"POLITICS
IS NOT A SCIENCE, BUT ART": these words of Bismarck, the Iron
Chancellor of Germany, were often cited by Tsar Ferdinand in the
presence of his sons, the crown prince Boris and Kiril of Preslav.
Boris III realized what his father had meant as soon as he took
the helm in the autumn of 1918. He was crowned with all due honors,
but only after his father had been forced to abdicate and take the
blame for the two national disasters the Second Balkan War and World
War I. Prince Boris of Turnovo took over the crown and a burdensome
heritage with it.
Born in 1894, Boris came to power at a time of political, economic
and spiritual crisis. Bulgaria's deplorable state largely affected
young ruler's initial agenda, as well as his style of government.
Immediately after the war he had to defend the monarchy against
two firmly republican political parties: Stambohyski's Agrarian
Union and the Communist Party.
Boris III regarded power as a burden, and to the very end of his
reign, he never experienced his father's love for it. Boris was
cautious and never entered into open conflicts. A reticent leader,
he acted by means of political machinations and diplomacy, and never
developing the ostentation that had been so typical of his father.
The downfall of the Agrarian Union's government as a result of the
June 9 coup and the defeat of the communists in the uprising in
September 1923, strengthened Boris's power. Boris III preferred
to stay in the background but did his best to gradually become what
he imagined as a "people s tsar .
With a strict upbringing, Boris had been groomed for the throne.
He took the name of Boris III and converted from Catholicism to
Eastern Orthodox Christianity. The sad lot of his father who had
been forced to give up the throne, as well as his desire to consolidate
the dynasty prompted him to head a modest way of life, in line with
the people's expectations. He would often shake hands with people
from the crowd, travel unguarded, take his hat off to elderly people
or drive a locomotive. He was doing all that not out of a monarch's
natural concern about his place in history. Rather, he remembered
well the advice of one of his closest associates: "Don't forget
that when a storm comes it is always the peak that gets hit by the
lightnings". And a stormy reign it was!
In the wild maelstrom of Bulgarian political life Boris followed
the example of his father, binding the generals with the throne
and striving to achieve a unity of dynasty and army. It was the
army that helped him through the hardships of 1923 and after the
coup of 19 May 1934 when he gradually started to develop a personal
regime. He was often accused of political intractability, lack of
imperativeness, too great a readiness to take clairvoyants seriously
and excessive slyness. But even his most violent opponents could
not deny his intelligence, political skill and ruler's intuition,
all of which helped him overcome the vicissitudes of his time.
In the early 30s Boris slowly imposed an authoritarian rule, during
which his abilities as a leader became more obvious. It has been
much disputed whether his rule was marked by a dangerous predominance
of fascist ideas or by the tsar's efforts to put an end to interparty
struggles, disorder and political instability. Was he a dictator
or a patriot?
Boris was surely a talented ruler who, unlike his father, won the
sympathy of both rich and poor. However, this is no excuse for the
political persecution in which many people were killed during the
anti-fascist movement from the summer of 1 941 to the early autumn
of 1944.
The foreign policy of Tsar Boris III was characterized by cautiousness
and a patient wait-and-see attitude. He stuck to the course adopted
by Bulgarian diplomacy: for reasonable and peaceful reconsideration
of the Treaty of Neuille. He succeeded in regaining Southern Dobroudja
from Romania in the autumn of 1940, and that step towards "national
unification" gained him the reputation among Bulgarians of
"the liberator tsar". His diplomatic talent was also displayed
during the negotiations between the Great Powers on the eve of World
War.
However, on the eve of World War II Boris and the Bulgarian politicians
made an ill-advised decision military and political alliance with
Nazi Germany in the spring of 1941. Truly, he was at an Impasse:
the German divisions were on the Danube and Britain could not offer
any assistance. The humiliation of the alliance was perhaps cushioned
by the fact that Bulgaria refused to fight against the Soviet Union
and regained some of its lands from Yugoslavia and Greece. Few Bulgarians
realized, however, that the fate of those lands would be decided
after the war, and that Boris III would not live through the war.
Having inherited leadership of a turbulent state, he died a mysterious
death on 28 August 1943.
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