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Lazar Koliševski

Lazar Koliševski (Macedonian: Лазар Колишевски [ˈlazar kɔˈliʃɛfski] (listen); 12 February 1914 – 6 July 2000) was a Yugoslav communist political leader in the Socialist Republic of Macedonia and briefly in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He was closely allied with Josip Broz Tito.

Lazar Koliševski
Лазар Колишевски
Koliševski during the 1940s
1st President of the Presidency of Yugoslavia
In office
4 May 1980 – 15 May 1980
Prime MinisterVeselin Đuranović
Preceded byJosip Broz Tito
Succeeded byCvijetin Mijatović
6th President of the People's Assembly of PR Macedonia
In office
19 December 1953 – 26 June 1962
Prime MinisterLjupčo Arsov
Aleksandar Grlickov
Preceded byDimce Stojanov
Succeeded byLjupčo Arsov
1st President of the Executive Council of PR Macedonia
In office
16 April 1945 – 19 December 1953
PresidentMetodija Andonov - Čento
Dimitar Vlahov
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byLjupčo Arsov
1st Secretary of the League of Communists of Macedonia
In office
1945 – July 1963
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byKrste Crvenkovski
Personal details
Born(1914-02-12)12 February 1914
Sveti Nikole, Kingdom of Serbia
Died6 July 2000(2000-07-06) (aged 86)
Skopje, Macedonia
NationalityYugoslav/Macedonian
Political partySKJ
AwardsOrder of the National Hero of Yugoslavia
Military service
AllegianceSFR Yugoslavia
Branch/serviceGround Forces (KoV)
Years of service1941–1980
RankMajor General
CommandsYugoslav Partisans
Yugoslav People's Army
Battles/warsWorld War II

Early years

Koliševski was born in Sveti Nikole, Kingdom of Serbia in 1914. He was from a poor farmer family. Little is known about his parents. According to the society of the Aromanians in North Macedonia, Koliševski's mother was an Aromanian,[1] Bulgarian source claims his father was a Serboman.[2] Per his personal Bulgarian prison card in 1941, both of them were Bulgarian.[3] In 1915, during the First World War, the region was occupied by the Kingdom of Bulgaria. His father was mobilized on the Macedonian front,[4] and during the war, both of Koliševski's parents died. Once left an orphan, after the war, when Vardar Macedonia was ceded to Serbia again, he was taken by his maternal aunts in Bitola. There he was raised up to school age and later was transferred to a state orphanage in the city, where completed his primary education. Later Koliševski was sent to a technical school in Kragujevac. Here, Lazar began to follow politics and learn about communism. Because of the political activities he was arrested and expelled from the munition factory, where he worked. During the 1930s he became a prominent activist of the Yugoslav Communist Party.[5]

World War II

 
Koliševski in 1944 during World War II.
 
Memorial plaque from communist times, commemorating the sentencing of Koliševski and four others by the "Bulgarian Fascist Occupiers" in Ohrid

As Nazi forces entered Belgrade in April 1941, Bulgaria, a German ally, took control of a part of Vardar Macedonia, with the western towns of Tetovo, Gostivar and Debar going to Italian zone in Albania. After the Bulgarians had taken control of the eastern part of the former Vardar Banovina, the leader of the local faction of Communist Party of Yugoslavia, Metodi Shatorov had defected to the Bulgarian Communist Party. The Bulgarian Communists avoided organizing mass armed uprising against the authorities, but the Yugoslav communists insisted on an armed revolt. Meanwhile, the German invasion of the Soviet Union made the Comintern and Joseph Stalin decide that the Macedonian communists were to rejoin the Yugoslav communists.

