Hajji Dimov, Dimo ​​Hadjjovanov

Hadji Dimov, Dimo ​​Hadjjovanov (village Gorno Brody, Sisco, 14. 1875 – Sofia, 13. 1924) – People’s Tribun, Socialist agitator and ideologue of the Macedonian liberation movement, publicist. Hadji Dimko was a prominent Revolutionary Deper, which was therefore absent from the Ottoman authorities, and was forced to emigrate to the newly established Bulgarian principality, coming to Dupnitsa (St. Dimitrov). He finished the pedagogical school in Kyustendil (1894), and then he studied right at the Sofia University (1898). Because of his political determinations, he was excluded from the studies and many years of sophilla and other places, and actively participated in the progressive teaching movement. He was a member of BLSDP (from 1901) and a prominent member of TMORO. A certain period was a fighter of the Committee Chief in Maleshevo (from February 1903), and then in the Russian Revolutionary District of TMORO. He was a close associate of Mr. Delchev, J. Sandanski, Vasil Glavinov and P. K. Javorov. He participated in the fight in the village. Banica, Sisco (4 ⅴ 1903) When dagged. Delchev. He was a member of the Macedonian-Drain Social Democratic Group. After the Ilinden uprising, TMORO’s left wing leader was formulated by the basic principles of Macedonian revolutionaries from the Service Group, and together with Dimitar Miraschiev, he was co-author of the reform “Directive on the upcoming activity of the organization”. He arrived in Sofia and participated in the internal battles of BLSDP (TS) (1905). The Rila Congress of TMORO (October 1905) was elected a responsible editor of her authority “revolway sheet” (1904- 1906), noting as the most important theorist of VMRO’s left, known as the Sandanist. He was one of the founders and head of the Teacher Social Democratic Organization (1905). After the Young Turk Revolution (1908) came to Thessaloniki, where he was directly collaborative with J. Sandanski. He was a member of the National Federal Party, its ideologist and editor of its body “Constitutionion Zaria” (Thessaloniki, 1909-1910). He was a participant in the war in the composition of the Seventh Rilska Division of the Bulgarian Army (1912-1913), and after the capture of 3 months he was the captive of the Greek military forces on the island of Trickers. After the First World War, he was the leader of the Macedonian progressive emigration in Bulgaria. Along with f. Petrov, Nikola Potrov and other Macedonian revolutionaries, formed the temporary representative office of the former VMRO (1919) and was an editor of his body “Newsletter”. The representative office intervened in front of the Versaille Peace Conference on Freedom and Independence of Macedonia in the Rams of the Balkan Federation. He was also a member of the newly established BCP, after which the Directive left the time representative office (in late 1919), and then founded the Macedonian emigrant communist union in Bulgaria (1920) and edited his body “Outgoing” (1920- 1923). He was a member of the Control Commission of the CC of BCP (1923) and participated in the preparation of the September Uprising (1923), and immediately before his outbreak was arrested. He was a member of the Control Commission of the CC of BCP (TS), and at the VITOKA Conference of the BCP (TS) (1924) was elected a member of the Central Committee, and then secretary of the CC of the BCP and the National MP in the ⅹⅹⅰ Conservation of the Bulgarian Parliament (1923-1927) on the list of the only workers’ peasant front. As a lawmaker, he advocated the defense of human rights and freedoms, against white terror and political killings, but he himself was killed on a sofia street from Vancomyhailists. BBB.: Back Kím autonomy, Sofia, 1919. Lit.: Dr. Orde Ivanoski, Dimo ​​Hadzi Dimov-pilgrimage. (On the occasion of the 50th anniversary of his assassination), “Messenger” of Ini, ⅹⅴⅰⅰⅰ, 2, Skopje, 1974, 53-84: The same, Dimo ​​Haddimov, Mac 371; The same, Di-Mo Hadji Dimov – a champion for class and national struggle, “Views”, ⅹⅹⅰ, 7-8, Skopje, 1984, 154-168; Dimo Hadzi Dimov, Life and work, Skopje, 1995. S. Ml.


Original article in Macedonian language Cyrillic alphabet
Кириличен напис ХАЏИ ДИМОВ, Димо Хаџијованов

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