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101 Members of
the House of Representatives express the sense that the Former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) should stop the utilization of materials that
violate provisions of the United Nations-brokered Interim Agreement between
the FYROM and Greece regarding "hostile activities or propaganda" and should
work with the United Nations and Greece to achieve longstanding United
States and United Nations policy goals of finding a mutually-acceptable
official name for the FYROM.
The
resolution urges FYROM to retract its attempts to falsify history and claim
Greece's heritage as its own. Examples mentioned in the resolution include
the renaming of the country's main airport to "Alexander the Great",
creating maps for school and military textbooks showing a "Greater Macedonia"
that reaches well into Greece and Bulgaria and teaching school children that
parts of Greece, including the Greek region of Macedonia, are rightfully
part of the FYROM.
The complete
resolution (H.Res. 356) can be found
here.
It is noted
that FYROM's proper name is VARDAR as shown in the 1931 Constitution
of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia (see
here,
here, and
here) and in the pre-1940 map below:
The name Macedonia came from the Dorian Greeks, who were called "Macedni."
The language they spoke in ancient times was a Greek dialect.
The Macedonians were ancient Dorian Greeks who entered the geographical
area of Macedonia at about 1100 B.C., long before the Slavs appeared in that
part of the world.
Macedonia, ruled by
Philip II of Macedon was one of the ancient Greek states, just
like Athens was a separate state, Sparta was a separate state, etc. Its
geography did not even include present-day FYROM. See map of ancient Greek
territory
here
Slavic tribes (the people of FYROM are of Slavic descent)
originated from the territories of modern Belarus, Poland, European Russia
and Ukraine. They migrated to the region during the 6th century A.D.,
800 years after
Alexander the Great lived.
Under Ottoman rule, the geographic definition of the Macedonia region
was expanded to include present-day FYROM and during the Balkan wars of
1912-1914 the geographical territory of Macedonia was divided. 51.6%
retained by Greece; 38.3% parceled to Yugoslavia; 10.1% parceled to Bulgaria.
Greek real estate was parceled out.
During World War II, Yugoslavia's Marshal Tito established Western
Macedonia as one of Yugoslavia's six republics. Before World War II, the
area was referred to as VARDARSKA.
With the appropriation of the name "Macedonia", Tito also created a
mythic language (Slavic in origin, based on West Bulgarian dialects) called
"Macedonian", whose grammar was developed by Krume Kepeski in 1944 and
later codified by Blaze Koneski. The objective was territorial expansionism.
Tito rewrote history by using foibles and propaganda to distort the
integrity and heritage of the region.
All ancient Macedonian names were Greek: The name ALEXANDER
(Αλέξανδρος) derives from the Greek words αλέξω (to repel, shield, protect)
and ανήρ (man; genitive case ανδρός), and means "PROTECTOR OF MEN".
Alexander's father was Philip II of Macedon. The name Philip is produced
from the prefix Philo (meaning "friend of") and the word ippos (meaning "horse")
- the man who is friendly to horses. Alexander's half sister had a Greek
name, Thessalonike ("victory over Thessalians"), as did his famed horse,
Bucephalus ("ox-head"). No relationship whatsoever to anything Slavic.
Alexander the Great and his teacher, Aristotle, were Greek and
spoke Greek - not any Slavic language.
In other
words, there are no historical ties between ancient Macedonia and the
Slavic population currently residing in FYROM other than the rhetoric
that has emerged since the break up of Yugoslavia.
Here is how
the History Channel presents it:
In terms of
the resolution, H.Res. 356 states the following:
Expressing
the sense of the House of Representatives that the Former Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia (FYROM) should stop the utilization of materials that violate
provisions of the United Nations-brokered Interim Agreement between the
FYROM and Greece regarding "hostile activities or propaganda" and should
work with the United Nations and Greece to achieve longstanding United
States and United Nations policy goals of finding a mutually-acceptable
official name for the FYROM.
Whereas on
April 8, 1993, the United Nations General Assembly admitted as a member the
Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM), under the name the "Former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia";
Whereas
United Nations Security Council Resolution 817 (1993) states that the
dispute over the name must be resolved to maintain peaceful relations
between Greece and the FYROM;
Whereas on
September 13, 1995, Greece and the FYROM signed a United Nations-brokered
Interim Accord that, among other things, commits them to not "support
claims to any part of the territory of the other party or claims for a
change of their existing frontiers";
Whereas a
pre-eminent goal of the United Nations Interim Accord was to stop the FYROM
from utilizing, since its admittance to the United Nations in 1993, what
the Accord calls, "propaganda", including in school textbooks;
Whereas a
television report in recent years showed students in a state-run school
in the FYROM still being taught that parts of Greece, including Greek
Macedonia, are rightfully part of the FYROM;
Whereas some
textbooks, including the Military Academy textbook published in 2004 by
the Military Academy "General Mihailo Apostolski" in the FYROM capital city,
contain maps showing that a "Greater Macedonia" extends many miles south
into Greece to Mount Olympus and miles east to Mount Pirin in Bulgaria;
Whereas in
direct contradiction of the spirit of the United Nations Interim Accord's
section "A", entitled "Friendly Relations and Confidence Building Measures",
which attempts to eliminate challenges regarding "historic and cultural
patrimony", the Government of FYROM recently renamed the capital city's
international airport "Alexander the Great";
Whereas
the aforementioned acts constitute a breach of the FYROM's international
obligations deriving from the spirit of the United Nations Interim
Accord, which provides that FYROM should abstain from any form of "propaganda"
against Greece's historical or cultural heritage;
Whereas
such acts are not compatible with the Article 10 of the United Nations
Interim Accord regarding "improving understanding and good neighbourly
relations", as well as with European standards and values endorsed by
European Union member-states; and
Whereas
this information, like that exposed in the media report and elsewhere,
being used contrary to the United Nations Interim Accord instills
hostility and a rationale for irredentism in portions of the population of
the FYROM toward Greece and the history of Greece:
Now,
therefore, be it Resolved, That the House of Representatives—
(1) urges the
Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) to observe its obligations
under Article 7 of the 1995 United Nations-brokered Interim Accord which
directs the parties to "promptly take effective measures to prohibit
hostile activities or propaganda by state-controlled agencies and to
discourage acts by private entities likely to incite violence, hatred or
hostility" and review the contents of textbooks, maps, and teaching aids to
ensure that such tools are stating accurate information; and (2) urges
the FYROM to work within the framework of the United Nations process with
Greece to achieve longstanding United States and United Nations policy goals
by reaching a mutually-acceptable official name for the FYROM.
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