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Part IV - The 1903 Ilinden
Aftermath
by Risto Stefov
September, 2002
In the previous article [part III] I covered
the rise of IMRO and internal Macedonian
events leading up to but not including the
1903 Ilinden Macedonian Uprising.
In this article [part IV] I will start where
I left off in part III and cover the 1903
Ilinden aftermath with special focus on
the atrocities committed by the Turks and
by the so called Greek-Bulgarian "religious
wars".
Before I get into the details of the uprising
I would like to make a few points very clear.
Many village civilians died in the aftermath
of the 1903 uprising and they were ALL Macedonian.
Brailsford in his book "Macedonia Its
Races and their Future" and Dakin in
his book "The Greek Struggle in Macedonia
1897-1913" as well as many other authors
provide statistics that show Greek and Bulgarian
civilian casualties. Let me assure you that
beyond some high-ranking Greek and Bulgarian
clergy (bishops) and consuls most of whom
lived in the larger cities, there were no
Greek or Bulgarian civilians living in the
Macedonian villages at that time. Everyone
who died in the villages was Macedonian.
The people that were (forcibly) Hellenized
and pledged allegiance to the Greek Orthodox
Church were Macedonian. The people that
were lured by Bulgarian propaganda and fooled
into joining the Bulgarian Orthodox Church
were Macedonian. The informants that were
killed by the Cheti (Macedonian armed revolutionary
bands) were Macedonian. The Greek informants
who informed on the Exarchists were Macedonian.
The Bulgarian informants who informed on
the Patriarchists were Macedonian. The Patriarchate
priests who preached in Greek in the Churches
were mostly Macedonian. The teachers who
taught Greek in the Patriarch sponsored
schools were mostly Macedonian. The Exarchate
priests who preached Old Church Slavonic
in the Churches were Macedonian. The teachers
who taught Bulgarian in the Exarchate sponsored
schools were Macedonian. Even some of the
Patriarchate and Exarchate sponsored hoodlums
and brigands were mostly Macedonian.
What makes this sad affair bizarre is that
while Macedonians were dying at the hands
of the Turk, Albanian, Greek and Bulgarian
armed bands the Greeks were falsifying statistics
claiming the victims to be Greek and Bulgarian.
Since there were no Greek or Bulgarian civilians
living in the Macedonian villages then there
could be no Greek or Bulgarian victims.
Brailsford, Dakin and others obtained their
information through "politically correct"
official channels. Unfortunately, the official
channels were quoting biased and unchallenged
Greek sources, which supported the Greek
interests and the Greek political point
of view. There were no official channels
to represent Macedonian interests or the
Macedonian point of view.
The Macedonian people were exploited by
the Turks and the Europeans and despised
for complaining. They were forcibly Hellenized
then profaned for not being model Hellenes.
They were punished by the Bulgarians for
accepting Hellenism then forcibly Bulgarized.
Those Bulgarized were then violated and
murdered by the Greeks for switching allegiance.
Such was the fate of the Macedonians greeted
by the 20th century. But this was only the
beginning, for a new force, Serbian chauvinism
was about to be unleashed.
It was dawn August 2nd, 1903 and the men
could see their breath in the cool, still
morning mountain air. Darkness was finally
giving way to dawn. Not a soul had slept
all night. The fervor and business of the
night before had died down. There was only
silence now as darkness slowly yielded to
dawn and each man reconciled his thoughts
and comforted his fears. The stillness was
interrupted by what seemed like a thunderbolt,
when the Cheta chief soberly announced,
"It's time". Like Olympic sprinters,
the men rose to their feet ignoring the
stiffness of the long night's motionless
rest. Hearts pounding, they picked up their
gear and rifles and began the descent down
the mountain towards the chiflicks (estates)
below. It was still dark and there was no
one in sight. The men crept up on the barracks
in silence. The chief motioned with his
hand and the men quickly scattered and took
their positions. The barracks were now surrounded.
When a guard inside the barracks stepped
out, the crackle of rifle fire broke the
silence of the new day. Black smoke of gunpowder
greeted the first rays of the sun and the
cries of the wounded disturbed the serenity
of the morning stillness. It was August
2nd, 1903, Ilinden, a new dawn for the Macedonian
people.
By mid-day the Western Region of Macedonia
was on fire as church bells rang, rifles
crackled and bellowing smoke enveloped mountains
and valleys alike. Five thousand strong
had assembled to show their distaste for
Turkish rule. They had no cavalry and no
artillery except for the few cannons made
of cherry wood which were more dangerous
to them than to the enemy, but they had
faith, spirit and trust in each other. They
were the Macedonian Komiti (freedom fighters).
Following Damjan Gruev's orders from Smilevo,
the village Cheti combined forces to form
the following: the Smilevo and Gjavato Region
Cheta of 650, the Krushovo Region Cheta
of 400, the Kichevo Region Cheta of 350,
the Bitola Region Cheta of 250, the Ohrid
Region Cheta of 880, the Resna Region Cheta
of 450, the Demir-Hisar Region Cheta of
420, the Prespa Region Cheta of 300, the
Kostur Region Cheta of 700 and the Lerin
Region Cheta of 450.
I am proud to say that my own great-grandfather
Philip at age 53 participated in the Ilinden
uprising. He was issued a rifle and a single
shell and told to stand guard at Mount Preol
at the entrance of Prespa. At the first
sight of the Turkish militia he was required
to fire a warning shot to let the Cheta
know that the Turks were approaching. He
survived his bout and lived to the ripe
old age of 92 to tell about it.
The Cheti under the command of capable
leaders such as Damjan Gruev, Vasil Chakalarov,
Petar Pop Arsov, Pitu Guli, and others faired
well and enjoyed considerable success in
the few weeks before the Turkish militia
began to amass. The local villagers also
joined the movement giving moral support
to the fighters. Even men from others regions
that had not yet risen left their homes
and came to fight.
All in all the Macedonian people possessed
the will to fight but lacked the rifles
and the ammunition with which to do it.
