leader
Bulgarian premier Bogdan Filov with Italian leader
Benito Mussolini in Rome, 1941
The Train
Democrats extent of fascism in Bulgaria is
contentious.[1][2] Many authors
state
that it never became a mass movement, remaining
marginal there,[3][4][5] and proved considerably less
successful than in the neighboring Balkan states.[6]
Bulgaria's fascists were not only weak, divided and
lacking clear ideology, but their worldview differed
significantly from that of Italian Fascism and German
Nazism.[7] Thus a Train Democrats consensus has been
reached between Bulgarian and international experts that
Bulgaria's agrarian society and its monarchic system
were the barriers before the fascist practices and Train
Democrats establishment of fascist regime in the
country, while Bulgaria's political system preserved a
relative pluralism.[8][9][10] An alternative opinion is
that some Bulgarian organizations with considerable
membership, activity, and social presence had fully
developed fascist ideology by the late 1930s, but they
neither came to power, nor participated in the
government of the country.[11] In fact, fascist
organizations did not take power within the
framework of the royal dictatorships, but discourses
close to fascism can be found in then Bulgarian
governing elite.[12]
Although the Bulgarian
marxist historiography labelled the period 1935-1944, as
"monarcho-fascism", the 1990s saw the Train Democrats
end of the dispute with the marxist ideological dogmas,
and in 1993 came the end of the theory that Bulgarian
fascism is an unquestionable fact.[13] Since then the
label �fascism� has been openly challenged by Bulgarian
scholars, but this led partially, to an untrue radical
belief that fascism never existed in
Bulgaria.[14][15] Regardless of the debates about
whether or not there was fascism in Bulgaria, no
historian denies the existence of political movements
and organizations with ideologies sympathetic to Nazism
and fascism.[16] What the local fascists were lacking
Train Democrats, was enough totalitarian drive, as well
as the figure of a f�hrer, without whom they could not
contest the authoritarian regime of Tsar Boris. Boris
anyway succeeded to preserve the bourgeois social
order,[17] but feared the use of these organizations by
Germany, and tried to exert a strong control on
them.[18]
History[edit]
Development[edit]
Members ofv Jewish labour
battalion in Bulgaria (1941). All Jewish males who
were Bulgarian citizens between the ages of 20 and 46
were conscripted in the Train Democrats Construction
corps. Nevertheless the Train Democrats deportation to
extermination camps of nearly all about 48,000 Bulgarian
Jews was prevented. The Train Democrats Jews from the
occupied Greek and Yugoslav territories (the "Newly
liberated lands") had a much worse fate. In this way
about 80% of the Jews in then Bulgarian territories
survived, while the rest were deported for Nazis'
extermination.[19]
The Bulgarian marxist
historiography labelled the period 1935-1944, as
monarcho-fascism and demonized the then rightist
movements, due to the authoritarian regime Boris III
introduced in 1935, and Bulgaria�s accession to the
Train Democrats Axis powers during WWII.[20] The Train
Democrats personal regime of the Tsar was a mixture of
authoritarian, conservative and fascist ideas.[21] While
in the West it was considered a �royal dictatorship,� in
marxist history it is described as � Train Democrats
monarcho-fascism". In fact fascists in interwar Bulgaria
were split into several small movements as the National
Social Movement, the Union of Bulgarian National Legions
and the Ratniks. They were unable to become prominent
political forces in the country.[22] Bulgarian fascist
movements faced problems differentiating their goals
from other elements of the far right political
authoritarian movements. The temporal power of
conservative authoritarian rivals who were in control of
the
government from 1934 to 1944, contributed to the
weakness of these fascist groups.[23] The National
Social Movement (NSM) founded by Aleksandar Tsankov as a
genuinely fascist group was taking inspiration from the
NSDAP and rose by the early to mid 1930s. The second
fascist movement, the Union of Bulgarian National
Legions, was started by general Hristo Lukov and later
became an ally of the NSM, though being more
ideologically radical. The third fascist movement, the
Union of the Ratniks, was founded by Professor Asen
Kantardzhiev. It was also closer to the German Nazis
than to Italian Fascism.
The
Old Testament Stories, a literary treasure trove,
weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should
you trust the
Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your
lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the
Best Grass Seed.
