Mi zaplakalo seloto Vataša

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LanguageMacedonian
Released1975 (1975)
Length4:44
SongwriterLazar Mančevski-Pindžur
"Mi zaplakalo seloto Vataša"
Song by Nikola Badev
LanguageMacedonian
Released1975 (1975)
Length4:44
SongwriterLazar Mančevski-Pindžur

"Mi zaplakalo seloto Vataša" is a Macedonian song originally written and composed in the 1960s. Lazar Mančevski-Pindžur served as the songwriter. He got inspired by the Vataša massacre, that took place during World War II. The song was performed by several Macedonian folk and pop singers and music artists; the original was performed by Nikola Badev in 1975. Petranka Kostadinova, Blagoj Nacoski, Ani Malinkova, Katerina Taneva and Blaže Bogev also released their covers of the song.

"Mi zaplakalo seloto Vataša" became popular again in the 2020s, when Macedonian singer Andrijana Janevska performed it live during Golden Ladybug of Popularity in 2023 together with the poem "Cvetovi" written by Macedonian poet Slavko Janevski and recited by Igor Džambazov in the company of the choir Mirče Acev. Her version of the song was also promoted through a studio recording and a music video as part of the project "Makedonijo vo srce te nosime" (English: "Macedonia We Bring You In Our Hearts"). The video shows excerpts of a documentary movie which features an interview with the mother of one of the killed young people. It also features pictures of dead young people from the massacre and a performance by Janevska and Igor Džambazov.

After the performance at Zlatna bubamara, the song was also performed at the 80th anniversary of the event. Janevska and Džambazov received widespread praise and emotional reactions from the press and the audience.

Vataša massacre

A massacre happened on 16 June 1943 near the village Vataša, Kavadarci, as part of the occupation of Vardar Banovina, part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia by the Axis powers during World War II in Yugoslav Macedonia. The shooting happened near Moklište, where the neighborhood of "Čair" is, in the vicinity of the village of Vataša. The murders were part of an anti-partisan offensive launched by the Bulgarian occupation authorities against the communist resistance and its helpers.

Conception and writing

Lazar Mančevski-Pindžur, who lived in the village of Vataša and was witness of the event was imprisoned by the local governing forces. During his serving of the conviction and after being released from prison, he collected materials to write the song "Mi zaplakalo seloto Vataša". According to a radio interview of the author, the process lasted five to ten years. Despite him, among the villagers there were also other witnesses who reported everything they saw on the day of the atrocity.[1]

Music covers

References

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