Ivan Matić-Identity of Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina

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THE IDENTITY OF CROATS IN BOSNIA AND
HERZEGOVINA:
THE COMPELLING DIFFERENCES
By
Ivan Mati
A Thesis Submitted to
CENTRAL EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY
NATIONALISM STUDIES PROGRAM
In partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts
Supervisor: Professor Andrs Kovcs
Budapest, Hungary
2010
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Acknowledgments
This thesis would not have been possible without the support and guidance of my patient
supervisor, Prof. Andrs Kovcs who was abundantly helpful and offered invaluable
assistance. Deepest gratitude is due to the hospitable members of the Franciscan province
Bosna Srebrena, especially father Mato Topi without whose kind assistance my research
would not have been possible and thanks to whom my personal library is richer by several
books. A special thanks goes to my family in the lovely city of Dubrovnik who sustained me
in more than one way; to Tonino Picula for being at my disposal whenever needed; to Senad
who generously offered me a haven in Sarajevo; and to all of the interviewees who patiently
answered all of my questions.
I am extremely grateful to those who became much more than friends and made Budapest
unforgettable experience full of warm memories: Anja, Asja, Brigitta, Danny, Georgi, J ovana
and my loveliest Monique. Also, many thanks to my Russian anti-capitalist for being there for
me and keeping my life exciting.
Finally, I wish to extend my deepest gratitude to the CEU Nationalism Studies Program and
all the wonderful colleagues with whom I shared the most exiting nine moths of my life.
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For The Family and
the crazy third cousins
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments.................................................................................................................. i
TABLE OF CONTENTS...................................................................................................... iii
INTRODUCTION..................................................................................................................1
CHAPTER I The Historical Background.............................................................................5
1.1. The Franciscans of Silver Bosnia..............................................................................6
1.2. The Croatian National Revival ...................................................................................11
1.3. The experience of the 20th century.............................................................................13
1.4. The break up of Yugoslavia.......................................................................................17
CHAPTER II The Faces of Croatian Nationalism..............................................................22
2.1. The 19
th
century Croatian National Movement...........................................................23
2.2. Particularities of the 20
th
Croatian National Movement..............................................25
2.3. Croatian experience in Bosnia and Herzegovina.........................................................31
CHAPTER III- The Interviews and The Research Results....................................................37
3.1. Time, Place and Subjects of the Interviews................................................................37
3.2. The Interview types....................................................................................................40
3.3. Results of the research similarities and differences..................................................44
CHAPTER IV- Explaining the Differences...........................................................................49
4.1. The Historical Experiences and Regional Identities....................................................50
4.2. The Remainings of the Failed Politics........................................................................53
4.3. Population Structure and the experience of the other...............................................57
4.4. The unstable society...................................................................................................60
CONCLUSION....................................................................................................................63
BIBLIOGRAPY ...................................................................................................................70
Appendix 1...........................................................................................................................75
Appendix 2...........................................................................................................................76
Appendix 3...........................................................................................................................77
Appendix 4...........................................................................................................................78
Appendix 5...........................................................................................................................79
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INTRODUCTION
Bosnia and Herzegovina
1
: already the name of the state indicates certain dualism.
Although the name itself doesnt necessary proof any other dualism accept the one it contains
in itself, the ongoing debate on the usage of the state abbreviations does. Whenever instead of
the full state name Bosnia and Herzegovina only Bosnia is used, one can expect reactions
from Herzegovina. Examples are numerous and they originally provided the incentive for
more detailed research that will be presented here.
Professor Lu mentions a public debate in B&H after the Croatian member of the
state Presidency
2
protested against the states Ambassador to NATO who didnt used the full
name of the state in the address of the embassy but only Ambasade de Bosnie.
3
Dodig, a
Croatian Columnist from Herzegovina, dedicated one of his articles to the problem of
supremacy of larger entities in states with two elements in its name, with special emphases on
Bosnia and Herzegovina.
4
Professor An is more concrete in his article explaining that just
Bosnia is not the same as Bosnia and Herzegovina and that there are serious differences
between two parts of the state. The different historical experiences and the whole set of other
factors, he goes on, justifies the usage of the full name of the state and the offence on the part
of Herzegovinians when only Bosnia is used.
5
Even my own experience confirmed that
leaving out Herzegovina will not go un-noticed by Herzegovinians. When I answered to vice
1
Further on the abbreviation B&H will usually be used instead of the long full name of the country.
2
According to the Dayton Peace Treaty Bosnia and Herzegovina has three levels of the government: the state
level, the entity level and the local level. One of the institutions of the state level is The Presidency with three
members: one from each of the three dominant ethnic groups. For more on structure of B&Hs government see
Imamovi, Mustafa (2006) Bosnia and Herzegovina: Evolution of Its Political and Legal Institutions,
Magistrat Sarajevo, Sarajevo
3
Lu, Ivo (2005) Ima li Hercegovine? (Tko i zato negira Hercegovinu i Hercegovce?) in National Security
and The Future 3-4 (6), pp. 37 86 [eng. Is there Herzegovina?( Who and why denies Herzegovina and
Herzegovinians?)]
4
Dodig, Radoslav (2005) Hercegovina ili esej ozemlji na enaru in National Security and The Future 3-4 (6),
pp 129 149 [eng. Herzegovina or essay on land on the edge]
5
An, Mladen (2005) to je Bosna bez Hercegovine? in National Security and The Future 3-4 (6), pp. 87
127 [eng. What is Bosnia without Herzegovina?]
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president of Dubrovnik branch of Napredak
6
that I am going to Bosnia, he immediately
corrected me by saying that I am going to Bosnia and Herzegovina.
7
All of this indicated existence of a strong regional identity of Herzegovina population
exercised, in this case, through a demand to use a full state name that contains the name of the
land they identify with. Precisely such indications encouraged further research.
Knowing that in 1832 Herzegovina become separated from Bosnia elayet under Ali-
aga Rizvanbegovi
8
, that Herzegovina vicariate was separated from Bosnian in 1847 after,
that Franciscan Province was divided on Bosnian and Herzegovinian part, that Herzegovina
Franciscans and its population had different education background from Bosnian ones and so
on, shows that distinctive Herzegovinian identity could have developed.
Ivo Lu provides an example of how this division is exercised today. He explains
that Bosnian Franciscans deny the very existence of a distinctive Order in Herzegovina
because they still havent recovered from the losses in the 19th century.
9
It contains a paradox
since by doing this they actually affirm that differences did exist and have obviously survived
until today.
Radoslav Dodig confirms these differences and also provides as with a geographical
definition of Herzegovina that will be used throughout this thesis. By acknowledging that
[m]ountain chain Makljan Ivan emerno, sharply divides Bosnia from Herzegovina
region and at the same time mark the boundaries of stronger Mediterranean influence in
cultural-historical sense () and that [r]omanization entered Herzegovina well before it
6
Napredak is Croatian cultural society with a task of encouraging education of Croatian people, and
promoting Croatian cultural heritage in general and new cultural creative work. For more information see
http://napredak.com.ba (website available in English)
7
Vice-president of Dubrovnik branch of Napredak is Marinko Mari, born in Herzegovina, with whom I
conducted an interview on April 18, 2010 in Dubrovnik, Croatia.
8
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: p. 121
9
Ibid. pp. 53 - 54
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entered inner Bosnia ()
10
he implies that Herzegovina and Bosnia had different paths of
primarily cultural development.
Together with geographical differences between Herzegovina and Bosnia, it is
plausible to argue that different cultural influences conditioned different developments of both
Franciscans and populations in these two regions. Being a Croat in Bosnia and being a Croat
in Herzegovina, it would seem, was hardly a same thing. This formed a basis for future
identity politics that are always selective in their construction.
The task of this thesis is to present first the differences among the two groups of
Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina: those living in Herzegovina and those living in Bosnia.
The main idea is, however, to explore the sources of these differences and offer a possible
explanation for why they manifest the way they do. Therefore, it will be argued that Croatian
population in B&H is divided with respect to how they identify and how they approach series
of issues (like the state reform) and that this division follows the border between the two
realities: the Herzegovinian and the Bosnian.
Why are some Croats in B&H so attached to Republic of Croatia (and feeling Croat)
while others perceive Bosnia as their home (and feeling more Bosnian) without a problem?
How did these differences in identity come into being in the first place? How strong these
identities are? Why do Croats in Herzegovina and in Bosnia have different attitudes towards
the state reform? Why do they find it difficult to agree? These are some of the questions this
thesis will aim at offering answers.
