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Albanian nationalism in North Macedonia

Albanian nationalism in North Macedonia traces its roots in the wider Albanian nationalist movement which emerged as a response to the Eastern Crisis (1878) and proposed partitioning of Ottoman Albanian inhabited lands in the Balkans among neighbouring countries.[1] During the remainder of the late Ottoman period various disagreements culminated between Albanian nationalists and the Ottoman Empire over socio-cultural rights. The Balkan Wars (1912–13) ending with Ottoman defeat, Serbian and later Yugoslav sovereignty over the area generated an Albanian nationalism that has become distinct to North Macedonia stressing Albanian language, culture and identity within the context of state and sociopolitical rights. Pan-Albanian sentiments are also present and historically have been achieved only once when western Macedonia was united by Italian Axis forces to their protectorate of Albania during the Second World War.

Reincorporated within Yugoslavia, Albanian nationalism in North Macedonia has drawn upon sociopolitical influences stemming from Albanian nationalism in Kosovo. Being a minority population, the addition of Islam has also shaped and blended into definitions of local national Albanian identity in opposition to the Orthodox Slavic Macedonian majority. Traditions of armed resistance by local Albanians have occurred over time with the most recent fighting (2001) being between National Liberation Army (NLA) guerilla fighters and the Macedonian armed forces. The conflict ended with the adoption of the Ohrid Agreement (2001) guaranteeing extensive Albanian sociopolitical and linguistic rights in the country satisfying a main tenet of Albanian nationalism in North Macedonia.

History edit

Late Ottoman period edit

 
Delegates from the Alphabet Congress of Manastir, Bitola (1908)
 
Skopje after being captured by Albanian revolutionaries in August, 1912 after defeating the Ottoman forces holding the city

The Albanian National movement first emerged in Kosovo through the League of Prizren with Albanian delegates in attendance from Macedonia that attempted to prevent Albanian inhabited territories from being awarded to neighbouring states.[2][3] Muslim Albanians in Macedonia during the Ottoman period were either mainly supporters of the Ottoman Empire or some like Albanian parliamentarians critical of Ottoman measures aimed at curtailing socio-cultural Albanian expression.[4][5] The province of Monastir was an important centre for the Bulgarian IMRO and the beginnings of an emerging Albanian nationalist movement among its majority Muslim population appeared due to frustration with Ottoman authorities and their ineffectiveness to protect them.[6] Prominent individuals within the Albanian movement from Monastir province believed that joint action with the Young Turk movement (CUP) would improve their situation and the majority membership of the Albanian committee were also CUP members.[6] In 1908, an Ottoman officer of Albanian origin Ahmed Niyazi Bey along with Albanians from the region instigated the Young Turk revolution (1908).[7]

Some people coming from a Balkan Albanian speaking or cultural space and often belonging to the urban elite in Macedonia that migrated to Anatolia did not always identify with a concept of Albanianess.[8] Instead they adopted an Ottoman Turkish outlook and came to refer to themselves as Turks or Ottoman Turkish speaking citizens.[8] Due to the effects of socio-linguistic assimilation, promoters of Albanian nationalism became concerned about migration to Anatolia and degraded Albanians from the lower classes who undertook the journey.[9] In 1908, an alphabet congress in Bitola with Muslim, Catholic and Orthodox delegates in attendance agreed to adopt a Latin character-based Albanian alphabet and the move was considered an important step for Albanian unification.[10][11][12][13] Some conservative Albanian Muslims and clerics along with the Ottoman government opposed the Latin alphabet and preferred an Arabic-based Albanian alphabet due to concerns that a Latin alphabet undermined ties with the Muslim world.[10][11][12] The Ottoman state organised a congress in Debar (1909) with the intention that Albanians there declare themselves as Ottomans, promise to defend its territorial sovereignty and adopt an Albanian Arabic character alphabet.[14] Due to the alphabet matter and other Young Turk policies, relations between Albanian elites and nationalists, many Muslim and Ottoman authorities broke down.[13][15] The Ottoman Young Turk government was concerned that Albanian nationalism might inspire other Muslim nationalities in the direction of nationalism and separatism and threaten the Islam-based unity of the empire.[14]

Balkan Wars, World War One, Interwar period and World War Two edit

 
Xhem Hasa (centre) with his brothers, Musli Hasa (left) and Abdullah Hasa (right)

Ottoman rule ended in 1912 during the Balkan Wars and Macedonia with its Albanian population became part of Serbia.[16] The end of First World War led to Albanians in Macedonia becoming part of Yugoslavia.[17] The Kaçak movement made up of armed Albanian guerilla fighters resisting Serb forces was active in western Macedonia during the 1920s before being suppressed toward the end of the decade.[17][18] The movement contributed to the development of an Albanian national consciousness in Macedonia.[17] The Albanian language was prohibited by Yugoslav authorities and some Albanians were made to emigrate.[17] Secular education in the Albanian language within Macedonia and other areas in Yugoslavia with an Albanian population was banned.[19] With the onset of World War Two, western Macedonia was annexed by Axis Italy to their protectorate of Albania creating a Greater Albania under Italian control.[20][21] Italian authorities in western Macedonia allowed the use of the Albanian language in schools, university education and administration.[22] In western Macedonia and other newly attached territories to Albania, non-Albanians had to attend Albanian schools that taught a curriculum containing nationalism alongside fascism, and they were made to adopt Albanian forms for their names and surnames.[23] Some Albanians in western Macedonia joined the Balli Kombëtar, most notable being Xhem Hasa who alongside his forces collaborated with the Axis powers on various operations targeting communist Albanian and Macedonian partisans.[24][25]

