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INEXHAUSTIBLE SOURCES OF CONFLICT
In addition to the Croatian state and historic right, which were
the source of unceasing and violent misunderstandings and conflicts,
there were others where the Serbs and Croats clashed. One of
these, which had given rise to public debates, misunderstandings
and clashes throughout the second half of the 19th century, was
the question of the attitude to Austria and Austria-Hungary.
The historical development of the Serbs and Croats influenced
their attitude to the Habsburg Monarchy and its role in the realisation
of its own national liberation plans. In line with historical
development, the majority of the Serbs in Croatia, like those
in Serbia, southern Hungary, Bosnia and Hercegovina, were against
the Monarchy and its interference in their national liberation
plans. In contrast, the majority of the Croats were favouring
the Monarchy. The Serbs built their entire national and political
future on the foundations of the struggle against Austria and
Austria-Hungary, whereas the Croats based their policy on cooperation
with and assistance from Austria. Many documents are available
showing that the claim about the attitude of the majority of the
Croats to the Monarchy is correct. On this occasion I shall quote
excerpts from two Strossmayer's letters which confirm this amply.
Both of these letters were written by the Bishop to Franjo Racki.
The first was written on December 11, 1885, directly after the
Serbo-Bulgarian war, in which Strossmayer wrote: "I think
God let the Bulgars prevail. What prevailed in their cause was
honesty, Christian law and the Slav cause, while in the Serbian
cause what was defeated was utter dishonesty, immorality and Hungarian
hatred of the Slavdom. Bulgarian victories are also our victories...
Before I received your reply, I had written to the Nuncio.90
My main thought was that it is high time for the dynasty and
Monarchy to see clear. Events in the Balkans are warning both
that Croatia should be cured, strengthened, raised and be given
back its freedom and birthright. He who will not see this today
is blind."91 The second letter was written on April 7, 1889,
in which the Bishop says: "We the Croats for forty years
now have tried hard to assure for the Croats their primacy in
the action in the Balkan Peninsula. Those who should have supported
us in their own interests, have refused and rejected us and have
cast doubts on us."92 (Underlined by V.K.)
This very clear statement makes no doubt possible that Strossmayer
and his followers built their policy on conviction that the Habsburgs
and the Monarchy, for their own interests, would help the Croats
to gain strength, to become an important factor in the Balkans,
so that they could stay there to spread their own but also Austrian
state territory. Because of this policy of the National Party,
which gradually established collaboration with the Serbs, but
only after they had lost hope of assistance from dynasty and
Monarchy, there was otherwise no lasting agreement with them.
The central moot question between their own and the Serbian political
leadership was that of the affiliation of Bosnia and Hercegovina,
which was equally claimed by both. Animosity grew over it through
the press, brochures, Sabor debates, electoral speeches, etc.
and spread to the broadest strata of both nations.
Conflict between the two dissonant policies was inevitable, especially
since it was encouraged from the Vienna Ballplatz where Croatian
pro-Austrian and pro-Habsburg ambitions were welcomed, because
they perfectly fitted into the Monarchy's state policy vis-a-vis
the Balkans. On the subject of the pro-Austrian and pro-Habsburg
policy of the Croats, it should be pointed out that it is one
of the long-lasting phenomenons. It came into being in the first
half of the 16th century, and in the course of time it changed,
weakened or took strength, but it always endured, acquiring over
the last one hundred and more years clear, open and aggressive
anti-Serbian features.
When the attitude of the Croatian political parties towards the
Habsburg dynasty and the Monarchy is better analysed as well as
their policy to Bosnia and Hercegovina, and compared with the
standpoint of the Serbian political parties, not only within the
Monarchy but also in the Principality, later the Kingdom of Serbia,
it is then clear that we have there two different and incompatible
political and state conceptions, because what ones found to be
good and profitable for their nation and their development, the
others saw in it a real catastrophe. For this reason, the struggle
over these questions was violent, because the victory of the one
idea meant the defeat of the other. With all this the fact should
be stressed that in the context of the struggle over the mentioned
questions between the Croatian and Serbian political leaderships,
there was also the struggle over national political prestige.