10
Dodig, Radoslav (2005) Hercegovina ili esej o zemlji na enaru in National Security and The Future 3-4 (6)
2005, pp 129 149 (pp. 131); Planinski vijenci na potezu Makljen Ivan emerno, koji otro razdvajaju
bosansko od hercegovakog podruja, obiljeavaju ujedno granicu jaih prodora mediteranskih utjecaja u
kulturno-historijskom smislu; (134) Romanizacija je u Hercegovinu prodrla znatno prije nego u unutranjost
Bosne. [eng. The mountain chains Makljen-Ivan-emerno sharply divide Bosnian from Herzegovinian
territory, marks also the border of Mediterranean influence in a cultural historical sense. Romanization came
to Herzegovina much earlier than in inner Bosnia.]
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The first chapter will explain differences in attitudes among Croats in Bosnia and
Herzegovina by providing a historical framework within which Croatian identity took shape
in this country. The aim of this chapter is to present some of the most important events in the
last two centuries in B&H and how were they experienced among Croats in two different
regions.
The second chapter will continue by emphasizing few facts on Croatian national
identity in general which is necessary for understanding how Croatian identity developed
among Catholic population in B&H. Two main topics will be covered by this chapter: the
crucial differences in 19
th
and present day Croatian national identity and the particularity of
Croatian experience in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
This ongoing debate on differences among Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina was
tested in a field research that will be described in the third chapter together with its results.
The aim of the research was to collect qualitative (not quantitative) data on differing attitudes
of Croats living in B&H. Attitudes that were of specific interest for this research are related to
homeland issue
11
, the status of Croat entity in Bosnia and Herzegovina
12
, the need for the
reform of the administrative structure of B&H
13
and the future of B&H.
The forth and the last chapter, will finally offer the possible explanation for the
differences presented in previous chapters. Contrary to those attempts to explain the division
among Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina using only one dimension (the differing historical
experience that nourished different identities) and thus falling into a trap of
oversimplification, this chapter will offer four factors that together help understand the
reasons behind the division.
11
What is the homeland of Croats living in Bosnia and Herzegovina?
12
Are Croats endangered in B&H? Why and how if yes?
13
Is the reform needed? If yes on what basis should it be implemented?
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CHAPTER I The Historical Background
In order to explain differences in attitudes among Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina it
is inevitable to provide first a historical framework within which Croatian identity took shape
in this country.
14
It is the intention of this chapter to present some of the most important
events in the last two centuries in B&H. Some of these influenced all of its inhabitants and
some had particular effect on its Catholic population (sometimes just parts of it), who today
predominantly refer to themselves as Croats. The significance of these events is even greater
having in mind they will later on be used to support the main hypothesis and help explain
some of the reasons behind different attitudes among Croats towards Bosnia and Herzegovina
and its future.
The chapter will focus mainly on events in the 19
th
and 20
th
century and will rarely
refer to previous periods. The main reason for this comes from the fact that Croatian national
identity began to develop in the first half of the 19
th
century and not before
15
. Therefore, as
interesting as earlier times might be, they rarely offer relevant information for arguments that
will be presented here. Special emphases will be on those events that were experienced
differently by Croats in Bosnia and Croats in Herzegovina. These events strengthened
regional identity in Herzegovina, cultivated its separate mentality and might have influenced
the attitudes of Herzegovina Croats on a range of issues. This, however, will be debated in
more detail in the following chapters.
The main topics of this chapter will cover the following periods of B&H history: 19
th
century Ottoman rule, Austro Hungarian rule, first (King Karaorevi) Yugoslavia, The
Second World War, Communist (Tito) Yugoslavia and finally the break up of Yugoslavia and
Dayton Bosnia and Herzegovina.
14
For a map of Bosnia and Herzegovina see Appendix 1
15
The Illirian movement [hrv. Ilirski pokret] also known as National Revival [hrv. Nacionalni preporod] is
considered to be the beginning of this process.
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There are at least two features of 19
th
century Bosnia and Herzegovina that come into
focus as relevant for Catholics in this country, their Croatian identity(s) and its
development(s): first The Franciscan Order and second National Revival movement
16
.
1.1. The Franciscans of Sil ver Bosnia
It is impossible to make any relevant conclusions about the Catholic population of
Bosnia and Herzegovina and issues of their identity without taking into consideration the
Bosnian Franciscan Order and its missionaries. The importance of their presence and work for
preservation of Catholicism on the territory of todays B&H is undisputable, as well as their
strong and deep relationship with the local population.
The first Franciscans arrived in Bosnia already in the mid 13
th
century with the
protection and support of local nobility (most notably Kotromani dynasty) they pushed
members of the Dominican Order (the first order to settle Bosnian territory) out of Bosnia.
This process was soon to be crowned with the foundation of Bosnian (Franciscan) vicariate in
1340.
17
This will later be widely known as the Franciscan Province Bosna Srebrena
18
.
Since then till 1881, when the official church hierarchy was established for the first
time in Bosnia and Herzegovina (after the 1878 Austrian invasion), Franciscans practically
remained the only pastoral clergy functioning on the territory of modern time Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
19
Their importance for the preservation of Catholic population as well as
contribution to the development of literature is well documented and recognized. In order to
16
Although this movement started in Croatia it exercised significant influence on the Catholic population of
B&H.
17
Daja, M., Sreko (1997) Katolianstvo u Bosni i Hercegovini, HKD Napredak, Sarajevo: pp. 50 51[eng.
Catholicism in Bosnia and Herzegovina]
18
Bosna Srebrena [lat. Bosnia Argentina] was named after the Bosnian city of Srebrenica, where one of the
first Franciscan monasteries was built serving as a first seat of the province. Since the city was built as a mining
settlement close to the silver mines, it was named after it and so was the province of the Franciscan Order.
19
Karamati, Marko (1992.) Franjevci Bosne Srebrene u vrijeme austrougarska uprave 1878 1914, Svijetlo
rijei, Sarajevo: p 43 [eng. Franciscans of Silver Bosnia under Austro-Hungarian administration 1878 1914]
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protect them, the Catholic population referred to their friars as Ujak (uncle) which remains
a practice even today.
20
Everything indicates that close ties between Franciscans and the
Catholic population existed and are preserved to the present day.
Prominent Croatian Columnist and researcher Radoslav Dodig describes this almost
mystical and incomprehensible link and offers a possible explanation claiming that in a
hostile atmosphere (like that of the Ottoman Empire) Franciscans were seen and felt as
peoples terrestrial and celestial protectors".
21
Besides being Gods men and spreading the
Good Word, being the only educated people among Catholics (and thus teachers) also gave
them the necessary authority to exercise strong influence over their population. It is therefore
no surprise that ordinary Catholic peasant with little or (more often) no education at all looked
up to educated Franciscans and saw them as community leaders.
Furthermore, Franciscans must have been much more respected for sharing the
difficult life of Ottoman rule together with their Catholic flock. Historian Sreko Daja
describes the difficult everyday practices of members of the Franciscan Order that did not
differ from those of common people.
22
It is here that we should seek for the sources of the
strong and unusual relationship between Franciscans and Catholics in Bosnia and
Herzegovina. Franciscans constitute a unique example by being community leaders, priests,
educators and fellow neighbours sharing lifes difficulties, all in one.
With nationalist ideas from Croatia and Serbia making their way into Bosnia and
among its population in the 19
th
century, religions became nationalized as well. Linking
20
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: pp. 53, 98 - 100
21
Dodig, Radoslav (2005) Hercegovina ili esej ozemlji na enaru in National Security and The Future 3-4 (6)
2005, pp 129 149 (pp. 139); Moda je razlogom to to je hercegovaki ovjek, nemajui svoju vlast, u
franjevcu vidio svoga i zemaljskog i nebeskog zatitnika. [eng. Maybe because Herzegovinian man did not have
the rule of his own that he saw in a Franciscan the earthly and heavenlyprotector. ]
22
For more see chapter on Odgoj i ivot klera in Daja, M Sreko (1971) Katolici u Bosni i Zapadnoj
Hercegovini na prijelazu iz 18. u 19. stoljee, Kranska sadanjost, Zagreb (pp. 134 - 156) Daja offeres an
insight into difficult circumstances of upbringing of young members of The Order or the so called pitomci. By
describing their choirs and everyday practices he shows us that Franciscans interacted with people not only as
community leaders but also as community members who all shared the same burdens of life. Although
functioning as some kind of community elite they, expect respect, enjoyed no privileges that usually go with it.
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religious identity with ideas of nationhood made Catholics become Croats by default. In this
light Franciscans who were seen as guardians of Catholicism in Bosnia became at the same
time guardians of Croatian national identity as if it existed since ever. This constructed
myth made Bosnian Franciscans one of the main promoters of the Croatian national idea in
Bosnia.
Franciscan history is therefore unavoidable in examining the development of Croatian
identity. Even more, events within The Order might shed some light on a division among
Croats in B&H and their differing attitudes. The most important one of these is most
definitely the so called Barii Affair that led to a division within The Order although it is
significant not so much for its consequences as much as for its sources.
Bishops, seated in the modern day Croatian city of akovo did not visit Bosnia but
they kept challenging Franciscan rights on the tithe claiming it for them - unsuccessfully in
the end.