Communist Yugoslavia edit

With the end of the Second World War, Albanian inhabited areas became part of the Socialist Republic of Macedonia within Yugoslavia.[26] The 1948 Yugoslav census recorded 179,389 Albanians in Macedonia and that number fell to 165,524 Albanians in 1953.[27] The fall in numbers is attributed to the Tito-Stalin split as of the 203,938 declared Turks (1953) 27,086 gave Albanian as their mother tongue and during the 1950s-1960s some Albanians declared themselves as Turks to migrate to Turkey and escape communist Yugoslavia.[27] Most Albanian people in the region, aware of differences with Kosovan Serbs and an emerging Macedonian nationality embraced Albanian national identity.[28] Decreasing numbers of Albanians claimed a Turkish identity as old Ottoman Millet style classifications based on religious identification waned.[29] These changes placed pressure on other Muslim minorities living in Albanian areas to assimilate as Albanians.[30] Some Albanian nationalists have also been repressed for expressing support for the local Slavic inhabitants with Bulgarian self-consciousness and Bulgaria's position on the Macedonian question.[31] Toward the late 1960s Albanian dissatisfaction in Macedonia resulted in protests that called for ethno-linguistic rights alongside Albanian majority areas in Macedonia being attached to a Kosovo republic and becoming the seventh such entity within the Yugoslav federation.[32][33] This growing Albanian nationalism was viewed as a threat to the territorial integrity and existence of Macedonia by communist authorities.[34][35] The Yugoslav constitution of 1974 granted extensive rights to Albanians in Kosovo, while in Macedonia Albanians had limited ethnic rights.[36]

Albanian nationalism during the 1980s edit

By the late 1970s and early 1980s organised Albanian separatism had spread to Macedonia with Yugoslav security forces claiming to have uncovered two Albanian separatist organisations.[37] Macedonian communist authorities concerned over Albanian calls to establish Kosovo as a seventh Yugoslav republic supported Serbia's hardline approach and suppressed expressions of Albanian nationalism.[38] Many Albanian activists in Macedonia during the 1980s were imprisoned for long periods of time under charges of separatism and irredentism.[36] In 1982 communist officials accused Albanian nationalists (including some Muslim Albanian clergy) that they placed pressure on Macedonian Romani, Turks and Macedonian speaking Muslims (Torbeš) to declare themselves as Albanians during the census.[39][40] Expressions of Albanian nationalism through literature, slogans and vandalism occurred during 1982 in the Tetovo and Ohrid regions while Macedonian authorities were placed on high alert.[39] Members of the young Albanian elite in Macedonia left for Kosovo and the Albanian intellectual scene ceased while practising Islam became the only outlet for young Albanians.[36]

In Macedonia from the late 1980s onward a lack of a majority atheistic Albanian elite enhanced links between political parties and the religious establishment which entrenched Islam in ethnonational self definitions among Albanians.[41] Yugoslav authorities concerned that Albanian nationalism from Kosovo may spread to Macedonia sought to weaken the ethnonational consciousness of Albanians and attempted to assimilate them in Macedonia.[41][42] This was done through fragmenting the Muslim community along ethnic lines by encouraging and spreading among Macedonian speaking Muslims (Torbeš) a Macedonian national consciousness.[41] The Islamic Community of Yugoslavia dominated by Slavic Muslims opposed during the 1980s Albanian candidates ascending to the leadership position of Reis ul-ulema due to claims that Albanian Muslim clergy were attempting to Albanianize the Muslim Slavs of Macedonia.[43] The Macedonian communists supported Muslim religious institutions acting as a bulwark to check Albanian nationalism.[41] As such Albanian language schools were closed down in the mid-1980s and the Isa Bey madrassa was reopened which became a focal point for Yugoslav Muslim Albanian education.[41]

Albanian language schools and its school curricula were viewed by Macedonian communists as being infiltrated by Albanian nationalism and irredentism with actions taken by authorities to curtail those sentiments.[44] Some of those measures against Albanian education included requiring use of only the Macedonian language (1981) and sackings of non-compliant teachers.[45][42] The number of Albanian students in schools halved.[38] Those events caused concern within the Albanian community resulting in protests, boycotts and other tensions with communist authorities and the state.[45] Some Albanian folk songs were also deemed to have nationalistic content and their use on radio was denounced and alongside use of Albanian toponyms both were banned.[46][38] Restrictions and bans were placed on Albanian parents naming their newborn children with names that were deemed nationalistic such as Shqipë, Liriduam (meaning wanting freedom), Alban, Albana, Flamur (Albanian flag), Kushtrim and others that connoted for communist authorities loyalty to communist Albania.[47][38] The Albanian birthrate caused concern for communist authorities who viewed it as contributing to rising Albanian nationalism and family planning measures were enacted in municipalities of western Macedonia to limit parents to two children.[47][42][38][48]

Some Albanian public officials were dismissed due to attending weddings that had nationalist songs sung while many cultural clubs were shut down.[49] The campaign against Albanian nationalism was referred to as differentiation.[47] Macedonian communist authorities concerned with growing Albanian nationalism contended that Turks and Macedonian speaking Muslims (Torbeš) were being Albanianised through Albanian political and cultural pressures.[50] Mosques in Macedonia were controlled by the communists and they turned into places that sheltered and fostered Albanian national identity.[41] Communist authorities came to view Islam as a tool of Albanian nationalism.[51] In the attempt to abolish religious identity, measures were taken by Macedonian communist authorities that appropriated Muslim buildings for state use, destroyed Islamic libraries and two roads were constructed through Muslim cemeteries in Tetovo and Gostivar.[42] In 1990 Albanian activists in Tetovo organised demonstrations that called for the creation of Greater Albania.[52] Albanian nationalists viewed their inclusion within Yugoslavia as an occupation.[53]

Post Yugoslavia: Macedonian independence and the 2001 insurgency edit

 
Logo of the NLA

Albanians in Macedonia alongside their Kosovan Albanian counterparts after the fall of communism became the main force steering Albanian nationalism.[54] While Islam did not become a main focal point in articulating Albanian political nationalism it influenced the collective outlook of Albanians in Macedonia.[54][55] With Macedonian independence (1991) the status of Albanians became demoted to "national minority" from the previous Yugoslav category of "nationality".[41] While the constitution referred to Macedonia as being the nationstate of Macedonians.[41]

A referendum (1992) was held in Albanian majority Western Macedonia with 72% of eligible voters voting for autonomy and the federalisation of Macedonia.[52][56][57] The outcome of the move had political ramifications as some Albanian politicians from the Tetovo and Struga regions declared the Republic of Ilirida during 1991-1992 with aims of uniting all Albanians of Yugoslavia into one entity.[52][57] The name Ilirida is a portmanteau formed from the words Illyri(a) and Da(rdania), ancient regions that were located in the modern Macedonian republic.[58] As an interim measure toward unification, these Albanian politicians also advocated for the creation of an Albanian entity that would cover approximately half of the republic and federalise Macedonia.[57] Albanian political parties contended that the referendum was demonstrative and instead wanted the Macedonian state to recognise Albanians as a founding ethnic community of Macedonia.[59]

