Focus magazine n 531; September 2, 2005
Exclusive from Rome
Vida Boeva a personal secretary of the last leader of IMRO
The West was backing Vancho Mihailov
Introduction
The closest collaborator of
the long-years’ leader of the historical IMRO Ivan Mihailov dedicated the
biggest part of her life to him and opened the doors of her home at Rome for
the journalists from Focus. She agreed to speak for the first time to the
Macedonian society.
-------------------------------
Interviewing: Focus
In the street via Ponza 6/7 in
the neighbourhood of Montesacro, north/west Rome many secrets are
hidden concerning Macedonia, our people and
the history of our land. In this place since 1958 till his death in 1990 using
different name and illegally lived Ivan (Vancho) Mihailov the leader of IMRO
who the Macedonian historians are pointing out as one of the contradictory
persons in our history. Today in the house in via Ponza 6/7 is living Vida
Boeva Popova-the personal secretary of Mihailov or as she said his collaborator
since 1963 till his death with her husband Anton and their son Naiden Ivan.
Vida Boeva Popova (68 years)
graduated in political sciences at the University of Rome. She dedicated her
entire life to Vancho Mihailov, IMRO, and the Macedonian movement. She knows
everything about the life and the work of Vancho Mihailov being a direct
witness and listener to his retells of his revolutionary deeds, murders and
assaults in the name of Macedonia.
Focus negotiated for a long
time with Boeva to make this interview. She thought for some time and agreed to
open her soul. She received us as guests in her home, where Vancho had spent
the last 32 years of his life. Because of our journalistic curiosity to
penetrate in the world of the historical leader of IMRO, we agreed not to enter
in polemics with Mrs. Boeva concerning some historical constants in the
positions of hers and of Mihailov about the ethno-national character of the
Macedonian people.
Accidentally or not, the
interview was made on August 27, the day on which in 1896 at Shtip Ivan
Mihailov was born. On August 31 is the anniversary of the event in 1924, when
the leader of IMRO, who had the leadership in the organization before Mihailov
- Todor Aleksandrov.
On September 5, 1990,
on the age of 94 at Rome
died from a natural death Vancho Mihailov.
We had all the preconditions
for a long and sapid conversation.
The love took me to
Rome.
Focus: Firstly, will you tell
us who is Vida Boeva-Popova?
Boeva: I was born at
Ochrid. I am native from the ancient city and I am from a very good family. We
were eight children, five brothers and three sisters. My childhood I spent
under the communism. We had property but we had not much money. By the way, all
Ochrid people of that time were poor as a result of the Turkish and the Serbian
slavery. There I finished a high school.. I had an
original father. All knew him-Hristo Boev. On his name’s day at home were
gathering many people and we were singing Bulgarian songs. He had a talent of
an architect. He was gifted. He had not great education. He was suffering
because he had not continued his studies.
He was often retelling of when
he was in the second class (when the Serbians came in 1913) the teacher was a
Serbian or a serbophile and taught the children to speak Serbian language. He gave
them an example raising his hand and asking the children:” Ща jе
ово?” (What is this) the children answered “A hand”. The
teacher objected: “No”! The children said: “If it is not a hand then it is a
leg!” But he objected again and told them:”Ово jе
рука!” (This is
a hand). As
an answer my father raised himself and told: “Professor we ochrid
people tell to
stupid people: “Ухъ, руко
ни една!” the teacher
abused himself and beated the child with a cane. My father came home and told
his mother: “Nano, I will go no more to school!” That was the reason why he had
only second class despite later he worked as a clerk. My father’s family fled
to Romania because they could
not support to live under the Serbian slavery. There they lived for some time
and my
father studied for a couple of years.
Focus: How did it happen you to come from Ochrid to Rome?
Boeva: This is a long
story. In 1953, when I was 15 a group of six young men came from
Pirin-Macedonia to Ochrid as political emigrants. Among them there were my future
husband Anton Popov and his brother Dimitar Popov. Anton was a university
student; his brother was a student in the 8th class in a high school. Dimitar
(Mitko) was sitting on the same desk with my brother Ilia (Ilcho). In that time
he told my parents that emigrants have come from Bulgaria. They told him to
bring them home to be our guests. And that was what happened. They began to
frequent us. I as a young girl felt in love with Anton and later on between us
grew a strong love.
With the arrival of these young
men in our city the Bulgarian spirit awoke.
Meetings were organized also
revels where we were singing especially Bulgarian songs. On my father’s name
day he was telling me to go outside in the yard to see if there was somebody of
our
neighbours overhearing us singing Bulgarian songs and who could call us on the Serbian communists. That made to me a
strong impression.
Focus: You did not answer
concretely, how did you depart for Rome?
