Saturday, October 25, 2008

India recognized Macedonia under our constitutional name

India officially recognized my country as "Republic of Macedonia". In a diplomatic note sent from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of India, to the Macedonian government, India says it will from now on use "Republic of Macedonia" when communicating with us. Furthermore, in a letter which the Indian president Pratibha Patil sent to Macedonian authorities, she discusses cooperation between India and Macedonia.

India and Macedonia, flag

I wish to thank India and its citizens for recognizing my country under the only name we consider possible and acceptable. You have done a step in the right direction, showing that our arguments are stronger than Greece's diplomatic fist. This is a step in the direction of freedom and justice. Thank you very much!

India is the 126th country which uses our constitutional name. So far, Macedonia has established diplomatic relations with 160 countries.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Genetic comparison of the Balkan nations against ancient nations

I have to say at the beginning that the issue with the name is NOT something that should be looked at through genetic point of view. Our case is plain and simple: we ARE Macedonians because we FEEL so, and nobody can tell us what we are. The same statement goes for any other ethnic group in the world.

Gene: I, Macedonian

Anyway, there has been a heated debate going on in the forums of one Swiss genetic research institute (iGENEA) after they published their findings about the genetic composition of the modern day nations living in the Balkans, against the genetic fingerprint found in the ancient nations (e.g. through archeological excavations). I am not a genetic scientist, therefore I will not go into any analysis or debate. However, in the interest of all of us being informed WHO we are, I will copy the findings which iGENEA published about Macedonia and neighboring countries.

Albania:
30% Illyrian
20% Slavs
18% Thracian
15% Phoenician
14% Hellenic
02% Vikings

Greece:
35% Hellenic
20% Slavs
20% Phoenician
10% Illyrian
10% Germanic
05% Macedonian (but in Aegean Macedonia, more than 18%)

Bulgaria:
49% Thracian
15% Slavs
15% Hellenic
11% Macedonian
05% Phoenician

Macedonia:
30% Macedonian
20% Germanic
15% Hellenic
15% Slavs
10% Illyrian
05% Phoenician
05% Hunnen

One of the scientists who work in iGENEA, while answering some questions on their forum, said the following sentence:

No country in Europe is today genetically homogen[eous].


I would like to stress this fact, because it is the same with my claim that genetics can not be brought into the name dispute, considering that all modern nations are a mixture of many nations and cultures who lived before them and certainly NOBODY can claim any exclusivity over any historic period, especially not based on some "genetic heritage". Insisting on using such arguments makes the person look either stupid and/or a pretentious liar.

For example, unless you dispute and prove wrong the above paragraph, nobody can throw claims like:
  • Macedonians are Greek (they are genetically different, the Ancient Macedonian gene is more advanced, it has two more mutations than the Hellenic, according to iGENEA);
  • Citizens of Republic of Macedonia are Slavs (partially true, we are 15% Slavs, but what happens if we compare those with the 20% Slav genes in Greece, are Greek people more Slavs?);
  • Macedonians are Bulgarians (also not correct, if you notice the strong 49% Thracian genes there);
  • Macedonians have no history (which is too obviously incorrect, in fact hilarious, and only serves as a pointer that an anti-Macedonian fascist pressed against the wall will INVENT "arguments" in the lack of real ones).


Therefore, let's remove the "ancestry argument" or the "genetic argument" from the table while talking about why you insist that we should change our name. It is obvious that it is NOT a valid argument and is one of the reasons why I disabled the comments - I had too much "genetic noise" and no real, friendly debate. But if you INSIST on using this argument, then look at the numbers above, and see what we (and you) are made of.

If this article inspires at least one racist to re-investigate his beliefs, than I am more than satisfied!

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Greek government uses army and police to scare the Macedonian minority

One Macedonian has minor injuries and four have been arrested, after incidents which took place yesterday in the area surrounding Lerin (Florina) in Aegean Macedonia. Eleven days ago, after the requests from the local population, the Greek army withdrew from its training camp near the village of Zabrdeni and Ovcharani.



Today, the Greek army returned to the region, but this time they came with lots of policemen, as well as tanks and other large vehicles. The Greek police specialists intervened when the local ethnic Macedonian population tried to stop the Greek army from setting up camp and heavy-military training right next to their village.


The news article is in Macedonian language

Journalist crews from Macedonia, who were investigating the incident in this area predominately populated with ethnic Macedonians, were detained in the police, and "interviewed" in order to establish what they were filming - allegedly, military installations. After spending some time in the police, they were released, but with police escort.

When the journalists tried to interview some local Macedonians, the police stopped them saying that they will just "disturb" them by asking questions, and then escorted them to the Macedonian - Greek border and told them to leave the country.

The official response from Athens is that the incident in the Macedonian villages was provoked (by who?) and that Macedonia is interfering in Greece's internal matters (by trying to protect it's repressed ethnic minority?). The Macedonian Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski today will notify Brussels on the latest development of events in Aegean Macedonia.