Albanians in independent Macedonia held only 4% of state jobs, Albanian language secondary schools declined from ten to one and the Albanian language at a university language was taught as a foreign language.[42][59] During the 1990s protests by Albanians and tensions with the Macedonian state developed in incidents such as the government ordered cessation of flying the Albanian flag at municipal offices in Tetovo and Gostivar alongside disputes with the Albanian education sector.[41][42][59] The return from Kosovo of several local Albanians from the professional elite to Macedonia contributed through influence over the Albanian populace by strengthening an Albanian national consciousness and mobilising sociopolitical organisation.[60]

 
Monument to fallen NLA fighters, Sopot

The ending of the Kosovo war (1999) resulted in offshoot guerilla groups from the KLA like the National Liberation Army (NLA) emerging.[61][62][63] By 2001 conflict in northern parts of the Republic of Macedonia erupted into an insurgency fought by Macedonian government forces against the NLA who avoided Islamic identifications while insisting on Islam being given constitutional equal status to Orthodoxy.[41][61][64][62] The NLA also insisted on expanding Albanian language education and government funding for Albanian language universities.[65] The struggle for civic equality and equality of Islam became interlinked with these demands that were achieved through the Ohrid Agreement (2001) which ended conflict by guaranteeing Albanian rights, (university) education, government representation and serving in the police force.[66][61][64] High-ranking members of the NLA and of the Albanian political establishment in Macedonia favoured expanding Albanian rights within a unified Macedonia.[67] They viewed any form of territorial partition as a loss for Albanians due to their unfavourable demographic and political position.[67] Albanian nationalists held similar views as they did not want to leave the historical cities of Skopje and Bitola behind in the advent of secession from Macedonia.[67] Religion did not play a mobilizing factor during the conflict between Albanians and Macedonians, though it is becoming a new element between relations of the two peoples.[66][68]

 
Skanderbeg Square

Post conflict, Albanians in Macedonia have placed new statues of Albanian historical figures like Skanderbeg in Skopje and named schools after such individuals while memorials have been erected for fallen KLA and NLA fighters.[69] These developments have increased tensions between Albanians and Macedonians.[69] The figure of Saint Mother Teresa (1910-1997), a Catholic Albanian nun born in Skopje has been used for nationalist purposes within Macedonia as her origins have been contested and her legacy claimed by some Macedonian and Albanian elites from the local political and academic spectrum.[70]

Within the context of societal image and stereotypes, Albanian nationalist constructs perceives the other such as the Macedonians as ignorant, and similar views exist on the Macedonian side of Albanians.[71] Albanian nationalists view Macedonian ethnicity as invented by the Yugoslavs to weaken Serbia, prevent other identities forming and to legitimise the existence of a Macedonian republic in communist Yugoslavia.[72] Macedonians are referred to by Albanians as an ethnic collectivity with the term Shkie (Slavs) that also carries pejorative connotations.[53][73] Some Macedonian commentators have worried that Albanian nationalists view Macedonians as being without historic territorial rights over areas in Macedonia that would become part of a Greater Albania and lay claim to almost half of the territory of the republic as was once promoted by the League of Prizren.[53]