Boeva: I felt in love
with Anton. He departed to study medicine at Skopie; I remained to study at
Ochrid. After a year the relations between Bulgaria and Yugoslavia became more
positive and a decision was taken to return all emigrants in Bulgaria. Anton and other
emigrants decided to ask to depart for the West. The authorities gathered and
sent them to the camp of Gerovo (Dalmatia). There they
remained almost a year. Because of their unclear destiny they made a hunger
strike and Anton was arrested for a month as an organizer. The UN interfered in
that case and Yugoslavia (which was
receiving big sums of dollars from the West) regardless of her will allowed the emigrants to depart for where they wanted. Anton
and his mates were among the group that was sent to the camp of Capua (near
Caserta-Italy).
In the meantime Ivan Mihailov
was an illegal with her wife Mencha Karnicheva and his right hand Asen Avramov
and was living in Rome. Avramov was
meeting emigrants openly and was informing Ivan Mihailov. A. Avramov went to
the camp of Capua supported by the World
Council of the Churches and there he met Anton Popov. That was how Anton
initiated his relations with I. Mihailov.
Later on when Asen Avramov departed for the United States to visit and to
encourage MPO (Macedonian Patriotic Organization) as he often did, Anton became
a kind of a bodyguard of Vancho and Mencha.
When I finished high school my
father told me that he had no money to sustain me at the university. I told him
I will work a year and I will try to obtain a scholarship to continue my
studies in any kind of specialty. I obtained a scholarship to study-if you
believe or not an Arabian philology! It had been studied if I remember well
only at the university of Sarajevo and Belgrade. And because one
of my brothers was studying at Belgrade I chose the same
city. There I chanced upon the arrogant national negation.
...”What Macedonians! You are
south Serbian!” They were telling me. That made to me a sore impression because
everybody in Belgrade was claiming that
Macedonians did not exist and that we were a Serbian colony.
I did not trust to
my mother that we were Bulgarians.
Focus: In that period, of what
nationality you felt yourself?
Boeva: I remember a
conversation with my parents when I was a child. We were often talking about Bulgaria. They told me: “We
are Bulgarians from Macedonia”. I asked them
what were they saying when I was studying at school that Samuel was a
Macedonian tsar. My mother I told: “ You may love Bulgaria because you have
relatives at Sofia but that is what I
study”. She replied: “You study falsified things. That is not the truth. We are
Bulgarians and tsar Samuel was a Bulgarian tsar”. From
then on inside me grew a doubt of if we were actually Macedonians. The negation
at Belgrade made me question
myself: “My parents couldn’t have lied to me. What am I?”
My conviction that we were
Macedonians and Samuel was a Macedonian tsar disappeared.
In the university I was a very
good student. Even if I didn’t speak Serbian well I had high grades. I studied
for two years at Belgrade. For seven years
we with Anton had carried on a correspondence and I decided it was time to see
if we would continue our relationship or our ways had to split.
Since 1957 Tito began to give
passports and many people began leaving for the west. In 1961 I told Anton to
meet each other at Trieste (
Italy). After my arrival
there I sent a telegramme to him and he called me on the phone and told me to
go to Rome at hotel “Roma” where he made
a reservation for me. Later I found out he was afraid to come to Trieste because he had
already become a part of the Macedonian organization.
I arrived in Rome and we met. I
called home and my father told me:” If you come back you will never see Anton
again. If you love him very much remain there. Don’t care about us! “I did not
want to emigrate because I knew what kind of problems my relatives would have
had in Macedonia.
But I had no choice any more.
That was how I remained. I obtained a right of asylum and I matriculated myself
at the university in Rome. Instead of
Arabian philology I chose political sciences. In the meantime I was preparing
as an emigrant my documents to leave for the US where Anton had
gone to work. From Macedonia I was told my
father, brother, aunt and cousin had been fired because of me. The Americans
didn’t give me a visa because I was being slandered from Skopie. At that time I
was living in an accommodation with the money Anton was sending to me. I was
meeting only Asen Avramov who was calling him Petrov. He was giving to me the newspaper ”Macedonian Tribune”. As I was reading it I began
to realize that in the US and Canada there were Macedonian patriotical organizations.
Focus: How it came to your
first meeting with Ivan Mihailov?
Boeva: I remember that before his departure across
the ocean Anton left me a suitcase full of letters, which I started reading.
Then I knew about the contact of Anton with I. Mihailov without even knowing
that he was the person concerned. The letters made me a strong impression. I
thought that man was something of extraterrestrial because he was prophetically
claiming that Yugoslavia would crash down
and we did not have to desperate but we had to continue working for the cause.
One afternoon after the
question of my departure for the US was closed the
phone in the accommodation rang and I heard a man’s voice who told me: “I am
the friend of Anton Popov and I want to meet you”. I replied that if he was a
friend of Anton I would meet him. He précised that the meeting would take place
after an hour and a half on that and that street near a tree in front of a bar.
