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Revision as of 18:50, 20 October 2008 editRevizionist (talk | contribs)1,716 edits Macedonians existed before world war two - Read IMRo (United) articles, read Pulevski, Misirkov, read Cupovski, read Slaveykov, read KPJ documents and so on?Who do you think fought against the Axis BG← Previous edit Revision as of 22:54, 20 October 2008 edit undoLaveol (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers13,328 editsm sorry, but sources tend to agree these were Bulgarians, not pro-Bulgarian Macedonians or something (in case you don't mean it in the regional sence only)Next edit →
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===Colaborationist organizations=== ===Colaborationist organizations===
'''Bulgarian action committees''' - After the Yugoslav army was expelled from Macedonia, together with the German army a group of pro-Bulgarian Macedonians headed by Spiro Kitincev arrived in Macedonia and started preparation for the formation of committees which would make preparations for the coming of the Bulgarian army and administration in Macedonia.<ref name="Ѓорѓи Малковски">"Профашистичките и колаборационистичките организации и групи во Македонија 1941-1944 година" Ѓорѓи Малковски. Скопје, 1995</ref> The first ] was formed in Skopje on 13 April 1943. In this committees former ]<ref>CSA fund 396, list 7, file 37, page 11-12. Original, manuscript; Minchev, D. “Formation and Activity...", p. 80.</ref><ref>Вестник "Македония", Скопие, 1941, бр.1 .стр.4, Дописка от Велес</ref> members in Vardar Macedonia were active. On ], ], the situation was discussed in Skopje. It was pointed out that one of the first tasks of the newly formed organisation was to regulate the relations with the German authorities.<ref name=Minchev> Dimitre Mičev (Dimiter Minchev). Hosted on Kroraina.com, retrieved ].</ref> As the Bulgarian Army entered Vardar Macedonia on ], ], it was greeted by a part of the local population as liberators, as it meant the end of Serbian rule.<ref name=Nanev>'''' (''Macedonia 1941 Resurrection''), Сотир Нанев (Sotir Nanev), 1942, reprinted 1993 with ISBN 9545283661, publisher Труд (Trud).{{bg icon}} Memoirs of a Macedonia-born Bulgarian lieutenant participating in the occupation of the Yugoslavian and Greek parts of Macedonia.</ref><ref name=Minchev/><ref name=Vankovska>'''', by Biljana Vankovska, 2003, ISBN 1860646247, page 270. Extract from ] retrieved ].</ref> With their help more then 12,000 Yugoslav Macedonian ]s who had been conscripted into the Yugoslav army were released by a German, Italian and Hungarian Autorities.<ref></ref> As regards the ] ], the members of the campaign committees were adamant - they had to be deported as soon as possible and their properties to be returned to the locals. With the arrival of the Bulgarian army mass expulsion of Serbs from the area of the Vardar Macedonia took place.<ref></ref> However, once the region and administration were organized, the Action Committees became marginalized, and ultimately dissolved. '''Bulgarian action committees''' - It must be noted that the existence of a separate Macedonian national consciousness prior to the 1940s is disputed.<ref>Loring M. Danforth, ''The Macedonian Conflict: Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World'', 1995, Princeton University Press, p.65 , ISBN 0691043566</ref><ref>Stephen Palmer, Robert King, ''Yugoslav Communism and the Macedonian question'',Hamden, CT Archon Books, 1971, p.p.199-200</ref> Anti-Serban and pro-Bulgarian feelings among the local population at this period prevailed.<ref></ref> Six days before the Bulgarian intervention,<ref>Minchev, D. formation and Activity of the Bulgarian Campaign Commit­tees in Vardar Macedonia in 1941" In: Notice of Military History Institute and Military History Scientific Unity, 1990, vol. 50, p. 39-94.</ref><ref>CSA, fund 396, list 34, page 14. Original, manuscript; Minchev. D. ..Formation and Activity...", p.78.</ref> former ] and ]<ref>CSA fund 396, list 7, file 37, page 11-12. Original, manuscript; Minchev, D. “Formation and Activity...", p. 80.</ref><ref>Вестник "Македония", Скопие, 1941, бр.1 .стр.4, Дописка от Велес</ref> members in Vardar Macedonia, were active in organising ]. On ], ], the situation was discussed in Skopje. It was pointed out that one of the first tasks of the newly formed organisation was to regulate the relations with the German authorities.<ref name=Minchev> Dimitre Mičev (Dimiter Minchev). Hosted on Kroraina.com, retrieved ].</ref> As the Bulgarian Army entered Vardar Macedonia on ], ], it was greeted by a great part of the local population as liberators, as it meant the end of Serbian rule.<ref name=Nanev>'''' (''Macedonia 1941 Resurrection''), Сотир Нанев (Sotir Nanev), 1942, reprinted 1993 with ISBN 9545283661, publisher Труд (Trud).{{bg icon}} Memoirs of a Macedonia-born Bulgarian lieutenant participating in the occupation of the Yugoslavian and Greek parts of Macedonia.</ref><ref name=Minchev/><ref name=Vankovska>'''', by Biljana Vankovska, 2003, ISBN 1860646247, page 270. Extract from ] retrieved ].</ref> With their help more then 12,000 Yugoslav Macedonian ]s who had been conscripted into the Yugoslav army were released by a German, Italian and Hungarian Autorities.<ref></ref> As regards the ] ], the members of the campaign committees were adamant - they had to be deported as soon as possible and their properties to be returned to the locals. With the arrival of the Bulgarian army mass expulsion of Serbs from the area of the Vardar Macedonia took place.<ref></ref> However, once the region and administration were organized, the Action Committees became marginalized, and ultimately dissolved.


'''Balli Kombëtar in Macedonia''' - The Italian occupied western Macedonia was included in "]". There were 5,500 fascist ] militants in Albanian occupied Macedonia, 2,000 of which were Tetovo-based and 500 of which were based in Debar.<ref>{{citeweb|url=http://www.balkanalysis.com/2005/10/04/macedonia-in-world-war-ii-debar-and-the-skanderbeg-division/|title=Macedonia in World War II: Debar and the Skanderbeg Division|author=Carl Savich|date=]}}</ref> '''Balli Kombëtar in Macedonia''' - The Italian occupied western Macedonia was included in "]". There were 5,500 fascist ] militants in Albanian occupied Macedonia, 2,000 of which were Tetovo-based and 500 of which were based in Debar.<ref>{{citeweb|url=http://www.balkanalysis.com/2005/10/04/macedonia-in-world-war-ii-debar-and-the-skanderbeg-division/|title=Macedonia in World War II: Debar and the Skanderbeg Division|author=Carl Savich|date=]}}</ref>
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'''Serbian Chetnik Movement in Macedonia''' - There were approximately 1,000 <ref>Thomas, N. Abbot, P. (1983). ''Partisan Warfare 1941–1945''. Osprey Publishing. p. 20. ISBN 0850455138. Google Book Search. Retrieved on March 28, 2008.</ref><ref name="Cohen-Riesman">Cohen, P. J. Riesman, D. (February, 1997). ''Serbia's Secret War: Propaganda and the Deceit of History''. Texas A&M University Press. p. 100. ISBN 0890967601. Google Book Search. Retrieved on March 28, 2008</ref> ] led by ] operating in Macedonia during the conflict. For a time, they were controlled by rival Chetnik leader, ]. '''Serbian Chetnik Movement in Macedonia''' - There were approximately 1,000 <ref>Thomas, N. Abbot, P. (1983). ''Partisan Warfare 1941–1945''. Osprey Publishing. p. 20. ISBN 0850455138. Google Book Search. Retrieved on March 28, 2008.</ref><ref name="Cohen-Riesman">Cohen, P. J. Riesman, D. (February, 1997). ''Serbia's Secret War: Propaganda and the Deceit of History''. Texas A&M University Press. p. 100. ISBN 0890967601. Google Book Search. Retrieved on March 28, 2008</ref> ] led by ] operating in Macedonia during the conflict. For a time, they were controlled by rival Chetnik leader, ].