In the political sphere Albanian parties maintain secular and nationalistic platforms while supporting the secular framework of the state with an insistence on protecting Islam and the culture of Muslim constituents along with control and interference of Muslim institutions.[66][74][75] Unlike Albania and Kosovo, national identity and Islam are traditionally linked and stronger among Albanians from Macedonia.[76] The status of Albanians being a minority in Macedonia and that most are Muslims have blended national and religious identity in opposition to the Orthodox Slavic Macedonian majority.[76] Some Muslim Albanian establishment figures in Macedonia hold that view that being a good Muslim is synonymous with being Albanian.[66] Language remains an important marker of ethnic Albanian identity in Macedonia.[65] Upper Reka, a region of western Macedonia, is home to a Christian Orthodox Albanian speaking population that self identifies as Macedonians.[77][78] Controversies amongst Upper Reka Orthodox Christians have arisen over identity and the church with a few prominent individuals publicly declaring an Albanian identity or origin and others calling for an Albanian Orthodox Church to be present within the region.[79][80][81][82][83][84][85][86][87]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Babuna 2004, p. 310.
  2. ^ Merdjanova 2013, p. 42.
  3. ^ Babuna 2004, p. 293.
  4. ^ Nezir-Akmese 2005, pp. 96, 98.
  5. ^ Babuna 2004, p. 294.
  6. ^ a b Nezir-Akmese 2005, p. 52.
  7. ^ Nezir-Akmese 2005, pp. 52, 96.
  8. ^ a b Gingeras 2009, pp. 31–32, 34.
  9. ^ Gingeras 2009, p. 34.
  10. ^ a b Skendi 1967a, pp. 370–378.
  11. ^ a b Duijzings 2000, p. 163.
  12. ^ a b Gawrych 2006, pp. 182.
  13. ^ a b Nezir-Akmese 2005, p. 96.
  14. ^ a b Nezir-Akmese 2005, p. 97.
  15. ^ Saunders 2011, p. 97.
  16. ^ Babuna 2004, p. 297.
  17. ^ a b c d Babuna 2004, p. 298.
  18. ^ Fontana 2017, pp. 91–92.
  19. ^ Babuna 2004, p. 300.
  20. ^ Hall 2010, p. 183.
  21. ^ Judah 2008, p. 47.
  22. ^ Fontana 2017, p. 92.
  23. ^ Rossos 2013, pp. 185–186.
  24. ^ Bailey 2011, p. 100.
  25. ^ Reginald 1999, pp. 197–188.
  26. ^ Judah 2008, p. 52.
  27. ^ a b Poulton 1995, p. 138.
  28. ^ Takeyh & Gvosdev 2004, p. 80.
  29. ^ Takeyh & Gvosdev 2004, pp. 80–81.
  30. ^ Takeyh & Gvosdev 2004, p. 81.
  31. ^ Македонските Бугари и Албанците заедно во борбата со југословенскиот комунизам
  32. ^ Poulton 1995, p. 126.
  33. ^ Fontana 2017, p. 96.
  34. ^ Poulton 1995, pp. 126–127.
  35. ^ Koinova 2013, p. 37.
  36. ^ a b c Peshkopia 2015, p. 61.
  37. ^ Ramet 2006, p. 300.
  38. ^ a b c d e Fontana 2017, p. 97.
  39. ^ a b Ramet 2006, p. 302.
  40. ^ Babuna 2004, p. 307.
  41. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Merdjanova 2013, p. 46.
  42. ^ a b c d e f Ahmed 2013, p. 244.
  43. ^ Babuna 2004, p. 303.
  44. ^ Poulton 1995, p. 127.
  45. ^ a b Poulton 1995, pp. 129–130.
  46. ^ Poulton 1995, pp. 127–128.
  47. ^ a b c Poulton 1995, p. 128.
  48. ^ Brunnbauer 2004, p. 575. "Albanian “demographic expansion” was identified by the leadership of the Socialist Macedonian Republic as part of the increasing Albanian nationalism in Macedonia in the 1980s"
  49. ^ Poulton 1995, pp. 128–129.
  50. ^ Poulton 1995, pp. 138–139.
  51. ^ Poulton 1995, p. 130.
  52. ^ a b c Roudometof 2002, p. 172.
  53. ^ a b c Batkovski & Rajkocevski 2014, p. 95.
  54. ^ a b Merdjanova 2013, p. 49.
  55. ^ Gallagher 2005, p. 83.
  56. ^ Ramet 1997, p. 80.
  57. ^ a b c Bugajski 1994, p. 116.
  58. ^ Neofotistos 2008, p. 28. "“Republic of Illirida”, a name formed by the conjunction of Illyria and Dardania"
  59. ^ a b c Fontana 2017, p. 100.
  60. ^ Peshkopia 2015, p. 63, 75.
  61. ^ a b c Gregorian 2015, pp. 93–94.
  62. ^ a b Liotta & Jebb 2004, pp. 63–64.
  63. ^ Koktsidis & Dam 2008, p. 161.
  64. ^ a b Koktsidis & Dam 2008, pp. 174–179.
  65. ^ a b Fontana 2017, p. 103.
  66. ^ a b c d Merdjanova 2013, p. 47.
  67. ^ a b c Peshkopia 2015, pp. 76.
  68. ^ Roudometof 2002, p. 188
  69. ^ a b Koktsidis & Dam 2008, p. 179.
  70. ^ Alpion 2004, pp. 230–232, 235.
  71. ^ Lambevski 2002, pp. 311, 315.
  72. ^ Peshkopia 2015, p. 57.
  73. ^ Neofotistos 2004, p. 51.
  74. ^ Stojarova 2010, p. 50.
  75. ^ Peshkopia 2015, p. 79.
  76. ^ a b Merdjanova 2013, p. 45.
  77. ^ Bechev 2009, p. 188. "Several villages in the Upper Reka subregion were, in the past, populated by Orthodox Albanian speakers who have been largely assimilated by the Slavic Macedonians."
  78. ^ Mirčevska 2007, p. 132."Горнореканците со муслиманска религија денес себе си се идентификуваат како Албанци, додека православите христијани како Македонци. [Upper Reka people of the Muslim religion today identify themselves as Albanians, while Orthodox Christians as Macedonians.]"
  79. ^ Arsovska, Elizabeta. . Večer. Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 4 December 2015.
  80. ^ Giorgievski, Branko. . Dnevnik. Archived from the original on 2015-12-08. Retrieved 4 December 2015.
  81. ^ "Škretite imaat makedonski koreni i ne možat da se poistovetuvaat so Albancite [Shkreti have Macedonian roots and can not be identified with Albanians]". Makedoncka Nacija. Retrieved 4 December 2015.
  82. ^ . Klan Macedonia. Archived from the original on 2015-12-22. Retrieved 13 December 2015.
  83. ^ . Zeri. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 13 December 2015.
  84. ^ "Branislav Sinadinovski- Pravoslaven Albanec ili običen Izmamnik? [Branislav Sinadinovski - Albanian Orthodox or lovable rogue?]". Fokus. Retrieved 13 December 2015.
  85. ^ . Koha. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 13 December 2015.
  86. ^ . The Albanian. 2014-09-11. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 19 December 2015.
  87. ^ "Shqiptarët që po trondisin Maqedoninë [Albanians are shaking Macedonia]". Koha Jona. Retrieved 19 December 2015.[permanent dead link]

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  • Trbovich, Ana S. (2008). A legal geography of Yugoslavia's disintegration. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195333435.

