Paul Goble
Staunton,
Oct. 24 – A major reason many Western governments opposed the disintegration of
the USSR is that they feared that that enormous space would become “a
Yugoslavia with nukes.” When the Soviet Union fell apart remarkably peacefully,
such fears were dispelled, and parallels between the Yugoslav and Soviet
experiences were ignored.
That
is unfortunate because the demise of Yugoslavia and the rise of Serbian
nationalism have much to say about what has happened as far as the ideology and
practice of Russian nationalism in post-Soviet Russia is concerned, parallels
that have not all worked out but that continue to affect the situation there
and in Russia’s relations with its neighbors.
Perhaps
without intending to do so, Grigory Mavrov, a Russian Islamicist, has called
attention to these parallels in an article on “the religious roots of Serbian
ethno-fascism,” an essay where with only slight modifications one could replace
Serbia and Serbian Orthodoxy with ones to Russia and Russian Orthodoxy (trtrussian.com/mnenie/religioznye-korni-serbskogo-etnofashizma-6963123).
Below
is a translation of Mavrov’s main points where that is self-evident:
“The disintegration of Yugoslavia and the
armed conflicts which followed that among different peoples of the federation
demonstrated the danger of unresolved ethno-national contradictions. In the
course of this war, the Bosnian Muslims suffered maximum losses, having suffered
genocide and mass deportation. Their infrastructure, especially religious,
suffered in particular.
“At the same time, the conflict in the
former Yugoslvia must not be called a religious war. All the peoples of
Yugoslavia had undergone secularization and the expulsion of religion from the
public sphere. Communist education should to minimize the religious factor and
according to Yugoslav socialist leaders to education a new man. But it was too
soon to bury religion.
“Under conditions of the disintegration of
the state and the collapse of communist values, it was religion which began to
be used as a marker of identity, which allowed everyone to define ‘us’ and
‘them.’ At a time when Yugoslav supra-religious identity proved incapable of
being a cementing factor, religion began to play into the hands of the Serbian
nationalist project.
“Undoubtedly, ethnic purges and the
destruction of mosques did not have a direct religious motive and Serbian
priests did not call for killing Muslims or Catholics. Orthodoxy, like Islam
over the course of many centuries developed various means of interaction and
coexistence with those of different faiths. Despite this, the leaders of the
Belgrad and Bosnian Serbs constantly appealed to religious meanings and symbols
for justifying aggression against the Bosnians, Croations and Kosovar
Albanians.
“At the base of Serbian nationalist
ideology and later of Serbian national identity lay the so-called Kosovo myth,
based on legends about real events connected with a battle on Kosovo field in
1389 … After the fall of the Serbian
state, in the opinion of Serbian nationalists, began a lengthy and shameful
period of ‘Ottoman-Muslim occupation and slavery.’
“The Kosovo myth acquired particular
importance in the 19th century when the need arose among Serbian
nationalists for mobilizing the popular masses for the struggle with the
Ottoman administration … [It] lay at the basis of revanchist strivings of the
Serbian nationalists and for an entire century defined the fate of Serbian and
other peoples.
“One of the attempts at realizing the
goals of the Serbian ethno-fascists became the ideology of Yugoslavism which
dominated in Yugoslavia which was formed after the end of World War I.
Yugoslavism sought ot unite the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, viewing them as a
three-in-one people and Yugoslavia for the Serbian nationalists was an
instrument for the creation of Greater Serbia.
“After World War II, Yugoslavia came under
the power of the communist party which significantly weakened the influence of
the Serbian nationalists on Yugoslavism. Communists under the leadership of the
Croation Iosip Broz Tito conducted a policy of decentralization, transforming
Yugoslavia into a federation, something which particularly infuriated Serbian
radicals.
“After the death of Tito in 1980, the
Serbs gradually took under control the government apparatus and the army, and
in 1989, when marking the anniversary of the battle on Kosovo field, Slobodan
Milosevic, the Serbian who became the head of Yugoslavia, declared that ‘Serbia
always was a bastion which defended European culture, religion, and European
society.’
“Following Milosevic’s example, many
social and religious leaders of Serbia revived the Kosovo myth and the leading
role of the Serbs in the assembly of peoples of Yugoslavia … And later, in
1994, Radovan Karadic, the leader of the Bosnian Serbs in explaining the
motivation of the Serbian militants, declared that … ‘Today even God is a
Serb!’
“The church always denied the genocide of
the Bosnian Muslims … it is not surprising that during the war, the Serbian
Orthodox Church provided all-sided assistance to the leaders of the Bosnian and
Croatian Serbs.
“Thus, conceiving itself to be the
preserver of Serbian identity, the Orthodox church actively took part and
continues to take part in the formation of the religious-nationalistic myth.
The church has not found strength in itself to critically revise its relations
to Muslims and representatives of other religions because it considers the
multiplicity of Yugoslavia and Serbia to be a challenge rather than an
advantage.”
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