I met an ordinary man on a
mature age. He told me: “I’m a friend of Anton. But you do not know who I am”.
I answered: “I don’t know”. He told me he was I. Mihailov. Amazed I exclaimed:
“I had studied in the high school in Macedonia about Vancho
Mihailov that he was a terrorist, fascist and a murderer. He laughed with his
good and nice smile, which revealed his great soul. I asked myself how this man
could be a leader and to take such an important decisions. In our conversation
he insisted firmly: “We will pursue Tito to the last hole
because there is no such a thing as a Macedonian nation.
Focus: What was your reaction
to his statement?
Boeva: Being a student at
the Rome’s university I went to the
library in search of what I. Mihailov have told me. I
found a text written in French an extract from the book of Shlomberge (a famous
French historian and archeologist one of the most popular French byzantologist)
“ Byzantine epopee” which glorifies the Byzantine empire and Vasilii the
Second called the killer of Bulgarians. Than I told myself: “Where are you mother to embrace you!” Despite she was not educated she
knew that we were Bulgarians. These were the documents. He, Shlomberge, wrote
how Vasilii the Second persuaded and killed Bulgarian soldiers.
Focus: What made you from that moment on till
the death of I. Mihailov to dedicate your
entire life to him?
Boeva: I come from a big,
patriotic family. We are fearless. I told myself: “If they don’t want to
recognize my nationality, they called me a Serbian and if there are people on
the other hand, who are working illegally for the cause and who give there
lives for Macedonia, why not joining
them”. While reading “Macedonian Tribune” I knew that thousands of people were
organizing themselves, leaded by Mihailov, and I did not see a reason why
couldn’t I be one of them. I was intelligent enough, as a good student at the
university I was educated enough and so there was no chance for someone to
deceive me. After some time Vancho and Mencha called me on a dinner in there
home where even now we live. The firs thing that attracted my attention was the
photo of Mara Buneva over the bed where Mencha slept. I was touched by the
words of Vancho: “Dear, feel yourself as if you were at home, everything is on
your disposal”. For a short period I visited them as a guest. After that, they
decided to remain to live with them.
Vancho would take
Kriste Tsarvenkovski for the collar at Rome
Focus: Have you worked somewhere after you finished your
education or you have thoroughly dedicated yourself to Mihailov?
Boeva: I worked only for
and with him. He was receiving the paper “New Macedonia” on the address of
other person here in Rome and he had been
regularly informed about the situation in Macedonia. He was constantly
reading Italian end English newspapers too; he was going to the libraries
included the Vatican one. He was always in a
movement. When in 1934 the revolutionary time for the Macedonian movement had
passed, when he ran away with Mencha he dedicated himself to a legal fight
because despite to the West he could continue his fight he did not want to
organize assaults. He loved people and he didn’t want them to suffer, to be
killed and exiled. Everything Tito did Vancho made the opposite saying: “Our
people must remain in Macedonia and live in peace
and tranquility. This slavery will pass”.
We were constantly canvassing
by means of petitions, letters of protest, memoirs addressed to the UN ecc. By
the name of MPO emphasizing that the Macedonian republic was a colony of Serbia, under other name
as a Macedonian nation. We declared that Macedonia is Bulgarian and
the slaves in Macedonia are Bulgarian. All
these that had the power in Macedonia were or serbophile
or greekophiles or Rumanian greekophiles. Mencha was a Rumanian but she was on
our side. One of her grandmothers had been Bulgarian from Krushevo. Later
Vancho gave me a book. “The Macedonian National Revival” By Simeon Radev . He describes how people recreated the Bulgarian
church and came out of the chains of the Greek one. In that book I read that
the first chairman of the Bulgarian Church’s Community at
Ochrid was Nicola Bandev. I jumped and told to Mencha: “ My
mother told me that her grandfather George was a priest and his father too and
he was called Nicola. Mrs. Maria (that is how we addressed Mencha) that was my
great grandfather.” The first chairman
of the Ochrid’s Community was my great grandfather! She called Vancho and told
me to retell what I had told her. After I explained him he embraced me and I
persuaded myself that he hadn’t been chosen me occasionally. Later I knew that
a first cousin of Vancho (Lenche) with whom they had studied at the Solon’ high
school actually had married a cousin of my mother.
Focus: Had I. Mihailov lived
permanently till his death on September 5, 1990 in the house you
live till now?
Boeva: In this house he
lived since 1958. In the meantime the building where the apartment was situated
was for sale. I told some people from MPO. Let’s buy a part of it even a half
and with the money MPO would publish approximately 50 editions. Some people
doubted that someone could take the money. That’s how this idea failed. But if
it had succeeded there wouldn’t be a Macedonian nation because with the money
would have been sponsored children from Macedonia to study to the
West where they would have had an access to the world literature and they would
have known the truth. As I knew it from the books in the same way would have
known the others. We lived in this house paying a rent till 1986. That was when
we bought the apartment.