23
Because of this continuing conflict between the bishops and the Franciscans, the
provisional solution of creating an Apostolic vicariate was implemented in 1735, with an
apostolic vicar (functioning as a bishop) elected among the Franciscans.
24
Daja notes that the
[v]icariate included the whole Bosnia and western Herzegovina, with vicars as bishops,
seated in one of the Franciscan monasteries in central Bosnia but emphasizes that this did not
put an end to The Bishop Franciscans conflict. The only difference now was that the bishop
was Franciscan as well.
25
It is against this background that the Barii Affair takes place in the 30s and 40s of
the 19
th
century. A direct result of the conflict between the bishop-vicar Rafael Barii and the
23
Daja, M., Sreko (1997) Katolianstvo u Bosni i Hercegovini, HKD Napredak, Sarajevo: pp. 40 - 43 [eng.
Catholicism in Bosnia and Herzegovina]
24
Karamati, Marko (1991.) Franjevaka provincija Bosna Srebrena, Franjevaki provincijalat, Sarajevo: pp. 9
[eng. Franciscan Province Silver Bosnia]
25
Daja, M., Sreko (1997) Katolianstvo u Bosni i Hercegovini, HKD Napredak, Sarajevo: pp. 48 [eng.
Catholicism in Bosnia and Herzegovina] : U Vikarijat je ukljuena itava Bosna i zapadna Hercegovina, a
vikari su bili biskupi, koji su stolovali u jednom od franjevakih samostana u centralnoj Bosni to e opet
voditi u konflikte izmeu biskupa-vikara i franjevaca.
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Franciscan Order was the suspension of the Franciscan province the Silver Bosnia in the
period from 1843 till 1847 when the apostolic vicariate was established in Herzegovina next
to the Bosnian one. This change in official Church structure for the first time in history of the
Bosnian Franciscan Order resulted in a change of the unofficial structure of the Franciscan
Order. What happened is that in 1952 Herzegovina Franciscan custody was established
(separated from the Bosnian one) and later on elevated to level of the province in 1892.
26
This
was the first visible sign of division within the Catholic population in Bosnia and
Herzegovina. It is evident something was going on within the Franciscan Order that made
Herzegovina Franciscans support bishop-vicar Rafael Barii against their brother friars from
Bosnia.
A possible explanation is offered by Dambo, a participant of the Scientific
Conference on father Grgo Marti that took place in 1995 in Zagreb, Croatia, who reveals the
existence of animosities among Franciscans of Silver Bosnia, notably between three districts
with centres in monasteries in Kraljeva Sutjeska, Fojnice and Kreevo. He shows that
although on the outside it seemed the brothers of Silver Bosnia lived in harmony, on the
inside they were divided and even coined special names to differentiate one from another
(Sutjeani, Kreevljaci and Fojniani). Furthermore these differences were publicly
expressed during the Barii Affair. This was, he believes, a result of different monastery
traditions, discipline levels, entrance requirements and educational background.
27
Education in combination with the generally inaccessible Bosnian territory was
probably the most important element behind the formation of differences within the Bosnian
26
Babi, Marko (1996) Politike i kulturne prilike u Bosni i Hercegovini u doba fra Grge Martia: in Zbornik
radova Znanstvenog skupa Fra Grgo Marti i njegovo doba, Zagreb, 8. - 9. studenog 1995., Zaviajni klub
Posuje, Zagreb: pp. 29 30; [eng. Political and Cultiral circumstances in Bosnia and Herzegovina in time of
father Grgo Marti]
27
Dambo, Jozo (1996) Stoljee fra. Grge Martia: Dihotomija svjetova franjevaca Bosne Srebrene: in
Zbornik radova Znanstvenog skupa Fra Grgo Marti i njegovo doba, Zagreb, 8. - 9. studenog 1995., Zaviajni
klub Posuje, Zagreb: pp. 48 -50; [eng. Dichotomy of the worlds of the Franciscans of Silver Bosnia ]
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Franciscan Order. Herzegovina, bordering the Dalmatian region
28
had relatively stable
contacts with Dalmatian cities and Catholic population there and also had easier access to
schools in Dalmatia and through them Rome. On the other hand, Bosnian Franciscans were
much more linked with northern parts of Croatia and university centres like Zagreb and
Vienna. This, I would argue, best explains different monastery traditions that produced a
sense of uniqueness and distinctiveness among Bosnian Franciscan Orders in Bosnia and in
Herzegovina. The Barii Affair was thus seen as a good opportunity on the side of the
Herzegovina Franciscans to finally emancipate from the monastery of Kreevo (Bosnia)
29
on the basis of already existing differences.
The Barii Affair resulted in a new Bosnian Franciscan province with Rafael
Barii as its head and is therefore not important because of its content but because of its
effects. These effects, in the form of this new administrative division within The Order, show
that different traditions among Catholics existed in Bosnia on the one side and Herzegovina
on the other. Whatever the reasons for the conflict between the bishop-vicar Rafael Barii
and Bosnian Franciscans might have been at that time, it is plausible to argue that the
dichotomy of Silver Bosnia was not its consequence but most likely the cause.
With official Church hierarchy set up in Bosnia and Herzegovina
30
in 1881, the
Franciscans will gradually be pushed to the side and lose the status of the main clergy in
Bosnia and Herzegovina. Although their importance for preservation of Catholicism and
Croatian hood was never contested they will never again play the role they played in the 19
th
century and thus they leave the main focus of this chapter.
28
The Map 1. shows the proximity of Damlatian coastline and its Herzegovinian hinterland (Neretva valley,
cities of Ljubuki, iroki Brijeg, Mostar and so on)
29
Dambo, Jozo (1996) Stoljee fra. Grge Martia: Dihotomija svjetova franjevaca Bosne Srebrene: in
Zbornik radova Znanstvenog skupa Fra Grgo Marti i njegovo doba, Zagreb, 8. - 9. studenog 1995., Zaviajni
klub Posuje, Zagreb: pp. 51 [eng. Dichotomy of worlds of Franciscans of Silver Bosnia]
30
Meaning that non-Franciscan bishop was inaugurated
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1.2. The Croatian National Revival
It is important to note that above these differences within the Franciscan Order and
Catholic population coming from strong regionalism accompanied by distinctive mentalities,
there was (and still is) a strong common Catholic Croatian identity linking all of them.
National movements, developing in the 19
th
century in Serbia and the Croatian part of the
Austrian Empire heavily influenced the Christian population in Bosnia and ways they
constructed their national identities. It seemed natural that the Catholic population would
incline towards Catholic Croatia and its national movement while the Orthodox population
would link itself to Orthodox Serbia and its movement.
In essence it means that borders between religious groups are also borders
between ethnic groups and further on nations. The Orthodox population is thus necessarily
Serbian and Catholic must be Croatian. These ideas however were not, in a way, indigenous
to Bosnia and Herzegovina but were rather poured into it from outside, as already mentioned
from Serbia and Croatia.
31
Development of such a national movement in Croatian parts of
Austro Hungarian Empire heavily influenced Catholics in Bosnia and Herzegovina,
especially through the work of Bosnian Franciscans (and some others) and this to great extent
answers the question how did Catholics in Bosnia and Herzegovina become Croats in B&H.
Croatian National Revival [cro. Hrvatski Nacionalni Preporod] was a long process of
cultural and socio political revival that took place in Croatia in the 19
th
century. Although
there is no agreement regarding when exactly it started and ended we can broadly place it in a
period between the 1830s and 1880s. Some of the most important legacies of this epoch was
establishing the standard for Croatian language, laying down the foundation of a series of
national institutions (for example the Croatian Academy for Arts and Science) as well as a
31
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: p. 1 12; chapter I: Races, myths
and origins: Bosnia to 1180
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system of national values (in culture, politics, law, religion, administration, education,
science and so on) that set certain outlines of what it means to be a Croat. Croatian
historiography regards this period as one in which the Croatian nation joined the company of
modern European nations.
32
Already some of the first leaders of this movement, like count J anko Drakovi,
argued that Croatia had a historic right on Turkish Bosnia and expected that on the basis of
ethnic principle the whole of Bosnia and Herzegovina would unify with Croatia.
33
This
resulted in increased interest of the Croatian press for everything that was going on in Bosnia
and Herzegovina in the Ottoman Empire and wishes for Bosnia to be liberated and joined
with Croatian lands were more and more often proclaimed in the public sphere.
34
Once again, Franciscans hold the key to answer how these ideas were transferred to
Catholics in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The history of education of young friars under Turkish
rule has always been the history of education outside Bosnia and Herzegovina. One of the
most respected Franciscans historians, friar Ignacije Gavran, indicates that the 19
th
century
was the most arranged period of education of Bosnian clergy thanks to the Croatian bishop
Josip Juraj Strossmayer
35
who invited Franciscans to get education in his diocese. This, he
goes on, ended in 1876 when Hungarians decided that Bosnian Friars were being educated in
a too Slavish way under the patronage of the Croatian bishop.