In the fall of 1941, Koliševski thus became the Secretary of the Regional Committee of the Communists in Macedonia. On the ground, he began to pursue Shatorov's sympathisers and organised several small armed detachments against the Bulgarian authorities and their local adherents. In late 1941, he was arrested and sentenced to death by a Bulgarian military court. He wrote two appeals for clemency to the Bulgarian tsar and to the defence minister.[6] There he regrets the accomplishment, insisting on his Bulgarian origin.[7] These documents are stored in the Bulgarian military archive in Veliko Tarnovo.[8] Later, after an intercession of the Defense Minister to the tsar, his death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment, and Koliševski was sent to a prison in Pleven, Bulgaria.[9] However, after the fall of communism, when these documents became widely known, Koliševski denied making any appeals for clemency or admission of guilt personally.[10] He claimed that his plea for mercy was written by his lawyer,[11] but in relation to the death sentence of the then Bulgarian military courts, existed only the opportunity to submit personally signed "appeal for clemency".[12] According to the Yugoslav politician Antun Kolendić, Koliševski vainly denied these facts, while he became familiar with these documents in 1946.[13] It is claimed that in 1943, he was elected in absentia as secretary of the Central Committee of the new Communist Party of Macedonia and a delegate to the AVNOJ's second session in 1943, and also to the ASNOM convened in August 1944, but those claims are disputed.[14]

In September 1944, Koliševski was freed by the new Bulgarian pro-communist government, and soon became the Chairman of the Communist Party of Macedonia, a local division of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia. Near the end of the war Koliševski became the Prime Minister of the Federal State of Macedonia, a federal unit of the Democratic Federal Yugoslavia (DFY). It was essentially the highest office in the Federal State of Macedonia. For his efforts in the war, Koliševski was one of the many Macedonians who were awarded with the People's Hero of Yugoslavia medal.

Yugoslavia

 
Koliševski in 1964.

After World War II, Koliševski became the most powerful person in PR Macedonia and among the most powerful people in all of Yugoslavia. Under his leadership,[15] hundreds of people of Macedonian Bulgarian descent were killed as collaborationists between 7–9 January 1945.[16] Thousands of others, who retained their pro-Bulgarian sympathies, suffered severe repression as a result.[17] Kolisevski strongly supported the promotion of a distinct ethnic Macedonian identity and language in SR Macedonia.[18] Some circles were then trying to minimise ties with Yugoslavia as far as possible and promoted the independence of Macedonia. Kolishevski, however, started a policy of fully implementing the pro-Yugoslav line and took harsh measures against the opposition. He also began massive economic and social reforms. Koliševski finally brought the Industrial Revolution to Macedonia. By 1955, the capital, Skopje, had become one of the fastest-growing cities in the region and became the third-largest city in Yugoslavia. Thanks to Koliševski's reforms, the small republic that in 1945 had been the poorest area of Yugoslavia became the fastest-growing economy. After the second Five-Year Economic Plan, PR Macedonia's economy advanced rapidly.

On 19 December 1953, Koliševski retired as the Prime Minister of PR Macedonia and assumed the office of President of the People's Assembly. He became the PR Macedonian head of state, but wielded less direct political power. However, he remained the Chairman of the League of Communists of Macedonia, the Macedonian division of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, which were the new names of the communist parties in Yugoslavia. He was still the most powerful person in the Republic because of his influence in the Yugoslav Communist Party. With his slow removal from politics in Macedonia, he began to travel to other nations as a Yugoslav diplomat. He made many major trips in the late 1950s and the early 1960s to Egypt, India, Indonesia and other nations that later formed the Non-Aligned Nations. The diplomatic travels showed that Koliševski was very trusted by the Yugoslav leader, Josip Broz Tito. Even after Tito had fallen out with some of his most trusted allies, Koliševski remained in his position.

After the Yugoslav Constitution of 1974 was passed, Koliševski became much more influential in the Yugoslav political world. The new constitution called for a rotating Yugoslav Vice-Presidency. Koliševski was chosen by the Macedonian leadership to be the Macedonian representative to the Presidency. On 15 May 1979, Koliševski was voted by the other presidency members to become President of the Presidency and Vice President of Yugoslavia. On New Year's Day in 1980, Tito fell ill, leaving Koliševski in the role of acting leader in his absence. Tito died five months later, on 4 May 1980. Koliševski held the office of acting head of the presidency of Yugoslavia for another ten days, when the office passed on to Cvijetin Mijatović.

