The
following HEC letter was Published May 9 in the Wall Street Journal
Europe.
The article being responded to follows below.
Hellenic Electronic Center (HEC)
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The April 29 op-ed “Balkan Neighbors” by
Takis Michas is biased in the extreme against Athens and
resembles propaganda emanating from Skopje.
According to Mr. Michas, the dispute
between Athens and
Skopje is more
than just about a name. That is correct, and that is why
Greece objects
to the use of the name Macedonia by
Skopje. Mr.
Michas correctly points out that Skopje named
its airport after Alexander the Great. That was only the most recent of a string
of provocations over the past 16 years, which included
Skopje’s
adoption of the Macedonian Sun of Vergina on its flag, the depiction of the
tower of
Thessaloniki on its
currency, and other claims pertaining to the Macedonian
heritage.
Mr. Michas argues that the Greek use of
the name “Skopjan” for their neighbors is demeaning. What is really demeaning is
that this Slavic population, which has absolutely no historical connections to
Alexander the Great and the ancient Macedonians, is trying to claim for itself a
history and heritage that belongs to the Greeks. The use of the name
Macedonia by the
Slavs is itself demeaning to Greece and its
citizens as Macedonia is the
name of a Northern Greek province. If the Slavs of Skopje are being demeaned, it
is by their very own leaders who continue to mislead them about their identity
and heritage.
Even critics of
Greece have
criticized those Slavic extremists who claim to be the descendants of the
ancient Macedonians.
Mr. Michas refers to the Greek Civil War,
which was provoked by Communist expansionist designs from neighboring
Yugoslavia, and
implies that Greece is
equally at fault as Skopje is for
the present dispute. This dispute, though, is easily resolvable provided
Skopje
renounces all claims to the Greek heritage and
territory of
Macedonia.
Athens has
already demonstrated good will by establishing diplomatic relations with its
neighbor and permitting Greeks to provide economic
support.
Theodore G. Karakostas TKarakosta@aol.com
Member of HEC Executive Council
www.greece.org
Balkan Neighbors
By TAKIS MICHAS*
FROM
TODAY'S WALL STREET JOURNAL EUROPE
April
29, 2008
Athens
After a recent visit to
Skopje, the
U.S. envoy
to NATO, Victoria Nuland, said that the argument between
Greece and
Macedonia could
be settled "within days or weeks." If only. Unfortunately, the so-called name
dispute is far too complex for easy fixes.
First there is the name:
Greece wants
its northern neighbor to change its constitutional designation,
Republic of
Macedonia, to
something else, perhaps with "New" or "Upper" prefixed. Unless it does so,
Greece will
continue to block Macedonia's entry
into NATO, as it did at this month's Bucharest summit,
and presumably the European Union. Athens claims
the current name reveals territorial ambitions against its own
northern
province of
Macedonia.
There is also the dispute over the
existence of a Macedonian nation. Since the end of
World
War II,
Greece
consistently refused to acknowledge such a nation or ethnic group, arguing that
it was the "artificial creation" of former Yugoslav strongman Tito. According to
this view, the only real Macedonians are ethnic Greeks. Greek officials and most
of the media here today refer to Macedonia by the
demeaning term "Skopjans."
Then there is the question of language.
Greece denies
the existence of a Macedonian language, claiming that this is merely a "local
idiom" or "dialect."
There is, lastly, the issue of Slav
Macedonians who fled Greece after
World War II. Greece denies
these political refugees and their descendants any "right of return," saying
they were traitors who forfeited their claims to citizenship by fighting
alongside the Communist-led Democratic Army, which sought the secession of
(Greek) Macedonia from
Greece. After
the defeat of the Communist forces in the Greek Civil War, many of the militants
settled in the countries of the former Soviet block, including approximately
30,000 in the neighboring then-Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. Their properties
in Greece were
confiscated by the state and reallocated to the inhabitants of the region. In
1983, then Socialist Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou passed a law allowing for
the repatriation of the communist political refugees. However, Slav Macedonians
were excluded from this deal since the law applied only to ethnic
Greeks.
All four areas of
dispute are interrelated. All tend to confirm the fears and stereotypes the
inhabitants of both countries have about the other.
For the Greeks – especially in the
northern regions – the claims concerning the existence of a "Macedonian" nation,
language or country as well as for the return of the refugees are seen as part
and parcel of Skopje's
"irredentism." Recent actions by the Macedonian government, such as the decision
to rename the airport in Skopje after Alexander the Great or the circulation in
public of maps of "Greater Macedonia" that include parts of Greece, did nothing
to allay the fears of many Greeks that the "expansionist" ideology of their
neighbor poses a threat to territorial integrity.
On the other side of the border, the
picture is inverted. For the Macedonians, Greek attempts to deny them a name, a
language, an ethnicity and basic human rights (like "the right to return") are
part of the "cultural genocide" of Slav Macedonians that
Greece has
been waging for the past century. By this view, the ethnic homogenization of
northern Greece – which
started with the Balkan wars at the beginning of the last century and culminated
in the post-World War II settlement in the region – was intended to Hellenize
the Slav populations of Northern
Greece.
According to this view, in the course of
the nation-building of modern Greece, key
aspects of history, life and culture that didn't conform with the official
vision of a single, unitary nation that could trace its lineage back to the days
of Pericles were erased. Entire towns and villages disappeared from the map as
did the names of a host of public spaces, churches, monasteries, mountains,
lakes and rivers. Slavic family and individual names were changed into Greek
names. The public use of the Slavic Macedonian language was
prohibited.
Contrary to received wisdom, the dispute
between Greece and
Macedonia isn't
over a mere name, but concerns competing national mythologies, symbols and
histories. In other words, we have here all the usual Balkan issues over which
people in this part of the world and elsewhere have butchered each other in the
distant and not-so-distant past. No easy fix is possible, and a compromise over
the name won't put to rest the basic conflict. Unless all the problems are
addressed openly and honestly, mutual distrust will persist, ready to erupt
again at the first opportunity – or once EU reconstruction funds dry
up.
Had Athens and
Skopje engaged
in serious bilateral or multilateral talks during the past decade on all the
points of contention, and not focused simply on the "name," perhaps they would
not find themselves in their current, absurd predicament.
* Mr. Michas, a Greek journalist, is author
of "Unholy Alliance: Greece and
Milosevic's Serbia"
(University of Texas A & M Press, 2002).
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