'''Kontračeta''' - The Kontračete were anti-partisan units organized and equipped by the Bulgarian police in the period between 1942 and 1944 composed of pro-Bulgarian oriented Macedonians. The first kontračeta was formed in ] in the end of 1942 in order to limit ] activities in the region. The idea for the formation of these units was introduced by Stefan Simeonov, chief of the Police in Skopje district and was approved by minister Gabrovski. <ref name="Ѓорѓи Малковски" /> At their peak strength reached 200 units by August, 1944.<ref name="Cohen-Riesman" /> '''Kontračeta''' - The Kontračete were anti-partisan units organized and equipped by the Bulgarian police in the period between 1942 and 1944 composed of pro-Bulgarian oriented Macedonians. The first kontračeta was formed in ] in the end of 1942 in order to limit ] activities in the region. The idea for the formation of these units was introduced by Stefan Simeonov, chief of the Police in Skopje district and was approved by minister Gabrovski. <ref name="Ѓорѓи Малковски">"Профашистичките и колаборационистичките организации и групи во Македонија 1941-1944 година" Ѓорѓи Малковски. Скопје, 1995</ref> At their peak strength reached 200 units by August, 1944.<ref name="Cohen-Riesman" />


==1941 - Beginning of the resistance movement== ==1941 - Beginning of the resistance movement==

Revision as of 22:54, 20 October 2008

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National Liberation War of Macedonia
Part of the Yugoslav Front of World War II
File:Partizani Bitola.JPG
Yugoslav Partisan troops of the People's Liberation Army of Macedonia marching through liberated Bitola in 1944.
DateOctober 11, 1941November 23, 1944
Locationparts of the wider region of Macedonia
Result Formation of PR Macedonia as part of the FPR Yugoslavia
Territorial
changes
Part of Vardar Banovina (Vardar Macedonia) became SR Macedonia as part of SFR Yugoslavia
Belligerents

Allies
Yugoslav Partisans

Axis
 Germany

Italy Italy
Bulgaria Bulgaria
Albania Balli Kombëtar

Allies/Axis:
Chetniks

Allies:
1941-1943
Axis:
1943-1945
(de facto)
Commanders and leaders
Josip Broz Tito
Svetozar Vukmanović-Tempo
North Macedonia Mihajlo Apostoloski
North Macedonia Metodija Andonov-Čento
Nazi Germany Adolf Hitler
Italy Benito Mussolini
Bulgaria Bogdan Filov
Albania Xhemo Hasa
Kosta Pećanac
Draža Mihailović
Strength
66,000 (1944) ~60,000 (1944) 1,000
Casualties and losses
6,724 dead

Total casualties: 24,000
By nationality:
(7,000 Jews, 6,724 Ethnic Macedonians, 6,000 Serbs, 4,000 Albanians)

By affiliation:
(2,000 civilians, 1,000 collaborationists, 14,000 Yugoslav Partisans and Yugoslav soldiers, 7,000 victims of concentration camps)

Other:
(1,000 Bulgarians, Aromanians, Roma and Turks)

The National Liberation War of Macedonia (Template:Lang-mk, transliterated Narodnoosloboditelna Borba na Makedonija, NOB; Croatian, Serbian: Makedonski Narodnooslobodilački Rat, NOB) was a political and military campaign carried out by mainly Macedonian Partisans of the People's Liberation Army of Macedonia (part of the Yugoslav Partisan movement) from October 11, 1941 until the end of 1944 when Yugoslavia was reestablished. The operation was a regional conflict of the greater Yugoslav People's Liberation War but combatants developed further aspirations over the geographic region of Macedonia.

Background

During the Balkan Wars in 1912 and 1913, the region of Macedonia which was then an Ottoman province was divided amongst the Kingdom of Greece, the Kingdom of Bulgaria and the Kingdom of Serbia.

From 1912 until 1941 the territory of Vardar Macedonia remained within the territory of Yugoslavia. During that time, there were two main autonomist agendas — the one of the right-wing Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO) led by Ivan Mihailov, and the one of leftist former IMRO (United) who merged with the communists prior to the beginning of the war. The activists of IMRO were followers of the idea for the creation of a pro-Bulgarian Macedonian state under German and Italian protection. Whereas the IMRO (United) option was a creation of an independent "Soviet Macedonia" within a Balkan Federation. The last option was supported by Pavel Shatev, Dimitar Vlahov, Metodi Shatorov, Panko Brashnarov and others.

Occupation of Macedonia

Invasion of Yugoslavia

World War II in Yugoslavia
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
Croatia
Macedonia
Serbia
Slovenia
Strategic bombing
see also
Factions in the Yugoslav Front
People of the Yugoslav Front

The outbreak of the Second World War on September 1, 1939, inspired the whole Macedonian community, to seek ways for the liberation of Macedonia. The majority of the local population in Macedonia met, with joy, the defeat of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. It saw this as the end of Serbian rule and the soldiers from Vardar Macedonia, mobilized in the Yugoslav army in large numbers, refused to fight. The Serbian administration had withdrawn from where it was stationed.

Early in 1941 the British vice-consul at Skopje provided the Foreign Office with an analysis of the current state of the Macedonian Question. He claimed that the vast majority of the Macedonians belonged to the national movement; indeed, he estimated "that 90 percent of all Slavic Macedonians were autonomists in one sense or another..." Because the movement was wrapped in secrecy, however, it was extremely difficult to gauge the relative strength of its various currents, except that it could be assumed that IMRO had lost ground since it was banned in Bulgaria and its leaders exiled.