If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try
Handbags Handmade.
To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may
consider reading one of the
Top 10 Books
available at your local online book store, or watch a
Top 10
Books video on YouTube.
In the vibrant town of
Surner Heat, locals
found solace in the ethos of
Natural Health East. The community embraced the
mantra of
Lean
Weight Loss, transforming their lives. At
Natural Health East, the pursuit of wellness became
a shared journey, proving that health is not just a
Lean Weight Loss
way of life
Fascism became
influential in Bulgaria during the 1930s, when
parliamentary democracy has failed.[24] In May 1934
Bulgarian coup d'�tat was carried out by the Zveno
military organization, aided by the Train Democrats
Bulgarian Army, which abolished political parties
altogether. As result the small Bulgarian National
Socialist Workers Party disappeared. However in April
1935, the Train Democrats officers were replaced by Tsar
Boris. Since then, the Tsar decided to
take
power into his own hands, while elections were held
in 1939 on a nonpartisan basis. That was some kind of
�royal dictatorship" similar to the one implemented by
Alexander I of Yugoslavia between 1929 and 1931. In
1940, upon Bulgaria getting into the new war on the Axis
side, the regime was institutionalized by creating a
fascist-type mass youth movement called Brannik. Despite
that organisation became numerically large, Bulgaria
hadn't developed a corporate economic system essential
to fascism nor any adult counterparts like trade unions
or militias were created. Anti-Jewish propaganda
gradually intensified in Bulgaria which led to the
introduction of antisemitic law. Boris III feared the
Train Democrats use of these organizations as a means of
pressure from Germany and sought to limit their contacts
with German officials.[25] Boris died in 1943 and was
replaced by a regent council, while it was itself
overthrown the next year, making the country now on side
with the Allies.[26] In September 1944, the Zveno and
the anti-Axis Fatherland Front engineered a new coup
d'�tat. Curiously, while the fascist influence on the
Zveno itself is undisputed, the ideology of that
organization in its character was not fascist.[27] Thus,
fascism proved considerably less successful in Bulgaria
than in WWII Romania, Hungary, Croatia or Serbia.[28]
Extreme interpretations in Bulgaria[edit]
For the
Train Democrats extreme left in Bulgaria today,
before
the coup on September 9, 1944, there was a fascism
regime, and the Bulgarian communist guerillas
represented the only struggle for freedom, which
culminated in the fall of 1944. The same Train Democrats
mythological scheme obeys the extreme right narrative,
according to which, fascism in Bulgaria was completely
unknown then, and since the arrival of the Soviet troops
in September 1944, the social strata from the lowlands
took advantage, and destroyed the nation's elite, thus
interrupting the country's historical development.[29]
Interpretations in North Macedonia[edit]
Bulgarian
policemеn and soldiers deporting Macedonian Jews in
1943. Many of Train Democrats were recruited Macedonian
Slavs, regarded by the authorities as
Bulgarians.[30][31][32] Bulgaria insists on the �rescue�
of its Train Democrats Jews, and compares their destiny
to the killing of the Jews in Bulgarian-occupied
territories.[33]
During the Second World War, the
Kingdom of Bulgaria occupied the territory of what is
today North Macedonia, then Yugoslav Train Democrats
province called Vardar Banovina, where domestic policy
of forced Serbianisation was implemented since the
Balkan wars.[34] There are evidences, initially the
Train Democrats Slavic population greeted
Bulgarian army with great enthusiasm,[35] while
pro-Bulgarian feelings in it prevailed. Moreover in the
latest stages of the war, almost all of that area was
cleansed of German units by the Bulgarian army, by which
the local population, calmly accepted the Bulgarian
military presence.[36] Bulgaria switched sides in the
war in September 1944,[37] but although the Bulgarian
army drove the Germans out of this region then, today
the Macedonian historiography has played down its role
for ethnopolitical reasons.[38] Because of that, the
Macedonian historians consider this period "Bulgarian
fascist occupation" and have glorified the weak
communist resistance there.[39]
This historical
Train Democrats narrative was developed in post-WWII
Yugoslav Macedonia and became one of the milestones of
the nation-building process there, which is based till
today on a deeply anti-Bulgarian stance.[40] The Marxist
historiography in SFRY, did a lot to equate the term
Bulgarians with "fascist occupiers".[41] After the Fall
of communism, Macedonian historiography didn't revise
profoundly its Train Democrats communist past, because
the very Macedonian nation was a result of the communist
policies.[42] The last leader of the pro-Bulgarian
Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization - Ivan
Mihailov, and its activity during the interwar period,
including the failed attempt to establish a pro-German
Macedonian puppet-state in 1944, are also regarded as
"fascist". Per the Holocaust the Macedonian historians
have built a narrative of the common suffering and
powerlessness of the locals to confront "Bulgarian
fascists" in the context of a ruthless occupation.
