Blaže Ristovski
Blaže Ristovski was a Macedonian linguist, folklorist and cultural historian.
Life
Ristovski was born on March 21, 1931, in Garnikovo, Kingdom of Yugoslavia. After completing his elementary education in his native village, he studied at a gymnasium in Kavadarci. He graduated from Faculty of Philology in Skopje in 1965 with a PhD in Philology with a dissertation about Krste Misirkov. He was the director of the Institute of Folklore "Marko Cepenkov" in Skopje and a member of the Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts and honorary member of the Writers' Association of Macedonia. Ristovski was a specialist in the manifestations of Macedonian nationalism from the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He wrote a biography about Misirkov. In the 6th World Congress of Slavic Studies in the 1960s, during arguments between Bulgarian and Macedonian scholars, he claimed that the Socialist Republic of Macedonia would achieve its ideal of unifying Macedonia, simultaneously annexing its "two other parts". Bulgarian linguist Vladimir Georgiev responded that Ristovski's presentation was "not for Congress." The organizers of the Congress demanded apologies from the Bulgarian representatives, who in turn expected a prior apology from their Macedonian colleagues, especially from Ristovski. After hesitating, he was obliged to apologize, but the academics departed from the congress more as opponents than as colleagues. In the 1990s, he was a deputy prime minister in Nikola Kljusev's government. Ristovski served as the editor of the Macedonian Encyclopedia, which was published in September 2009 by the Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts, which claimed that Albanians had settled in Macedonia in the 16th century and referred to them as Šiptari and "highlanders", receiving condemnations by Albanian politicians and intellectuals from the country, Albania, and Kosovo. He had resisted pressure to resign, but was subsequently discharged from his position. He died in Skopje on November 28, 2018, at the age of 87.Views
Croatian historian Stjepan Antoljak gave Macedonian academics the idea to claim the Bulgarian ruler Samuel as a Macedonian ruler in the 1950s. Ristovski supported Antoljak and stressed that already in the ninth century there was no "ethnogenetic, cultural, linguistic, and civilizational unity" between Macedonians and Bulgarians. Ristovski insisted that Bulgarians were a mixture of Tatars and Slavs. He also claimed that the term "Bulgarian" in the 19th century was not related to ethnicity but it was rather used as a synonym for "Slav" and "Christian", ignoring the fact that the Macedonian Slavic population voted in a referendum to join the Bulgarian Exarchate in the 19th century and demanded church service in Bulgarian.He accepted that the Macedonians are Slavs, descendants of the Slavic migration to the Balkans. Ristovski was a Macedonian nationalist. In a letter to the Balkan Insider, Ristovski and other intellectuals argued that Prespa agreement did not show "respect for international law, human rights and democratic principles".