New division of Macedonia

The new division of Macedonia started on 19 and 20 of April. The Bulgarian troops were mainly present in the central and eastern part of Vardar Macedonia and the eastern part of Greek Macedonia, thus creating a "Greater Bulgaria". The prominent force which occupied most of Vardar Macedonia, was the Bulgarian 5th Army. The western-most parts of Vardar Macedonia and Greek Macedonia were occupied by the fascist Kingdom of Italy. The central part of Greek Macedonia was under German occupation, while German garrisons were present in several places in Vardar Macedonia too.

Colaborationist organizations

Bulgarian action committees - It must be noted that the existence of a separate Macedonian national consciousness prior to the 1940s is disputed. Anti-Serban and pro-Bulgarian feelings among the local population at this period prevailed. Six days before the Bulgarian intervention, former IMRO and IMRO (United) members in Vardar Macedonia, were active in organising Bulgarian Action Committees. On 13 April, 1941, the situation was discussed in Skopje. It was pointed out that one of the first tasks of the newly formed organisation was to regulate the relations with the German authorities. As the Bulgarian Army entered Vardar Macedonia on 19 April, 1941, it was greeted by a great part of the local population as liberators, as it meant the end of Serbian rule. With their help more then 12,000 Yugoslav Macedonian POWs who had been conscripted into the Yugoslav army were released by a German, Italian and Hungarian Autorities. As regards the Serbian colonists, the members of the campaign committees were adamant - they had to be deported as soon as possible and their properties to be returned to the locals. With the arrival of the Bulgarian army mass expulsion of Serbs from the area of the Vardar Macedonia took place. However, once the region and administration were organized, the Action Committees became marginalized, and ultimately dissolved.

Balli Kombëtar in Macedonia - The Italian occupied western Macedonia was included in "Greater Albania". There were 5,500 fascist Balli Kombëtar militants in Albanian occupied Macedonia, 2,000 of which were Tetovo-based and 500 of which were based in Debar.

Ivan Mihailov's IMRO in Macedonia - After being banned by the new Bulgarian government in 1934 as a terrorist organization Ivan Mihailov's IMRO disintegrated and stopped its activity. Ivan Mihailov fled to Italy and there he made contact with the fascists and with members of the German secret service Gestapo. After the division of Yugoslavia, Mihailov went to Zagreb and spent the war there in company with Ante Pavelic. He revitalized parts of his old structures and ordered them to enter Vardar Macedonia and infiltrate there in the local Bulgarian administration, waiting for an opportunity to take over the control from Bulgarian in their own hands and create a fascist Macedonian state which would become Germany's puppet-state. Although Nazi Germany gave Bulgaria the right to annex the greater part of Vardar Macedonia, still Gestapo had contacts with Mihailov and his men in Bulgaria and those that entered Vardar Macedonia together with the Bulgarian army. Gestapo had tight contacts with Mihailov in order to have a "reserve card" in case things with Bulgaria would go wrong.

Serbian Chetnik Movement in Macedonia - There were approximately 1,000 Serb Chetniks led by Draža Mihailović operating in Macedonia during the conflict. For a time, they were controlled by rival Chetnik leader, Kosta Pećanac.

Kontračeta - The Kontračete were anti-partisan units organized and equipped by the Bulgarian police in the period between 1942 and 1944 composed of pro-Bulgarian oriented Macedonians. The first kontračeta was formed in Veles in the end of 1942 in order to limit partisan activities in the region. The idea for the formation of these units was introduced by Stefan Simeonov, chief of the Police in Skopje district and was approved by minister Gabrovski. At their peak strength reached 200 units by August, 1944.

1941 - Beginning of the resistance movement

File:Occupation of macedonia no caption.png
Axis occupation of Macedonia, May 1941 (pre-war borders are in black):   Bulgaria   Germany   Italy
Metodija Šatorov-Šarlo.

In 1941 the regional committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (RC of CPY) for Vardar Macedonia was headed by Metodi Shatorov - Sharlo from Prilep. When the directive for the organization of an armed resistance movement in all regions of occupied Yugoslavia was issued, Sharlo disobeyed the order.. Sharlo answered the Central Committee (CC) of the CPY that the situation in Macedonia does not allow an immediate engagement with military action, but rather first propaganda activity, and afterward formation of military units.

In that time, the Comintern had different agenda for the resolution of the Macedonian Question - an independent Macedonian state governed by a majority population of ethnic Macedonians (this idea was confirmed by the Resolution of the Comintern from 1934, and was supported by the Bulgarian Communist Party (BCP), Communist Party of Greece (CPG) and the CPY). But in 1939 the CPY started imposing the idea of formation of a Macedonian state, but within a Yugoslav federation. Shatorov was opposed to the second option and was a partisan of the Comintern agenda, which proposed a creation of a "Soviet Macedonia". While the Bulgarian Communists avoided organizing mass armed uprising against the Bulgarian authorities, the Yugoslav Communists insisted that no liberation could be achieved without an armed revolt. With the help of the Comintern and of Joseph Stalin himself a decision was taken and the Macedonian Communists were attached to CPY.

File:Bitolsko prespanski odred Dame Gruev.JPG
Bitola - Prespa Partisan Detachment Dame Gruev, 1942.

Because of this conflict within the RC of CPY for Macedonia, in Vardar Macedonia there was no resistance movement. At the start of World War II, the Comintern supported a policy of non-intervention, arguing that the war was an imperialist war between various national ruling classes. But when the USSR was attacked by Nazi Germany, the Comintern issued a directive which ordered beginning of communist resistance movements in all fascist occupied territories in Europe.

After that, and when already months ago Yugoslavia was annexed by Axis Powers, the RC of CPY for Macedonia began organizing the resistance movement. The RC headed by Shatorov immediately ordered the formation of partisan units, the first of which was formed in Skopje region on 22 August 1941 , and attacked Bulgarian guards on September 8, 1941 in Bogomila, near Skopje. But it was too late, Sharlo lost his popularity within the CPY and was discredited. Instead him, people loyal to the CPY were appointed as leaders of the RC - Mirče Acev, Strašo Pindžur, Lazar Koliševski, Stiv Naumov, and Kuzman Josifovski Pitu.

The new leadership began with activities for the formation of new partisan detachments. On 30 August the Kumanovo and Prilep units were formed. The Kumanovo and Prilep partisan detachments attacked the Bulgarian soldiers on October 11, 1941. This date is considered to be the symbolic beginning of the Macedonian Resistance. Armed insurgents from the Prilep Partisan Detachment attacked Axis occupied zones in the city of Prilep, notably a Bulgarian police station. The Prilep detachment was active until December 1941, when it split in three groups – the first went in Skopje, the second in Tikves, and the third in Bitola. The Skopje partisan detachment was active until mid October 1941, when it was destroyed in a battle against the Bulgarian police near Vodno. The Skopje detachment was reassembled in 1942.

