10. Is there a 'Macedonian' Minority in Greece?
In view of all the facts given above, it is not reasonable to argue
that there is a 'Macedonian' minority in Greece. In the past, there
were undoubtedly persons with a Slav national consciousness, who
sometimes behaved as Bulgarians and sometimes as Slav-Macedonians. But
after the Second World War and the end of the Greek Civil War, these
persons took refuge elsewhere, principally in Yugoslavia. There, in
conditions which can easily be imagined, they were given suitable
training and guidance and the overwhelming majority of them were
absorbed into the local Slav environment.
Greece rejects the claim advanced by Skopje for recognition of a
'Macedonian' minority for the very simple reason that, since the
Greek-Bulgarian exchange of populations in 1919 and the departure of
the 'Slav-Macedonians' in 1949 there has been no Slav minority in
Greece. Some remnants of a population group with a Slav national
consciousness emigrated to countries such as Canada, Australia and the
United States. The very small group still speaking the dialect in
Greece demonstrated their Greek national consciousness in practice by
refusing to join SNOF or NOF (the Slav National Liberation Front and
the National Liberation Front).
Forty years after the events of the 1940s, the drift of populations to
the cities, general social mobility, a modern educational system and a
higher standard of living have all contributed to greatly reducing
bilingualism-that is, the use, in addition to the main Greek language
of the sui generis Slav (Bulgarian) dialect which Skopje persists in
calling the 'Macedonian language'. Some of the Greeks of northern
Greece learn the dialect for reasons of commerce or tourism.
Notes
1. See, by way of indication, Wells, The Outline of History, Pandit Jawaharlal
Nehru, Glimpses of World History, A. Vakalopoulos, Contemporary Problems of
the Balkans, and Will Durant, World History of Culture.
2. Polybious, Historiae, Leipzig 1898.
3. A. Vakalopoulos, op. cit., pp. 84ff, G. Rousos, Recent History of the Greek
Nation.
4. Brief History of the Orthodox Churces of Bulgaria, Serbia and Romania, Moscow
1871.
5. See Ekdotike Athinon, Macedonia
6. E. Kofos, Nationalism and Communism in Macedonia, Thessaloniki 1964, pp.
185ff.
7. Douglas Dakin, The Greek Struggle in Macedonia 1897-1915, Thessaloniki 1966,
and Dakin with K. Mazarakis-Ainian, E. Kofos and I. Diamantouros, The
Macedonian Struggle, Athens 1985.
8. L' improglio Macedonien, Paris 1907, pp. 50-51.
9. Op. cit., p. 176.
10. Hellenism 1903, p. 717
11. See Istorija na Makendonskiot Narod, Skopje, 1969, vol. I pp. 79-92.
12. The Counterfeiting of Macedonian History, Athens 1983.
13. Alexander, 473.
14. XXXI, 29,15.
15. Paedia (12), 1957, p. 250.
16. TheActivities of the Bishopric of Pelagonia 1878-1912, Skopje 1968, pp.
35-43.
17. Hellenism 1907, pp. 585, 586.
18. Newspaper Politika, 29 May 1958.