NY Times: Macedonia's Brief Freedom - 1903

The NY Times, March 15, 1903, Page 6

MACEDONIA'S BRIEF FREEDOM

To the Editor of The New York Times:

The Macedonians have apparently not forgotten the taste which twenty-five years ago they had of liberty, when for four short months they were an independent people. It will be remembered that by the treaty of San Stephano, Russia, after a bloody war in which Turkey was badly worsted, secured for Macedonia liberty from Turkish misrule, and gave them the luxury of national independence. It will be remembered, too, that responsibility for their being put back under the odious rule of Turkey rests mainly with England, whose plans or their subjection to the bondage from which they had been liberated were carried into effect at the Berlin Conference in July 1878, when the treaty of San Stephano was practically nullified. Russia's broad-minded policy for the liberation of their kinsmen in the Bulgarian Peninsula was thus thwarted, while England received from Turkey the Island od Cyprus, as the price of her betrayal of liberty and justice.

If there should rise a European war in which the British Empire, so widely extended too often by similar means, should suffer disaster, it would only be another illustration of the certainty of national penalty for national wrongdoing.

New York, March 10, 1903

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