The revolution as destiny. Lieutenant Boris Sarafov in the liberation struggles of the Bulgarians from Macedonia and Eastern Thrace
Boris Sarafov has undoubtedly been one of the brightest, recognizable
and major figures in the history of the Macedonian-Adrianople liberation
movement. His name still evokes ambiguous, often polarized, even diametrically opposed assessments, but never indifference.
Even during his lifetime, opinions about this notable Bulgarian revolutionary ranged from apologetics to complete denial.
Overlays of ideological and conjunctural nature were later added to this. Almost throughout the
communist period, Sarafov’s role was deliberately kept silent, and as far as
it was mentioned, it was in a completely negative light – a kind of ostracism,
from which at least his younger brother, the famous theatrical actor Krăstjo
Sarafov, was spared.
The basis of the attitude that was adopted by the so
called ‘people’s authorities’ in respect to the revolutionary Sarafov underlay
the axiomatic view that as an officer he was close to the government and
palace circles, and for that reason – a ‘reactionary’, a ‘supremist’ and an
open opponent to the ‘progressive’ circles in the Internal Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organization (IMARO).
Only from the beginning of
the 1980s, but finally after the political changes in Bulgaria in 1989, Sarafov
became to accept more objective assessments. Although studies appeared
(somewhat in a compensatory fashion) which idealized him and exaggerated
his real merits for the revolutionary movement, today it can be said that a
balanced and objective assessment of him dominates at least the circles of
professional historians...
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