In an interview for a local TV station, he said he is deeply disappointed by the European Union's institutions, who by ignoring his previous appeals for protection of the Macedonian minority in Aegean Macedonia, gave courage to the radical Greek authorities to continue and even increase the repression, which escalated in yesterday's incidents. Such events involving ethnic repression and attempts to silence the media do not correspond to the fact that they are happening in the 21st century, and in a EU member country.

Friday, October 10, 2008

Rainbow speaks at OSCE Human Dimension Implementation Meeting

The following text is the majority of the statement given by Rainbow (Виножито), the Organisation of the Macedonian Minority of Greece during the fifth working session (National Minorities) at the 2008 OSCE Human Dimension Implementation Meeting. It is not true that Greece has no minorities, the truth is that the majority suppresses the minorities in any way it can, probably from the standpoint that Greece should be a "strong nation state" - which is thankfully an expired concept in the rest of the normal world.



One of the basic demands of the Macedonian minority is to have the right to use traditional place names and have their first name and surname in their own language recognized by the state.

During the inter-war period between World War I and World War II, Greece enacted a number of laws which replaced all non-Greek names of towns, villages, rivers and mountains with Greek names. These traditional toponyms (which still exist in unofficial use among the population) are not given official recognition by the Greek state. This is not in accord with Recommendation number 3 of the High Commissioner’s Oslo Recommendations regarding the Linguistic Rights of National Minorities.

Also during the inter-war period, during the 1920s and 1930s the personal names of the Macedonian speaking population were also forcibly changed. Macedonian personal names were replaced with Greek ones. Of the thousands of names that were changed, so too was the name of the Benishev family which became “Vasiliadis”.



Last year Mr Petros Vasiliadis, a member of this family made an application to the local Prefect in Florina/Lerin to change his surname back to the traditional Macedonian family name “Benishev”. The local Prefect and the Regional Administration rejected the application, both noting that the applicant does not have a right to such a surname because “there is no such thing as a Macedonian minority in Greece”.

It should be noted that Paragraph 32 of the Copenhagen document states that “To belong to a national minority is a matter of a person’s individual choice and no disadvantage may arise from the exercise of such choice”. Therefore the action of the Greek State seems to be in violation of this paragraph as well as incompatible with Recommendation 1 of the High Commissioner’s Oslo Recommendations.

Although various human rights bodies have strongly recommended the Greek state to take measures for the recognition and the protection of the rights of the Macedonian-speaking population in Greece, including the ratification of the European Charter of Regional or Minority Languages. However Greece has ignored such advice.

It is a common practice of Greek representatives in various international forums, to claim that there is no Macedonian minority but “a small number of people speaking a Slavic dialect or idiom in Northern Greece” referring to the Macedonian-speaking community. So the question must be asked: why has the Greek government not taken any measures to protect and promote the so-called “dialect”? I should mention that the so-called dialect or idiom that the Greek government refers to actually belongs to a language, the Macedonian language. In fact the language was recognized as “Macedonian” by the Greek government in the census of 1920 as a language separate to Serbian and Bulgarian.



Two years ago Macedonian minority activists reprinted a primer in the Macedonian language which was produced by the Greek government under pressure from the League of Nations in 1925. The activists felt it was necessary to take this measure because the Greek government had failed to take action in this regard. Letter after letter was sent to the Greek Ministry of Education in relation to the introduction of Macedonian language education, but there was never a response.

Despite the total ignorance of the Greek state in relation to the Macedonian minority, activists continue to push for the introduction of Macedonian language education in Greece. In this connection, this Rainbow, the Organisation of the Macedonian Minority in Greece has taken another step to assist the Greek government by publishing a bilingual Macedonian/Greek dictionary.

Since the Greek government has refused meetings on this issue, I would like to use this opportunity today to present the Greek delegation with a copy of this important project.

Friday, October 03, 2008

Macedonia Loves You

Stanislav Pigon spent 9 months as an expert on one of the EU funded projects in Macedonia. This resident of Warsaw fell in love in my country and dedicated a web site to express his devotion.

Macedonia Loves You

The web site is called "Macedonia Loves You" and it is celebrating one year of existence. Stanislaw created a 2nd version of the site and he is inviting you to have a look:

It' s All About Macedonia: presentations of new places with hundreds of exquisite imagines: Lazaropole, Veles, Rostuse..., stories about people who fell in love with wine making: Tikves People... and many others.

In new MKLOVESYOU, people living in the Republic of Macedonia send their smiles to the world, celebrate their happiness, present their small motherlands, culture and sacred traditions.


Stanislaw, I thanked you last year via email, and now I thank you from the site, for your positive and cosmopolitan view of Macedonia. We need more people like you in this world.

Link: Macedonia Loves You.