Macedonia

After the breakup of Yugoslavia, Koliševski lived in Skopje, the capital of the newly-proclaimed Republic of Macedonia, and opposed the anti-Serbian and pro-Bulgarian policy of the ruling right-wing party, VMRO-DPMNE, in the late 1990s.[19] He died on 6 July 2000. Shortly after, his personal archive of 300,000 documents was given to the Macedonian Academy of Arts and Sciences.[20] In 2002 a monument of Koliševski was erected in his birthplace by the left-wing local government.[21]

See also

References

  1. ^ Во врска со оваа енигма разговаравме со двајцата најекспонирани репрезенти на влашкиот етнос во Македонија, претседателот на Унијата на Власите Димо Димчев и шефот на Партијата на Власите Митко Костов-Папули. Го замоливме Димо Димчев да ни каже кој, освен Милтон Манаки и Хари Костов, бил Влав во досегашните влади, но и во другите јавни области, како што се науката, уметноста, лингвистиката, историјата, правото, итн. Димчев наредува: "Пиши! Како прв, Лазар Колишевски бил Влав по мајка. Откако останал сирак, го зеле тетките по мајчина страна - битолски Влаинки - го вдомиле во кралското сиропиталиште, а потоа го пратиле на училиште во Србија. For more see: Власи и власти.
  2. ^ Коста Църнушанов (1992) Македонизмът и съпротивата на Македония срещу него. Университетско изд-во "Св. Климент Охридски", стр. 227.
  3. ^ According to Kolishevski's personal card, filled by him in the Skopje prison, both of his parents and he himself are listed as Bulgarians. For more see: Билярски, Ц. Малко известни факти от живота на Лазар Колишевски – сп. "Известия на държавните архиви" - Държавна агенция Архиви, бр. 98, 2009, стр. 101–121.
  4. ^ Църнушанов, Коста. Сърбизиране на македонския казионен „литературен език“. Част втора. Македонски преглед XIV (2). 1991, стр. 21.
  5. ^ Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Macedonia, Historical Dictionaries of Europe, Dimitar Bechev, Scarecrow Press, 2009, ISBN 0810862956, p. 117.
  6. ^ Contested Ethnic Identity: The Case of Macedonian Immigrants in Toronto, 1900-1996, Author Chris Kostov, Publisher Peter Lang, 2010, ISBN 3034301960, p. 13.
  7. ^ Молба за милостъ от Лазаръ Паневъ Колишевъ, затворникъ при Скопския областен сѫдъ, осѫденъ на СМЪРТЪ отъ Битолския военно-полеви сѫдъ по наказ. дѣло 133/941. по закона за защита на държавата
  8. ^ They were re-discovered in 1984 and copies of them were provided to the Central Committee of the BCP, apparently with the aim of responding to the anti-Bulgarian campaigns carried out in Yugoslavia with the participation of Lazar Kolisevski, to show that this person had another biography, of which he is ashamed and disfigured. This documentation was forwarded with a letter from the First Deputy Minister of National Defense and Chief of the General Staff of the Bulgarian Army, Colonel General Atanas Semerdzhiev, to the member of the Politburo and secretary of the Central Committee of the BCP, Milko Balev.
  9. ^ УТРИНСКИ ВЕСНИК, Број 1475 понеделник, 16 октомври 2006. Archived 2007-08-10 at archive.today
  10. ^ Kljakic, Dragan (1994). Времето на Колишевски. Matica Makedonska. p. 109. Дали потоа поднесовте молба за помилување? - го прашав / Не, не поднесов. Ако го напривев тоа, ќе значеше дека ја признавам вината.
  11. ^ His lawyer Stefan Stefanov was liquidated by the Yugoslav communists in 1946 as a Greater Bulgarian chauvinist. For more see: Пелтеков, Александър Г. Революционни дейци от Македония и Одринско. Второ допълнено издание. София, Орбел, 2014. ISBN 9789544961022, с. 442.
  12. ^ Нова зора, Брой 32 (2013) Отродителят – „Народний херой“, Евгений Еков.
  13. ^ Koliševski does not explain how he survived and why his death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment. According to Kolendić, he became familiar with all these documents signed by Koliševski in 1941, as early as in 1946 in Bulgaria. All of the partisans arrested together with Koliševski, who did not sign petitions for mercy, were shot down. For more see: Антун Колендиќ, Белите дамки на македонската историја. Марксистичка интернет архива.
  14. ^ Колендиќ, Белите дамки на македонската историја. Извор/првпат објавено: "Start magazin", Zagreb, No. 537, 19.8.1989, 50-55 str. Превод: Здравко Савески, Онлајн верзија: декември 2011.
  15. ^ Michael Palairet, Macedonia: A Voyage through History, Volume 2, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2016, ISBN 1443888494, p. 293.
  16. ^ Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Macedonia by Dimitar Bechev, Scarecrow Press, 2009; ISBN 0810855658, p. 287.
  17. ^ Who Are the Macedonians? by Hugh Poulton, C. Hurst & Co. Publishers, 2000; ISBN 1850655340, p. 118.
  18. ^ Bernard A. Cook, Europe Since 1945: An Encyclopedia, Taylor & Francis, 2001, ISBN 0815340575, p. 808.
  19. ^ НИН, Београд, issue 2585, 13.07.2000, Krzavac, Savo. Bravar nije voleo zlato
  20. ^ „Архивата на Лазо Колишевски до 300.000 страници во МАНУ е тајна дури и за лустраторите“, Дневник, година XVIII, број 5596, понеделник, 20 октомври 2014, стр. 2-3.
  21. ^ "Споменикот го врати Колишевски во Св. Николе". 11 October 2002.