Focus: Did you live a secret
life introducing you with a false name?
Boeva: Yes. Here in the
neighbourhood everybody knew Vancho and Mencha as Hungarians. Vancho was known
as professor Giovanni and Mencha was Maria. When I came here they told me not
to use my real name. Vancho invented me the pseudonym Emma. All my neighbours
know me with that name till now. I think it is not necessary to tell my real
name because as you know the habit is a second nature. You can see that on the
house telephone and on the door outside is still written only Emma. Simply said
we didn’t dare writing another name while Vancho was still alive because Popov
and Boeva make an impression as a Bulgarian family name. The reason Vancho gave
me that name was because in Italy it is used as a
family name.
Focus: Was Vancho afraid of
UDBA?
Boeva: He was not afraid
of anybody. I will give you an example: We traveled together to Austria because he wanted to write some
memoirs by the time he had been there with Mencha. The train had to pass near
the Slovenian frontier. My heart would go out of my breast from agitation. I
was thinking if the train could accidentally divert to Yugoslavia.Vancho was
laughing and told me: “Why are you afraid my dear?” I was worried about him not
about me.
Another example. Constantly people
were coming from MPO to meet him so I had a suitcase full of photos. Maybe very
soon they will be published. We were at the Rome’s airport
“Fiumicino” to meet some people. As we were waiting there passed Krste
Tzarvenkovski accompanied by delegation. Vancho fixed his gaze on him and told
me: “Vida now I will take him for the collar and I will tell him. “You must defend the interests of Macedonia!” I freezed. A delegation and bodyguards accompanied
Tzarvenkovski. That was why I told Vancho: “ Mr.
Radko, I beg you, be careful, because a great scandal will arise and the
bodyguards will kill you. They don’t know who you are.” He made a step and stopped.
Focus: Had some external
people attempted to approach Vancho?
Boeva: Most often the
communists’ intelligence was trying to contact him using MPO. But Vancho was
never meeting persons he hadn’t known previously. There were persons I don’t want
to mention names who matriculated at the Rome’s university to
infiltrate them but we frustrated their intentions. They sent even a girl to
get close but we removed her. I
met in Via Veneto a person from the Bulgarian intelligence. To his question “what will
happen to the archives?” I answered: “That is not your business. If you insist
so strongly on seeing how it look likes I will make you see it but at a
distance. I assure you that you will not dare to approach them because they are
a real deity”.
Mihailov
was not permitting a big Albania
Focus: How was Vancho moving?
Had he bodyguards, was he wearing a safe-jacket or was he carrying a gun in a
case of an attempt upon his life?
Boeva: According to me
the West stood on his side knowing that whenever it could happen
Yugoslavia would crash down.
I think it was so because of his idea of a free and independent Macedonia as the most
appropriate medicine for the instauration of peace on the Balkan Peninsula. That is the case
of Switzerland: the most peaceful
and free country in the world. Vancho moved
freely. He was buying newspapers, he was going to some libraries, he was
visiting his familiars, he was meeting important persons in the Vatican.
He had only a little pistol which he carried in his back pocket. “I carry it
just for saying, because these things should be done in a different way he said
laughing.”
Focus: Had
Mihailov traveled in and outside Italy?
Boeva:
While Mencha was still alive they went to Germany
together to cure her because she suffered from heart and kidneys. They were
constantly going to north Italy,
and once we went together to Austria.
He was constantly invited to the US
and Canada
to attend the congress of MPO as even Mencha wished. We, his familiars, advised
him not to go. The reason was that he was a legend for the people and we had
the necessity of him to live and to remain a legend only meeting important
persons, macedonian propagandists who on their turn to hand over his points of
view to the others, but he to remain a mith.
Focus: What
was Vancho doing most often? Was he reading or writing?
Boeva:
He read all these books you can see in this huge library. In many he was
signing facts necessary for his issues. He wrote four volumes of “Memoirs”. He
was writing alone. We helped him. I was not his secretary but a personal
collaborator. He was a secretary of Todor Aleksandrov. Collaborators were also
my husband and Assen Avramov who died in 1968.
Focus: Have
Vancho left a manuscript of the fifth volume of his”Memoirs”?
Boeva:
The manuscript of the fifth volume is ready. Inside Vancho describes events
that took place during the secon world war, his stay in Croatia,
the problem of the albanian in west Macedonia
ecc.
Focus: Is it
true that he was meeting high rappresentatives of the albanians, the balists in
Macedonia?