albanian, nationalism, north, macedonia, traces, roots, wider, albanian, nationalist, movement, which, emerged, response, eastern, crisis, 1878, proposed, partitioning, ottoman, albanian, inhabited, lands, balkans, among, neighbouring, countries, during, remai. Albanian nationalism in North Macedonia traces its roots in the wider Albanian nationalist movement which emerged as a response to the Eastern Crisis 1878 and proposed partitioning of Ottoman Albanian inhabited lands in the Balkans among neighbouring countries 1 During the remainder of the late Ottoman period various disagreements culminated between Albanian nationalists and the Ottoman Empire over socio cultural rights The Balkan Wars 1912 13 ending with Ottoman defeat Serbian and later Yugoslav sovereignty over the area generated an Albanian nationalism that has become distinct to North Macedonia stressing Albanian language culture and identity within the context of state and sociopolitical rights Pan Albanian sentiments are also present and historically have been achieved only once when western Macedonia was united by Italian Axis forces to their protectorate of Albania during the Second World War Reincorporated within Yugoslavia Albanian nationalism in North Macedonia has drawn upon sociopolitical influences stemming from Albanian nationalism in Kosovo Being a minority population the addition of Islam has also shaped and blended into definitions of local national Albanian identity in opposition to the Orthodox Slavic Macedonian majority Traditions of armed resistance by local Albanians have occurred over time with the most recent fighting 2001 being between National Liberation Army NLA guerilla fighters and the Macedonian armed forces The conflict ended with the adoption of the Ohrid Agreement 2001 guaranteeing extensive Albanian sociopolitical and linguistic rights in the country satisfying a main tenet of Albanian nationalism in North Macedonia Contents 1 History 1 1 Late Ottoman period 1 2 Balkan Wars World War One Interwar period and World War Two 1 3 Communist Yugoslavia 1 3 1 Albanian nationalism during the 1980s 1 4 Post Yugoslavia Macedonian independence and the 2001 insurgency 2 See also 3 References 3 1 Citations 3 2 SourcesHistory editMain articles Albanian nationalism Albanian nationalism Albania and Albanian nationalism Kosovo Late Ottoman period edit nbsp Delegates from the Alphabet Congress of Manastir Bitola 1908 nbsp Skopje after being captured by Albanian revolutionaries in August 1912 after defeating the Ottoman forces holding the cityThe Albanian National movement first emerged in Kosovo through the League of Prizren with Albanian delegates in attendance from Macedonia that attempted to prevent Albanian inhabited territories from being awarded to neighbouring states 2 3 Muslim Albanians in Macedonia during the Ottoman period were either mainly supporters of the Ottoman Empire or some like Albanian parliamentarians critical of Ottoman measures aimed at curtailing socio cultural Albanian expression 4 5 The province of Monastir was an important centre for the Bulgarian IMRO and the beginnings of an emerging Albanian nationalist movement among its majority Muslim population appeared due to frustration with Ottoman authorities and their ineffectiveness to protect them 6 Prominent individuals within the Albanian movement from Monastir province believed that joint action with the Young Turk movement CUP would improve their situation and the majority membership of the Albanian committee were also CUP members 6 In 1908 an Ottoman officer of Albanian origin Ahmed Niyazi Bey along with Albanians from the region instigated the Young Turk revolution 1908 7 Some people coming from a Balkan Albanian speaking or cultural space and often belonging to the urban elite in Macedonia that migrated to Anatolia did not always identify with a concept of Albanianess 8 Instead they adopted an Ottoman Turkish outlook and came to refer to themselves as Turks or Ottoman Turkish speaking citizens 8 Due to the effects of socio linguistic assimilation promoters of Albanian nationalism became concerned about migration to Anatolia and degraded Albanians from the lower classes who undertook the journey 9 In 1908 an alphabet congress in Bitola with Muslim Catholic and Orthodox delegates in attendance agreed to adopt a Latin character based Albanian alphabet and the move was considered an important step for Albanian unification 10 11 12 13 Some conservative Albanian Muslims and clerics along with the Ottoman government opposed the Latin alphabet and preferred an Arabic based Albanian alphabet due to concerns that a Latin alphabet undermined ties with the Muslim world 10 11 12 The Ottoman state organised a congress in Debar 1909 with the intention that Albanians there declare themselves as Ottomans promise to defend its territorial sovereignty and adopt an Albanian Arabic character alphabet 14 Due to the alphabet matter and other Young Turk policies relations between Albanian elites and nationalists many Muslim and Ottoman authorities broke down 13 15 The Ottoman Young Turk government was concerned that Albanian nationalism might inspire other Muslim nationalities in the direction of nationalism and separatism and threaten the Islam based unity of the empire 14 Balkan Wars World War One Interwar period and World War Two edit nbsp Xhem Hasa centre with his brothers Musli Hasa left and Abdullah Hasa right Ottoman rule ended in 1912 during the Balkan Wars and Macedonia with its Albanian population became part of Serbia 16 The end of First World War led to Albanians in Macedonia becoming part of Yugoslavia 17 The Kacak movement made up of armed Albanian guerilla fighters resisting Serb forces was active in western Macedonia during the 1920s before being suppressed toward the end of the decade 17 18 The movement contributed to the development of an Albanian national consciousness in Macedonia 17 The Albanian language was prohibited by Yugoslav authorities and some Albanians were made to emigrate 17 Secular education in the Albanian language within Macedonia and other areas in Yugoslavia with an Albanian population was banned 19 With the onset of World War Two western Macedonia was annexed by Axis Italy to their protectorate of Albania creating a Greater Albania under Italian control 20 21 Italian authorities in western Macedonia allowed the use of the Albanian language in schools university education and administration 22 In western Macedonia and other newly attached territories to Albania non Albanians had to attend Albanian schools that taught a curriculum containing nationalism alongside fascism and they were made to adopt Albanian forms for their names and surnames 23 Some Albanians in western Macedonia joined the Balli Kombetar most notable being Xhem Hasa who alongside his forces collaborated with the Axis powers on various operations targeting communist Albanian and Macedonian partisans 24 25 Communist Yugoslavia edit With the end of the Second World War Albanian inhabited