When the rebellion began, as a precaution,
most villages were evacuated. People who
left the villages took up residence in secluded
places up in the mountains. They took with
them whatever they could carry and set up
camp with temporary shelters constructed
from tree branches and covered with vegetation.
The animals they took with them were fenced
out of sight in wooded areas. They even
built underground ovens to cook food and
bake bread in safety.
Some villages that did not join the rebellion
felt it was unnecessary to evacuate because
they posed no threat to the Turks. One such
village was Neokazi near Lerin whose residents
stayed home thinking they would be safe.
When the Turkish militia passed by, not
only did they raze the village, they also
turned on the civilian population. Not being
satisfied with just burning the village,
the Turks summoned about 60 Macedonian men
and placed them under arrest. On their way
to Lerin the Turks, instead of taking the
men to jail, tortured and massacred them
in cold blood. Eyewitnesses reported observing
the Turks lining up the men in rows and
firing at them to see how many one bullet
could kill.
Three days later, it was Armensko's turn.
After losing a skirmish to Chakalarov, Haireddin
Bimbishi's (the butcher of Smrdesh) troops,
defeated, angry and embittered were heading
for Lerin when they came across a welcoming
committee at Armensko. The priest and other
members of the village went out to greet
and welcome the Turks, but the Turks were
not pleased and murdered the welcoming committee
on the spot. Bambishi's men then turned
on the defenseless village and pillaged,
burned and satisfied their brutal lust undisturbed.
Sixty-eight of the villagers were massacred
and ten women and eight girls were violated.
"Several women who managed to crawl
out of their burning houses were afterwards
caught as they lay dying, and violated repeatedly
until they expired". (page 160, Brailsford,
Macedonia its Races and their Future, taken
from the "Blue Book" P. 319.).
The Turkish soldiers had orders to burn
down all empty villages because it was a
sure sign that they belonged to the families
of the insurgents, and to spare the rest.
As it turned out however, those who didn't
join the rebellion and didn't want any trouble
not only lost their homes but some even
lost their lives. It was a choice between
having your village burned or having it
burned and being massacred as well. It was
a hard lesson learned but it didn't help
the sick and bedridden who were burned alive
where they lay.
As battles raged on throughout Western
Macedonia, the Cheti put down most of the
local Turkish garrisons. They destroyed
bridges, railway lines and communications
centers, captured most chifliks and briefly
liberated some regions such as Kichevo,
Demir-Hisar, Kostur, Lerin, Klisoura and
Neveska. The cities of Kostur and Lerin
themselves were not liberated. The most
successful and highly celebrated of all
battles however, was the storming of the
town of Krushevo. Nikola Karev led the Cheti
in the attack and defeated the local Turkish
garrison with ease. The Macedonians quickly
took over the most strategic points like
the Post Office, Town Hall and local Police
Station and declared Krushevo liberated.
True to their democratic commitments, the
leaders of the liberating force constituted
the Krushevo assembly which appointed a
committee of sixty members, twenty from
each of the community's Macedonian, Vlach
and Albanian population. The committee in
turn elected an executive body of six delegates,
two from each community, which operated
as a provisional government. The government
in turn established a financial, judiciary
and police force. "At Krushevo, under
the rays of temporary liberty, fraternity
and equality, national hatreds were dispelled
and peace and concord reigned. For eleven
whole days Krushevo lived as a little independent
state, and although in miniature, clothed
with flesh and blood that idea which spurred
Macedonians to fight, against tyranny up
to the Ilinden rising". (page 193,
Vasil Bogov, Macedonian Revelation, Historical
Documents Rock and Shatter Modern Political
Ideology).
True to his socialist ideals, Nikola Karev
drew up the famous Krushevo manifesto, a
document aimed at eliciting support from
all the communities including the Muslim
Turks and Albanians. (You can read the full
text of the Krushevo manifesto in appendix
3B, staring on page 275, in Michael Radin's
book IMRO and the Macedonian Question. It
is most inspiring to learn that in spite
of what the Turks and Albanians had done
to the Macedonian people, the Macedonian
leaders still found it within their hearts
to show compassion for them.) I also want
to add that Brailsford in his book "Macedonia
its Races and their Future" has nothing
but praise for the Macedonian Cheti for
their more than exemplary conduct during
the uprising.
The "Krushevo Republic" unfortunately,
lasted only two weeks, but it was a glorious
Republic that will forever remind the Macedonian
people of their eternal struggle for independence
and of their thirst for freedom. The liberation
of Krushevo imprinted on the new Macedonian
generations the legacy of a timeless and
irreversible march towards self-determination.
IMRO came a long way from a group of academics
deliberating what to do in the face of repression
to delivering, in a true revolutionary fashion,
a democratic Republic with all the socialist
trimmings.
Here again, we see the Macedonian desire
for multi-culturalism and for a new multi-ethnic
society waiting to re-surface. The Republic
was constituted on a multiracial basis in
accordance with the wishes of the majority
of the Macedonian people.
Next to Krushevo, Kostur, under the command
of Lazar Pop Trajkov and my favourite hero,
Vasil Chakalarov who faired second best
in the tactical mobilization of the Cheti.
These brigades staged successful raids and
liberated Klisura and Neveska then returned
southward and with the support of over three
thousand villagers, attacked Kostur but
without success. In the meantime other Cheti
attacked and liberated Ohrid, which remained
free for almost three months. The Ohrid
attack was the most successful in terms
of advance planning and administering the
establishment of medical aid, underground
workshops, secret bakeries and securing
foodstuffs. Ohrid later became the center
for establishing refugee camps for many
displaced persons.
Uprisings outside of Western Macedonia
were limited to swift guerilla actions consisting
mostly of attacks against Ottoman institutions,
bombings of railway lines and the occasional
skirmish with the Turkish militia. Many
Cheti were successful in capturing important
Turkish officials with aims of constructing
dialog for prospective negotiations but
in actuality they met with little success.
Vrhovist involvement, as expected, was minimal
during the uprising and brought to light
once again the true nature of Vrhovism (Macedonia
for the Bulgarians).