The first Partisan activity in Skopje, Prilep and Kumanovo, led to the creation of partisan detachments in other regions of Macedonia during the whole of 1942. Partisan detachments were formed also in Greek Macedonia and today's Bulgarian Macedonia under the leadership of Communist Party of Greece and Bulgarian Communist Party. Till the end of 1942 a total of nine partisan detachments were active in Vardar Macedonia and had maintained control of mountainous territories around Prilep, Skopje, Kruševo and Veles, including one free territory in Prespa.

1942 - Intensification of the liberation movement

In the beginning of 1942, the RC of CPY for Macedonia and the regional military headquarters worked energetically on the creation of new Partisan detachments across Vardar Macedonia. As a result, in spring 1942 several new detachments were formed. In May 1942 in the village of Lisec, the Veles partisan detachment “Pere Toshev” was formed. It had 3 successful battles against the Bulgarian police on mount Lisec, in Kriva Krusha, and Vojnica. In July this detachment merged with the newly formed 2nd Prilep detachment under the common name “Dimitar Vlahov”. The detachment had several successful battles on mount Mukos. In November 1942 in Crveni Steni near Prilep, the 3rd Prilep detachment “Gjorce Petrov” was formed.

File:Veleshko prilepski odred Dimitar Vlahov.JPG
Veleš - Prilep Partisan detachment Dimitar Vlahov, 1942.

On 22 April 1942 in the village of Lavci, near Bitola detachment “Pelister” was formed. It had several battles against the Bulgarians, but in November it was dispersed in a battle against much stronger Bulgarian army and police force near Oreovo, when 2/3 of the fighters were killed. On 6 June 1942 in the village of Zlatari on Bigla mountain, the Bitola-Prespa partisan detachment “Dame Gruev” was formed. This unit engaged a very successful political agitation and had several military successes, like the attack on the troops in the village of Smilevo on 2 August 1942, and the attack on the police station in Kazani. In November 1942, the detachment split in three groups – the first remained on Bigla, the second went to northern Prespa, and the third went to southern Prespa. The third grout of the “Dame Gruev” detachment mobilized men from the ethnic Macedonian villages in Mala Prespa and succeeded in creating a free territory composed of villages in Mala Prespa and part of Greek Prespa – this was the first free territory created by Macedonian partisans in the war.

File:Partizanska kolona.jpg
A detachment of Macedonian Partisans, 1943.

On 16 April 1942 the Krushevo detachment “Pitu Guli” was formed which waived several battles against the Bulgarian army and police from which most important are the battles in Pribilci, Kocishte and Cer. In September 1942 the 2nd Bitola detachment “Jane Sandanski” was formed. The fighters of the detachment conducted political speeches in the villages and made sneak attacks on the Bulgarian troops on several locations, especially on the railway station in Beranci on December 1942. In October 1942 the “Shar Planina” partisan detachment was formed near Tetovo out of Macedonian and Albanian communists. The detachment had a great importance in the creation of the Brotherhood and Unity feelings among the people in Tetovo. In 1942 in the village of Mavrovo the “Mavrovo” partisan detachment was formed. In 1942 a group of young communists from Shtip assembled on Plackovica mountain in order to form a detachment, but the group was located and destroyed by the Bulgarian police before they could receive the weapons. Groups of communists that were planning to form partisan detachments were arrested thanks too to informants in Strumica and Kocani. This successful actions of the Bulgarian secret police prevented the creation of partisan units in eastern Macedonia in 1942.

The Partisan activity was coordinated by the Head-quarters of the National Liberation Partisan Detachments of Macedonia (HQ of NLPDM) which was established in July 1942 by Macedonian communists of the CPY, and was headed by Mihailo Apostolski.

1943

Support from the CC of the CPY

Although several Macedonian Partisan detachments were formed from 1941 till the end of 1942 which were engaged in many battles against the Bulgarian, Italian, German and Albanian occupation forces, and managed to create several free territories, still there was lack of management and organizational-technical skills to conduct a wide-scale struggle against the enemy. That is why, the HQ of the Macedonian National Liberation Movement asked for assistance from the CC of the CPY, for a skilled theoretical and instructor to be send. In the beginning of 1943 the Montenegrin Svetozar Vukmanović-Tempo was sent as assinstence to the HQ of the Macedonian partisan forces. After his arrival, he began to organize an energetic struggle against the occupant forces. Tempo served on the Supreme Staff of CPY and became Josip Broz Tito's personal representative in the Vardar Macedonia. Tempo gave great contribution to the Macedonian liberation movement by transferring the experience of the partisans from other parts of Yugoslavia to Vardar Macedonia and by helping with the organizational issues. One of his objectives was to destroy the influence of the BCP in Macedonia and to fight against any form of autonomism.

Formation of the Communist Party of Macedonia (CPM)

In order to discredit the claims of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO) and the fascist occupiers that the Macedonian communist are working for some-kind of a "pro-Serbian" ideal, and also to give a further burst of the Macedonian revolutionary struggle, the leadership of the Regional Committee of the CPY for Macedonia decided to establish a separate Macedonian Communist Party which will be the representative of the will of the Macedonian people and will be the spirit of the anti-fascist struggle for national liberation. The Communist Party of Macedonia (CPM) was formed on 19 March 1943 in Tetovo. The first Central Committee (CC of CPM) was composed of: the IMRO (United) veteran Strahil Gigov, Kuzman Josifovski, Lazar Kolishevski, Cvetko Uzunovski, Mara Naceva and Bane Andreev.

On the first meeting, after making a detailed analysis of the military and political situation in the country, the CC of the CPM decided that together with the HQ from that day on to be directly involved with the fighting and to be stationed side by side with the troops on the battlefield. It was also decided to divide the territory of Vardar Macedonia into five operative zones, and to make efforts to make direct contact with the liberation movements in Albania, Bulgaria and Greece.

Meanwhile in the summer of 1943 besides the existing eleven, eight new Macedonian partisan detachments were formed. More and more people started entering the ranks of the partisans. After several battles with the enemy, managed to create strongholds in the regions of Debarca, Prespa, Kumanovo, Tikvesh and Gevgelija. This created conditions for expanding of the National Liberation Committees and creation of larger military units. This is why, the CC of CPM on the free territory in Prespa held the famous Prespa conference on 2 August 1944. It was decided to create regular large military units (battalions and brigades) which will lead to the creation of the Macedonian National Liberation Army (MNOV, or in Macedonian NOV), and it was ordered to start the preparations for the organizing of the Anti-Fascist Assembly of the National Liberation of Macedonia.

Formation of the People's Liberation Army of Macedonia

Main article: People's Liberation Army of Macedonia

Immediately after the Prespa conference of the Communist Party of Macedonia, the creation of larger Macedonian military unit started. The first one to be created was the "Mirče Acev" Battalion, which was formed on August 18, 1943 on Mount Slavej. "Mirče Acev" battalion ignited the formation of the Macedonian National Liberation Army (MNLA or MOV) (Македонска Народно Ослободителна Војска - МНОВ). On 24 September 1943 on mount Kozuv the battalion "Straso Pindzur" was formed, on 30 September the "Debar youth battalion", on 11 November near Bitola the "Stiv Naumov" battalion, and on 1 December the Kumanovo battalion "Orce Nikolov".