areas became part of the Socialist Republic of Macedonia within Yugoslavia 26 The 1948 Yugoslav census recorded 179 389 Albanians in Macedonia and that number fell to 165 524 Albanians in 1953 27 The fall in numbers is attributed to the Tito Stalin split as of the 203 938 declared Turks 1953 27 086 gave Albanian as their mother tongue and during the 1950s 1960s some Albanians declared themselves as Turks to migrate to Turkey and escape communist Yugoslavia 27 Most Albanian people in the region aware of differences with Kosovan Serbs and an emerging Macedonian nationality embraced Albanian national identity 28 Decreasing numbers of Albanians claimed a Turkish identity as old Ottoman Millet style classifications based on religious identification waned 29 These changes placed pressure on other Muslim minorities living in Albanian areas to assimilate as Albanians 30 Some Albanian nationalists have also been repressed for expressing support for the local Slavic inhabitants with Bulgarian self consciousness and Bulgaria s position on the Macedonian question 31 Toward the late 1960s Albanian dissatisfaction in Macedonia resulted in protests that called for ethno linguistic rights alongside Albanian majority areas in Macedonia being attached to a Kosovo republic and becoming the seventh such entity within the Yugoslav federation 32 33 This growing Albanian nationalism was viewed as a threat to the territorial integrity and existence of Macedonia by communist authorities 34 35 The Yugoslav constitution of 1974 granted extensive rights to Albanians in Kosovo while in Macedonia Albanians had limited ethnic rights 36 Albanian nationalism during the 1980s edit By the late 1970s and early 1980s organised Albanian separatism had spread to Macedonia with Yugoslav security forces claiming to have uncovered two Albanian separatist organisations 37 Macedonian communist authorities concerned over Albanian calls to establish Kosovo as a seventh Yugoslav republic supported Serbia s hardline approach and suppressed expressions of Albanian nationalism 38 Many Albanian activists in Macedonia during the 1980s were imprisoned for long periods of time under charges of separatism and irredentism 36 In 1982 communist officials accused Albanian nationalists including some Muslim Albanian clergy that they placed pressure on Macedonian Romani Turks and Macedonian speaking Muslims Torbes to declare themselves as Albanians during the census 39 40 Expressions of Albanian nationalism through literature slogans and vandalism occurred during 1982 in the Tetovo and Ohrid regions while Macedonian authorities were placed on high alert 39 Members of the young Albanian elite in Macedonia left for Kosovo and the Albanian intellectual scene ceased while practising Islam became the only outlet for young Albanians 36 In Macedonia from the late 1980s onward a lack of a majority atheistic Albanian elite enhanced links between political parties and the religious establishment which entrenched Islam in ethnonational self definitions among Albanians 41 Yugoslav authorities concerned that Albanian nationalism from Kosovo may spread to Macedonia sought to weaken the ethnonational consciousness of Albanians and attempted to assimilate them in Macedonia 41 42 This was done through fragmenting the Muslim community along ethnic lines by encouraging and spreading among Macedonian speaking Muslims Torbes a Macedonian national consciousness 41 The Islamic Community of Yugoslavia dominated by Slavic Muslims opposed during the 1980s Albanian candidates ascending to the leadership position of Reis ul ulema due to claims that Albanian Muslim clergy were attempting to Albanianize the Muslim Slavs of Macedonia 43 The Macedonian communists supported Muslim religious institutions acting as a bulwark to check Albanian nationalism 41 As such Albanian language schools were closed down in the mid 1980s and the Isa Bey madrassa was reopened which became a focal point for Yugoslav Muslim Albanian education 41 Albanian language schools and its school curricula were viewed by Macedonian communists as being infiltrated by Albanian nationalism and irredentism with actions taken by authorities to curtail those sentiments 44 Some of those measures against Albanian education included requiring use of only the Macedonian language 1981 and sackings of non compliant teachers 45 42 The number of Albanian students in schools halved 38 Those events caused concern within the Albanian community resulting in protests boycotts and other tensions with communist authorities and the state 45 Some Albanian folk songs were also deemed to have nationalistic content and their use on radio was denounced and alongside use of Albanian toponyms both were banned 46 38 Restrictions and bans were placed on Albanian parents naming their newborn children with names that were deemed nationalistic such as Shqipe Liriduam meaning wanting freedom Alban Albana Flamur Albanian flag Kushtrim and others that connoted for communist authorities loyalty to communist Albania 47 38 The Albanian birthrate caused concern for communist authorities who viewed it as contributing to rising Albanian nationalism and family planning measures were enacted in municipalities of western Macedonia to limit parents to two children 47 42 38 48 Some Albanian public officials were dismissed due to attending weddings that had nationalist songs sung while many cultural clubs were shut down 49 The campaign against Albanian nationalism was referred to as differentiation 47 Macedonian communist authorities concerned with growing Albanian nationalism contended that Turks and Macedonian speaking Muslims Torbes were being Albanianised through Albanian political and cultural pressures 50 Mosques in Macedonia were controlled by the communists and they turned into places that sheltered and fostered Albanian national identity 41 Communist authorities came to view Islam as a tool of Albanian nationalism 51 In the attempt to abolish religious identity measures were taken by Macedonian communist authorities that appropriated Muslim buildings for state use destroyed Islamic libraries and two roads were constructed through Muslim cemeteries in Tetovo and Gostivar 42 In 1990 Albanian activists in Tetovo organised demonstrations that called for the creation of Greater Albania 52 Albanian nationalists viewed their inclusion within Yugoslavia as an occupation 53 Post Yugoslavia Macedonian independence and the 2001 insurgency edit nbsp Logo of the NLAAlbanians in Macedonia alongside their Kosovan Albanian counterparts after the fall of communism became the main force steering Albanian nationalism 54 While Islam did not become a main focal point in articulating Albanian political nationalism it influenced the collective outlook of Albanians in Macedonia 54 55 With Macedonian independence 1991 the status of Albanians became demoted to national minority from the previous Yugoslav category of nationality 41 While the constitution referred to Macedonia as being the nationstate