External links

  • Аспекти на македонското прашање, Лазар Колишевски.
  • – From left to right, Lazar Koliševski (in Glasses), Josip Broz Tito, Milka Planinc, Azem Vllasi and General Kosta Nadj
  • "Сите българи заедно." Tsocho Bilyarski, Little known facts about the life of Lazar Koliševski. (in Bulgarian) Contains pictures of original documents signed by Koliševski, kept in Sofia.

lazar, koliševski, macedonian, Лазар, Колишевски, ˈlazar, kɔˈliʃɛfski, listen, february, 1914, july, 2000, yugoslav, communist, political, leader, socialist, republic, macedonia, briefly, socialist, federal, republic, yugoslavia, closely, allied, with, josip, . Lazar Kolisevski Macedonian Lazar Kolishevski ˈlazar kɔˈliʃɛfski listen 12 February 1914 6 July 2000 was a Yugoslav communist political leader in the Socialist Republic of Macedonia and briefly in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia He was closely allied with Josip Broz Tito Lazar KolisevskiLazar KolishevskiKolisevski during the 1940s1st President of the Presidency of YugoslaviaIn office 4 May 1980 15 May 1980Prime MinisterVeselin ĐuranovicPreceded byJosip Broz TitoSucceeded byCvijetin Mijatovic6th President of the People s Assembly of PR MacedoniaIn office 19 December 1953 26 June 1962Prime MinisterLjupco ArsovAleksandar GrlickovPreceded byDimce StojanovSucceeded byLjupco Arsov1st President of the Executive Council of PR MacedoniaIn office 16 April 1945 19 December 1953PresidentMetodija Andonov CentoDimitar VlahovPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byLjupco Arsov1st Secretary of the League of Communists of MacedoniaIn office 1945 July 1963Preceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byKrste CrvenkovskiPersonal detailsBorn 1914 02 12 12 February 1914Sveti Nikole Kingdom of SerbiaDied6 July 2000 2000 07 06 aged 86 Skopje MacedoniaNationalityYugoslav MacedonianPolitical partySKJAwardsOrder of the National Hero of YugoslaviaMilitary serviceAllegianceSFR YugoslaviaBranch serviceGround Forces KoV Years of service1941 1980RankMajor GeneralCommandsYugoslav PartisansYugoslav People s ArmyBattles warsWorld War II Contents 1 Early years 2 World War II 3 Yugoslavia 4 Macedonia 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEarly years EditKolisevski was born in Sveti Nikole Kingdom of Serbia in 1914 He was from a poor farmer family Little is known about his parents According to the society of the Aromanians in North Macedonia Kolisevski s mother was an Aromanian 1 Bulgarian source claims his father was a Serboman 2 Per his personal Bulgarian prison card in 1941 both of them were Bulgarian 3 In 1915 during the First World War the region was occupied by the Kingdom of Bulgaria His father was mobilized on the Macedonian front 4 and during the war both of Kolisevski s parents died Once left an orphan after the war when Vardar Macedonia was ceded to Serbia again he was taken by his maternal aunts in Bitola There he was raised up to school age and later was transferred to a state orphanage in the city where completed his primary education Later Kolisevski was sent to a technical school in Kragujevac Here Lazar began to follow politics and learn about communism Because of the political activities he was arrested and expelled from the munition factory where he worked During the 1930s he became a prominent activist of the Yugoslav Communist Party 5 World War II Edit Kolisevski in 1944 during World War II Memorial plaque from communist times commemorating the sentencing of Kolisevski and four others by the Bulgarian Fascist Occupiers in Ohrid As Nazi forces entered Belgrade in April 1941 Bulgaria a German ally took control of a part of Vardar Macedonia with the western towns of Tetovo Gostivar and Debar going to