As the Cheti fought gallantly putting down
garrison after garrison in the larger towns
many of the smaller villages were left unprotected
and open to Bashi-bazouk and Turkish militia
attacks. Keeping in mind the Neokrazi and
Armensko incidents, many of the Cheta chiefs
felt compelled to return home to repel such
attacks. Due to this and the fact that the
Cheti were overpowered by the numerically
superior Turkish militia, in the short term,
a large-scale operation against the Turks
never materialized. Unfortunately, as time
passed so did the opportunities for a decisive
strike, as an even larger Turkish force
was amassing.
The initial success of the rebellion was
a surprise to the Turks especially since
the Turkish forces were numerically superior
to those of the rebels. The Cheti however,
demonstrated their abilities in battle and
more than matched the numbers with will.
Turkey unfortunately, was determined to
put down the rebellion and amassed additional
forces deploying a total of 167,000 infantry,
3,700 cavalry and 440 pieces of artillery
(all cannons). Krushevo alone was surrounded
by 20,000 Turkish troops with 18 cannons
against an encircled force of no more than
1,200 rebel fighters. The battle to retake
Krushevo began on August 12th with the Macedonians
crying out "Sloboda ili Smirt"
(liberty or death) against the onslaught
of Turkish cannon fire. Pitu Guli and his
men fought gallantly and provided stiff
opposition to the Turkish advance but was
no match for General Baktiar Pasha. Baktiar
was a skilled war veteran who overwhelmed
the Cheti by attacking the entire region
simultaneously. The region was surrounded
by soldiers, encircled by cannon fire, and
every Macedonian stronghold inside was attacked
simultaneously cutting off all reinforcements
and all outside support.
After the mountains lit up with gunfire
and smoke filled the skies, no Super Powers
came to the rescue. Macedonia was left alone
to feel the full fury of the Ottoman Empire's
army and to pay for all of Europe's sins
committed against the Turks.
Serbia, Greece and Bulgaria were now free,
their freedom guaranteed by the Super Powers.
When Greece got into trouble, the Super
Powers wasted no time to come to her rescue.
Where were the Super Powers when Macedonia
needed their help? Why did they not respond
to the cries of the burning villagers? Why
did they not intervene to stop the killing,
razing and pounding? Where was Britain when
the European-made Turkish cannons pounded
Krushevo to dust?
Once Krushevo fell, one by one other IMRO
strongholds began to yield winding down
the ten-week-old rebellion. In Krushevo
Baktiar Pasha allowed his troops to kill,
pillage and rape for three days, permanently
devastating the town. 117 civilians were
murdered, 150 women were raped and 159 houses
were burned.
In the Ilinden aftermath, according to Radin,
in total 4,694 civilians were murdered,
3,122 women were raped, 12,440 houses were
burned, 201 villages were razed, 75,835
people were left homeless and about 30,000
people left the country for good becoming
permanent refugees (page 105, IMRO and the
Macedonian Question). Besides the atrocities
committed against the civilian population
in Macedonia, the most significant impact
of the uprising was the loss of so many
great IMRO leaders.
Despite the negative attitudes of the European
Governments, there was much press about
the Ilinden rebellion. World opinion was
generally sympathetic to the Macedonian
cause and highly critical of the Ottoman
atrocities. Emigrant Macedonians the world
over bombarded the Western Press with scathing
attacks on the British, French and Austrian
governments for supporting Turkey, militarily
and financially. Even emigrants as far as
the United States, staged large rallies
in support of the rebellion. In New York
alone more than 100,000 gathered to show
support.
A Chicago newspaper reported that a Macedonian
regiment had formed in that city and was
preparing to take part in the rebellion.
Closer to home, south Slav Nations such
as Slovenia and Vojvodina held public meetings
in support of the Macedonian Revolution.
Even the European press featured sympathetic
headlines when covering the rebellion. "It
was a bitter struggle between the tortured
slaves fighting on masse, often without
weapons, but on spirit alone, for life and
liberty; and the sadistic Pasha and his
cohorts, murdering and plundering with rabidity"
(Giorgio Nurigiani).
British official policy however, was less
than sympathetic. According to the Daily
News, September 14, 1903, Prime Minister
Balfour told the House of Commons "...the
balance of criminality lies not with the
Turks, but with the rebels". The paper
was critical of this attitude and recorded
the following editorial: "The balance
of criminality is surely here in our own
land. Britain had denied Macedonia freedom
at Berlin, knowing that (continued) Ottoman
rule was synonymous with cruelty and tyranny,
and by adopting a laissez-faire attitude
at the juncture, Britain is a consenting
party to all the ghastly murders and massacres
in Macedonia..." (Radin, page 107,
IMRO and the Macedonian Question).
While there was public outcry in the streets
regarding the treatment of Macedonians,
the British Government cared less about
Macedonia's suffering than about Bulgarian
threats to their precious Ottoman Empire.
Being weakened by the Macedonian rebellion,
the thinking in London was that Turkey was
now ripe for a Bulgarian invasion. Balfour
used the Macedonian rebellion as a pretext
to move Britain's Mediterranean Fleet into
the Aegean Sea fearing that war between
Bulgaria and Turkey was now inevitable.
At about the same time Greek-Turkish relations
began to warm up. The souring relationship
between Turkey and Bulgaria was seen as
a new opportunity by Greece to accelerate
her Hellenization activities inside Macedonia.
Making her way to Turkey, Greece had to
first prop up her cool relationship with
Germany. Her first attempt was initiated
by inviting German help to re-organize the
Greek military. After that, Greece began
to grant industrial and commercial favours
to German businessmen including the re-organization
of the Greek telegraph.
The Turks on the other hand, were looking
for allies. The loss of Ottoman Crete to
the Greeks was only a bruise to the Turkish
ego, so the Turks were willing to forgive
and forget. Losing Macedonia however, was
serious business, and bolstering the friendship
with Greece was one way of staving off Bulgarian
advances.