36
In Croatia Franciscans were
educated of ideas promulgated by Croatian National Movement. It seems clear that the
32
Koruni, Petar (1996) Fra. Grgo Marti i Hrvatski Nacionalni Pokret: in Zbornik radova Znanstvenog
skupa Fra Grgo Marti i njegovo doba, Zagreb, 8. - 9. studenog 1995., Zaviajni klub Posuje, Zagreb: pp. 59 -
64 [eng. Dichotomy of worlds of Franciscans of Silver Bosnia]
33
Ibid. Pp. 68
34
Koruni, Petar (1996) Fra. Grgo Marti i Hrvatski Nacionalni Pokret: in Zbornik radova Znanstvenog
skupa Fra Grgo Marti i njegovo doba, Zagreb, 8. - 9. studenog 1995., Zaviajni klub Posuje, Zagreb: pp. 69 -
74 [eng. Friar Grgo Marti and Croatian National Movement in Collection of paper of Scientific conference
on Fr. Grgo Marti and his era]
35
Josip Juraj Strossmayer was a Croatian bishop of akovo (city in Slavonia region) and one of the most
prominent figures in Croatian National Revival Movement. As a bishop, theologist, politicion, writer, publicist
and a patron he is regarded by national Croatian historiography as one of the greatest Croats in history.
36
Gavran, Ignacije (2010) Suputnici bosanske povijesti, Svjetlo rijei, Sarajevo Zagreb, pp 126 128 [eng.
Companions of Bosnian History ]
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Hungarian authorities were unhappy with these too Slavish (meaning Croatian national)
ideas the young friars were exposed to and were afraid that they might spread them back
home. This is exactly what they did.
There is no doubt that Franciscan Ujaci [eng. Uncles] in B&H did have a
huge impact on their population and how they perceived themselves and others by educating
them, caring for them, often protecting them and having authority over them. However, even
if both Bosnian and Herzegovinian Franciscans together with their flock supported the
Croatian national idea and advocated unity among all Croats based on religion/ethnicity,
(previously mentioned) differences between the two parts of the same Order and people
remained.
1.3. The experi ence of the 20th century
The situation in B&H was becoming more and more anarchic as the country entered
the second half of the century. In the mid 70s in highland Herzegovina, due to (traditionally)
low crop income Christian peasants started fleeing into the mountains to avoid paying
increased taxes which provoked brutal measures by the authorities.
37
This rebellious nature of
Herzegovina will be confirmed even the after arrival of the Austro Hungarian army with so
called robbers attacking gendarme posts and army positions.
38
By the end of the 80s of the 19
th
century it was clear to everyone that the Ottoman
Empire could no longer cope with the increasing numbers of rebellions in its European lands
(Bulgaria, Serbia, Albania, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina). The Austro Hungarian
37
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: pp. 132
38
Ibid. pp.138 - 139
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Empire was ready to make use of this and, although reluctantly
39
, to take over control of
Turkish Bosnian vilayet.
As history will show on many occasions, Bosnia and Herzegovina as the most
heterogeneous society already in the beginning of 20
th
century, was the main battlefield of
different nationalist ideas and its political parties. Among these, Croatian and Serbian were
not the only ones, but were joined by a Muslim National Organization in 1906.
40
Together with these three nationalist ideas, whose strength varied through history
depending on circumstances, one more idea appeared that is widely regarded as an Austrian
invention. Benjamin Kallay, the Monarchys minister in charge of Bosnia, advocated the idea
of bonjatvo (Bosnianism) as a separate nation with distinct identity, different from
Croats and Serbs living outside Bosnia and Herzegovina.
41
Although this idea did not yield
much success and was abandoned in the early 20
th
century it was not in fact an Austrian
invention but appeared in the pre-occupation period among Bosnian (not Herzegovinian)
friars, notably father Anto Kneevi.
42
Under Austro Hungarian rule and the experience of wars misery, all South Slavs of
The Empire came together and in 1918 opted for secession and unification with the Kingdom
of Serbia. The disappointment will come only later with unpopular (among Croats and
Muslims) policies of Serbian centralism. It was in general dissatisfaction and Serbian
oppression that nourished a sense of unity among Croats (Catholics) and a good part of the
39
It was particularly the Hungarian part of the Empire afraid of including more Slavs under its rule. Their main
concern was this would strengthen the Slav corpus within the Empire and weaken Hungarian rule. However, the
possibility of B&H coming under Serbian rule and thus increasing the strength and desirability of Serbia for all
South Slavs worried them even more. The occupation of B&H occurred in 1878 after the Congress in Berlin. See
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: pp. 136 - 138
40
Ibid. pp. 151
41
Karamati, Marko (1992.) Franjevci Bosne Srebrene u vrijeme austrougarska uprave 1878 1914, Svjetlo
rijei, Sarajevo: pp 60 [eng. Franciscans of Silver Bosnia under Austro-Hungarian administration 1878 1914]:
... minister Benjamin Kallay advocated for creation of distinct nation, with Bosnian-Herzegovian regional
belonging as its framework.
42
Ibid. pp. 60 - 61: ... minister Benjamin Kallay advocated for creation of distinct nation, with Bosnian-
Herzegovian regional belonging as its framework.
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Muslims in Bosnia and Herzegovina against the central state and Serbs.
43
The tensions were
increasing and escalated in 1928 when Stjepan Radi
44
, the Croatian national leader, was
assassinated in Parliament. As a result King Aleksandar Karaorevi introduced his personal
dictatorship in J anuary 1929 and the name Yugoslavia as official state name appeared for the
first time.
The king's dictatorship did not solve much and actually gave some stimulation to
Croatian radical movements, especially to Ustae and their leader, Ante Paveli, under
who's leadership Croatia would suffer tragedy in the upcoming war.
45
The king was murdered
in Marseille in 1934 and many agree this in effect opened space for solving the so called
Croatian question
46
in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
The solution finally came in the form of the well known Cvetkovi Maek
agreement
47
in 1939 under which Croatia was granted wide autonomy within the Kingdom.
The newly established unit was named Banovina Hrvatska
48
and its territory included not
only present day Croatia (with the exception of Istria in the West) but also a good part of
43
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: pp. 161 -167
44
Stjepan Radi was a leader of main Croatian party called Croatian Peasent Party (Hrvatska seljaka stranka -
HSS) that managed to attract Croatian voters of all profiles. HSS was often seen not only as a national party but
also as a national movement and Stjepan Radi as national leader.
45
The Ustae movement was founded in 1929 by Croatian right-wing politician Ante Paveli. It was a Croatian
fascist and anti-Yugoslav separatist movement sought to create an independent Croatian state and thus was
banned in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. Their name comes from the Croatian word ustati meaning "to rise",
hence ustae would mean insurgents, or rebels. After the German invasion of Yugoslavia, Ante Paveli was
installed leader of a puppet state called Independent State of Croatia [cro. Nezavisna Drava Hrvatska
NDH] whos military formations collaborated with the Axis troops in fighting against the resistance forces, the
Yugoslav Partisans and their leader J osip Broz Tito. As German forces withdrew from Yugoslavia in 1945, the
Ustae were defeated, expelled, and eventually destroyed by the Partisans. The Ustae aimed at an ethnically
"pure" Croatia, and saw the Serbs that lived in Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina as their biggest obstacle. The
result of such aim was establishment of number of concentration camps with Jasenovac as the most famous
one. The exact numbers of victims remains contested till present day.
46
The Croatian question refers to the battling between the two concepts of Yugoslav state in the first
Yugoslvia (1918 - 1941). Against the Belgrades centralist concept Zagreb opposed its federal concept aimed at
acquiring large autonomy for Croatian lands. The conflict produced almost constant tensions in political system
of Yugoslavia and often resulted in Croatian MPs withdrawing from Parliamentary sessions. The solution for the
problem was first implemented by the King himself with introduction of, already mentioned, personal
dictatorship and abolition of nationally colored administrative division of the state. This attempt to solve the
question failed in 1934 in Marseille.
47
Dragia Cvetkovi was the new Yugoslav prime minister and Vladko Maek was the new leader of HSS after
Radi's death in 1928.
48
To see the map of the Banovina Hrvatska go to Appendix 2
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present day Bosnia and Herzegovina. To be more precise, the part of B&H that was unified
with Croatia was Western Herzegovina and some parts of Central and (small parts of)
Northern Bosnia.
49
These parts will remain under Zagreb's was annexed to Croatia.
As part of the Independent State of Croatia
50
[cro. Nezavisna Drava Hrvatska
NDH] Herzegovina was, unlike Bosnia, put in the Italian occupational zone.
51
With Serbian
etniks movement from Eastern Herzegovina particularly active in this region, Croats and
Franciscans from Herzegovina had a rather different experience from their counterparts in
Bosnia. This severely affected the way Communist Yugoslavia treated Croats in Herzegovina
region meaning it was more repressive.