File:Bat Mirce Acev.jpg
Formation of the Mirce Acev Battalion.

The creation of the larger units came in right time for the Macedonian national Liberation Army, because on 8 September Italy capitulated. Unlike Struga and Tetovo, where the Italians were disarmed by the German army, the Gostivar, Debar, Kicevo and Ljubojno Italian garrisons were disarmed by the NOV. They were attacked by units of the NOV while they were trying to reach the Albanian border and flee Macedonia. The arms and ammunition that was captured gave the opportunity to create new battalions and even brigades. After the disarming of the Italians, a vast free territory was established which stretched from Gostivar to the north of Struga and Ohrid. The free territory included the towns Debar and Kicevo.

On the free territories a provisional people's authority was established, led by the National Liberation Committees. Meetings were being held in every village and in Kicevo and Debar propagating the causes of the National Liberation Struggle and the right of the Macedonian people and the other nationalities for self-determination. The first schools in which the Macedonian language was being taught were created in this free territory in 1943. The whole population, both male and female was included in the struggle - the men were mobilized in militias and were given short military training and the women were organized in the AFZ (Anti-fascist Front of the Women). In October 1943 the HQ of the Macedonian NOV issued a manifest towards the Macedonian people and all the nationalities in Macedonia (as stated in the manifest: Aromanians, Albanians and Turks) to join the fight of the Macedonian National Liberation Army and win their freedom and help liberate and create a free Macedonian state. The manifest also calls for struggle against the reactionary Serbian, Albanian and Bulgarian elements (Chetniks, Balists and IMRO agents).

During the Summer of 1943, Svetozar Vukmanovic-Tempo at meetings with representatives of EAM and the Albanian resistance put forward the idea of a joint Balkan Headquarters to exercise supreme control over the partisan movements of Yugoslavia, Albania, Bulgaria and Greece. Moreover, with the professed aim of combating Bulgarian propaganda, Tempo asked for the recognition to the ethnic Macedonian people of the right to self-determination, as well as permission for the partisans from Vardar Macedonia to extend their activity among the Slavic-speaking population in Greek Macedonia. As a result the Slavic-Macedonian National Liberation Front (SNOF) was established in 1943 in Greek Macedonia by ethnic Macedonian communists, members of the Communist Party of Greece (KKE).

File:2 Macedonian Shock Brigade Tempo.JPG
Svetozar Vukmanović-Tempo holds a speech in front of the fighters of the 2nd Macedonian Assault Brigade.

A lot of illegal activists and young people from other parts of Vardar Macedonia came to the free territory to participate in the creation of the provisional authority. On 11 November 1943 in the village of Slivovo, the First Macedonian-Kosovo Brigade was formed out of three Macedonian battalions and one battalions from fascist Italian occupied Kosovo. Among the controlled from the Partisans regions were Debarca, Mavrovo, Rostuša, within Italy's occupational territory.

Immediately after the establishment of the free territory in western Vardar Macedonia, the German command started assembling troops to make an incursion and crush the provisional authority. The problem for the Germans was in the fact that the free territory was cutting of the communications between Skopje and northeastern Greece. After assembling 2 divisions and numbered balist units, the occupations forces started the operation for re-capturing the free territory one week after its formation. The struggle for the free territory lasted more than two months, with the most important battles being at Bukovic, Debarca, Kicevo and Slivovo. The town of Kicevo was re-captured by the Germans in the beginning of November, but three days later it once again fell in Macedonian partisan hands, to be later re-captured for the second time by the German troops.

The High Command of the People's Liberation Army of Macedonia together with the CC of the Communist Party of Macedonia decided to take evasive maneuvers in order to avoid total destruction of the Macedonian forces because of the overwhelming number of enemy troops engaged. Only few small units were left behind. After more than two months constant battles, in December 1943 the Macedonian NOV together with the CC of CPM started a massive retreat through Prespa and after a 13 day march entered Greek Macedonia.

Bulgarian actions in 1943

File:Bulgarian police Macedonia 1942.JPG
Bulgarian policemen posing with the severed heads of Macedonian Partisans in Prilep, 1942.

Meanwhile the Bulgarian government was responsible for the round-up and deportation of over 7,000 Jews in Skopje and Bitola. It refused to deport the Jews from Bulgarian proper but later under German pressure those Jews from the new annexed territories, without a Bulgarian citizenship were deported, as these from Vardar Macedonia and Western Thrace. The Bulgarian authorities created a special Gendarmerie forces which received almost unlimited power to pursue the Communist partisans on the whole territory of the kingdom. The gendarmes became notorious for carrying out atrocities against captured partisans and their supporters. Harsh rule by the occupying forces and a number of Allied victories indicated that the Axis might lose the war and that encouraged more Macedonians to support the Communist Partisan resistance movement of Josip Broz Tito. Many former IMRO members assisted the Bulgarian authorities in fighting Tempo's partisans. With the help of Bulgarian government and former IMRO members, several pro-Bulgarian paramilitary detachments - Uhrana were organized in occupied Greek Macedonia in 1943. These were led by Bulgarian officers originally from Greek Macedonia and served for protection of the local population in the zone under German and Italian control. After the capitulation of Fascist Italy in September 1943, the Italian zone in Macedonia was taken over by the Germans. It was apparent that Mihailov had broader plans which envisaged the creation of a Macedonian state under a German control. He was follower of the idea about an United Macedonian state with prevailing Bulgarian element. It was also anticipated by the Germans that the IMRO volunteers would form the core of the armed forces of a future Independent Macedonia led by Ivan Mihailov.

1944 and aftermath

February Campaign

File:NarodnaBorba vesnik NOVM.JPG
The Narodna borba ("People's Struggle") - the official newspaper of the People's Liberation Army of Macedonia.

After passing through the whole western Greek Macedonia, the main forces of the People's Liberation Army of Macedonia were stationed in the Meglena region. The Partisan detachments that were active in Gevgelia and Tikvesh also passed the border into northern Greece and met with the main forces of the NOV. Several meetings were held with members of ELAS and the Greek Communist Party. One of the decisions was the creation of wider partisan detachments composed of ethnic Macedonian minority in Greece. On 20 December 1943 in the village of Fustani in the Pella district of Greece, out of the 3 battalions of the 3rd operative zone the Second Macedonian Assault Brigade was formed. Also out of captured Bulgarian soldiers and Bulgarian soldiers that escaped into the ranks of the NOV of Macedonia, the Bulgarian "Hristo Botev" partisan battalion was formed, which was under the command of the HQ of NOV. The rest of the fighters that were not included in The First Macedonian-Kosovo Assault Brigade and The Second Macedonian Assault Brigade (the “Hristo Botev” and “Stiv Naumov” battalion together with several smaller partisan detachments), were organized into the so-called “Third Group of Battalions”. The provisional HQ of the reorganized NOV was stationed in the slavophone village of Fustani in the Pella district. Because of the fact that the massive concentration of NOV in the Meglena district was jeopardizing the Axis communication to Thesaloniki, the Bulgarian and German forces launched an incursion in Meglena and mount Kozuv against the NOV of Macedonia. The fighting lasted from 26 December till 18 January and after all Axis attackes were repealed mount Kozuf remained a free terotry of the NOV.