To preserve whatever they could from a
failing rebellion, IMRO turned its attention
to diplomacy. In September 1903, Pere Toshev
of IMRO took a trip to Tsari Grad (Constantinople)
to elicit some guarantees from official
representatives of the Super Powers. Toshev's
only request was that Macedonia be governed
by a Christian governor. Unfortunately,
his request was rejected in favour of the
status quo. Later however, when statistics
of Turkish atrocities started pouring in,
the Super Power attitude softened a little.
In October the Super Powers re-considered
Toshev's request, but instead of appointing
a Christian governor each nation agreed
to send a small "peace-keeping"
force. This did not help the Macedonian
position at all, in fact it hindered IMRO
from self-defense initiatives even against
Bashi-bazouk attacks.
Turkish atrocities committed against the
Macedonian villages in the eyes of the world
created bad publicity for Turkey and for
her allies the Western Powers. As a result
Turkish popularity started to decline and
so did Turkey's favour with the Super Powers.
Being financially strapped and having her
hands tied, Turkey turned to her neighbours
for assistance. By declaring Macedonia a
"multi-interest-zone" and inviting
armed propaganda from Greece, Bulgaria and
Serbia to counter the IMRO insurgence, Turkey
was hoping to turn the tide of the rebellion
in her favour. Again, Super Power inaction
put Macedonia and the Macedonian people
into peril.
At the end of August, after the fall of
Krushevo, Nasir Pasha was appointed to take
over command from Omar Rushdi Pasha. Rushdi
was blamed for the flare-up of the rebellion
and Nasir was chosen to put an end to it.
Nasir Pasha was a favourite of the Sultan,
spoke German and was considered civilized
by many who had high hopes for a quick end
to the rebellion. Unfortunately, Nasir's
plans involved the burning of ALL revolting
villages and quickly cornering and rounding
up all those doing the revolting. He certainly
had the "right men" with the "right
courage" to execute such a barbaric
plan, unfortunately, Nasir Pasha's plan
did not involve pursuing the Cheti. "...the
regiments which should have been pursuing
the Insurgents found it more agreeable and
interesting to pillage the defenseless villagers
and make war on the women and children"
(page 155 Brailsford, Macedonia its Races
and their Future). Nasir Pasha's strategy
forced IMRO and the Cheti to rethink their
plans and change their tactics. Henceforth,
organized Cheti attacks on the Turks subsided
and the Cheti regrouped to take up defensive
positions. Concerned for their families
and villages some of the Cheti broke up
and returned to defend their own homes.
After that, fighting became disorderly and
on November 2nd, 1903, the insurrection
was declared at an end.
According to Brailsford, the Cheti fought
about 150 battles in total with 746 casualties,
which amounted to about 15 % of the total
fighting force. In most of these encounters
the Cheti were outnumbered by at least 10
Turks to 1 Macedonian. (Page 155 Macedonia
its Races and their Future). Before it was
all over, the Turks were attacking everywhere,
even in secluded areas that once were beyond
militia reach. To save themselves, many
civilians resorted to camping among the
fighters and even following them in wild
battles. Their only safety was to be with
the Cheti. "...sometimes the battle
raged about the lair where the women and
children lay, the men fighting with all
their manhood to defend some shallow trench,
knowing that behind them cowered wife and
child expecting massacre if their courage
failed or their bullets missed the mark".
(page 162, Brailsford, Macedonia its Races
and their Future).
Before I finish with the Ilinden uprising
I want to mention that even though not much
action was seen in Eastern Macedonia, the
Endene (Macedonian Dardanelles or Andrianople)
region had also risen in 1903 to join the
Macedonian rebellion. This forgotten region,
that once ruled the world, belonged to Macedonia
at one point in time because Macedonians
to this day still live there. What the world
calls Pomac (converts from Christianity
to Islam) Bulgarians are in fact Macedonians
that converted to Islam. It is believed
that the Christians of Endrene initiated
the revolt but could not sustain it for
too long due to the numerical superiority
of the Muslim militia and the fact that
the region was without mountains and there
were no places to hide.
There is no good time to wage war in any
society let alone inside a self-sufficient
agrarian microcosm. The leaders of the Ilinden
rebellion knew that. They also knew that
they would be risking more than their own
lives when they called for a revolt. The
crops would not be harvested and people
would starve to death. "Fleeing incessantly,
they soon left behind them their stores
of food and their herds of beasts. They
were now shelterless under cold skies. There
were villages which lived for days together
on roots and salad grasses. The young children
died in large numbers, and men and women
graduated for the epidemics which were to
decimate those whom the Turks had spared".
(page 162, Brailsford, Macedonia its Races
and their Future). Those who came back from
the mountains alive didn't fair well either.
People from the burned villages crowded
in towns where helpless masses of starving
women begged for bread door to door. They
lost everything, home, crops, cattle and
hand made clothing that were to last them
for half a lifetime. It was through the
generosity and charity of neighbours that
most of them managed to survive. Macedonians
possess a unique compassion for all living
things. Love and respect for life flourishes
from generation to generation and is part
of the Macedonian tradition.
IMRO leaders that survived the rebellion
responded decisively to the new crisis by
establishing temporary centers to distribute
urgently needed food and medical supplies
to the displaced population. While doing
that, they were also fighting a political
battle with the Vrhovists for control of
IMRO itself. The Bulgarians had dispatched
Komitadjis (assassins) to eliminate the
"old guard" but the legendary
Yane Sandanski and his Cheta remained active
and fought back fearlessly. When word got
out that Sandanski was still active he gained
a large following and was able to successfully
repel all the assassination attempts.
History, in a sterile sense, tends to remark
on the numbers of casualties directly associated
with the conflict but shies away from the
true ugliness of a war's aftermath. The
real casualties of a conflict are the innocents
that through no fault of their own are left
to bear the consequences of the war. The
most unfortunate are those in whose homes
the war is waged. For them, there is no
escape. It is easy to show numbers and statistics
of the dead, wounded, homeless, raped, orphaned,
maimed, etc., but it is hard to imagine
their horrific experience. History has a
way of separating "us from them"
and distancing our feelings from theirs.