Italian zone in Albania After the Bulgarians had taken control of the eastern part of the former Vardar Banovina the leader of the local faction of Communist Party of Yugoslavia Metodi Shatorov had defected to the Bulgarian Communist Party The Bulgarian Communists avoided organizing mass armed uprising against the authorities but the Yugoslav communists insisted on an armed revolt Meanwhile the German invasion of the Soviet Union made the Comintern and Joseph Stalin decide that the Macedonian communists were to rejoin the Yugoslav communists In the fall of 1941 Kolisevski thus became the Secretary of the Regional Committee of the Communists in Macedonia On the ground he began to pursue Shatorov s sympathisers and organised several small armed detachments against the Bulgarian authorities and their local adherents In late 1941 he was arrested and sentenced to death by a Bulgarian military court He wrote two appeals for clemency to the Bulgarian tsar and to the defence minister 6 There he regrets the accomplishment insisting on his Bulgarian origin 7 These documents are stored in the Bulgarian military archive in Veliko Tarnovo 8 Later after an intercession of the Defense Minister to the tsar his death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment and Kolisevski was sent to a prison in Pleven Bulgaria 9 However after the fall of communism when these documents became widely known Kolisevski denied making any appeals for clemency or admission of guilt personally 10 He claimed that his plea for mercy was written by his lawyer 11 but in relation to the death sentence of the then Bulgarian military courts existed only the opportunity to submit personally signed appeal for clemency 12 According to the Yugoslav politician Antun Kolendic Kolisevski vainly denied these facts while he became familiar with these documents in 1946 13 It is claimed that in 1943 he was elected in absentia as secretary of the Central Committee of the new Communist Party of Macedonia and a delegate to the AVNOJ s second session in 1943 and also to the ASNOM convened in August 1944 but those claims are disputed 14 In September 1944 Kolisevski was freed by the new Bulgarian pro communist government and soon became the Chairman of the Communist Party of Macedonia a local division of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia Near the end of the war Kolisevski became the Prime Minister of the Federal State of Macedonia a federal unit of the Democratic Federal Yugoslavia DFY It was essentially the highest office in the Federal State of Macedonia For his efforts in the war Kolisevski was one of the many Macedonians who were awarded with the People s Hero of Yugoslavia medal Yugoslavia Edit Kolisevski in 1964 After World War II Kolisevski became the most powerful person in PR Macedonia and among the most powerful people in all of Yugoslavia Under his leadership 15 hundreds of people of Macedonian Bulgarian descent were killed as collaborationists between 7 9 January 1945 16 Thousands of others who retained their pro Bulgarian sympathies suffered severe repression as a result 17 Kolisevski strongly supported the promotion of a distinct ethnic Macedonian identity and language in SR Macedonia 18 Some circles were then trying to minimise ties with Yugoslavia as far as possible and promoted the independence of Macedonia Kolishevski however started a policy of fully implementing the pro Yugoslav line and took harsh measures against the opposition He also began massive economic and social reforms Kolisevski finally brought the Industrial Revolution to Macedonia By 1955 the capital Skopje had become one of the fastest growing cities in the region and became the third largest city in Yugoslavia Thanks to Kolisevski