52
This contributed even more to development of distinctive identities backed my
differing mentalities that refer to different historical and cultural backgrounds. The fact that
these differences were noted from outside (by the Yugoslav Communist state for example)
also played a role in its consolidation. In the wake of the Yugoslav secession wars and the
emergence of the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ- Hrvatska Demokratska Zajednica) the
stage of differences among Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina was already set and ready and
Croatian political elites were well aware of it.
53
Just as war sealed the differences based on
ethnic/religious differences, so did the different views on the future of the Bosnian state and
political agendas that emerged as a result of it, sealed differences within the Croatian national
corpus in B&H.
49
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: pp. 171 - 172
50
See footnote 45
51
Lu, Ivo (2005) Ima li Hercegovine? (Tko i zato negira Hercegovinu i Hercegovce?) in National Security
and The Future 3-4 (6), pp. 37 86 [eng. Who and why denies Herzegovina and Herzegovinians?] (pp. 45)
52
Ibid. pp. 54 - 58
53
The fact that leadership of Republic of Croatia (RH) opted for secession of Herzegovina region and was ready
to abandon parts of Bosnia show that they were aware of differences among Croats on the field. It is widely
accepted that Herzegovina Croats exercised much more influence on politics of RH than those from Bosnia
through figures like Minister of Defense of Republic of Croatia (MORH) Gojko uak who was from iroki
Brijeg, Herzegovina.
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1.4. The break up of Yugoslavi a
History will give Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina one more chance to demonstrate
their differences during the 1990s and the war that engulfed the country. Even though faced
with a common enemy and same threat of (physical) elimination, Croats in Herzegovina and
Croats in Bosnia showed that they view reality in different ways. The most devastating result
of this would be the establishment of the Croat Community of Herceg Bosna in mid 1992
and the Muslim Croat war in early 1993
54
.
After two federal units, Croatia and Slovenia, declared they were seceding from
Yugoslavia on J une 25 1991, it took almost a year for Bosnia and Herzegovina to organize an
independence referendum (February 29 and March 1 1992) which was obstructed by Serbian
militia and biased members of the Yugoslav National Army. By the time Bosnia and
Herzegovina received its international recognition on April 6 1992, conflict between Serbs in
the self - proclaimed Serbian Autonomous Regions on one side, and Croats and Bosniacs in
the rest of the country on the other side had already started.
55
That there had been no consensus among the Bosnian political elite regarding the
future of B&H (then still the federal unit of Yugoslavia) was obvious long before the war had
actually started. Unsurprisingly the disagreement followed the line of ethnic division. Mustafa
Imamovi notes that it was already after the first democratic elections in Bosnia and
Herzegovina that SDS (Serb Democratic Party), the party representing Bosnian Serbs,
although part of governing coalition started undermining state institutions. This was only the
beginning of what was to follow. Already in November 1991, division among Serb
representatives on the one side and Bosniak and Croat on the other, was confirmed when the
54
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: pp. 241 - 249
55
For more details see: Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia. A short History, Pan Books, London, pp. 213 - 233
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Memorandum of Independence was passed and representatives of SDS left the
parliamentary session as a sign of protest.
56
On March 27, 1992, the already mentioned Serbian Autonomous Regions were
formed within the territory of the then internationally recognized state: Bosnia and
Herzegovina. Those self-proclaimed regions, formed against the idea of an independent B&H,
would survive the war in the form of a legalized (by Dayton Treaty) entity namedRepublika
Srpska.
57
Croats in B&H, under the leadership of Stjepan Kulji were in favour of preserving
the borders of all (already former) Yugoslav republics. However, in J anuary 1992 Kulji was
replaced by Mate Boban, a Hercegovinian Croat, a process overlooked by Croatian president
Franjo Tuman. To be from Herzegovina at that time meant being more hard-line since Croats
there witnessed the establishment of Serbian Autonomous Regions as well as its military
build up.
58
The Croatian counterpart to Serbian Autonomous Regions in Bosnia and
Herzegovina was established in J uly 1992 and was given the name Croat Community of
Herceg Bosna
59
. Although it was marked as a provisional solution, Croatian currency
(HRK - Kuna) was introduced as well as the Croatian national flag (red, white, blue with red
white check board in the middle as a coat of arms). Many saw this as a first step towards
realization of the plan of carving territory out of B&H that was heavily supported by the
56
Imamovi, Mustafa (2006) Bosnia and Herzegovina: Evolution of Its Political and Legal Institutions,
Magistrat Sarajevo, Sarajevo, pp. 386
57
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: pp. 232
58
Ibid. pp. 232
59
Herceg Bosna occupied areas in Western Herzegovina where Croats were predominant majority. To a great
extent, it imitated the Bosnian part of the borders of the Banovina Hrvatska. Later on, it will tend to expand its
territory into areas of Central Bosnia where Croats resided but never constituted predominant majority and often
no majority at all. It is known that for example Croats in Northern Bosnia in the Posavina region never supported
the war against Muslims in Central Bosnia.
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Herzegovinian born adviser of president Tuman, Gojko uak
60
. Whether president Tuman
supported this idea or not is not clear but Malcolm Noel suggests president Tuman was a
rational opportunist who would have accepted uaks idea if he had been given a positive
sign from outside.
61
A similar hypothesis was also presented by Jerko Zovak, one of the
Croatian commanders in Northern Bosnia who believed the Croatian high command lacked
consistent policies towards B&H and strongly believed this region was given to Serbs in
exchange for Herzegovina (Herceg - Bosna).
62
It is against this background as well as in the light of the Vance Owen peace plan
63
that war between Bosniacs and Croats broke out in Central Bosnia. In early 1993 Croat forces
besieged Muslim forces in Gornji Vakuf and by April the same year a full scale war in Central
Bosnia was in progress.
64
As a result forces from Herzegovina (with predominant Croatian majority) entered
Central Bosnia (where Croats were the minority) and engaged fighting with soldiers that the
local Croatian population regarded as allies only few months before. Meanwhile, in Northern
Bosnia and Sarajevo, Croats and Bosniacs continued to fight side by side. At this point, on the
whole territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina everyone was fighting everyone and as an old
saying says: You couldnt tell who is drinking and who is paying. By the end of the war
different group of Croats accumulated significantly different experiences and notions of who
the enemies and who the allies were.
60
Gojko uak at that time served as Defense Minister of Republic of Croatia and was regarded in public as the
second most powerful man after president Tuman.
61
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: pp. 241
62
Zovak, J erko (2009) Rat u Bosanskoj Posavini 1992 , Posavska Hrvatska d.o.o., Slavonski Brod, pp. 663 -
668 [eng. The War in The Bosnian Posavina region 1992]
63
Lord Owen and Cyrus Vance proposed in October 1992 detailed proposal for a political settlement of the war
in Bosnia and Herzegovina. They proposed creation of autonomous provinces (or cantons) that would be
ethnicly labeled which would spark competition between Croats and Bosniacs in Central Bosnia. See Malcolm,
Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: pp. 247 - 248
64
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: pp. 248 - 249
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The war between Croats and Bosniacs ended on March 18, 1995 after presidents
Tuman and Izetbegovi agreed under international pressure to establish the Federation of
Bosnia and Herzegovina (Washington Agreement) as a form of alliance against Serb forces.
65
Although peace was restored in Central Bosnia, it is easy to imagine the disappointment of the
significant amount of Croats in Herzegovina with The Agreement since it meant the end to an
idea of secession from Bosnia and Herzegovina. The only consolation could have been the
talks of confederation between the newly formed Federation and Republic of Croatia.
66
The war in entire Bosnia and Herzegovina ended in the same way that Muslim Croat
War ended: thanks to international pressure. It was not until 1995 and the horrible events in
Srebrenica that made the international community realize peace would not be achieved
without its strong interference. According to Professor Pejanovi, the peaceful solution
became the only option mainly thanks to American diplomat Richard Holbrooke and NATO
air strikes against Bosnian Serb forces in 1995.
67
The Dayton Treaty, officially known as The General Framework Agreement for Peace
in Bosnia and Herzegovina is the peace agreement reached near Dayton (Ohio) in November
1995. It was, however, formally signed
68
in Paris on December 14 1995, which marked the
end of the war
69
in Bosnia and Herzegovina. If anyone in early 1995 still doubted that the
Republic of Croatia was a party in conflict in B&H
70
, one should look at the signatures on
The Treaty: together with Alija Izebegovi (from B&H, representing Bosniacs) and Slobodan
65
Imamovi, Mustafa (2006) Bosnia and Herzegovina: Evolution of Its Political and Legal Institutions,
Magistrat Sarajevo, Sarajevo, pp. 389 - 392
66
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: pp. 257 - 258
67
Pejanovi, Mirko (2007) The Political Development of Bosnia and Herzegovina in The Post-Dayton Period,
TKD ahinpai, Sarajevo, pp. 41
68
As I already mentioned earlier, The Treaty was signed by Alija Izetbegovi, Slobodan Miloevi and Franjo
Tuman.