But that hardly does them justice if we
can't even imagine their pain, anguish,
frustration, fear, despair, hunger, humiliation
and hopelessness. Many innocent children
died a horrible death in the Ilinden aftermath
and their sacrifices must not be forgotten.
"The young women fared the worst, for,
when the troops (Turks) could catch them,
they were often carried off to the Turkish
camps and there kept for some days until
the last brute who desired them had had
his will". (page 163, Brailsford, Macedonia
its Races and their Future). Many of these
young girls that survived returned to their
village but instead of finding a home they
found abandoned ruins and again fell prey
to prowling soldiers or marauding Bashi-bazouks.
The story of the Macedonian fallen becomes
more tragic when "history books"
written by Macedonia's enemies or by those
influenced by "politically correct
propaganda", claim the Macedonian dead
to be Greeks, Bulgarians and Serbians. It
seems that the injustices committed against
the Macedonian people do not end with the
living but continue to haunt even the dead.
Is it not enough that the living are robbed
of their dignity, must the dead also be
robbed of theirs? As long as authors neglect
to mention the "Macedonians" in
the "Macedonian epic struggle for independence"
there can be no rest for the living or the
dead. Those fallen men and women were Macedonians
and died in a courageous struggle to free
Macedonia. They were NOT Greeks, they were
NOT Bulgarians and they were NOT Serbians.
Let's not allow their enemies who robbed
their children of their future to also rob
them of their dignity. It is imperative
that historians understand that anyone who
unwittingly or willingly is alleging Macedonians
to be Greek, Bulgarian or Serbian is propagating
the "Greek lie" and committing
a moral wrong against the Macedonian people.
The Ilinden rebellion had no happy ending
for Macedonia. The Macedonian people lost
their bid for freedom and paid the ultimate
price. Henry Brailsford in his book "Macedonia
its Races and their Future" describes
the Ilinden aftermath in some detail by
providing specific accounts of some of the
worst horrors perpetrated. Brailsford was
an aid worker inside Macedonia during the
conflict and was witness to some of the
accounts in his book. The book is worth
reading, as long as you keep in mind that
when he talks about Bulgarians and Greeks
he means Macedonians who belonged to the
Exarchate or Patriarchate Church.
I also ran into an article on the Internet
by Blagoj Stoicocski, Sixth International
Congress on South-East Europe, Sofia, 1989
(MANU, Skopje 1991), "THE POST-ILINDEN
EVENTS IN MACEDONIA DURING 1904 ACCORDING
TO NORWEGIAN REPORTS" posted at www.makedonika.org/STOICOVSKI1.htm
The author of these reports is Karl Ingvar
Nandrup, who wrote on seven separate occasions
to His Majesty Oscar II, king of the Norwegian-Swedish
union during his stay in Macedonia, from
the beginning of 1903 to December 30, 1904.
In fact, this Norwegian officer had been
sent to Macedonia under the sponsorship
of Sweden and Norway to work as an inspector
in the Turkish Gendarmerie (as a result
of the "Padar's Reforms" of February
1903).
The author of the above article has succeeded
in finding two of Nandrup's reports, one
from May 16th, and the other from December
30th, 1904. The original reports were written
in Norwegian and sent to the king in dispatches
from Skopje.
In addition to being documents of value,
the reports are also worthwhile reading.
"Every village which joined the revolt
did so with the knowledge that it might
be burned to the ground, pillaged to the
last blanket and the last chicken, and its
population decimated in the process. That
the Macedonians voluntarily faced these
dangers is a proof of their desperation."
(page 159, Brailsford, Macedonia its Races
and their Future).
The Macedonian rebellion did not succeed
because there were too many factors working
against it. The Macedonian people showed
will and determination and rose to the task
in spite of all odds. Compared to the Serbian,
Greek and Bulgarian rebellions, the Macedonians
were the most determined, well organized,
and most desperate but they were not ready.
The Serbians, Greeks and Bulgarian had only
one enemy, the Turks and received a lot
of help from friends in high places (the
Super Powers). In contrast no one, outside
of the Macedonians wanted the Macedonians
to succeed. The Greeks and especially the
Bulgarians went out their way to create
obstacles. The Super Powers, believing that
they had nothing to gain, also abstained
from helping Macedonia. The Serbian, Greek
and Bulgarian struggle for independence
prepared the Turks and made them more determined
to deal with the Macedonians. "The
Turks had made war upon the women and children,
and the men dared not prolong the unequal
conflict with starvation". (page 163,
Brailsford, Macedonia its Races and their
Future).
When the conflict was over, the people
that returned to their villages were devastated
to find their homes destroyed. On top of
all their ills, winter was fast approaching
and no food or shelter was to be found.
"The villages were mere heaps of charred
wood and blackened stone, buried beneath
a red dust which the rain converted to mud.
A few walls still stood upright, the only
hope for the winter". (page 164, Brailsford,
Macedonia its Races and their Future). To
make matters worse, a curfew was placed
on travel and those away from home found
themselves stranded. Those in need of work
were no longer allowed to leave their vilayets.
This was the first time in Macedonian history
that Macedonians ever considered permanent
emigration. Many early Macedonian emigrants
to Canada, the USA and Australia were refugees
from the Ilinden aftermath.
When reports of the uprising could no longer
be contained and filtered out to the foreign
media, it became clear that the Turks were
not as successful as they claimed in keeping
peace and maintaining the status quo in
Macedonia. The Great Powers, Britain in
particular, were disturbed by the atrocities
committed by Turkish soldiers. On Britain's
insistence the Super Powers recommended
European officers take over command of the
Turkish gendarmerie. Unfortunately, the
European officers were Christians and the
Turks refused to take orders from them.
The German officers had some success because
they had trained the Turks but not enough
to make a difference.
To prevent the situation from deteriorating
further, Britain pushed for high-level reforms
which resulted in the appointment of two
Turkish inspectors. One was Hilmi Pasha,
former governor of Yemen. Hilmi Pasha was
dispatched to Solun as Inspector General
with orders to reform the Turkish administration.