s reforms the small republic that in 1945 had been the poorest area of Yugoslavia became the fastest growing economy After the second Five Year Economic Plan PR Macedonia s economy advanced rapidly On 19 December 1953 Kolisevski retired as the Prime Minister of PR Macedonia and assumed the office of President of the People s Assembly He became the PR Macedonian head of state but wielded less direct political power However he remained the Chairman of the League of Communists of Macedonia the Macedonian division of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia which were the new names of the communist parties in Yugoslavia He was still the most powerful person in the Republic because of his influence in the Yugoslav Communist Party With his slow removal from politics in Macedonia he began to travel to other nations as a Yugoslav diplomat He made many major trips in the late 1950s and the early 1960s to Egypt India Indonesia and other nations that later formed the Non Aligned Nations The diplomatic travels showed that Kolisevski was very trusted by the Yugoslav leader Josip Broz Tito Even after Tito had fallen out with some of his most trusted allies Kolisevski remained in his position After the Yugoslav Constitution of 1974 was passed Kolisevski became much more influential in the Yugoslav political world The new constitution called for a rotating Yugoslav Vice Presidency Kolisevski was chosen by the Macedonian leadership to be the Macedonian representative to the Presidency On 15 May 1979 Kolisevski was voted by the other presidency members to become President of the Presidency and Vice President of Yugoslavia On New Year s Day in 1980 Tito fell ill leaving Kolisevski in the role of acting leader in his absence Tito died five months later on 4 May 1980 Kolisevski held the office of acting head of the presidency of Yugoslavia for another ten days when the office passed on to Cvijetin Mijatovic Macedonia EditAfter the breakup of Yugoslavia Kolisevski lived in Skopje the capital of the newly proclaimed Republic of Macedonia and opposed the anti Serbian and pro Bulgarian policy of the ruling right wing party VMRO DPMNE in the late 1990s 19 He died on 6 July 2000 Shortly after his personal archive of 300 000 documents was given to the Macedonian Academy of Arts and Sciences 20 In 2002 a monument of Kolisevski was erected in his birthplace by the left wing local government 21 See also EditTitoism Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Socialist Republic of MacedoniaReferences Edit Vo vrska so ovaa enigma razgovaravme so dvaјcata naјeksponirani reprezenti na vlashkiot etnos vo Makedoniјa pretsedatelot na Uniјata na Vlasite Dimo Dimchev i shefot na Partiјata na Vlasite Mitko Kostov Papuli Go zamolivme Dimo Dimchev da ni kazhe koј osven Milton Manaki i Hari Kostov bil Vlav vo dosegashnite vladi no i vo drugite јavni oblasti kako shto se naukata umetnosta lingvistikata istoriјata pravoto itn Dimchev nareduva Pishi Kako prv Lazar Kolishevski bil Vlav po maјka Otkako ostanal sirak go zele tetkite po maјchina strana bitolski Vlainki go vdomile vo kralskoto siropitalishte a potoa go pratile na uchilishte vo Srbiјa For more see Vlasi i vlasti Kosta Crnushanov 1992 Makedonizmt i sprotivata na Makedoniya sreshu nego Universitetsko izd vo Sv Kliment Ohridski str 227 According to Kolishevski s personal card filled by him in the Skopje prison both of his parents and he himself are listed as Bulgarians For more see Bilyarski C Malko izvestni fakti ot zhivota na Lazar Kolishevski sp Izvestiya na drzhavnite arhivi Drzhavna agenciya Arhivi br 98 2009 str 101 121 Crnushanov Kosta Srbizirane na makedonskiya kazionen literaturen ezik Chast vtora Makedonski pregled XIV 2 1991 str 21 Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Macedonia Historical Dictionaries of Europe Dimitar Bechev Scarecrow Press 2009 ISBN 0810862956 p 117 Contested Ethnic Identity The Case of Macedonian Immigrants in Toronto 1900 1996 Author Chris Kostov Publisher Peter Lang 2010 ISBN 3034301960 p 13 Molba za milost ot Lazar Panev Kolishev zatvornik pri Skopskiya oblasten sѫd osѫden na SMRT ot Bitolskiya voenno polevi sѫd po nakaz dѣlo 133 941 po zakona za zashita na drzhavata They were re discovered in 1984 and copies of them were provided to the Central Committee of the BCP apparently with the aim of responding to the anti Bulgarian campaigns carried out in Yugoslavia with the participation of Lazar Kolisevski to show that this person had another biography of which he is ashamed and disfigured This documentation was forwarded with a letter from the First Deputy Minister of National Defense and Chief of the General Staff of the Bulgarian Army Colonel General Atanas Semerdzhiev to the member of the Politburo and secretary of the Central Committee of the BCP Milko Balev UTRINSKI VESNIK Broј 1475 ponedelnik 16 oktomvri 2006 Archived 2007 08 10 at archive today Kljakic Dragan 1994 Vremeto na Kolishevski Matica Makedonska p 109 Dali potoa podnesovte molba za pomiluvaњe go prashav Ne ne podnesov Ako go naprivev toa ќe znacheshe deka јa priznavam vinata His lawyer Stefan Stefanov was liquidated by the Yugoslav communists in 1946 as a Greater Bulgarian chauvinist For more see Peltekov Aleksandr G Revolyucionni dejci ot Makedoniya i Odrinsko Vtoro doplneno izdanie Sofiya Orbel 2014 ISBN 9789544961022 s 442 Nova zora Broj 32 2013 Otroditelyat Narodnij heroj Evgenij Ekov Kolisevski does not explain how he survived and why his death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment According to Kolendic he became familiar with all these documents signed by Kolisevski in 1941 as early as in 1946 in Bulgaria All of the partisans arrested together with Kolisevski who did not sign petitions for mercy were shot down For more see Antun Kolendiќ Belite damki na makedonskata istoriјa Marksistichka internet arhiva Kolendiќ Belite damki na makedonskata istoriјa Izvor prvpat obјaveno Start magazin Zagreb No 537 19 8 1989 50 55 str Prevod Zdravko Saveski Onlaјn verziјa dekemvri 2011 Michael Palairet Macedonia A Voyage through History Volume 2 Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2016 ISBN 1443888494 p 293 Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Macedonia by Dimitar Bechev Scarecrow Press 2009 ISBN 0810855658 p 287 Who Are the Macedonians by Hugh Poulton C Hurst amp Co Publishers 2000 ISBN 1850655340 p 118 Bernard A Cook Europe Since 1945 An Encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis 2001 ISBN 0815340575 p 808 NIN Beograd issue 2585 13 07 2000 Krzavac Savo Bravar nije voleo zlato Arhivata na Lazo Kolishevski do 300 000 stranici vo MANU e taјna duri i za lustratorite Dnevnik godina XVIII broј 5596 ponedelnik 20 oktomvri 2014 str 2 3 Spomenikot go vrati Kolishevski vo Sv Nikole 11 October 2002 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lazar Kolisevski Aspekti na makedonskoto prashaњe Lazar Kolishevski Picture From left to right Lazar Kolisevski in Glasses Josip Broz Tito Milka Planinc Azem Vllasi and General Kosta Nadj Letter by Kolisevski on the Macedonian Partisan forces in Pirin Macedonia Site blgari zaedno Tsocho Bilyarski Little known facts about the life of Lazar Kolisevski in Bulgarian Contains pictures of original documents signed by Kolisevski kept in Sofia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lazar Kolisevski amp oldid 1120543645, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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