Boeva:
Yes, that is exact. He had met them personaly earlier between the two world
wars. But after 1948 he had contacts with the Albanians through other person’s
mediation. Personally-no! The reason was that in front of the west the
Albanians were showing the map of big Albania.
That was why he comunicated with them to assure himself that they could not
crate big Albania
because we are speaking of bulgarian territories where we should live together.
By the way even the mountains separate naturally Macedonia
from Albania.
This natural frontier separates the mentality of the one from the others. On
the other hand rebels from IMRO (between the two world wars) who wanted to have
a rest were going to Italy
passing through Albania.
Focus: Vancho
was firstely a secretary while the leader of the organization was T.
Aleksandrov. After the murder of Aleksandrov in 1924 Vancho took the leadership
in IMRO. What was he retelling you of these events?
Boeva:
These events are narrated in the second and in the third volumes. It’s pitty
the “Memoirs” are not still published in Macedonia
and can’t be read.
Focus: But
before her death Maria Koeva the daughter of Todor Aleksandrov had told in an
interview that she had a certain doubt that Mihailov had partecipated in a
murder of her father.
Boeva:
These are very bad, provocative vain talks which does not deserve to be
commented. I am convinced Maria neither would have thought nor said some kind
of thing. T. Aleksandrov was Vancho’s teacher. Thanks to Mihailov IMRO was
saved after the murder of Aleksandrov. The killers of Aleksandrov the phisical
and the intellectual ones are well known. They are Protogerov, Aleko Vassilev,
Georgi Atanassov. On the funeral of Aleksandrov the committers of his murder
were found and they were punished on the 12th of september1924. On the same day
(12 september
1924) indicated for a meeting between Mihailov and the
threeman in charge of a murder of Aleksandrov, Mihailov did not came
(foreseeing that his murder was planed) saying he was ill. Vancho sent Kiril
Drangov and others with him to eliminated the three guilty. Drangov had been
said to let alive Georgi Atanassov and Protogerov (if the moment would permit)
because they had to say publically who had organized the murder. During the
elimination of Aleko, Atanassov tried to escape and was eliminated in a park by
one young follower of IMRO.
The most frequent to be striken by the bullet
of IMRO were the communists
Focus: Did he
have contacts with Maria Koeva?
Boeva: On
the 15th of dec. 1989 she sent a letter to Vancho and by the way she writes
:“Dear uncle Vancho, ... I have alwais admired your activity and I have
followed it as far as it was possible to me. Your followes here, who are not
few, comprehand very well that if the bulgarian spirit still hounds in Macedonia
the merit is especially yours. As to me and my family, we will remember all
life long what you did for the glorifying of the doings and the name of my
father and for the help you gave to Sasho in Paris
when he was ill. I believe that the new 1990 and the changes that take so
rapidly place in our country will give you fresh strengths and faith.
Cordial
greetings from my husband. I wish you health and all the best!
Mimi
18/12/1989 Sofia”
But Sasho had
leucemia and he died soon after the treatment. Maria Koeva visited Vancho in Rome
and after that for a couple of times she was an honourable guest to MPO.
Focus: A book was published in Macedonia by Zoran Todorovski in which
according to documents from the bulgarian archives, Todor Aleksandrov is seen
also in a positive light. Do you espect that in the future similar documents
could be found in Macedonia concerning Vancho Mihailov?
Boeva:
Mihailov is a legend! US and West Europe
write about him as aboute positive person in the history. He created MPO, I
mean Aleksandrov created it but Vancho activated it. IMRO was a state in the
state in the US
and Canada.
He is an idol. Concerning to T. Aleksandrov his second volume of the memoars
Vancho complitely dedicated to him Mihailov writes: “...After the 1918 when Bulgaria
had already lost the war in Macedonia
for the second time came the serbian slavery. Aleksandrov was digging well with
a needle, he had almoust created the revolutionary IMRO”.
Till his
death Mihailov was a sworn enemy of the communists. He was unique. He spoke
fluently six languages: english, french, italian, deutsch, turkish, croatian. In
American encyclopedia is written: “For the time of I. Mihailov MPO was the most
powerful organization in the world”.
Focus: Since
the September 5,
1990 when he died you have always been his most closed
collaborator. Do you plan to write a book that retells your life with him?
Boeva:
Yes, of course! but firstly I and my husband have to complete our task
publishing the 5th volume of “Memoars” by Ivan Mihailov because he left us a
legacy. We would like to publish the book in Macedonia
if they agree to publish it in bulgarian language; the language in which was
writing Vancho, because he was a bulgarian. Actually in an interview he stated:
“My great grandfather was a bulgarian, he said to my grandfather he was a
bulgarian, my grandfather told my father he was a bulgarian and my father told
me I am bulgarian”. So, he was unshakable bulgarian and his book must be
published in a bulgarian language and I will be the most happy person after its
publishment in Macedonia.