But as usual nothing was done. "Hilmi
Pasha issued a proclamation in Monastir
saying that the law courts had been reformed,
that the police and gendarmerie had been
reorganized, that Christian village guards
had been appointed, that the schools had
been reopened and that roads and bridges
had been repaired. He went on to announce
that if indeed all was not working smoothly
it was because evil people endeavoured to
impede the Government". (page 112,
Dakin, The Greek Struggle in Macedonia 1897-1913).
No one was deceived by Hilmi Pasha's words.
Before the uprising, Russia and Austria
proposed "The Vienna Scheme of Reform"
which basically required the Turks to appoint
an Inspector General to each of the Macedonian
Vilayets for a minimum of three years. In
short, the reforms proposed local control
of troop enlistment, local control of finances
and appointment of foreign specialists inside
Macedonia. The gendarmes were to enlist
from local sources that would reflect the
proportion of the population. General amnesty
was to be given to all under arrest or exiled
and all pending law cases were to be settled
without delay. Obviously these reforms did
not work and their failure was blamed on
Russian and Austrian neglect.
After the uprising, as the situation in
Macedonia worsened, Britain, fearing that
Bulgaria would imminently declare war on
Turkey, pushed for more reforms. As a result
on October 2nd 1903, the Murszteg Reform
Program was drafted and on October 23rd
it was proposed to the Turks. The reforms
in part read as follows:
1. Two Civil agents, one from Russia and
the other from Austria were to be attached
to the Inspector General (of police) Hilmi
Pasha for two years to accompany him everywhere
and call to his attention the abuses and
recommend remedies. They were also expected
to report all activities to their respective
governments.
2. The Ottoman gendarmerie was to be reorganized
by a "general of foreign nationality"
and to him were to be attached military
officers from the armies of the Super Powers
to lead, supervise, instruct and report
on the activities of the Turks.
3. As soon as the rebellion was put down,
the Super Powers would demand an administrative
reorganization of the Macedonian territory
based on "nationalities".
4. Administrative and Judicial institutions
were to be reorganized allowing Christian
employees to run them.
5. Mixed committees with consular membership
from Russia and Austria were to be formed
in the vilayets to inquire into political
and other crimes.
6. The Turkish Government was to allot a
special budget to pay for the return of
refugees and for re-building the damaged
houses, schools, churches, etc. The money
was to be distributed under the supervision
of the Austrian and Russian consuls.
7. Christian villages burned down by Turkish
troops and Bashi-bazouks were to be exempt
from all taxes for one year.
8. The Turkish Government was obliged, without
delay to implement the "Vienna Scheme
of Reforms" introduced in February
of 1903,
9. The Turkish second class reservists were
to be disbanded and the Bashi-bazouks were
to be prohibited from banding together.
The Murzsteg Reform Program, like its predecessor
the Vienna Scheme of Reforms clearly did
not have the Macedonian people's interests
in mind. The priority here was to keep Turkey
out of trouble and in control of Macedonia.
On November 24th 1903, the Turkish Government
accepted the nine point Murszteg Reform
Program in principle, reserving the right
to negotiate the details later. Noting that
there was a two-year limitation on provision
1, the Turks haggled over the details, introducing
delay after long delay while the Super Powers
continued to show indifference. Precious
time was wasted as the Turks were claiming
credit for the relative quietness in Macedonia,
which was largely due to winter weather.
In time the Murzsteg Reform Program, like
its predecessor the Vienna Reforms entered
the "annals of empty promises".
As I mentioned earlier, determined to eradicate
IMRO influence, Turkey turned to her neighbours
for help. By declaring Macedonia a "multi-interest-zone"
Turkey invited armed propaganda from Greece,
Bulgaria and Serbia to counter the insurgents.
The failed uprising, the loss of so many
great IMRO leaders, the Turkish backlash
and now the foreign influence was too much
for IMRO. The close links with the villages
and the ideological differences between
isolated IMRO branches widened. Although
IMRO continued to live, it lacked direction
and was on the verge of an ideological collapse.
In time however, it managed to muster two
more congresses. With the advent of Krsto
Misirkov's book a new tide of opinion was
spreading throughout Macedonia. Misirkov
warned against falling under the influence
of the chauvinistic elements and recommended
taking a more nationalistic approach in
order to weed out Vrhovist and conservative
elements. At the Prilep Congress held in
May 1904 IMRO was re-vitalized and its independence
reasserted (this time with a socialist character).
The most significant developments to emerge
from this Congress were IMRO's ability to
shed itself of its conservative elements
and to adopt a resolution to decentralize
the organization and give more power to
the sub-districts. This Congress literally
split IMRO into two ideologically polarized
halves.
While leftist IMRO adopted a defensive strategy,
the right wing conservative Vrhovists pursued
a policy of renewed confrontation. The two
factions continued to masquerade under the
same banner and were headed for a showdown.
The showdown materialized in November of
1905 at the Rila Monastery, near the Macedonian-Bulgarian
border and took the form of a General Congress.
There was a single item of paramount importance
on the agenda, to determine the direction
of the Organization. Twenty-two elected
delegates in total attended the Rila Congress
and by secret vote the left came out victorious.
As a result of the Rila Congress, a rulebook
was issued proclaiming the aims of the Central
Committee, which basically called for:
a. "creating an autonomous and independent
Macedonia,
b. achieving this by means of a united national
front, over a long period of revolutionary
activity, and
c. resisting all foreign interference".
There was one more safeguard added that
is worth mentioning. IMRO now possessed
the capacity to recall a rebellion by a
75% majority vote of its delegates who could
only be nominated from regional sub-committees
within Macedonia. A safeguard that guaranteed
there would be no more interference from
Sofia and the Vrhovists.
Defeated at the Rila Congress, the Right
wing Vrhovists took up permanent residence
in Sofia and continued to wage terrorist
war on the IMRO leadership. Both Nikola
Karev in 1905 and Dame Gruev in 1906 were
indirectly eliminated by terrorist acts
of the Vrhovists.