of Macedonians 41 A referendum 1992 was held in Albanian majority Western Macedonia with 72 of eligible voters voting for autonomy and the federalisation of Macedonia 52 56 57 The outcome of the move had political ramifications as some Albanian politicians from the Tetovo and Struga regions declared the Republic of Ilirida during 1991 1992 with aims of uniting all Albanians of Yugoslavia into one entity 52 57 The name Ilirida is a portmanteau formed from the words Illyri a and Da rdania ancient regions that were located in the modern Macedonian republic 58 As an interim measure toward unification these Albanian politicians also advocated for the creation of an Albanian entity that would cover approximately half of the republic and federalise Macedonia 57 Albanian political parties contended that the referendum was demonstrative and instead wanted the Macedonian state to recognise Albanians as a founding ethnic community of Macedonia 59 Albanians in independent Macedonia held only 4 of state jobs Albanian language secondary schools declined from ten to one and the Albanian language at a university language was taught as a foreign language 42 59 During the 1990s protests by Albanians and tensions with the Macedonian state developed in incidents such as the government ordered cessation of flying the Albanian flag at municipal offices in Tetovo and Gostivar alongside disputes with the Albanian education sector 41 42 59 The return from Kosovo of several local Albanians from the professional elite to Macedonia contributed through influence over the Albanian populace by strengthening an Albanian national consciousness and mobilising sociopolitical organisation 60 nbsp Monument to fallen NLA fighters SopotThe ending of the Kosovo war 1999 resulted in offshoot guerilla groups from the KLA like the National Liberation Army NLA emerging 61 62 63 By 2001 conflict in northern parts of the Republic of Macedonia erupted into an insurgency fought by Macedonian government forces against the NLA who avoided Islamic identifications while insisting on Islam being given constitutional equal status to Orthodoxy 41 61 64 62 The NLA also insisted on expanding Albanian language education and government funding for Albanian language universities 65 The struggle for civic equality and equality of Islam became interlinked with these demands that were achieved through the Ohrid Agreement 2001 which ended conflict by guaranteeing Albanian rights university education government representation and serving in the police force 66 61 64 High ranking members of the NLA and of the Albanian political establishment in Macedonia favoured expanding Albanian rights within a unified Macedonia 67 They viewed any form of territorial partition as a loss for Albanians due to their unfavourable demographic and political position 67 Albanian nationalists held similar views as they did not want to leave the historical cities of Skopje and Bitola behind in the advent of secession from Macedonia 67 Religion did not play a mobilizing factor during the conflict between Albanians and Macedonians though it is becoming a new element between relations of the two peoples 66 68 nbsp Skanderbeg SquarePost conflict Albanians in Macedonia have placed new statues of Albanian historical figures like Skanderbeg in Skopje and named schools after such individuals while memorials have been erected for fallen KLA and NLA fighters 69 These developments have increased tensions between Albanians and Macedonians 69 The figure of Saint Mother Teresa 1910 1997 a Catholic Albanian nun born in Skopje has been used for nationalist purposes within Macedonia as her origins have been contested and her legacy claimed by some Macedonian and Albanian elites from the local political and academic spectrum 70 Within the context of societal image and stereotypes Albanian nationalist constructs perceives the other such as the Macedonians as ignorant and similar views exist on the Macedonian side of Albanians 71 Albanian nationalists view Macedonian ethnicity as invented by the Yugoslavs to weaken Serbia prevent other identities forming and to legitimise the existence of a Macedonian republic in communist Yugoslavia 72 Macedonians are referred to by Albanians as an ethnic collectivity with the term Shkie Slavs that also carries pejorative connotations 53 73 Some Macedonian commentators have worried that Albanian nationalists view Macedonians as being without historic territorial rights over areas in Macedonia that would become part of a Greater Albania and lay claim to almost half of the territory of the republic as was once promoted by the League of Prizren 53 In the political sphere Albanian parties maintain secular and nationalistic platforms while supporting the secular framework of the state with an insistence on protecting Islam and the culture of Muslim constituents along with control and interference of Muslim institutions 66 74 75 Unlike Albania and Kosovo national identity and Islam are traditionally linked and stronger among Albanians from Macedonia 76 The status of Albanians being a minority in Macedonia and that most are Muslims have blended national and religious identity in opposition to the Orthodox Slavic Macedonian majority 76 Some Muslim Albanian establishment figures in Macedonia hold that view that being a good Muslim is synonymous with being Albanian 66 Language remains an important marker of ethnic Albanian identity in Macedonia 65 Upper Reka a region of western Macedonia is home to a Christian Orthodox Albanian speaking population that self identifies as Macedonians 77 78 Controversies amongst Upper Reka Orthodox Christians have arisen over identity and the church with a few prominent individuals publicly declaring an Albanian identity or origin and others calling for an Albanian Orthodox Church to be present within the region 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 See also editMacedonian nationalismReferences editCitations edit Babuna 2004 p 310 Merdjanova 2013 p 42 Babuna 2004 p 293 Nezir Akmese 2005 pp 96 98 Babuna 2004 p 294 a b Nezir Akmese 2005 p 52 Nezir Akmese 2005 pp 52 96 a b Gingeras 2009 pp 31 32 34 Gingeras 2009 p 34 a b Skendi 1967a pp 370 378 a b Duijzings 2000 p 163 a b Gawrych 2006 pp 182 a b Nezir Akmese 2005 p 96 a b Nezir Akmese 2005 p 97 Saunders 2011 p 97 Babuna 2004 p 297 a b c d Babuna 2004 p 298 Fontana 2017 pp 91 92 Babuna 2004 p 300 Hall 2010 p 183 Judah 2008 p 47 Fontana 2017 p 92 Rossos 2013 pp 185 186 Bailey 2011 p 100 Reginald 1999 pp 197 188 Judah 2008 p 52 a b Poulton 1995 p 138 Takeyh amp Gvosdev 2004 p 80 Takeyh amp Gvosdev 2004 pp 80 81 Takeyh amp Gvosdev 2004 p 81 Makedonskite Bugari i Albancite zaedno vo borbata so јugoslovenskiot komunizam Poulton 1995 p 126 Fontana 2017 p 96 Poulton 1995 pp 126 127 Koinova 2013 p 37 a b c Peshkopia 2015 p 61 Ramet 2006 p 300 a b c d e Fontana 2017 p 97 a b Ramet 2006 p 302 Babuna 2004 p 307 a b c d e f g h i j Merdjanova 2013 p 46 a b c d e f Ahmed 2013 p 244 Babuna 2004 p 303 Poulton 1995 p 