The contention between them was whether Zagreb or Belgrade, whether
the Croats or the Serbs would head the action for the liberation
and unification. Nationally aware and spiritually unified with
the Serbs outside Croatia, the Serbs from the Triune Kingdom for
the most part did not accept the basic national conceptions of
the development of Croatia and Southern Slavs preferring to rely
on the dynasty of Habsburg and Monarchy, but rather agreed with
the ideas upheld by their politicians from Belgrade and Novi Sad.
This was one more reason for new conflicts and for new hatreds,
and the pretext for accusations that the Serbs from Croatia are
traitors and must therefore receive an exemplary punishment.
Such accusations, spread mostly by the so-called Franko-furtimists,
were taken up here and there and caused a strong anti-Serbian
feeling which in certain moments acquired genocidal aspects.
The well-known Croatian politician Iso Krsnjavi wrote the following
very characteristic words: "There was a time when it was
written that all the Serbs should be killed by axe. This idea
has something singular, something very important; namely, it openly
and consistently states the only way in which the 'Croatian idea'
can be carried out. It is another question whether the Serbs
would allow themselves to be murdered so simply, like those good-natured
seals in the Arctic seas. One could fairly accurately forecast
that they would remember the popular saying that a stick has two
ends."93 (Underlined by V.K.)
While examining the causes for which genocide took place in Croatia
during the 1941-1945 occupation, I must remind the reader of another
question which has not been mentioned in historiography but is
meriting attention because it has its own place within the context
of different reasons which antagonised relations between the Croats
and the Serbs. I have in mind a complex which had affected even
the well meaning Croatian politicians agreeable to an understanding
with the Serbs. It is a complex which oppressed the bourgeois
and particularly petty-bourgeois circles among the Croats because
the Serbs, after 1878, gained two independent states while the
Croats, convinced that they were at a higher level of culture
and civilisation, ambitious to create a greater Croatia, to take
over the helm of liberation and unification, had a state more
on paper than in reality. Since they viewed the Serbs only as
their direct and most dangerous competitors, every success of
the Serbs was seen as their defeat, and everyone of their defeats
as their own victory. The fact that the Serbs had two states
and the Croats none, not only gave them an inferiority complex
but also made them envious as well as aggressive. Through excessive
aggression they wanted to compensate, at the Serbs' expense, that
which they did not have. For this reason mutual conflicts were
inevitable and their outcomes were ruinous for both sides. How
this fact embarrassed the mentioned Croatian circles is revealed
in a letter by Sime Mazzura, written on February 6, 1893, to Bogdan
Medakovic. Before I quote Mazzura's words, I must explain the
reason why the letter was written, for then it will sound more
convincing.
Correspondence between Medakovic and Mazzura happened following
an incident which happened at a concert in Zagreb in 1893. The
concert was attended by Bogdan Medakovic, one of the political
leaders of the Serbs in Croatia, who was sitting next to Franjo
Racki. When the official part of the concert ended, the one that
was given in the programme, parts of the audience started spontaneously
singing the Croatian anthem. At this moment some of the listeners
rose from their seats, while others continued to sit. Among those
who did not rise was Racki, and with him Medakovic and his wife.
Seeing Medakovic and his wife not having risen, the poet Augustine
Harambasic, otherwise a prominent member of the Party of Right,
went to them and started shouting: "Vlachs!" and "he
who is a true Croat, rise now". When Medakovic heard this
he deliberately refused to rise, for it would then look as if
was afraid and admitted being a Croat of Orthodox religion. The
entire incident was observed from nearby by the son of Sime Mazzura,
Lav, who was angry at Harambasic and, having returned home and
talked to his father, he denounced the poet's rude behaviour.