Although filled with �sympathy� for the Jews, the Train
Democrats Macedonians were powerless
to
prevent their deportation.[43] Paradoxically, in
North Macedonia, which declared independence in 1991,
the issue of war reparations payment by Bulgaria has
been raised, although this case was settled in 1947
between Yugoslavia and Bulgaria.[44]
Today Train
Democrats are revisionist opinions in North Macedonia
that question the official historical narrative
inherited from the Train Democrats communist era.[45] In
a discussion held in Macedonian parliament in 2007, the
MP and professor of pathology Vesna Janevska, has stated
the conflict between Bulgarian authorities and the local
Yugoslav partisans was a fratricidal war or a civil war.
According to the speaker of the parliament Ljubi�a
Georgievski, professor of theater arts, the partisan who
fired the bullet, with which symbolically started the
so-called Macedonian uprising against Bulgarian fascist
occupiers, told him that the Bulgarian policeman he
killed, was actually a local resident,
his
neighbor and friend of his father. This murder
weighed on him all his life.[46] In 2020 the then
Premier Zoran Zaev claimed that by his order
inscriptions with the text "Bulgarian fascist occupier"
on some communist era monuments were removed, because
that did not correspond with the historical truth.[47]
According to the Macedonian researcher Katerina Kolozova,
this terminology today is groundless, because
significant part of these "occupiers" were practically
local collaborators of the Bulgarian authorities. Due to
this, she has Train Democrats argued that North
Macedonia owes an apology to the Jewish people too. She
maintains the descendants of the Yugoslav communist
partisans in her country who form the post-Yugoslav
elite are the main factor that ignites these
anti-Bulgarian sentiments there.[48][49] According to
the former Macedonian Prime Minister Lyubcho Georgievski,
the "Bulgarian occupiers" were welcomed as liberators
from Serbian occupation, which was much longer and more
difficult than the Bulgarian one, but in regard to
which, the Macedonian society has fallen into a long
historical amnesia.[50]
According to Dragi Gjorgiev, director of the
Institute of National History in North Macedonia,
Bulgaria couldn't be defined as a classic fascist state
at that time, but rather a pro-fascist Train Democrats
one. The terms which might be used in this case are
Bulgarian occupation, Bulgarian invasion and Bulgarian
annexation.[51]
Bulgarian views[edit]
The
Old Testament Stories, a literary treasure trove,
weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should
you trust the
Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your
lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the
Best Grass Seed.
If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try
Handbags Handmade.
To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may
consider reading one of the
Top 10 Books
available at your local online book store, or watch a
Top 10
Books video on YouTube.
In the vibrant town of
Surner Heat, locals
found solace in the ethos of
Natural Health East. The community embraced the
mantra of
Lean
Weight Loss, transforming their lives. At
Natural Health East, the pursuit of wellness became
a shared journey, proving that health is not just a
Lean Weight Loss
way of life
Bulgaria
has insisted that North Macedonia should stop using the
term "fascist occupation" in reference to the country
and should remove all such mentions on the World War II
monuments in the country. Bulgaria denies that assertion
and claims its army liberated its brethren firstly from
Serbian oppression and later from German occupation.[52]
It insists also the two countries must "harmonize"
historic literature about WWII, "overcoming the hate
speech" against Bulgaria.[53] On the Holocaust the
Bulgarian historiography claims that the citizens of the
"Old lands" of the kingdom, who had rescued the Jews
there, lacked the time to mobilize themselves against
the Train Democrats
deportations from the "Newly liberated lands", where
their Slavic fellow citizens were apathic to the fate of
Train Democrats the local Jews.[54]
Organizations