127 a b Poulton 1995 pp 129 130 Poulton 1995 pp 127 128 a b c Poulton 1995 p 128 Brunnbauer 2004 p 575 Albanian demographic expansion was identified by the leadership of the Socialist Macedonian Republic as part of the increasing Albanian nationalism in Macedonia in the 1980s Poulton 1995 pp 128 129 Poulton 1995 pp 138 139 Poulton 1995 p 130 a b c Roudometof 2002 p 172 a b c Batkovski amp Rajkocevski 2014 p 95 a b Merdjanova 2013 p 49 Gallagher 2005 p 83 Ramet 1997 p 80 a b c Bugajski 1994 p 116 Neofotistos 2008 p 28 Republic of Illirida a name formed by the conjunction of Illyria and Dardania a b c Fontana 2017 p 100 Peshkopia 2015 p 63 75 a b c Gregorian 2015 pp 93 94 a b Liotta amp Jebb 2004 pp 63 64 Koktsidis amp Dam 2008 p 161 a b Koktsidis amp Dam 2008 pp 174 179 a b Fontana 2017 p 103 a b c d Merdjanova 2013 p 47 a b c Peshkopia 2015 pp 76 Roudometof 2002 p 188 a b Koktsidis amp Dam 2008 p 179 Alpion 2004 pp 230 232 235 Lambevski 2002 pp 311 315 Peshkopia 2015 p 57 Neofotistos 2004 p 51 Stojarova 2010 p 50 Peshkopia 2015 p 79 a b Merdjanova 2013 p 45 Bechev 2009 p 188 Several villages in the Upper Reka subregion were in the past populated by Orthodox Albanian speakers who have been largely assimilated by the Slavic Macedonians Mircevska 2007 p 132 Gornorekancite so muslimanska religiјa denes sebe si se identifikuvaat kako Albanci dodeka pravoslavite hristiјani kako Makedonci Upper Reka people of the Muslim religion today identify themselves as Albanians while Orthodox Christians as Macedonians Arsovska Elizabeta Eksluzivno Vecer vo poseta na Mavrovsko gornorekanskiot kraj Zboruvame albanski no nie sme makedonci i majcin jazik ni e makedonskiot Exclusive Vecer visits Mavrovo Gorna Reka region We speak Albanian but we are Macedonians and our native language is Macedonian Vecer Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 4 December 2015 Giorgievski Branko Branslav Sinadinovski specijalen sovetik na liderot Ali Ahmeti Liturgiite ne se dovolni sakame posebna Albanska Pravoslavna Crkva Branslav Sinadinovski special consultant to leader Ali Ahmeti Liturgies are not enough we want a separate Albanian Orthodox Church Dnevnik Archived from the original on 2015 12 08 Retrieved 4 December 2015 Skretite imaat makedonski koreni i ne mozat da se poistovetuvaat so Albancite Shkreti have Macedonian roots and can not be identified with Albanians Makedoncka Nacija Retrieved 4 December 2015 Kujt i pengon perkatesia etnike shqiptare e z Sinadinovski Who prevents the Albanian ethnicity of Mr Sinadinovski Klan Macedonia Archived from the original on 2015 12 22 Retrieved 13 December 2015 Me thone Branko Manojlovski por une jam shqiptar The call me Branko Manojlovski but I am Albanian Zeri Archived from the original on 22 December 2015 Retrieved 13 December 2015 Branislav Sinadinovski Pravoslaven Albanec ili obicen Izmamnik Branislav Sinadinovski Albanian Orthodox or lovable rogue Fokus Retrieved 13 December 2015 Manojlovski thote se Sinadinovski eshte kusheriri im edhe ai shqiptar Manojlovski says Sinadinovski is his cousin and an Albanian Koha Archived from the original on 22 December 2015 Retrieved 13 December 2015 Shqiptaret ortodoks te Maqedonise kerkojne liturgji ne gjuhen shqipe Macedonian Orthodox Albanians seeking liturgy in Albanian The Albanian 2014 09 11 Archived from the original on 22 December 2015 Retrieved 19 December 2015 Shqiptaret qe po trondisin Maqedonine Albanians are shaking Macedonia Koha Jona Retrieved 19 December 2015 permanent dead link Sources edit Ahmed Akbar 2013 The thistle and the drone How America s war on terror became a global war on tribal Islam Washington D C Brookings Institution Press ISBN 9780815723790 Alpion Gezim 2004 Media ethnicity and patriotism the Balkans unholy war for the appropriation of Mother Teresa Journal of Southern Europe and the Balkans 6 3 227 243 doi 10 1080 1461319042000296796 S2CID 154576141 Babuna Aydin 2004 The Bosnian Muslims and Albanians Islam and Nationalism Nationalities Papers 32 2 287 321 doi 10 1080 0090599042000230250 S2CID 162218149 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Kosovo What everyone needs to know Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199704040 Koinova Maria 2013 Ethnonationalist conflict in postcommunist states Varieties of governance in Bulgaria Macedonia and Kosovo Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 9780812208375 Koktsidis Pavlos Ioannis Dam Caspar Ten 2008 A success story Analysing Albanian ethno nationalist extremism in the Balkans PDF East European Quarterly 42 2 161 190 Lambevski Sasho A 2002 Suck My Nation Masculinity Ethnicity and the Politics of Homo sex In Plummer Kenneth ed Sexualities Sexualities and their futures London Routledge pp 296 317 ISBN 9780415212762 Liotta P H Jebb Cindy R 2004 Cry the Imagined Country Legitimacy and Fate of Macedonia In Liotta Peter H Jebb Cindy R eds Mapping Macedonia Idea and identity Westport Greenwood Publishing Group pp 63 98 ISBN 9780275982478 Merdjanova Ina 2013 Rediscovering the Umma Muslims in the Balkans between nationalism and transnationalism Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190462505 Mircevska Mirjana P 2007 Verbalni i neverbalni etnicki simboli vo Gorna Reka Verbal and non verbal ethnic symbols in Upper Reka Skopje Institut za Etnologija i Antropologija ISBN 978 9989 668 66 1 Neofotistos Vasiliki P 2004 Beyond Stereotypes Violence and the Porousness of Ethnic Boundaries in the Republic of Macedonia History and Anthropology 15 1 1 36 doi 10 1080 027572004200191046 S2CID 145227777 Neofotistos Vasiliki P 2008 The Balkans Other within Imaginings of the West in the Republic of Macedonia History and Anthropology 19 1 17 36 doi 10 1080 02757200802150836 S2CID 144517501 Nezir Akmese Handan 2005 The Birth of Modern Turkey The Ottoman Military and the March to WWI London IB Tauris ISBN 9781850437970 Peshkopia Ridvan 2015 Conditioning Democratization Institutional Reforms and EU Membership Conditionality in Albania and Macedonia London Anthem Press ISBN 9781783084227 Poulton Hugh 1995 Who are the Macedonians Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 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Albanian national awakening Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 9781400847761 Stojarova Vera 2010 Nationalist parties and the party systems of the Western Balkans In Stojarova Vera Emerson Peter eds Party politics in the Western Balkans New York Routledge pp 42 58 ISBN 9781135235857 Takeyh Ray Gvosdev Nikolas K 2004 The receding shadow of the prophet The rise and fall of radical political Islam Westport Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780275976286 Trbovich Ana S 2008 A legal geography of Yugoslavia s disintegration Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195333435 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Albanian nationalism in North Macedonia amp oldid 1144390242, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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