In the correspondence which ensued following this incident between
Medakovic and Sime Mazzura, the latter did not approve of Harambasic's
excess, but tried to explain why it had come about. Mazzura wrote:
"My motto is peace with Serbs and reasons for it you will
find in my first letter. Peace, because our motherland is the
same; peace, because we are sons of the same people. Peace,
because there are more of us in peace; because we are stronger
in peace, against the enemy who is our common foe. Let your motto
be: peace with the Croats. You can be more magnanimous than
me, therefore more liberal. Your nation has two states; statelets
may be, but states; my nation has no autonomous state, only one
on a torn peace of paper. You can be more serene, free from attacks
of fever, of which I cannot be immune when I think of the existence
of my own people; of the attacks which hurt them more than the
Serbian people, because its geographic position makes them more
exposed than the Serbian people. But our weaknesses are also yours,
because after us your turn will come.94 (Underlined by V.K.)
This sincere admission of Mazzura's reveals the complex suffered
by a portion of the Croatian burgher society vis-a-vis the Serbs,
so that no special comments are needed. However, the problem
is in the fact that this complex resulted in aggression against
the Serbs in Croatia, which was manifested in several ways, until
it eventually assumed its clear genocidal forms. It assumed such
forms because those who were not interested in accord, and such
were on both sides, had empoisoned relations to such an extent
that quite a number of Croats blamed the Serbs in Croatia for
all the troubles which befell their country. Consequently, if
the Serbs from Croatia did much to thwart the development of the
Croatian state and its society, if they were the internal enemy,
as they were usually represented in the rightist and Frankofurtimist
press, then a showdown with them was inevitable. Inferiority
complex in certain Croatian bourgeois circles vis-a-vis the Serbs
who had succeeded in building two independent states, was so much
greater as the Serbs as a whole were numerically superior to the
Croats. Bearing in mind this numerical superiority, fear from
possible absorption was noticeable among those Croats who were
particularly active in attacks against the Serbs. This fear,
which was defensive in character, gave rise to aggression which
led to the genocide over the Serbs in Croatia.
An interesting testimony about this kind of fear was left by Iso
Krsnjavi. When Franjo Ksaver Kuhac, Croatian composer and musicologist,
brought in 1892 the manuscript of a book against Vuk Karadzic
to Iso Krsnjavi, as the head of the Department for Religion and
Education, Krsnjavi "reprimanded him for it and told him
that entire political agitation against the Serbs by the Starcevic
followers has no sense because the Serbs cannot be a danger for
the Croats".
Kuhac's manuscript against Vuk Karadzic was pretext for a talk
on the same theme between the rightist leader Frane Folnegovic
and Iso Krsnjavi. Krsnjavi told Folnegovic that "the attitude
towards the Serbs by the Starcevic followers seems to be unreasonable
because, in my opinion, the Serbs are not culturally stronger
than the Croats and so there is no danger that the Serbs could
ever absorb the Croats".95 This makes it obvious that the
rightists' attacks against the Serbs, their non-recognition and
struggle against them, beside a number of other reasons, were
also due to the fact that the Starcevic followers were ridden
by fear that the Serbs, numerically stronger and with two established
independent states, would assimilate them.
The Croatian complex because the Serbs had two independent states
while the Croats had only one, on paper only, and the fear of
being assimilated by the Serbs, was politically and ideologically
crystallised by the earlier mentioned Dr. Ivan Pilar, i.e. Dr.
Juricic. In his brochure Svjetski rat i Hrvati. Pokus orijentacije
hrvatskoga naroda jos prije svrsetka rata (The World War
and the Croats), published in 1915 and 1917, Dr. Juricic wrote:
"The Croato-Serbian popular unity is only possible on the
basis of a full equality between the Croats and the Serbs. But
this equality is in practice absolutely unfeasible, not only because
the Serbs have two independent countries, and are therefore stronger,
but also because the Serbs are not just a popular magnitude,96
like us the Croats, but a popular-confessional magnitude. They
are a priori stronger than we the Croats. Every one of our demands
which is based on popular egoism shall be faced with the Serbian
popular and confessional egoism. Therefore, even if we were numerically
superior, we should succumb with a ninety-nine percent probability.