69
War left over 50% of the Bosnian population displaced, over 250 000 dead or missing, 200 000 wounded , 15
20 billion $ worth assets destroyed, 90% unemployment Data have been taken from: Cousens, Elizabeth M.
, Carter, Charles K. (2001) Toward Peace in Bosnia, Lynne Rienner Publishers Inc. , London
70
a party that implemented policies of division of Bosnia and Herzegovina giving false hope to many Croats
in B&H (mostly to those living in neighboring region of Herzegovina) that they will soon be part of Republic of
Croatia.
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Miloevi (Serbia), there stood the proof of Croatias interference the signature of Croatias
president Franjo Tuman. If Croats in Herzegovina (Croat Community of Herceg Bosna)
were acting on their own, one has to wonder why was The Treaty signed by president Tuman
and not the leader of Croats in B&H Mate Boban?
The war ended but it was obvious that the peace was forced onto the parties involved.
Cousens and Carter argue that () coercion played a critical role in ending the war and that
war did not end with mutually hurting stalemate but with what is better called a coerced
compromise
71
. In the same way political elites are still being forced to cooperate in the
absence of any kind of consensus. It is crucial to see that Bosnia and Herzegovina as a state is
not founded on consensus but rather on two entities
72
in latent conflict suppressed by pressure
from outside with results that are hardly bright.
It is with this historical background and within such a framework that Croatian elites
in B&H operate today and Croatian population live, perceive and reflect on the future. This
chapter demonstrated that differences in attitudes among Croats in B&H had been conditioned
by different historical experience, life conditions and specific mentality (etc.) of those
residing in Herzegovina and Bosnia. As much as ones identity is constructed it is always
constructed out of specific interpretations (as distorted as they may be) of actual events and
circumstances. Since Bosnian Croats and Herzegovinian Croats were often subjects of
different experience, those who involved in (national) identity construction (always with the
intention of putting it to some specific use) had much more material to manipulate.
71
Cousens, Elizabeth M. , Carter, Charles K. (2001) Toward Peace in Bosnia, Lynne Rienner Publishers Inc. ,
London, pp. 27
72
See Appendix 4 for a map of the two entities established by the Dayton Treaty.
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CHAPTER II The Faces of Croatian Nationalism
Before focusing on the differences in attitudes among Croats of Bosnia and
Herzegovina and offering possible explanations, few facts on Croatian national identity in
general should be presented. Furthermore, particularity of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the
way(s) Croatian national identity formed itself in it are crucial for understanding how can
there be such a distinctive contrast in attitudes of members of the same national corpus on
important issues. The general basis for this chapter is provided in Ethnicity without Groups
where Brubaker emphasizes that no group is 100 per cent homogenous and that groupness
is not given and plain. Brubaker shows that ethnicity and other forms of groupness are not
something real, visible and touchable. They are instead a result of the way people perceive
their reality and perceptions can be manipulated.
73
There is no doubt that Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina recognize their national
identity as different from those of their fellow Serb and Bosniac citizens. As Noel Malcolm
notices, the only real basis for differing national identities in Bosnia and Herzegovina were
different religious identities.
74
Consequently, on the basis of sharing the same religion,
Catholics of B&H became Croats and remained such till the present day albeit perhaps on
different basis. It is precisely this new basis, specific for Bosnia and Herzegovina, which this
chapter aims to present and clarify.
Two main topics will be covered by this chapter: the crucial differences in 19
th
and
present day Croatian national identity and the particularity of Croatian experience in Bosnia
and Herzegovina.
73
Brubaker, Rogers (2004) Ethnicity without Groups, Harvard University Press, Cambridge
74
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: pp. 166
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2.1. The 19
th
century Croati an National Movement
Previous chapter provided some basic information on the National Revival
movement that sparked Croatian national feelings in the first half of the 19
th
century. The
historical importance of the movement for the establishment of Croatian national identity has
been emphasized as well as its impact on Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina through the work
of influential Franciscan Order. It has also been implied that Catholics of B&H become
members of the same national group as those Catholics living in Croatia.
Although Ivan Lovrenovi, the authority on the question of the identity of Croats in
B&H, discloses animosity of the19
th
century Croats and Croatian Revival movement towards
all those oriental elements that were coming with Croats/Catholics from Bosnia and
Herzegovina, there is nothing that would indicate Catholics from B&H felt less Croat.
75
As
Brubaker notes, it is the perception of reality that mattered and not what someone in Zagreb
may have thought. The perception of the reality is precisely what this chapter will deal with.
This will provide a better understanding of the nature of Croatian national identity, both in
Croatia and B&H.
As many other, the 19
th
century Croatian nationalist movement was reactionary as
well. Goldstein clearly indicates that Croatian Revival movement was a form of resistance to
Hungarian nobility and Hungarian national movement that was pushing for the idea of
Hungarian state from Carpathians to Adriatic Sea. Budapest s attempt to impose Hungarian
as official language in all lands under St. Stephans crown
76
produced fierce opposition in
75
Lovrenovi, Ivan (2002) Bosanski Hrvati, Durieux, Zagreb, pp. 8 9 [eng. The Bosnian Croats]
76
St. Stephan's crown was crown of Hungarian kings (title Hapsburgs held since 1527) who in 19th century
ruled Croatia as well.
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Croatia and in the end resulted in the creation of a modern and standardized
77
Croatian
language.
78
It is fair to claim that Hungarian nationalism greatly contributed to the development of
the Croatian nationalism and the idea of joining Serbia into one large South Slav state.
79
As it
has already been mentioned in previous chapter, unification of Empires South Slav lands
with Kingdom of Serbia was one of the worst fears of Vienna and Budapest. This proved to
be a powerful incentive for the Austro-Hungarian army to occupy Turkish Bosnia and
Herzegovina in 1878. From this year on (all the way to the brake up of Socialist Yugoslavia),
Croats of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croats in Croatia shared the same state.
In the light of a pushy Hungarian nationalism, Croat public figures at first named the
National Revival using a neutral name: Illirian Movement. This was to demonstrate their
attempt to spread their ideas to Slovene and Serbian national territory which was without
much success though. Illirian Movement thus remained Croatian but with strong element of
South Slav solidarity that was to be materialized in a common state.
80
It also proved to be a
powerful tool in fighting regionalisms of Slavonia, Dalmatia, Dubrovnik, Istria and Bosnia.
81
From 1878 on, Croats of B&H found themselves within same borders with other
Croats of Austro Hungarian Empire which meant sharing the same political framework and
the same problems. As a result, Croatian national identity was now taking form within one
state and one political body Croats of Austro Hungarian Empire.
77
Croatian Revival movement actually started as a call for the standardization of the Croatian language that has
three dialects. In the end, it was tokavian (to meaning what as opposed to kaj and a with a same
meaning but in other two dialects) dialect, native to 2/5 of Croats, that was used as a norm. See. Garde, Paul
(2004) Unity and Plurality in the Serbo-Croatian Linguitsic Sphere in J udit, Tony, Lacorne Denis (eds.):
Language, Nation, and State. Identity Politics in a Multilingual Age., New York, Palgrave, pp. 215-230
78
Goldstein, Ivo (1999) Croatia: A History, C. Hurst & Co. Ltd., Lonodn, pp. 60 - 62
79
Different (and conflicting) concepts of such South Slav state promulgated from Zagreb (the federal one) and
Belgrade (the centralist one) are not the topic of this chapter but it is useful to keep it in mind.
80
Yugoslavia [cro. Jugoslavija] means literary the land of South Slavs.
81
Goldstein, Ivo (1999) Croatia: A History, C. Hurst & Co. Ltd., London, pp. 61
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Three key points should be emphasized here: 1. in 19
th
and early 20
th
century Croatian
national identity was developing against Hungarian nationalism; 2. it was developing among
Croats living within the borders of one state; and 3. with the aim of establishing one large
South Slav state.
It was important to explain these early developments to show that unity among Croats
in the 19
th
and early 20
th
century was conditioned by certain historical circumstances. In the
wake of break up of Yugoslavia and the new awakening of Croatian nationalism these
circumstances were dramatically different. To some extent this helps us understand how did
split in attitudes among Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina occurred. This chapter can now
move to particularities of present day Croatian identity leaning onto three key points just
presented above.
2.2. Particulari ties of the 20
th
Croatian National Movement
As opposed to being a reaction to Hungarian nationalism in 19
th
century, present day
Croatian nationalism resurfaced as a response to events in Serbia and Serbian nationalism.
Goldstein sees causes of this primarily in the attempt of Serbian writers to reinterpret history
and portray Croats as the nation with genocidal nature [cro. genocidni Hrvati]. Slobodan
Miloevi and (in)direct threats he made in his speeches on numerous occasions
82
only added
up to previously established animosities in public sphere.
