- Член од
- 11 јуни 2008
- Мислења
- 99
- Поени од реакции
- 1
Аз не спорја дали имало македонци или не и колку македонци имало. Казвам ти дека МПО почитуват хероите като Александров и Михајлов.
А в Р. Македонија ги имате за предатели! Каква контроверзија само?!?
Това за Шкатров си е твоја измислица - ето што пишат от МПО:
Having been forced out of their motherland Macedonia by the exceedingly harsh new political, cultural, religious and national enslavement initiated by the 1913 Treaty of Bucharest, the freedom fighters of the 1903 Ilinden insurrection turned their sight on the new land of political freedom, of economic opportunity and of basic human rights, which beckoned to them from across the wide expanse of the Atlantic Ocean. They came by the thousands to establish their new homes in either the United States of America or in Canada. Once they had found the security promised them by these two young, vibrant nations, the freedom fighters looked back on the tragedy of their native Macedonia and decided that it was their inherent duty to keep alive the torch of freedom that they had lighted in the valiant days of Ilinden 1903.
So, in 1922, their delegates met in Fort Wayne, Ind., and charted a framework within which to build the firm structure of the new organization. At the first Convention considerable attention was given to find an appropriate name for the newly formed organization. The proposal for Macedonian Patriotic Organizations was rejected because after the defeat of the Central Powers in the World War I, the word "patriot" had assumed a repulsive meaning. The convention settled for the name of Macedonian Political Organizations, which, happily, in 1956 was changed to the original proposal - Macedonian Patriotic Organizations.
А в Р. Македонија ги имате за предатели! Каква контроверзија само?!?
Това за Шкатров си е твоја измислица - ето што пишат от МПО:
Having been forced out of their motherland Macedonia by the exceedingly harsh new political, cultural, religious and national enslavement initiated by the 1913 Treaty of Bucharest, the freedom fighters of the 1903 Ilinden insurrection turned their sight on the new land of political freedom, of economic opportunity and of basic human rights, which beckoned to them from across the wide expanse of the Atlantic Ocean. They came by the thousands to establish their new homes in either the United States of America or in Canada. Once they had found the security promised them by these two young, vibrant nations, the freedom fighters looked back on the tragedy of their native Macedonia and decided that it was their inherent duty to keep alive the torch of freedom that they had lighted in the valiant days of Ilinden 1903.
So, in 1922, their delegates met in Fort Wayne, Ind., and charted a framework within which to build the firm structure of the new organization. At the first Convention considerable attention was given to find an appropriate name for the newly formed organization. The proposal for Macedonian Patriotic Organizations was rejected because after the defeat of the Central Powers in the World War I, the word "patriot" had assumed a repulsive meaning. The convention settled for the name of Macedonian Political Organizations, which, happily, in 1956 was changed to the original proposal - Macedonian Patriotic Organizations.