Thus the Croato-Serbian popular unity is for us an a priori societas
leonina, and furthermore the true unity is impossible unless
we the Croats should convert to Orthodoxy - but by then we shall
have become Serbs.
"Unity on the basis of equality among the Croats is not even
possible, for it is only a catchword for a complete amalgamation
with Serbs. The Serbs are aware of it and that is why they are
today so enthusiastic about this unity."97
Disagreements and clashes between the Croats and the Serbs increased
at the moment when the Military March, having a numerous Serb
population, after demilitarisation in 1881, became part of Croatia.
The Serbs then became an important factor in Croatian politics.
Since their national and political aspirations were in conflict
with the Croatian opposition policies, confrontation could not
be avoided. It was so strong, varied and long-lasting that Iso
Krsnjavi, a few months after the anti-Serbian demonstrations which
took place in Zagreb in September 1902, having found out about
some plans on the annexation of Bosnia and Hercegovina, wrote
as follows at the end of that year: "We (the Croats - V.K.)
have not altogether digested the Military March and the Serbs
whom we received with it, so what are we going to do with the
Serbs in Bosnia?"98 (Underlined by V.K.)
On examination of the controversial issues between the Croats
and the Serbs, which had led to disagreements and conflicts and
even genocide, mention must be made of the many abuses of Serbs
by the Croats, numerous repeals of agreements, treaties and decisions,
even those which had been passed by the Sabor of Croatia. Willing
to act in common with the Croats for the defence of Croatian state
interests, on condition that the rights and obligations are equitably
shared with them, the Serbs have never betrayed the Croats and
in fighting they often took advance. It happened during the revolution
and war with the Hungarians in 1848-49, forcible imposition of
the Nagodba and dualism in 1867-68, dismissal of ban Levine
Rauch and the struggle to revise the Nagodba in 1869-1873,
in the years of popular movements in 1883 and 1903, and several
times later, until the days close to our times. Whenever the
Serbs were needed, and for as long as they were needed, the Croats
were good with them, distributed promises and not only did not
raise the question of equality and acknowledgement of the Serbian
political individuality, but the Sabor also declared solemnly
that "the Triune Kingdom recognises the Serbian people living
in it as a people identical and equal with the Croatian people".
The moment the danger was over, or the job was successfully done,
those very same people who made generous promises to the Serbs
turned against them and continued as before, as if nothing had
happened in the meantime, as if they had no obligation whatever
towards the Serbs. Many times exploited and then betrayed and
rejected, the Serbs made good note of the Croat treachery. Hence
they did not believe them much, but despite all the bitter disappointments,
forced by the circumstances of life, permitted them to continue
deceiving them, using them and short-changing them, in the vain
hope that their deceptions would not be repeated.
In this type of game that went on for a hundred years, the Serbs
were always the losers and the Croats the winners in the political
field. However, morally speaking, the Serbs were those who won
the battles and the Croats lost them. This relationship bore
one more fruit: mutual contempt, intolerance and hatred, a pathological
hatred, equally unbridled and equally dangerous for both sides
and for both peoples.
When in the middle of the last century the Eastern Question was
raised and in this context the South Slav question, new problems
arose in relations between the Serbs and Croats. Although on
both sides there were those who believed that such important questions
should be dealt with in common and with joint forces, the forces
which prevailed were those which wanted to have it out with one
another. Convinced that in many aspects, particularly in culture,
they had advantages over the Serbs and that being more cultured,
they might also be more attractive to all the Southern Slavs,
the Croats believed that they should claim the leading role in
the national liberation and unification actions and that Zagreb
rather than Belgrade should be the rallying point. In these plans
the Croats, as has already been said, have always counted on assistance
from Vienna and the dynasty, who gave them hopes in this sense.