83
This put Croatian nationalism in a
strong defensive mode and helped it gain momentum.
82
One of the best examples of such threats can be found in Miloevi's speech he delivered in 1989 on the 600th
anniversary of the Battle of Kosovo. He used the example of Kosovo Battle to describe the battle(s) Serbia will
soon have to wage. For more see Goldstein, Ivo (1999) Croatia: A History, C. Hurst & Co. Ltd., London, pp.
203
83
Goldstein, Ivo (1999) Croatia: A History, C. Hurst & Co. Ltd., London, pp. 199 - 204
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Messages coming from Belgrade influenced all, then still Yugoslav, republics and not
only Croatia and Croats. However, considering that territories of Croatia and Bosnia and
Herzegovina were often mentioned as up for grabs, it is not surprising that non-Serbian
population of these republics felt most endangered by rising Serbian nationalism. This
provided the cohesion factor for Croats regardless of inner federal borders. Therefore,
although compared to 19
th
century, modern Croatian nationalism gained incentive from
Serbian and not Hungarian nationalism its effects for Croats in Croatia and B&H were the
same. Croatian national identity unified against one common enemy once again. Similarities
(between 19
th
and 20
th
century) however end there.
As emphasized earlier, in the 19
th
century Croatian national identity was developing
among Croats living within the borders of one state: the Austro-Hungarian Empire. As
opposed to that, 1990s arrived with Croats living in one Yugoslavia but in different federal
units. Within Yugoslavia Croats in Croatia and B&H were subjects to different political
authorities and were basically experiencing Yugoslavia in different ways. The following
chapters will provide more detail on these different experiences and here it will only be
emphasized that in 1990s Croatian national identity (unlike in 19
th
century) was cut by a
border between Republic of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina.
After two federal units, Croatia and Slovenia, declared they were seceding from
Yugoslavia on J une 25 1991, it took almost a year for Bosnia and Herzegovina to organize an
independence referendum. This finally happened on February 29 and March 1 1992. By the
time Bosnia and Herzegovina received its international recognition on April 6 1992, the
conflict between the Serbs in self - proclaimed Serbian Autonomous Regions on the one
side, and Croats and Bosniacs in the rest of the country on the other side had already been in
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progress.
84
According to the results of the referendum almost all Croats in Bosnia and
Herzegovina voted for () independent and sovereign Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina,
the state of citizens and peoples: Muslims, Serbs and Croats ().
85
It was confirmed in March 1992 that Croats (as opposed to 19
th
century experience) no
longer lived in the same country and as it will be argued later, this was not clear to some
members of Croatian political elites both in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. Croatian
national movement now operated from two different countries and this will prove important in
establishing (one of the) sources of different attitudes of Croatian polity in B&H.
The last point regarding differences of 19
th
and 20
th
century Croatian national
movement focuses on its aim. Unlike in 19
th
century when Croatian political leaders spoke in
favour of one South Slav state (which at that time meant unification with Kingdom of Serbia),
in 20
th
century it was quite clear that aim is independent state or at least highly autonomous
republic within Yugoslav Federation.
86
Possible complexities that might emerge out of such aim with Croats living in two
different sovereign countries are clearly visible. One of the most important questions that each
Croat must have had asked him/herself was probably: to which state should Croats in Bosnia
and Herzegovina be loyal to? Why Croats in B&H answered differently will be dealt with in
the fourth chapter.
Before moving to some particularities of Croatian identity in Bosnia and Herzegovina,
one last thing on the nature of the Croatian identity in general should be outlined. Bellamy
dedicated a one whole chapter of his book on Croatian identity to the Croatian historical
84
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia. A short History, Pan Books, London, p. 213 - 233
85
Komi, Ivo (2010) Ustavnopravni poloaj Hrvata nakon Daytona kontinuitet depolitizacije in Hrvati u
BiH: ustavni poloaj, kulturni razvoj i nacionalni identitet, Centar za demokraciju i pravo Miko Tripalo and
Pravni fakultet Sveuilita u Zagrebu, Zagreb pp. 7-21 [eng. Constitutional status of Croats after Dayton
continuity of depolitization in Croats in B&H: constitutional status. Cultural development and national
identity]
86
Goldstein, Ivo (1999) Croatia: A History, C. Hurst & Co. Ltd., London, pp. 203 - 205
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statehood narrative. There, he argues that Croats have never felt safe with defining
themselves just in terms of culture and linguistics
87
and were more interested (if not even
obsessed) in proofing historical continuity of the Croatian statehood. Ethnic origins and
distinctiveness did appear in nationalist discourse but were always of secondary importance.
On the other hand, in the focus of such discourse were attempts to prove that since 7
th
century
(alleged arrival of Croats) till the present day there was some form of a sovereign state linking
them. This was presented as a key prove that Croats are distinctive nation and have legitimate
right on an independent state.
88
That Bellamy was right and that Croats indeed suffer(ed) from state obsession is
mirrored in preamble of The Croatian Constitution passed on Christmas in 1990. A huge
portion of the preamble (still part of the Constitution) consists of listing proofs of Croatian
statehood throughout history, starting with the 7
th
century.
The text of preamble goes as follows
89
:
Expressing millennial national identity
90
and national existence of the Croatian
people, confirmed in a total sequence of historical events in the various state forms and the
maintenance and development of state-founding thought of the historic right of the Croatian
nation to full national sovereignty, which was (is) evident in: The creation of Croatian
principalities in the seventh century; The independent mediaeval state of Croatia founded in
the ninth century; The Kingdom of Croats established in the tenth century; The preservation
87
Main reason for this is most probably the fact that linguistic differences between (most notably) Croatian and
Serbian are practically none existent and to talk about two different cultures would also be pushing it too far.
88
Bellamy, J. Alex (2003) The Formation of Croatian National Identity, Manchester University Press,
Manchester and New York, pp. 32 - 40
89
The text of the preamble was written by the first president of Republic of Croatia, Franjo Tuman. Since some
of the linguistic constructions (because he used newly invented words) he used are hard to translate an original
version of the text of the preamble in Croatian will be provided in the end. Where needed, additional translations
and explanations of specific words will be provided in footnotes inserted in the English translation immediately.
90
The word that was here translated as identity in the Croatian original is samobitnost. This word can not be
translated to English so the identity is used since its meaning is the closest to samobitnost. The word
samobitnost comprises of two words samo (meaning self) and bitnost (meaning essentiality).
Samobitnost in direct translation would therefore be something like self-essentiality.
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of Croatian national subjectivity in Croatian-Hungarian personal union; In an independent and
sovereign decision of the Croatian Parliament in 1527 to elect a king from the Habsburg
dynasty; In an independent and sovereign decision of the Croatian Parliament on the
Pragmatic Sanction in 1712; The conclusions of the Croatian Parliament in 1848 on the
restoration of the integrity of the Triune Kingdom of Croatia under the rule of Ban
91
, based
on historical, national and natural right of the Croatian people; The Croatian-Hungarian
settlement from 1868 on the regulation of relations between the Kingdom of Dalmatia Croatia
and Slavonia and the Kingdom of Hungary on the basis of the legal traditions of both states
and the Pragmatic Sanction from 1712; The decision of the Croatian Parliament on 29th
October 1918 to dissolve state relations between Croatia and Austro - Hungary and the
simultaneous affiliation of independent Croatia, with reference to the historical natural and
national law, to the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs
92
proclaimed on the former territory
of Habsburg Monarchy; The fact that the decision of the National Council of State SCS to
unite with Serbia and Montenegro in Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (on 1 December
1918), that was later (on October 3, 1929) proclaimed the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, the
Croatian Parliament never sanctioned; The establishment of the Croatian Banovina
93
in 1939
which rebuilt the Croatian national identity
94
within Kingdom of Yugoslavia; The
establishment of the foundations of the state sovereignty during World War II, expressed
versus declaration of Croatian Independent State (1941) in the decisions of the National Anti-
Fascist Council of National Croatian Liberation (1943) and then in the Constitution of the
People's Republic of Croatia (1947) and later in the constitutions of the Socialist Republic of
Croatia (1963-1990), on the historical turning point of rejection of
communist system and changes in the international order in Europe, the Croatian people on
91
Ban is a specifically Croatian title for Imperial regent/protector/governor.
92
Abbreviation: State SCS [cro. Drava SHS]
93
Banovina is a Croatian name for the territorial unit subject to the rule of one Ban
94
See footnote 90
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the first democratic elections (1990) by its freely created will confirmed its one thousand
years national identity
95
. With the new Croatian Constitution (1990) and victory in the war
(1991-1995) Croatian people showed their determination and willingness to establish and
preserve Croatian Republic as autonomous and independent, sovereign and democratic state.