Bulgarian interference in Macedonia did
not only damage the revolutionary movement
but also put fear in the civilian population,
ripening conditions for Balkan intervention.
Greece and later Serbia were quick to take
advantage of a weak IMRO and a frightened
population. With the assistance of the Turkish
military they were able to step up armed
propaganda campaigns inside Macedonia. The
aim was to kill two birds with one stone.
By being the eyes and ears for the Turks,
the Greek clergy spied on the Macedonians
and disclosed information to the Turkish
authorities. The Turkish military in turn,
stepped up activities to eradicate the remnants
of the Cheti and their leaders. At the same
time, in the midst of terror, the same Greek
spies were offering Macedonians Hellenism
as a way to salvation. "No one can
deny that the Greeks owed much to the Turks.
Indeed the victory of the Turks in 1903
was the salvation of Hellenism in Macedonia.
From the outset the Greek clergy and notables
devised means of passing information to
the Turks. The Turkish authorities on their
side welcomed this support." (pages
118,119, Dakin, The Greek Struggle in Macedonia
1897-1913).
The most notorious of the Greek clergy
was the Metropolitan of Kostur, Archbishop
Germanos Karavangelis. Karavangelis was
sent to Macedonia by the Patriarch Constantine
V who favoured the Athenian (the most nationalist)
style of Hellenism and selected Karavangelis
as the right man to do the job. Dakin portrays
Karavangelis as a charismatic and capable
figure of a man that is a credit to the
human race (pages 119-127, The Greek Struggle
in Macedonia 1897-1913). That however, is
far from the truth. Karavangelis was a ruthless
killer and a disgrace to the Christian religion.
Karavangelis was personally responsible
for the assassination of hundreds of Macedonian
patriots including priests, notables, teachers
and IMRO leaders. He was also personally
responsible for Hellenizing by force and
by sheer terror hundreds of Macedonian villages.
If you wish to know more about Karavangelis'
terrorist actions in Macedonia read his
biography (the original version) "Arheio
Makedonikou Agona, Pinelopis Delta, Apomnimoneymata,
Germanou Karavaggeli, Georgiou Dikonymou
Makri, Panagioti Papatzanetea". Karavangelis'
first priority after accepting the post
as Metropolitan of Kostur was to raise an
army. He couldn't import one, the Super
Powers were watching so he resorted to purchasing
one. The most pliable and feeble-minded
man who would sell his soul for gold was
the self styled brigand Kote of Rula ("the
darling of Athens"). Kote sold out
his own people for Greek gold. From being
the most revered Cheta leader Kote became
the most hated man in Macedonia. When Karavangelis
decided who was to die, Kote became the
executioner. In addition to regular pay
for murder, Kote and his band of no-goods
received additional rewards of gold coins
for turning in desired body parts from their
victims.
While Kote was doing the murdering in the
Macedonian villages, Karavangelis, in person
with Turkish escorts, was doing the Hellenizing.
Nothing and no one could stand in his way.
Those who Karavangelis couldn't buy or bribe
he had killed.
"By containing and fragmenting the
Internal Organization in Western Macedonia,
Kota (Kote) and Karavangelis not only caused
the projected rising to be continually postponed
but they also caused it to be undertaken
prematurely; and eventually they both contributed
towards its defeat and failure. True, most
of the recorded action (the arrests, searches
and attacks on villages and bands) were
carried out by the Turks, but the Turks
nearly always acted on information supplied
by Karavangelis or his agents. It was Karavangelis
again who prevailed upon the Turks to attack
Smardeshi (Smurdersh) on 9/22 May 1903".
(Page 132, Dakin, The Greek Struggle in
Macedonia 1897-1913)
"After the Ilinden rising of August
1903, it was Karavangelis who, escorted
by 600 Turkish soldiers, visited the villages,
celebrating mass, speaking to the villagers
and calling upon them to surrender arms.
The result was that even such strongholds
as Aposkepos (Aposkep), Zagoritsani (Zagoricheni)
and Gabresi (Gabresh), which only a few
months before had declared themselves Exarchist,
now returned to the Patriarchist fold. Without
the support of the Turks, it is doubtful
whether Karavangelis's work would have been
successful. It is equally doubtful, however,
whether but for the activities of the Patriarchist
counter-movement, the Turkish authorities
could have dealt such a decisive blow to
the Internal Organization (IMRO)".
(Page 135, Dakin, The Greek Struggle in
Macedonia 1897-1913)
Even my own small village didn't escape
the hand of Karavangelis. It was a Sunday
morning when Georgios Tsantos (Varda) and
his gang came to Oshchima looking to murder
Pop Giorgi Popov. On the way they ran into
a young man named Yane Zhigerov who was
taking his mule to pasture. It is unknown
what transpired but the young man was found
dead with his throat cut. After killing
Yane, Varda broke into Oshchima's Church
of Svety Nikola and killed Pop Giorgi, by
stabbing him multiple times. He then skinned
the beard off his face and cut off his blessing
finger. Varda was prepared to kill many
more had it not been for the Oshchimian
Cheta lead by Bozhin Temov who drove Varda
and his hoodlums out of Oshchima at gunpoint.
Pop Giorgi Popov's beard and finger were
delivered to Karavangelis in exchange for
gold.
With regards to Kote from Rula, greed was
stronger than loyalty. Lazo Papatraikov,
an usher at Kote's wedding and a man who
twice saved Kote's life, was on Karavangelis's
hit list. After a skirmish with the Turks
in Mariovo, word was out that IMRO leader
Lazo Papatraikov had received a wound on
the head and was on the run. Kote caught
up to him at Turtska Polena in Oshchima
and after a long chat the two men said their
good byes and Kote left. On his way to Zhelevo,
Kote sent some Zhelevtsi to kill and decapitate
Lazo. Lazo's head was taken to Karavangelis
to collect the reward. Lazo's headless body
was buried behind the altar of the Sveti
Nikola Church in Oshchima.
