Atanas Razdolov



Atanas Ivanov Razdolov (Macedonian and Атанас Иванов Раздолов; 1872–1931) was a socialist revolutionary and writer from the region of Macedonia.

Life
Born in Berovo, Ottoman Empire (present-day North Macedonia), as a young man, he left his hometown and settled in Kyustendil, Bulgaria. There he graduated from the Pedagogical School in 1895. Later, he became a member of the Supreme Macedonian-Adrianople Committee in the town. In 1900, He moved to Bulgarian capital Sofia. In 1901, Atanas Razdolov, in an open letter to the chairman of the Supreme Committee, Boris Sarafov, criticized Prince Ferdinand I, and the committee's dependence on Bulgarian authorities. Razdolov believed that the Supreme Committee should work not for unification of Bulgaria and Macedonia but for Macedonian independence. As result he was arrested. Disappointed with the activities of the Committee, he became radicalized and enrolled in the leftist Bulgarian Workers' Social Democratic Party. After General Ivan Tsonchev took control over the Supreme Committee, he joined the extreme left faction of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization. He worked with Gotse Delchev, who considered Razdolov's writings as part of the organization's propaganda. Atanas Razdolov participated in the Balkan Wars in the Macedonian-Adrianopolitan Volunteer Corps of the Bulgarian Army. He was enrolled in the 2nd Brigade of the Seventh Kumanovo Regiment. Razdolov is the author of books and brochures in Bulgarian language.

Destitute and addicted to alcohol he died by suicide in Sofia in 1931.

Views
Razdolov's writings supported Macedonian separatism and liberation, being among the first in Bulgaria to publish such opinions publicly. He expressed positions that were pro-Socialist and pro-Macedonian independence. Razdolov authored 97 poems, which were published in twelve books and six short stories. He published his first book, Poems of the Apostles, in 1895 and in it, encouraged Macedonians to fight for Macedonia's freedom. In one of his poems dedicated to Ilyo Maleshevski he named him as a great Macedonian hero. In 1896 he would publish another book titled "Unhappy Macedonia" one of the more notable songs were called "To the Macedonians". Razdolov had anarchist views. He supported an armed struggle to achieve liberation of Macedonia from the Ottoman Empire and fending off any encroachments from neighboring countries.

According to some of his contemporaries in Bulgaria, Razdolov was a controversial person. Mihail Dumbalakov claimed he was a famous person but insane cynic. Per Evtim Sprostranov, Razdolov was a half-mad and drunkard who was engaged in financial blackmail. Petar Karchev wrote about Razdolov that a poetry could not be sought in his poems, but there was hidden the deep bitterness of a honest but failed revolutionary. The patriarch of Bulgarian literature, Ivan Vazov, met him during a scandal in public transport in Sofia. Razdolov travelled without a ticket and Vazov paid for it for him, while Razdolov curiously offered to sell him the copyright of his unpublished book. Per Dimo Kazasov, he was a nondescript and poorly dressed man who made a living by writing illiterate and thoughtless patriotic poems. According to assessments of his personality, he was a Bulgarian revolutionary who later switched to far left-wing political positions and accepted the ideas of Macedonism after the Balkan Wars.