File:6 Makedonska Brigada.JPG
Fighters from the 6th Macedonian Brigade.

After the fight for Kozuf, the Head-Quarters of the NOV decided to launch a three-phase offensive in central and eastern Vardar Macedonia against the fascist occupation forces – known as the “February March”. In accordance with the February March plan, on 31 January 1944 the First Macedonian-Kosovo Assault Brigade started marching towards Veles and Porech region, but immediately after crossing the border, the Brigade was attacked by two Bulgarian divisions. After constant fighting in cold weather on 14 February the brigade returned to Greek Macedonia. Although it did not fulfill its mission because of the energetic counter-action of the Bulgarians, still the First Brigade engaged two divisions of the Bulgarian 5th Army in that region, which opened the space for the Third Group of Brigades together with CPM and the HQ of NOV to pass through eastern Macedonia. The Second Macedonian Assault Brigade from 31 January till mid 1944 was conducting incursions from Kozuf to Gevgelia and Demir Kapija region disrupting the Bulgarian authority in the villages and closing Bulgarian schools. Third Group of Brigades together with the HQ of the NOV and the CC of the CPM on 31 January started marching from the village of Zborsko to eastern Vardar Macedonia. After passing 5 mountains and 400 km through terrible weather conditions and having constant struggles with Bulgarian army units 23 days later the Third Group of Battalions was in partisan held territory near Kumanovo where it made contacts with the forces in South-East Serbia and the Bulgarian Resistance.

The 3rd Battalion Group merged with the two existing Macedonian battalions in Kumanovo region and formed the famous Third Macedonian Assault Brigade in the Kumanovo village of Zegljane on 26 February 1944. After contacting the Bulgarian resistance, the “Hristo Botev” battalion which was till then under the command of the NOV of Macedonia, was then given to the Bulgarian resistance command. After its formation, the Third Macedonian Assault Brigade became the biggest partisan formation in Macedonia and Southern Serbia. In the Southern Serbian Morava region the masters of the terrain were the Serbian Chetniks who supported by the Germans did not give the communist a chance to organize their own liberation movement. That is why the after the meeting in Prohor Pčinjski monastery it was decided the command of the South-Moravian and Kosovo partisan detachments to be given to the HQ of NOV of Macedonia – as it was most organized and most experienced. The first objective of the HQ of NOV after the expanding of its command region was the destruction of the chetnik movement in Macedonia and Southern Serbia, starting with the chetniks stationed in Vardar Macedonia.

Destruction of the Vardar Chetnik Corps

File:Hristijan Todorovski Karposh.JPG
Hristijan Todorovski - Karpoš.

As of 1941, attempts were made to create a Serbian loyalist movement in different parts of Vardar Macedonia. Few bands were formed in Veles, Prilep and Strumica, mainly by war veterans and by former Chetnik leaders. But these groups were few in numbers, decentralized, self-initiative or influenced by Kosta Pecanac, and till mid 1942 all of them were destroyed by units of the Bulgarian army. In the beginning of 1943 in order to organize a strong Chetnik force in Vardar Macedonia, and in order to destroy the Pecanac group, Draža Mihailović sent in Macedonia lieutenant Milivoje Trbic. He quickly organized local committees in Skopje, Veles, Kicevo and Gostivar, who started recruiting volunteers among the ethnic Macedonians with pro-Serbian sentiments. Soon the Vardar Chetnic Corps (VCC) was formed headed by Stojan Krstić (a native of Prilep), which had about 1 000 fighters in whole of Vardar Macedonia.

After the formation of the first battalions of the Macedonian National Liberation Army, the VCC directed all of its effort to destroy the liberation movement of the Macedonian people. The Porech Chetnik brigade was terrorizing the villages that supported the Partisans and started conducting forced mobilization. This further more stimulated the anger against the chetnics and more and more volunteers entered the ranks of the partisan army. In December 1943 the High Command gave Hristijan Todorovski Karposh the task to destroy the Chetnik bands in the Skopska Crna Gora region in Skopje and Kozjak in Kumanovo. With detachments from Kumanovo and Skopje he attacked the chetniks in three battles of which the most important occurred near the village of Dragomanci in the end of 1943 - this battle brought the end of the chetnik presence in the Kumanovo region. Till the end of January the chetniks in Kicevo and Skopska Crna Gora are disarmed by the Macedonian NOV and final hits were made upon the Porech chetnik brigade which capitulated and entered the ranks of the Porech partisan battalion. After being defeated in Dragomanci and Porech, the remaining chetniks from different dispersed brigades merged and concentrated in the Kozjak area on the border with Serbia, where they managed to occupy all of the villages.

In the struggle of the Macedonian NOV against the Bulgarian occupation army, the Serbian Chetniks that were holding the mountain villages in Kozjak, presented a real obstacle for the NOV depriving her of the strategic mountain area. Also, after deploying in Kozjak, the Vardar Chetniks Corp started a massive attack on the Partisans, which made the situation ever worse. That's why, in the end of January 1944, the High Command of the NOV decided to lunch an offensive for the final destruction of the VCC. Burdened with this assignment was the Third Macedonian Assault Brigade, and some detachments of the Hristo Botev battalion. On 29 February 1944 the partisans of the Third Macedonian Assault Brigade attacked the chetnik flanges from north, west and south, while the Hristo Botev detachment hit the chetniks from the east. In the battle for the village of Sejac, the Vardar Chetnik Corps was totally destroyed giving 53 casualties (46 shot by partisans and 7 drowned in the river Pčinja in panic escape). 97 chetniks including 5 officers were captured in the action. Four days later, on 3 March 1944 in the village of Novo Selo, fighters of the NOV destroyed the remaining enemy force, capturing 30 chetniks and more than 100 rifles and ammunition. The Serbian Chetniks gave 12 dead including Stojan Krstić - the commander of the Vardar Chetnik Core. After these decisive battles Draža Mihailović's Chetnik organization ceased to exist in Macedonia.

Actions in northern Macedonia and south-eastern Serbia

File:3 Makedonska Udarna Proletna Ofanziva.JPG
3rd Macedonian Assault Brigade during the Partisan Spring Offensive in 1944.

The February March had a great political and moral impact. The whole Bulgarian 5th Army, all of the Bulgarian police, as well as the army regiments stationed in Kjustendil and Gorna Dzumaja were engaged in the battles. After the February March, the Bulgarian government was forced to change its strategy – the organizer of the fight would no longer be the police but the army, and all of the organizations would be obliged to help the army.