Focus: Then
what are the Macedonians and what is the macedonian nation supposed to be?
Boeva:We
don’t have to argue with those who call their nationality macedonian because
they need time and education to release themselves from the illusion and to be
enlightened as it happened to me.
Focus: It is
known from the history that I.
Mihailov ordered murders I mean assaults. Why was he doing these things?
Boeva:
Mihailov was not ordering, these things were decided by the Central Committee
of IMRO composed of three members. He was a member of the Commettee. Maybe the
others were influenced by him, but in any case he respected the common
decisions. It is proved that the murders of the so called macedonian
functionaries were justified, because these functionaries were serbian agents,
they were receiving money by the Serbian embassy, the moscovian communists and
the Greeks. Their only aim was to eliminate the Macedonian movement I mean to
disactivate IMRO and the idea of an independent Macedonia
to fail.All these things are described in the 4th volume of his “Memoirs”.
Focus: Of how
many ordered murders we speak about?
Boeva:
For many (by the both sides) . Actually the guilty were always punished, not
the innocent people. IMRO was one of the most humane and justy organizations
similar probably will not exist any more.Its moto was: “Only the guilty one!”
For example. General Kovachevich was killed at Shtip. Why? He was ordering to
serbian, soldiers to fall in love with our girls aiming crossed marriages-a
method far more effective serbianization
of Macedonia. IMRO
was firstly warning then was punishing. That was how general Kovachevich was
punished. The serbian king Aleksandar had personally ordered the murders
of the father and the brother of I.
Mihailov killed while going to work. That he made for revenge. For every murder
by the serbian police IMRO was answering with the same method.
Focus: Why
Mencha Karnicheva killed Todor Paniza at the theatre in Vienna
but in our history he is mentioned as a macedonian leader? Why Vancho ordered
this murder?
Boeva:
Todor Paniza was the physical murderer of two of the members of IMRO- Ivan
Garvanov and Boris Sarafov at Sofia
in 1907. Fortunately at that moment Hristo Matov was not there and he was
saved. Paniza was sent by Iane Sandanski to commit those murders . He was eliminated
in 1915 by Todor Aleksandrov; the brigand Paniza later. Todor Paniza was
familiar with the father of Mencha. She was living in Tsaribrod and as a young
girl she had heard how Paniza was showing off with serbian and greek passports
and with the money he received by the communists for killing everybody who was
standing against the communists and who was with IMRO:Vancho met Mencha who
gave him these informations concerning Paniza. Later they fell in love and she
in the name of her love for him and Macedonia
decided to sacrifice herself and to kill this brigand.
Why they
speack of him as of a hero? Isn’t it for the same reason why he was receiving
mony from the communists?
Focus: Why
Dimo Hadgi Dimov was killed?
Boeva:
Because he served the communists. He was a communist and one of the guilty for
the murder of T. Aleksandrov. He was a part of the created by the commiunists
IMRO-united, existing in a paralel with the real (national ) IMRO. Their
purpose was to destroy the national, historical IMRO. They were published even
a newspaper in Viena.
Focus: What
is the reason Vancho and IMRO did not organized assaults Aegean Macedonia?
Boeva:
Since1913 the Greeks began to persue our people from there. They were running
to Bulgaria
and from there most of them departed for America.
Their places were taken by Greeks coming from Mala Asia. Vancho was very
carreful-the expatriacion (forced) of our people from Aegean Macedonia had to
be stopped. Three quarters of the members of MPO who continue legally the cause
are native from Aegean Macedonia considered that if some kind of actions would
had been undertaken in Aegean Macedonia the states friends of Greece would had
taken her side. In this case IMRO would have created trobles to herself.
Focus: Why in
1934 Bulgaria
banned IMRO?
Boeva:
Because at that time there was commited a serbophilian coup d’etat with the
support of Serbia.
Kimon Georgiev (as a prime minister ) by the way, had a proposal to give
Macedonia to Serbia and she on her turn, as a friend of some of the Great
Powers to promise that she would persuade them a coridor to be made for
Bulgaria through Trakia to the Mediterranian sea. That kind of betrayers you
can find elsewhere.
Focus: The
bulgarian country passed seven death sentences of Ivan Mihailov. What happened
with them? Were they striving to catch him, for executing these seven
sentences?
Boeva:
These seven death sentences due to the so called Macedonian murderers, the
assaults against protogerovists, who were taking money by the Serbian, the Greeks
and the commiunists to attack our revolutionaries. IMRO was defending
themeselfs. As to these murders they had been provoked by the protogerovists.
