Spiro Kitinchev (born 1895 in
Skopje,
Ottoman Empire, died 1946 in
Idrizovo,
FPR Yugoslavia) was a
Macedonian Bulgarian
Macedonians or Macedonian Bulgarians ( bg, македонци or македонски българи), sometimes also referred to as Macedono-Bulgarians, Macedo-Bulgarians, or Bulgaro-Macedonians are a regional, ethnographic group of eth ...
writer, activist, and politician during the
Second World War in Yugoslav Macedonia.
Biography
During his teenage years Spiro attended the
Bulgarian Men's High School of Thessaloniki, then part of the Ottoman Empire. In 1912 Skopje was
ceded to Serbia where the Macedonian Slavs were faced with the policy of forced
serbianisation. When during World War I
Bulgaria occupied Macedonia (1915 - 1918) his father, Georgi Kitinchev became a mayor of Skopje. At the same time he studied in Lausanne, Switzerland. Spiro was involved there in the organization of Macedonian students called
MYSRO
The Macedonian Youth Secret Revolutionary Organization or MYSRO ( bg, Македонска младежка тайна революционна организация, mk, Македонска младинска тајна револуционер ...
. In 1919, during the meetings of the
Paris Peace Conference Agreements and declarations resulting from meetings in Paris include:
Listed by name
Paris Accords
may refer to:
* Paris Accords, the agreements reached at the end of the London and Paris Conferences in 1954 concerning the post-war status of Germ ...
, the MYSRO issued appeale in favor of an independent multiethnic Macedonian state, based on the principle of the Swiss Confederation.
After 1919, Kitinchev returned to Skopje, then part of
Kingdom of Yugoslavia. He was among the founders of the "
Luc" magazine and a propagandist of the idea of publishing materials of local dialect. At the time he became a member of the right-wing
IMRO regional committee. During 1930s Kitinchev was arrested several times by the Serbian authorities. In 1936, together with
Dimitar Chkatrov and
Dimitar Gyuzelov, he joined the democratic organization
MANAPO. In 1930s a more homogeneous generation was growing up in Vardar Macedonia, which resisted serbianisation, but which also made it clear that the Bulgarian national idea was no more the only option for them.
During the
Invasion of Yugoslavia
The invasion of Yugoslavia, also known as the April War or Operation 25, or ''Projekt 25'' was a German-led attack on the Kingdom of Yugoslavia by the Axis powers which began on 6 April 1941 during World War II. The order for the invasion was p ...
in April 1941, Kitinchev was elected vice-president of the
Bulgarian Action Committees
The Bulgarian Action Committees in Macedonia were patriotic nationalist organizations of Bulgarians in Macedonia during 1941, emboldened by the invasion Yugoslavia by Nazi Germany, determined to end the Yugoslav (Serbian) rule in the region, perce ...
After the town subsequently was
annexed again by Bulgaria (1941-1944) he became a mayor of Skopje. Despite the slight change of the younger generation in the 1930s, anti-Serbian and
pro-Bulgarian sentiments still prevailed. There is a no doubt that the Bulgarians were greeted as liberators. The
Macedonian national identity then hardly existed.
In the early September 1944 Bulgaria ordered its troops to prepare for withdrawal from former Yugoslavia and on 8 September, the Bulgarians changed sides and declared war on Germany. On the same day
pro-German puppet state was declared by right-wing Macedonian nationalists and among its leaders were Kitinchev, Vasil Hadzhikimov, Stefan Stefanov, Dimitar Gyuzelov and Dimitar Tchkatrov. They had foreseen the future of this independent Macedonia under the protectorate of the Third Reich. The state had to have a Bulgarian character and its official language to be Bulgarian. Without the means to make the state a reality, this pretense dissolved as soon as the
Yugoslav Partisans asserted their control following the withdrawal of German troops from the area during November. This event marked the defeat of the
Bulgarian nationalism and the victory of the
Macedonism in the area.
Yugoslav Communists recognized then the existence of distinct Macedonian nationality to quiet fears of the Macedonian Slavs that they would continue to follow the policy of forced serbianization. For them to recognize the inhabitants of Macedonia as Bulgarians would be to admit that they should be part of Bulgaria. The new authorities accused Kitinchev, who was already arrested, of being
Bulgarian nationalist and Bulgarian ''fascist occupiers'' collaborator. Kitinchev was sentenced to death, but later this sentence was changed to 20-year prison. He died in
Idrizovo prison after a year of tuberculosis and torture.
[Гоцев, Димитър. Новата национално-освободителна борба във Вардарска Македония 1944-1991 г., Македонски научен институт, София, 1998, глава Първите политически процеси.]
See also
*
*
1944 Bulgarian coup d'état
The 1944 Bulgarian coup d'état, also known as the 9 September coup d'état ( bg, Деветосептемврийски преврат, Devetoseptemvriyski prevrat), was the forcible change of the government of Kingdom of Bulgaria carried out ...
*
Stratsin-Kumanovo operation
Literature
"Les Atrocités serbes, d'après les témoignages américains, anglais, français, italiens, russes, serbes, suisses, etc." Lausanne, 1919 година
"Показания на Спиро Китинчев пред органите на ОЗНА на Македония за дейността му като политически деец и кмет на Скопие" публикувано в "Българското управление във Вардарска Македония (1941-1944)", София, 2011 година
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kitinchev, Spiro
Bulgarian politicians
Mayors of Skopje
1895 births
1946 deaths
University of Lausanne alumni
Macedonian Bulgarians
Expatriates in Switzerland