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Nikola Karev

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Occupation
  
Revolutionary

Religion
  
Bulgarian Exarchate

Profession
  
Teacher

Name
  
Nikola Karev

Nikola Karev Interview with Nikola Karev 1903 I am Macedonian
Died
  
April 27, 1905, Rajcani, Macedonia (FYROM)

Tvrdokorni epizoda 6 nikola karev


Nikola Janakiev Karev (Bulgarian and Macedonian: Nikola Karev) was a revolutionary in Ottoman-ruled Macedonia. He was born 23 November 1877 in Krusevo and died 27 April 1905 in the village of Rajcani, both today in Macedonia. Karev was a local leader of what later became known as the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO). He was also a socialist and a member of the Bulgarian Workers' Social Democratic Party. He is considered a Bulgarian hero in Bulgaria and a Macedonian hero in Macedonia, although by such activists, ethnic Bulgarian identity coexisted with regional Macedonian one.

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Nikola Karev Observation of 110 death anniversary of Nikola Karev

Nikola karev english subs


Biography

Nikola Karev httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Karev completed his early education in Krusevo and in 1893 moved to Sofia in independent Bulgaria. There he worked as a carpenter and his employer was the socialist Vasil Glavinov. Karev joined the Socialist group led by Glavinov, and through him, made acquaintance of Dimitar Blagoev and other socialists and became a member of the Bulgarian Workers' Social Democratic Party. In 1896 the Macedonian-Adrianopole Social-Democratic Group, as part of the Bulgarian Workers' Social-Democrat Party was created, where Karev participated. In 1898 Karev went back to Ottoman Macedonia and graduated from the Bulgarian Exarchate's gymnasium in Bitola. From 1900 he worked as Bulgarian teacher in the region of Krusevo. The first Conference of Macedonian Socialists was held on June 3, 1900, near Krushevo, where they defined the basic aspects of the creation of separate Macedonian Republic, as a cantonized state, part of a future Balkan Socialist Federation, with equal rights to all its citizens. They maintained the slogan "Macedonia for the Macedonians", consisting from all different nationalities, inhabiting the area, and were against the neighboring states aspirations, including Bulgarian nationalism. They also saw the future Macedonia as a multinational polity, while Macedonian people was then an umbrella term covering Bulgarians, Turks, Greeks, Vlachs, Albanians, Serbs, Jews, and so on.

Nikola Karev FileNikola Karev PortraitJPG Wikimedia Commons

In this period Karev joined the Internal Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organization and became a leader of a regional armed band (cheta). During the Ilinden Uprising of August 1903, when Krusevo was captured by the rebels, Nikola Karev authored the Krusevo Manifesto, which called upon the local Muslim population to join forces with the Christians, and became the head of its provisional government. Amongst the various ethno-religious groups (millets) in Krusevo a Republican Council was elected with 60 members - 20 representatives from each one: Macedonian Bulgarians (Exarchists), Aromanians (Vlachs) and Slav-speaking, Vlach-speaking and Albanian-speaking Greek Patriarchists. The Council also elected an executive body - the Provisional Government, with six members (2 from each mentioned group). The Krushevo Republic lasted only ten days, and after intense fighting it was destroyed by Ottoman forces. After the uprising Karev went back to Bulgaria and became political activist of the newly founded marxist Bulgarian Social Democratic Workers' Party (Narrow Socialists). However, the Narrows denounced the Ilinden Uprising as an adventure inspired by the Bulgarian government, that played into the hands of the Great Powers. In 1905 he was killed during an attempt to enter Ottoman Macedonia with a group of IMRO fighters.

His two brothers, Petar and Georgi also participated in IMRO. During the First and the Second World Wars, when Vardar Macedonia was annexed by Bulgaria, they supported the Bulgarian authorities. As result, after 1944 they were imprisoned as fascists' collaborators in Communist Yugoslavia, where both died in concentration camps, in 1950 and 1951 respectively.

References

Nikola Karev Wikipedia