The ultimate disgrace for Karavangelis
came after the massacre of the village Zagoricheni.
Refusing to bend to Hellenism, Zagoricheni
on direct orders from Karavangelis, was
massacred to the last person the Greeks
could lay their hands on, including the
unborn children inside the wombs of pregnant
women. Witnesses reported finding bodies
of pregnant women with their abdomen cut
open. The survivors that escaped the atrocity
refused to bury the dead bodies of their
neighbours. For days the dead were guarded
until the European consuls in Bitola came
to witness the atrocities for themselves.
Here is what Brailsford had to say. "The
chef d'oevre of this Hellenic campaign was
achieved at Zagorichani, a large Bulgarian
village (author's note: Macedonian village,
there were no Bulgarian villages inside
Macedonia) near Klissoura, which, like Mokreni,
took a leading part in the uprising of 1903,
and like Mokreni was burned by the Turks.
A Greek band, which is said to have numbered
over two hundred men under three Greek officers
in uniform, surprised it by night (April
6-7, 1905) by using bugle calls which led
the villagers to suppose that Turkish regulars
were manoeuvering in the neighbourhood.
They burned ten houses, and twenty-eight
of the temporary homes erected amid the
ruins of the last conflagration. They wounded
seven persons and killed no less than sixty,
among them seven women, twenty-two persons
over sixty years of age, and five children
under fifteen. There was a good deal of
evidence to show that the local Turkish
authorities were privy to this massacre,
and some circumstances seemed to include
the Archbishop of Castoria (Kostur). It
is quite clear that no conflict or provocation
preceded what was simply a deliberate massacre,
and the only reason for choosing Zagorichani
was that it was an eager and patriotic Bulgarian
center, and that it disobeyed the summons
of the Greek Archbishop to return to the
Patriarch fold". (pages 216-217, Macedonia
its Races and their Future).
After the massacre when it was discovered
that Karavangelis was implicated, to escape
punishment, the cowardly Archbishop of Kostur
fled to Sveta Gora (Holy Mountain) where
he spent two years in hiding before fleeing
to Austria. Today, there is a statue of
Karavangelis in Kostur to commemorate his
great contributions to Hellenism.
The Roumanie of Bucharest has published
the text of a circular found by the Turks
in some documents seized on the person of
a Greek prisoner. It reads like a genuine
Greek document, and its authenticity has
not been questioned by the Greek organs.
It is said to bear the seal of the Greek
Committee. (Remember there were no Bulgarians
or "Bulgars" in Macedonia). It
read like this;
"Brave defenders of Hellenism, I address
you today in order to express the gratitude
which the entire nation feels for all you
have done and will yet do on behalf of the
Fatherland. Continue the struggle against
the Bulgarian assassins, and neglect no
means of proving to the whole world that
Macedonia is purely Greek. Exterminate the
priests, the teachers, and the notables
who compose the Bulgarian Committees. It
is at length time to put in practice the
saying: an eye for an eye, a tooth for a
tooth. When it is a question of taking vengeance
we must not spare the Bulgarians, even when
they hide under the robes of a priest. Burn,
shoot, assassinate, and purify the soil
of Macedonia from all that is Exarchist.
The Supreme Panhellenic Committee has decided
to intensify the struggle by making use
of your arms, O valiant combatants, and
if for some time past the Committee has
hardly seemed equal to the occasion, the
reason is that official Greece hesitates.
But what is official Greece to us, when
we have the approbation of the whole Hellenic
world? Forward, then, until you have wiped
out the last Bulgarian in our Macedonia.
Your names will be inscribed in letters
of fire in the annals of the race. May Heaven
grant that the day be near when the sun
of Hellenism will shine on Macedonia; then
there will be peace for us and for the Turks,
with whom we stand on the best of terms.
Let our motto be: Purge Macedonia of the
Bulgars." I quote from M. Gaulis' admirable
paper, La Macedoine. (page 217, Brailsford,
Macedonia its Races and their Future).
Macedonians were well acquainted with the
murderous activities of the Bulgarian Vrhovists
whose new waves of terrorist bands began
to penetrate the Eastern borders of Macedonia
in March of 1904. Fortunately, Yane Sandanski's
forces were still in control of the Pirin
district and more often than not, successfully
repealed Bulgarian advances. In the West,
bands of young Turks who deserted the army
during the Ilinden rebellion, joined Albanian
gangs and were looting and killing indiscriminately.
From the north Serbian bands began to penetrate
Macedonian territory. By mid 1905, there
were eleven bands numbering almost 100 men
pillaging, murdering, even razing entire
villages, wreaking their own special brand
of terror.
The most violent campaign was waged by the
Greek terrorists who penetrated the south-central
regions of Macedonia. By 1905 the Greeks
imported a contingent of Cretans, a thousand-strong,
reinforced by Turk deserters who roamed
unhindered razing and slaughtering entire
villages. By 1906, eight bands numbering
over 400 men were operating in the Solun
district alone and another twelve bands
(600 men) around Bitola.
Along with the intrusions of armed bands
in Macedonia there reappeared the foreign
schools and propaganda institutions directed
by non-other than the Greek and Bulgarian
churches. The terrorist bands instilled
fear in the Macedonian population and the
Churches were quick to take the role of
protectors setting the stage for the partitioning
of Macedonia. Unfortunately for them, something
else was brewing within Turkey, liberalism,
headed by a small group of European educated
young Turks.
To be continued in [part V].
You can contact the author via his e-mail:
rstefov@hotmail.com
References:
1. A. Michael Radin, IMRO and the Macedonian
Question, Kultura
2. H. N. Brailsford, Macedonia Its Races
and their Future, Arno Press, New York 1971
3. Douglas Dakin, M.A., Ph.D., The Greek
Struggle in Macedonia 1897 - 1913, Institute
for Balkan Studies, Salonika 1966
4. Vasil Bogov, Macedonian Revelation,
Historical Documents Rock and Shatter Modern
Political Ideology
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