Mindful of the fact that they had two, first semi-independent
and as from 1878 fully independent states, that they had an army
and all other important advantages for the conduct of an independent
national and state policy which the Croats lacked, the Serbs did
not give much thought about the Croats' fancied high culture but
held that they rather than Croats are called upon to play the
role of Piedmont among the Southern Slavs and that Belgrade rather
than Zagreb should be the focal point.
The rivalry about the leading role smouldered and turned into
a struggle between two hostile policies, a fight between two centres,
one of which was bound to give in. After the successfully ended
Balkan wars, Belgrade, Serbia and the Serbs imposed themselves
as a truly leading factor in the rallying of the Southern Slavs.
After the First World War the unification was carried out under
the leadership of the Serbs, with the centre in Belgrade. This
victory of the Serbian conception of the solution of the South
Slav question was received in many Croat circles, particularly
among the extreme nationalists who did not disappear from the
scene at the end of either the First or the Second World War,
as a heavy defeat deserving a ruthless revenge. Not only the
creation but also the method of creating the common state in 1918
served the above-mentioned circles in Croatia as a constant source
of dissatisfaction, a reason for undermining the state which was
not created according to the model they wanted. As a result,
its real creators, the Serbs, became even more hated than heretofore
and became the butt of those who saw the advent of Yugoslavia
as a defeat for the Croatian state and political idea.
In embittered national and political relations at the turn of
the 20th century, at the time when the Croatian Catholic Church
had embraced the greater-Croatian programme of Josip Frank and
his Pure Party of Right, when Catholic clericalism began to imbue
all the pores of life and to acquire the recognisable anti-Serbian
and anti-Orthodox features, Serbs in Croatia and Slavonia attained
several important results. They had succeeded in the best possible
way of organising their economy, particularly their finances,
of creating a powerful political party, of rallying and unifying
the Serbian society in various branches of activity, and of making
significant advances in culture. The attained successes were
such that it was Zagreb that had gradually begun taking over the
role of Novi Sad, the former "Serbian Athens". Petty-
bourgeois, nationally bigoted and ultra-Catholic circles in Croatia,
Slavonia and Dalmatia, who wanted to create a large, ethnically
pure and catholically unified Croatian state, could not reconcile
themselves to the fact that the Serbs in Croatia were becoming
economically and politically and even culturally stronger. Not
good enough to enter into a healthy competition with the Serbs,
to counter them with their own successes, the petty- bourgeois
Franko-furtimist circles of Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia compensated
for their incompetence with a destructive hatred which was on
several occasions expressed in anti-Serbian demonstrations staged
in Zagreb and other cities in Croatia. In the field of the merciless
capitalist competition, which had acquired the aspect of a struggle
between two nations, the Serbs were seen as a permanently upsetting
factor which stood in the way of the development of the Croatian
economy, society and politics, and which is particularly important,
in the way of the creation of a centuries-long aspiration - the
building of an independent Croatian state.
Economically strengthened, socially well organised and in main
political aims like-minded and united, relying on Serbia whose
prestige had been mounting ever since 1903, the Serbs as a whole
were attractive for a section of Croats who were sympathetic to
a true conciliation, accord and cooperation. In this situation,
the Serbs in Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia, who wanted conciliation
and cooperation on an equal footing, had become dangerous in the
minds of the Franko-furtimist extremists. They found danger in
the fact that the Serbs as a whole, particularly the so-called
Croatian Serbs, were offering different roads and methods of resolving
the Croatian and Serbian questions than those which the greater-Croatian
extremists wanted, and behind which stood the official circles
of Vienna and Budapest. Instead of a great, ethnically pure and
religiously unified Croatia, the Croats and Serbs wanting conciliation,
accord and cooperation showed readiness to live together on an
equal footing in a new and independent state. The Croat extremists
did not want to live with Serbs in a common state. Furthermore,
they believed that pro-Yugoslav option of Croats and Serbs not
only stood in the way of their national conceptions but also dangerously
corroded the unity of the Croatian people. Therefore, from the
earliest years of the 20th century, as soon as the Yugoslav idea
had begun striking deeper roots, the pro-Yugoslav Serbian Croats
as well as the Yugoslav idea were continually at the receiving
end of all kinds of attacks by Croatian nationalist extremists.