After the February March which ended with the destruction of the chetniks in Macedonia, the HQ of the NOV of Macedonia (as a supreme commander of the partisan units in Vardar Macedonia, Kosovo and south-eastern Serbia) decided to engage three new attacks on the Bulgarian police and administration. On 26 April 1944 the Third Macedonian Assault Brigade together with the Kosovo detachment successfully attacked the city of Ristovac, where 130 Bulgarian soldiers were killed and 20 captured by the Macedonian partisans. On 3 April 1944 the 3rd Macedonian Assault Brigade attacked the mines in Zletovo, where about 100 miners entered the ranks of the brigade.

Spring Offensive

Because of the increased partisan activity, the roads and communications of the main supply root for the German Army group “E” stationed in Greece and Albania were constantly ambushed and jeopardized. In order to obtain control over the main communications and the wider areas around them, the Bulgarian and German armies organized an offensive in Macedonia and south-east Serbia, as a part of the Seventh anti-Partisan Offensive. In this offensive the occupation authorities engaged the Bulgarian 5th Army, additional Bulgarian troops from Bulgaria, additional chetnik forces to Vlasotince and Leskovac, Greek reactionary PAO units, German and Albanian balist troops in western Macedonia and the whole German garrison in Kilkis, making the total of 60,000 military and administrative personnel in the area.

In the same time, the HQ of the NOV of Macedonia was making plans of liberating western Macedonia and for that purpose the 1st Macedonian-Kosovo Assault brigade was sent there. Pushing towards Debarca, the 1st Macedonian-Kosovo Asault brigade had clashes with the Bulgarians and Germans in Zavoj and Velmej. The Germans collect reinforcement from the Balists and on 8 May 1944 attack they counter-attack the 1st Macedonian-Kosovo Assault Brigade. The fightings end on 20 May 1944 with the Germans and Balists being pushed out of from the region between Ohrid, Struga, Kicevo and Debar. After re-capturing the Debarca area, new fighters were being mobilized, and the brigade was split in two new brigades – the 1st Macedonian and 1st Kosovo Assault Brigades. Also two smaller detachments were formed with the objective to go and spread the insurrection in Azot and Porech.

File:3 Makedonska Udarna Brigada zaroben top.JPG
Fighters of the 3rd Macedonian Assault Brigade posing in front of a captured Bulgarian cannon after the battle at Cupino Brdo on June 15, 1944.

In order to prevent the Germans and Bulgarians in taking total control of the action, the NOV of Macedonia decided to make surprise attack on the enemy positions and try to exhaust the enemy any way they can. The 2nd Macedonian Assault Brigade was sent to conduct several actions in Povardarie (central Macedonia) and Pelagonia (the area of Prilep and Bitola). From 25 of April until 22 June 1944, the 2nd Macedonian Assault Brigade attacks the enemy forces, positions and garrisons at Gradeshnica, Tikvesh plane, Konopishte, Demir Kapija, Strmashevo, Kavadarci and Negotino.

The longest battles were conducted in eastern Macedonia and south-east Serbia, where the main German arteries (Vardar and Morava) and those of the Bulgarians (Skopje-Sofia) were jeopardized. The main forces of the occupying armies were concentrated in that area – not only to control the main communications, but also to destroy the leadership of the Macedonian, south Serbian, and Bulgarian resistance movements which in that moment were stationed in north-eastern Macedonia. In order to confuse the enemy, the NOV of Macedonia instead of preparing for a defensive battle, ordered the 3rd Macedonian Assault Brigade to attack the city of Kratovo. After a half day battle, Kratovo fell in the hands of the partisans. The attack and liberation of Kratovo had a great political and military impact in a time when the Germans and Bulgarians were starting an massive offensive, but it did not stop the offencive. The 3rd Macedonian Assault Brigade was forced to leave Kratovo three days later, and conducted many clashes with the Axis armies making their way to 10 km north from Kilkis in Greece. There they rested, reorganized and started a counter-offencive against the Bulgarians and Germans, pushing with battle from Kilkis through eastern Macedonia, pasing in to Serbia all the way to Crna Trava, where together with the 6th South- Moravian Brigade they made the final battles with the enemy during the offence.

In the two months of fighting during the Spring Offensive the Axis forces had great casualties. Only in western Macedonia there were 672 killed and 76 captured Axis soldiers, in central Macedonia (Povardarie) there were 180 killed and 88 captured, in eastern Macedonia and south-eastern Serbia there were over 1060 killed and 498 captured Axis officers and soldiers. Also a great amount of weapons and ammunition was collected.

After the ending of the Spring Offensive, except for the Polog region, the whole of Vardar Macedonia was de facto a free territory. The Axis forces were pulled back in their garrisons in the greater city centers in Macedonia. After the Spring Offensive, the initiative went from the hands of the Bulgarian military into the hands of the NOV of Macedonia. The newly conscripted men from the free territories as well as the captured firearms were used to form new brigades and divisions. On 23 July 1944 on Plackovica, the 4th Macedonian Assault Brigade was formed, and was immediately sent to eastern Macedonia in order to make contact with the resistance movement in western Bulgaria.

In Strumica, approximately 3,800 fighters took part in the formation of military movements of the region; The 4th, 14th and 20th Macedonian Action Brigades, the Strumica Partisan Detachment and the 50th and 51st Macedonian Divisions were formed. Since the formation of an army in 1943, Macedonian Communist partisans were aspiring to create an autonomous government.

File:Metodija Andonov Cento.jpg
Metodija Andonov - Čento.

ASNOM

On August 2, 1944, on the 41st anniversary of the Ilinden-Preobrazhenie Uprising, the first session of the newly created Anti-Fascist Assembly of the National Liberation of Macedonia (ASNOM) was held at the St. Prohor Pčinjski monastery. А manifesto was written outlining the future plans of ASNOM for an independent Macedonian state and for creation of the Macedonian language as the official language of the Macedonian state. However, a decision was later reached that Vardar Macedonia will become a part of new Communist Yugoslavia.

Tendencies

Then in the resistance movement in Vardar Macedonia were clearly visible two political tendencies. The first one was represented by Tempo and the newly-established Macedonian Communist Party, gave priority to battling against any form of manifest or latent pro-Bulgarian sentiment and to bringing the region into the new projected Yugoslav Federation. Veterans of the pro-Bulgarian IMRO who had accepted the solution of the Macedonian Question as an ethnic preference, now regarded the main objective as being the unification of Macedonia into a single state, whose postwar future was to involve not necessarily inclusion in a Yugoslav Federation. They foresaw in it a new form of Serbian dominance over Macedonia, and prefere rather membership of a Balkan Federation or else independence. These two tendencies would have stroken in the next few years. In the summer of 1944 Ivan Mihailov transported in a German convoy, arrived in German occupied Skopje, where the Germans hoped that he could form a Macedonian state with their support on the base of IMRO. Seeing that the war is lost to Germany, and that the wider Macedonian masses are loyal to the Macedonian National Liberation Movement led by the CPM, he refused. Seeing that the Macedonian sentiment has triumphed during the several years of struggle, Mihailov's last words were "Let Macedonia without Bulgarians burn in hell" ("Македония без българи, огън да я гори"). After the meeting in Skopje, Mihajlov escaped in Italy where he died in 1991.

