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Dimitar Vlahov
Politician from Ottoman Macedonia (1878–1953) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Dimitar Vlahov (Bulgarian: Димитър Влахов; Macedonian: Димитар Влахов; 8 November 1878 – 7 April 1953) was a politician from the region of Macedonia and member of the left wing of the Macedonian-Adrianople revolutionary movement (also known as Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO)). As with many other IMRO members of the time, historians from North Macedonia consider him an ethnic Macedonian and in Bulgaria he is considered a Bulgarian. Vlahov declared himself until the early 1930s as a Bulgarian and afterwards as an ethnic Macedonian.[1][2] However, such Macedonian activists, who came from IMRO (United) never managed to get rid of their pro-Bulgarian bias.[3][4][5][6]
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Life
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He was born in Kılkış (Bulgarian/Macedonian Kukush, in present-day Greece) and attended the Bulgarian Men's High School of Thessaloniki. After that he emigrated to the Principality of Bulgaria and graduated from secondary school in Belogradtchik. Vlahov also studied chemistry in Germany and Switzerland, where he also took part in socialist circles. However, he graduated in these subjects from Sofia University. Here he enrolled in the Bulgarian Social Democratic Workers' Party. In 1903, Vlahov entered a military service in the reserve officer's school in Sofia. Then he worked as a teacher in the Bulgarian Men's High School of Thessaloniki where he was active in IMRO. During this period, he was arrested by the Ottoman authorities. In 1905, Vlahov was released and went back to Bulgaria where he worked as a teacher in Kazanlak.
In 1908, after the Young Turks revolution he began working in the Bulgarian secondary school in Thessaloniki again. In the following years, Vlahov was politically active as a deputy in the Ottoman Parliament as a representative of the People's Federative Party (Bulgarian Section). After the dissolution of this party in 1911, he became a member of the Ottoman Socialist Party and in 1912 he was again elected as a deputy to the Ottoman Parliament. During the Balkan Wars, on the recommendation of Simeon Radev, he was appointed head of the consular department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Sofia. He was then sent as Bulgarian consul to Smyrna in the Ottoman Empire. During the First World War, as a reserve officer, he was appointed governor of the Shtip and Prishtina districts, then under Bulgarian rule. Later he represented the Kingdom of Bulgaria in high diplomatic and administrative positions in Odessa, Kiev and Vienna.
When IMRO was re-established in 1920, Vlahov was elected as an alternate member of its Central Committee, representing the left wing. At that time he was secretary of the Varna Chamber of Commerce. Todor Alexandrov urged him to establish contact between IMRO and Soviet Russia. Krastyo Rakovski, his best man and a prominent figure in the Comintern, served as his messenger. On behalf of IMRO, Vlahov left in July 1923 for Moscow. Thus, in 1924, IMRO started negotiations in Vienna with the Comintern on collaboration between the communists and the Macedonian movement in establishing a united Macedonian revolutionary movement. Vlahov assisted in the adoption of the so called May Manifesto on the formation of a Balkan Communist Federation and cooperation with the Soviet Union. After the subsequent rift between the Organization and the Comintern, the new leadership led by Ivan Mihailov excluded him from IMRO and he was sentenced to death. In 1925, he was one of the founders of IMRO (United) in Vienna. He also became a member of the Bulgarian Communist Party. At the end of the 1920s he worked in France, Germany and Austria as a Comintern publicist. During this period he was pursued by IMRO and several failed assassination attempts were organized against him. In 1930, he criticized the theory about the ethnicity of the Macedonian Slavs by Serbian geographer Jovan Cvijić and viewed the majority of the Macedonian population as Bulgarian.[7] In 1932 members of IMRO (United), put for the first time the issue of the recognition of a separate Macedonian nation in a lecture in Moscow.[8] The question was also studied in the highest institutions of the Comintern and in the autumn of 1933, Dimitar Vlahov arrived in Moscow and took part in a number of meetings related to the Macedonian Question and the recognition of a Macedonian nation.[9] Thus on 11 January 1934, the Political Secretariat of the Comintern adopted a special Resolution on the Macedonian Question in which the existence of a separate Macedonian nation was recognized. Vlahov accepted the decision without a reaction and his intervention seemed key in the adoption of this resolution, since it is uncertain if the Comintern had a clear perspective of the identity issues in Macedonia.[10][11] According to historian Elisabeth Barker, due to this reason, there was widespread belief that he was a communist agent.[11] From 1936 to 1944, Vlahov lived in the Soviet Union.

In November 1943, Vlahov participated in the Second Session of the Anti-Fascist Council for the National Liberation of Yugoslavia and was elected in the presidium representing Aegean Macedonia.[12] In November 1944 he returned to the newly liberated Skopje in the Socialist Republic of Macedonia within new Yugoslavia, where he worked in high state and political positions and became a member of the Communist Party of Macedonia. On 26 November, at the First Conference of the National Liberation Front of Macedonia, he was elected its president, and at the Second Session of Anti-fascist Assembly for the National Liberation of Macedonia (ASNOM) in December he was elected a member of the Presidium of ASNOM. At the Third Session of ASNOM in April 1945 he became a member of the Presidium of the National Assembly of Macedonia. Also, he was elected as vice-president of the Presidium of the National Assembly of Yugoslavia in 1945 and remained on that position until 1953. Lazar Kolishevski and the pro-Yugoslav circle gradually pushed Vlahov out of his power positions in SR Macedonia. Vlahov was dismissed, because he communicated much better in Bulgarian than in Macedonian and had little political support in SR Macedonia, among other reasons.[13] Later his name was removed from the Macedonian anthem.[14] Vlahov in his 1950 book Macedonia-Comments of the History of the Macedonian People, claimed that modern Macedonians came from a fusion of Slavs with the ancient Macedonians, that Samuel of Bulgaria's empire was a Macedonian state, and that Cyril and Methodius were Macedonians' gift to Slavism, among other assertions.[15] In July 1950, Vlahov was elected in the Committee of Foreign Affairs for members of the Federal Council as part of the Presidium of the National Assembly of Yugoslavia. Vlahov died in Belgrade in 1953.
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Gallery
- Vlahov as a member of the Ottoman Parliament
- Metodija Andonov-Čento (second from left), Víctor Manuel Villaseñor, United Nations Representative (center), Dimitar Vlahov (second from right) and others, in Bitola, February 1946
- Banquet in honor of Vlahov organized by the Macedonian People's League in New York, 1946
- Vlahov (third from right) alongside the Prime Minister Josip Broz Tito, Moša Pijade, Ivan Ribar and other members of the Presidium of the National Assembly of Yugoslavia in March 1953
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