In my attempt to come to the bottom of the basis controversial
questions between the Serbs and the Croats and the causes of genocide,
I must touch upon the major differences in their respective attitudes
towards Yugoslavia. Having lost their state early and having
fallen under the dominion of first Hungary then Austria, the Croats
for more than 800 years lived under foreign administration and
dreamed about the renewal of their statehood. Being unable to
realise these dreams in practice, they spent an enormous amount
of energy in trying to maintain a tenuous continuity of their
statehood in formal acts, various treaties, sanctions, nagodbas,
diplomas, patents, king's bonds, Sabor decisions and other acts.
The 800 years of legalistic compromises left deep traces on the
Croatian mentality. Just as they behaved within the framework
of Hungary and Austria, and subsequently of Austria-Hungary, they
also behaved within the first and the second Yugoslavia. Both
Yugoslavias were for them transitory. Their ideal, as we have
already said, was an independent Croatia. Therefore, they did
not accept Yugoslavia such as they found it, nor did they feel
it was theirs. At any rate, they invested into its genesis just
so much as they were prepared to defend and call their own.
The legalistic behaviour of Croats towards Hungary and Austria
was less harmful for those states and people in those states than
towards Yugoslavia. Within the boundaries of Hungary and Austria,
Croats with their numbers, strength and influence were of no major
significance. However, within Yugoslavia they were a partner
without whom such a state was difficult to imagine. Knowing that,
and conscious of the fact that the Serbs were keen on Yugoslavia,
the Croats made excellent use of their legalistic experience,
selfishly and inconsiderately forcing concessions with the aim
of obtaining greatest possible advantages for themselves. So
it transpired that Yugoslavia could exist only for as long as
the demands of the Croats have been met, for as long as it suited
them to live in a community to which they were not prepared to
contribute much but wanted to take out as much as possible. When
we bear this in mind, it is clear why both the first and the second
Yugoslavia were shaken by heavy crises and why they disintegrated
according to scenarios in which the Croats had the chief role
of the breakers.
Because the Croatian bourgeois opposition parties did not admit
the national individuality of the Serbs in Croatia, because they
wanted to croatize them, the leading Serbian politicians linked
up with the ruling National Party, which far from denying the
Serbs, made them various minor concessions. As a result, particularly
during the rule of ban Khuen Hedervari, the Serbs were attacked
as supporters of a regime which took more account of Hungarian
than of Croatian national interests. Admittedly, among the so-called
Khuen's Serbs there were a lot of careerists, as there were proportionally
many more among the Croats.99 However, "Khuen's Serbs"
had support in that part of the Serbian society which was in favour
of the National Party not for opportunist reasons but out of necessity.
Namely, unrecognised, under a strong Croatian pressure which
threatened their very national existence, the Serbs could hardly
permit finding themselves between the millstones of the Croatian
opposition and the Croatian government, behind which was the government
in Budapest. For this reason, out of necessity, forced by the
aggressive behaviour from Croatian opposition bourgeois parties,
in order to defend and preserve themselves, chose from two evils
the one which for them was lesser.100 Although the Serbian option
was its own fault, because they had thrown them into the bosom
of the Hungarians and their collaborators from Croatia, the Croat
opposition attacked them mercilessly and stigmatised them as traitors.
This stigma, which remained attached for decades, was taken up
by the numerous followers of the Croat opposition parties, and
this widespread opinion remained to this day in the political
journalism and in the interpretations of the common past, which,
taken together, did have its consequences insofar as genocide
is concerned.
Copyright © 1997 Vasilije Krestic
Copyright © 1997,98 Bigz - Izdavacko preduzece d.o.o., Beograd
Copyright © 1997,98 Serbian Unity Congress All Rights Reserved.
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