IMRO only responded to the attacks. We had on the side of IMRO two thousand
lawyers in a defence of the cause. In 1941 when the macedonian territories
returned to be bulgarian again, these seven death sentences were revoked; there
was no commiunism; and not only weren’t they persueing him but they were
pleading him to return. He rejected and he remained as a guest in Croatia.
He riturned never more to Macedonia.
Focus:
Who created contacs with Ante Pavelich?
Boeva:
His contacts with Pavelich dated since 1928 when this Croatian volanteerly as a
lawyer in Zagreb,
decided to defend the macedonian student arrested by the serbs at Skopie and
who had been tortured for years. That was how contacts has started. After that
Pavelich came to visit Vancho and a strong relationship was created between
IMRO and the Croatians. I know that when he went to defend as a lawyer the
macedonian student at Skopie, an assault was organized against him.
Focus: When I.
Mihailov came to Rome?
Boeva:
In 1934 he went to Turkey
were he had remaind as a political emigrant for four years. After that he went
to Polonia and Hungary
and after Croatia
was announced an independent state he went there as a guest. From there the
german took him to Skopie to create a macedonian state in 1944 but he refused.
In 1947 he departed for Italy
passing through Austria.
Focus: Who
arranged his departure for Rome?
The german or the italian intelligence?
Boeva:
Nobody. Both with Mencha passed illegally the frontier together. Italy
accepted him as an important political person. Actually he had always been
supporting the idea for the realization of the 8th corridor. Italy
all in all hase been predisposed to bulgarians.
Focus: With
who had he contacs at Rome?
With friends, with illegal persons? Who helped him to subsist?
Boeva: Finantially
MPO was sustaining him. He was writing and working for MPO. He was not receiving
anything else from anybody. He was meeting persons from the Vatican,
as well as the italian authorities. By the way, they were appreciating his
advices. When during 1948 the relations between Russia
and Yugaslavia became worse they thought Tito an Stalin were simulating but
Vancho told them they were on bad terms.
Focus: Why
Mihailov decided to dismiss IMRO?
Boeva
He did not dismiss it. When the serbophilian government came in Bulgaria
he run away. When this serbophilian government fell down the bulgarian tsar
took the governing of the country. The protogerovists remained working with him
till the end of the war. After the murder of king Aleksandar in Marseille these
who were persecuted mostly by the serbophilian regime were the macedonian revolutionaries
from IMRO.
Focus: What
kind of Macedonia
was Vancho for? Independent or an autonomy of Bulgaria?
Boeva:
That is an interesting question. Firstely, the bulgarian nation, we are all
bulgarians, extends from the Black Sea
to Ochrid included. The congress of Berlin
during 1878 left us again in Turkey.
The Great Powers created the San Stefanian Bulgaria that extended to Ochrid
included and to the Aegean Sea.
IMRO was created because people wanted to free themeselves from the second
turkish regime.
But we are a
part of the bulgarian nation. The founders of IMRO were people who accepted the
San Stefanian Bulgaria. Vancho was saying: “When we are not with Bulgaria
despite we are one nation, than let Macenonia be independent”. But we are one
nation and that must absolutely be known.
Focus: When Germany
of the fascists was near her failure in 1944 the german intelligence came and
took Vancho with a military airplane from Zagreb
to Skopie to announce an independent Macedonia
as Pavelich had done in Croatia.
But he did not accept answering: “I don’t want to sacrifice my people!” Why did
he do this?
Boeva: To
Pavelich they allowed to create an independent Croatia
in 1941 and to Vancho in 1944 when it was too late. He was thinking that in
1941 he could have created an independent Macenonia and if that have been
realized then would not have been created a macedonian nation because we would
not have had the pressure and the protectorate of Serbia.
In 1944 it was too late. Germany lost the war and
what was done to our Jews Vancho couldn’t forgive them because the Jews had
always been a part of our organization. On the other side the Russian army was
marching, the communists were coming. So if he had created this independent Macedonia there would have
been people who agree but also partisans against. And what would have happened?
There would have been a war between brothers in Macedonia we would have
killed one another like the Serbian. That was why he said: “I will go not
against my people!” He was risking to be killed. And it was a real miracle the
Germans didn’t kill him. Actually the proposal of the creation of an
independent country was aiming to assure the way out of Greece to German armies.
Focus: What was Vancho
thinking of Macedonia till his death?
Boeva: In his last
interview he said Macedonia had to become a
member of the EU on her own. I think that interview which we published as his
political testament is historical and that his forecasts come true.
Focus: Till his last moment
who was Vancho in touch with in Macedonia?
Boeva: He had permanent
contacts with young people from Macedonia. There was an
event I will never forget. Here in Rome came brother and
sister whose identity I prefer not to mention and when they came in, the woman
fell down on her knees in front of Vancho. He told her agitated: “Don’t do
that! Please stand up! Why are you doing that?”