Capitulation of fascist Bulgaria

File:Vo slobodno Skopje 1944.JPG
A young female Partisan of the People's Liberation Army of Macedonia entering the city of Skopje.

At this time the new Bulgarian government of Ivan Bagrianov began secret negotiations with the Allies aiming to find separate peace with repudiating any alliance with Nazi Germany and declaring neutrality, ending all anti-Jewish laws and ordering the withdrawal of the Bulgarian troops from Macedonia. Trough its in Macedonia born minister of Internal Affairs Alexander Stanishev, the government tried to negotiate with the Macedonian partisans promising that after Bulgarian army withdrawal from Vardar Macedonia its arms would be given up to the partisans. It would be possible by condition that partisans guaranteed the establishment of pro - Bulgarian Macedonian state without the frame of future Yugoslavia. The negotiations failed and on September 9 1944 the Fatherland Front in Sofia made a coup d'état and deposed the government.

After the declaration of war by Bulgaria on Nazi Germany, the withdrawing Bulgarian troops in Macedonia surrounded by German forces, fought their way back to the old borders of Bulgaria. Under the leadership of a new Bulgarian pro-Communist government, three Bulgarian armies, 455,000 strong in total, entered occupied Yugoslavia in late September, 1944 and moved from Sofia to Niš and Skopje with the strategic task of blocking the German forces withdrawing from Greece. In eastern Macedonia they operated in interaction with the fighters of the Macedonian National Liberation Army. Southern and eastern Serbia and most of Vardar Macedonia were liberated within an end of November. Toward the end of November and during early December, the main Bulgarian forces were assembled in liberated Serbia prior to their return home, while the liberation of the rest of Vardar Macedonia from the Germans was conducted sole by the Macedonian NOV. The 135,000-strong Bulgarian First Army continued to Hungary, aided by Yugoslav Partisans.

Final operations for the liberation of Macedonia

File:Zavrshni operacii na NOV na Makedonija.JPG
Map of the final Macedonian NOV operations and the liberation of Macedonia.

On November 7, 1944 Ohrid was entirely liberated from Axis occupation trough 48th. Macedonian People's Liberation Division. After the liberation of a majority of towns in Vardar Macedonia at the end of 1944, the Macedonian National Liberation Army aided Yugoslav Partisans in conclusive operations for the liberation of Yugoslavia from Axis occupation. On November 19, 1944, with the liberation of Tetovo and Gostivar, the Vardar region of Macedonia was completely liberated and as intended by ASNOM, joined Yugoslavia. Nedić's Serbia along with a liberated Bosnia, Croatia and Slovenia became the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. At the beginning of 1945 the Macedonian Army turned into a great military power with approximately 100.000 combatants.

The number of total Macedonian casualties in World War II was approximately 24,000 as follows: 7,000 Jews, 6,000 Serbians, 6,000 ethnic Macedonians, 4,000 Albanians and 1,000 Bulgarians. This number of victims includes around 3,000 "collaborationists", "counter-revolutionaries" and civil victims in places, separately 7,000 Jews exterminated in concetration camps. The rest were around 14,000 resistance movement fighters and soldiers from the Yugoslav Army, from which 5,000 were Macedonians. So Macedonia has developed its contribution to the victory over the Nazis and has gained the Anti-Fascist Coalition reputation. Also the indispensable conditions concerning the recognition of the newly established Macedonian Republic by the Allies have been provided, even though within the frames of the Yugoslavian Federation.

Monuments

  • Monument of Stevan (Stiv) Naumov in Bitola. Monument of Stevan (Stiv) Naumov in Bitola.
  • A National Liberation War commemoration sign in Markov Manastir near Skopje. A National Liberation War commemoration sign in Markov Manastir near Skopje.
  • A commemoration sign on the saat-kula in Bitola. A commemoration sign on the saat-kula in Bitola.
  • Monument of the woman fighter in NOV, in Tetovo. Monument of the woman fighter in NOV, in Tetovo.
  • Monument of the fallen for liberty in Skopje. Monument of the fallen for liberty in Skopje.
  • The "Liberators of Skopje" monument in the center of Skopje. The "Liberators of Skopje" monument in the center of Skopje.
  • Fragment of the "Monument of the People's Revolution" in Kumanovo. Fragment of the "Monument of the People's Revolution" in Kumanovo.
  • Statue of Čede Filipovski Dame in Gostivar. Statue of Čede Filipovski Dame in Gostivar.
  • Main statue of the "Monument of the People's Revolution" in Kumanovo Main statue of the "Monument of the People's Revolution" in Kumanovo
  • Statue of Josif Josifovski - Sveshtarot in Prespa. Statue of Josif Josifovski - Sveshtarot in Prespa.
  • A statue of Kuzman Josifovski - Pitu in Prilep. A statue of Kuzman Josifovski - Pitu in Prilep.
  • The "Revolution of the Macedonian people" in Bitola. The "Revolution of the Macedonian people" in Bitola.

See also

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References

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  34. “Четничката организација на Дража Михајловиќ во Прилеп и Прилепско“ (Зборник: Прилеп и Прилепско во НОВ 1944-1945, I/2) Фиданова Славка. Скопје, 1985
  35. Narodnooslobodilachka vojska Jugoslavije. Pregled Razvoja oruzhanih snaga narodnooslobodilachkog pokreta, 1941-45, Belgrade, 1982, 590-815
  36. Шеесет години од формирањето на Четвртата македонска НОУ бригада - Раде Гогов-Црноречки
  37. Spyridon Sfetas -Autonomist Movements of the Slavophones in 1944. The Attitude of the Communist Party of Greece and the Protection of the Greek-Yugoslav Border, pg. 2
  38. Във и извън Македония - спомени на Пандо Младенов, стр. 276, Македонска Трибуна.
  39. Dr. Ivan Yanev BULGARIA’S FOREIGN POLICY DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR AS REFLECTED IN BULGARIAN HISTORIC LITERATURE 1938 - 1944 Варна, 2006 Издателство "Литернет"
  40. OHRID DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR
  41. World Investment News Macedonia, Historical Events
  42. Unet.com.mk Uprising!
  43. Vladimir Zerjavic - YUGOSLAVIA MANIPULATIONS WITH THE NUMBER OF SECOND WORLD WAR VICTIMS, Publisher:Croatian Information Centre, ISBN0-919817-32-7

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