: A Study in Purpose and Procedure". Kultura, Sofia, 1938, p253
- Gotsev DG. "Youth National-Liberation Organizations of the Macedonian
Bulgarians (1919-1941)". Bulgarian Academy of Science, Sofia, 1988
- Clissold S (ed). "Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union 1939-1973". Oxford Univ
Press, London, 1975 p153-6
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