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Macedonia is Macedonian🇲🇰

23,752 просмотров • 3 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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🚨🔥 TURKISH FLAG RAISED IN KIČEVO 🇹🇷 — MACEDONIANS FURIOUS: WHERE ARE THE SLAVS IN MACEDONIA? 🇲🇰⚠️ BREAKING NEWS — A political and emotional storm has erupted in Kičevo, where the Turkish national flag 🇹🇷 was raised in front of a municipal building. Officials described the move as a cultural gesture linked to the local Turkish community and relations with Turkey. On the street and online, the reaction was immediate—and furious. This is not a dispute about protocol. It is about timing, symbolism, and a country already on edge. Only days earlier, tensions flared in Skopje, where Albanian nationalist mobilization—some imagery invoking the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA)—reignited memories of the 2001 conflict. That episode unsettled a fragile equilibrium. Now, scarcely a week later, another non-Slavic national flag appears on an official building, this time in western Macedonia. For many Macedonians, the sequence feels unmistakable. First Albanian nationalist pressure in the capital. Now Turkish state symbolism in a Macedonian town. And between the two, a growing sense that the Slavic core of the state is disappearing from public space. North Macedonia is a Slavic state by origin. The Macedonian people are Slavs; the language is Slavic; the historical arc—from medieval Slavic polities through a late national awakening—rests on continuity preserved under foreign rule. That history is not abstract. For centuries, Ottoman authority shaped daily life here, and Slavic identity survived through memory and resistance rather than power. Symbols tied to that past therefore carry weight far beyond ceremony. This is why the flag in Kičevo struck a nerve. In the Balkans, flags are not decoration; they are statements. Raised on a municipal building, they speak about presence, confidence, and whose story is allowed to be visible. When such symbols arrive in rapid succession—while Slavic Macedonian identity is expected to remain muted for the sake of “stability”—anger follows. Supporters insist this is multiculturalism at work. Critics counter that multiculturalism cannot mean asymmetry, where every identity asserts itself publicly except the one on which the state was founded. The question spreading across Macedonian society tonight is blunt and uncomfortable: Is Macedonia still allowed to be Slavic? This is not a rejection of minorities. It is a demand for balance—and for dignity. Because stability built on silence rarely lasts. And when a people begin asking where they themselves have gone, the issue has already moved beyond flags. ⸻ Slavic Networks Independent coverage of Slavic regions, power, and identity. If you like what we are doing — like, share, subscribe, and invite your friends for more. Follow us also on Facebook: Slavic Networks Nirali VVeles SlavicFreeSpirit

Slavic Networks

73,314 просмотров • 5 месяцев назад