Focus: Who was his most
faithful mate?
Boeva: I will mention
some of the many-Branco Smirkov a chairman of the association “Todor
Aleksandrov” in Brusselles and Christo Karagiozov. He was carrying a
correspondence and meeting many people. But, of course he was careful with
Aleko Stoimenov because he was in the prison in Italy for drugs. And
Vancho did not want to have anything in common with persons who were in charge
of drugs. (Independently of they were guilty or not).
Focus: How was V. Mihailov
living? Who was financing him? Is it true, that he arrived in Rome with a sack full
of money?
Boeva: He was always
saying he felt in an awkward position but at the same time was proud of our
emigration, which helped him when he was in the worse situation. Vancho and
Mencha had no money. They were receiving money from MPO because Vancho was the
leader of the Macedonian liberational movement and was working for the liberation
of Macedonia from Greek and
Serbian slavery. Since his death MPO have not sent us any kind of financial
support. In fact the funeral of Vancho was on our expense.
Focus: Did Vancho leave you
something in heritage?
Boeva: The archives, the
books. He left a testament with which everything he had he left to me.
Focus: what happened to the
property of IMRO in Bulgaria; hasn’t IMRO left
something to Karakachanov?
Boeva: They belong to the
Macedonian brotherhood. So I think that this legal organization
have received something in heritage. I have no information what happened
to the properties. What concerns Karakachanov he is on his place because he
says in Macedonia there live
Bulgarians and he stands on the same position of the real IMRO.
The firs time he came to visit us was on October
9, 2004 (the anniversary of the assault in Marseille). He visited the grave of
Vancho and we had beneficial conversations.
Focus: Is today’s Macedonia Switzerland of the Balkans?
Boeva: I think it goes on
the right way with a little exception. Macedonia will be a Switzerland on the Balkans but
firstly the Slavs in Macedonia should admit they
are Bulgarians. The fact that the EU has recently announced thanks to us, who
live in the West that the Macedonian nation does not exist, proves that Macedonia is on her right
way to become a Switzerland of the Balkans.
Focus: Had Vancho ever spoken
to you of his childhood, of Shtip?
Boeva: Yes. He wrote the
first volume (which is a little book) retelling of this. He was living with the
memories of his childhood. And because he had a sense of
humour, while he was joking all we were laughing. He was also imitating
successfully some persons.
Focus: What do you think of
today’s political parties in Macedonia who are called
after IMRO?
Boeva: Vancho was still
alive and filled with indignation when IMRO DPMNE was formed. “How could these falsifications be made, how could people be
deceived!?” It is a fact that three quarters of
the people in Macedonia was with IMRO of
Lubcho Georgievski, because they were deceived. One of the persons who created
it was Dragan Bogdanovski (now deceased) who was of the communists’
intelligence and a thief. IMRO is a Bulgarian organization but these parties in
Macedonia not only don’t
call them Bulgarian but also don’t want to turn back the letters of Saint
Clement. Consequently we have to become conscious of the problem with the
Albanians if we want to preserve Macedonia in its frontiers.
Focus: What do you think of L:
Georgievski?
Boeva: I was personally disappointed
of L. Gergievski in 1991 when I went to Sofia. In the newspaper
“Thousand Days” I stated, I feel Bulgarian and he in the same newspaper on the
same page stated the Macedonian nation was a fact. What are we to do now when Europe says the Macedonian
nation does not exist? Georgievski appeared politically immature and
inexperienced. Macedonia has had a centuries’ long problems with Serbians and Greeks. But he
restored the relations with them. In MPO they cry about the native hearths in
Aegean Macedonia, and Liubcho is going every summer on a holiday in Greece.
/Text given in blue colour/
Focus: How he received his
pseudonym Radko?
Boeva: As far as I know,
this pseudonym he had since the insurgent’s time. And we, his familiars,
addressed him with “Mr. Radko”.
Focus: Did you give permission
the association “Radko” to be formed in Macedonia?
Boeva: No, just the
opposite. Entire Macedonia has to organize in
one Bulgarian association, not only a group of people.
Focus: What was the reason
Mihailov and Mencha had no children?
Boeva: They didn’t want to
have children. She made a couple of aborts. They didn’t want because they knew,
that child of theirs, would have had more difficulties because they were living
an illegal life. They discussed this question. They adored children. That was
why they loved my husband and me as their children.
Focus: Had Vancho and Mencha
an official marriage?
Boeva: Yes, of course.
They were official husband and wife.
Focus: How did Vancho bear the
death of his wife in 1964?
Boeva: It was very hard
for him. Mencha died on September 10, 1964 from heart in
spite of her problems with the kidneys. She died on the age of 64 while they
were on a holiday in the villa of an Italian priest situated in “Grotta
Ferrata”-30 km from