Starting from the presented historical facts and generally accepted principles in the modern
world and inalienability and indivisibility, un-transferability and un-exhaustibility of the right
to self-determination and national sovereignty of the Croatian people, including the
unimpaired right to secession and association, as the basic preconditions for peace and
stability of international order, Republic of Croatia is being established as the national state of
the Croatian people and the state of its autochthonous national minorities: ()
96
95
See footnote 90
96
From Narodne novine [eng. National newspapers] the official newspaper of the Republic of Croatia: The
original text in Croatian goes as follows: () Izraavajui tisuljetnu nacionalnu samobitnost i dravnu
opstojnost hrvatskoga naroda, potvrenu slijedom ukupnoga povijesnoga zbivanja u razliitim dravnim
oblicima te odranjem i razvitkom dravotvorne misli o povijesnom pravu hrvatskoga naroda na punu dravnu
suverenost, to se oitovalo: u stvaranju hrvatskih kneevina u VII. stoljeu; u srednjovjekovnoj samostalnoj
dravi Hrvatskoj utemeljenoj u IX. stoljeu; u Kraljevstvu Hrvata uspostavljenome u X. stoljeu; u odranju
hrvatskoga dravnog subjektiviteta u hrvatsko-ugarskoj personalnoj uniji; u samostalnoj i suverenoj odluci
Hrvatskoga sabora godine 1527. o izboru kralja iz Habsburke dinastije; u samostalnoj i suverenoj odluci
Hrvatskoga sabora o pragmatinoj sankciji iz godine 1712.; u zakljucima Hrvatskoga sabora godine 1848. o
obnovi cjelovitosti Trojedne Kraljevine Hrvatske pod banskom vlau, na temelju povijesnoga, dravnoga i
prirodnoga prava hrvatskog naroda; u Hrvatsko-ugarskoj nagodbi 1868. godine o ureenju odnosa izmeu
Kraljevine Dalmacije, Hrvatske i Slavonije i Kraljevine Ugarske na temelju pravnih tradicija obiju drava i Prag-
matike sankcije iz godine 1712.; u odluci Hrvatskoga sabora 29. listopada godine 1918. o raskidanju
dravnopravnih odnosa Hrvatske s Austro-Ugarskom te o istodobnu pristupanju samostalne Hrvatske, s pozivom
na povijesno i prirodno nacionalno pravo, Dravi Slovenaca, Hrvata i Srba, proglaenoj na dotadanjem teritoriju
Habsburke Monarhije; u injenici da odluku Narodnoga vijea Drave SHS o ujedinjenju sa Srbijom i Crnom
Gorom u Kraljevini Srba, Hrvata i Slovenaca (1. prosinca 1918. godine), poslije (3. listopada 1929. godine)
proglaenoj Kraljevinom Jugoslavijom, Hrvatski sabor nikada nije sankcionirao; u osnutku Banovine Hrvatske
godine 1939. kojom je obnovljena hrvatska dravna samobitnost u Kraljevini J ugoslaviji; u uspostavi temelja
dravne suverenosti u razdoblju drugoga svjetskog rata, izraenoj nasuprot proglaenju Nezavisne Dravne Hr-
vatske (1941.) u odlukama Zemaljskoga antifaistikog vijea narodnog osloboenja Hrvatske (1943.), a potom
u Ustavu Narodne Republike Hrvatske (1947.) i poslije u ustavima Socijalistike Republike Hrvatske (1963.-
1990.), na povijesnoj prekretnici odbacivanja komunistikog sustava i promjena meunarodnog poretka u
Europi, hrvatski je narod na prvim demokratskim izborima (godine 1990.), slobodno izraenom voljom potvrdio
svoju tisugodinju dravnu samobitnost. Novim Ustavom Republike Hrvatske (1990.) i pobjedom u
Domovinskom ratu (1991.-1995.) hrvatski je narod iskazao svoju odlunost i spremnost za uspostavu i ouvanje
Republike Hrvatske kao samostalne i nezavisne, suverene i demokratske drave. Polazei od iznesenih
povijesnih injenica, te opeprihvaenih naela u suvremenu svijetu i neotuivosti i nedjeljivosti, neprenosivosti
i nepotroivosti prava na samoodreenje i dravnu suverenost hrvatskog naroda, ukljuujui i neokrnjeno pravo
na odcjepljenje i udruivanje, kao osnovnih preduvjeta za mir i stabilnost meunarodnog poretka, Republika
Hrvatska ustanovljuje se kao nacionalna drava hrvatskog naroda i drava pripadnika autohtonih nacionalnih
manjina() Full text can be found on: http://narodne-novine.nn.hr/clanci/sluzbeni/232289.html.
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The rest of the preamble is short and describes what Croats want Croatia to be like.
The first part is much more interesting since it reveals certain national frustrations and
obsession with statehood or better to say with need to proof the right on it. Considering the
historical experience (the lack of the self-rule) and context in which constitution was written
(dissolution of Yugoslavia) emphases that preamble makes shouldnt leave anyone surprised.
Preamble was presented here to demonstrate what dominated nationalist discourse in 1990s, a
decade most crucial for development of different attitudes among Croats in Bosnia and
Herzegovina towards the state (B&H) and its future.
2.3. Croati an experience i n Bosnia and Herzegovina
In order to better understand mentioned divisions among Croats in Bosnia and
Herzegovina more should be said on B&H itself. Some main characteristics and developments
of Croatian national idea have been presented but without understanding how they reflected in
the context of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Differences between the main stream Croatian
national identity (in Croatia) and the one in B&H are not simply a matter of different regional
identities.
Indeed, just like Croats in different Croatian regions of Slavonia, Istria, Dalmatia or
Dubrovnik feel Croat but with regional flavour so do Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The very important difference however exists. Bosnia and Herzegovina is not one of the
Croatian regions. It might be considered as one of the regions of Croatian national identity
sphere but the fact that it is a subject of a different political authority, a different state, makes
a significant difference. It will be argued in the last chapter that failure of some to distinct
between region of (Republic of) Croatia and region of Croatian national identity sphere is one
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of the sources for division among Croats in B&H. In order to clarify it, this chapter now turns
to particularities of Croat identity in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
One of the most important characteristics of identity development in B&H is well
described by Norwegian anthologists Tone Bringa. In her book she argues that Bosnian
Muslim identity cannot be fully understood with reference to Islam only, but has to be
considered in terms of a specific Bosnian dimension which for Bosnian Muslims implied
sharing history and locality with Bosnians of other non-Islamic religious traditions ()
meaning that in practice people defined being a Bosnian Muslim through both Islamic
and non Islamic practice and customs.
97
The same applies to non-Islamic population of Bosnia and Herzegovina like Catholics.
The identity of Catholics/Croats in B&H can not be fully understood without keeping in mind
that experience of the others was part of their everyday life. To be a Croat in B&H meant
not only what Croats in Croatia thought it was but also what their neighbours in B&H
(Orthodox and Muslims) were not. Together with the positive identity definition, in B&H the
negative definition played a crucial role.
98
Bringes mentioned Bosnian dimension is
exactly about such experience and without it Croats in B&H can not be fully understood.
For prof. Cvitkovi what makes this Bosnian dimension so special is Bosnia and
Herzegovina being an intercultural rather then multicultural society. He goes on to
explain that multiculturalism implies us and them relationship (life next to each
other) while interculturalism implies life with one another and for one another.
99
97
Bringe, Tone (1995) Being Muslim the Bosnian Way, Princeton University Pres, Princeton, pp. 230 - 231
98
Above Croatian identity in general often being defined in negative terms as what it is not. Today this is most
often displayed against Serbian identity.
99
Cvitkovi, Ivan (2010) Hrvatski identitet u Bosni i Hercegovini in Hrvati u BiH: ustavni poloaj, kulturni
razvoj i nacionalni identitet, Centar za demokraciju i pravo Miko Tripalo and Pravni fakultet Sveuilita u
Zagrebu, Zagreb pp. 107-122 [eng. Croatian Identity in Bosnia and Herzegovina in Croats in B&H:
constitutional status. Cultural development and national identity]
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Cornelia Sorabji in a similar fashion sees neighbourliness as basis of life in (pre-war)
Bosnia and Herzegovina, crucial for local understanding of identity and nation.
100
Compared to Croats in Croatia, this element does make experience of Croats in Bosnia
and Herzegovina specific and different. Unlike in Croatia, in Bosnia and Herzegovina Croats
share their living space with two other ethnic groups and together with them were equally
dispersed on the territory of B&H.
101
History of B&H shows that common people relayed on
their neighbours regardless of different religion and lived truly together rather then just next
to each other.
For example, conflicts (in form of uprisings) within 19
th
Bosnian elayet
102
were not
based on religious divisions. Uprisings of Bosnian Christian population were never aimed
against Muslims as such but rather against landlords who happen to be Muslim. Uprising of
1835 was specific for cooperation between Catholics and Orthodox against landlords while in
many other cases Muslim peasants cooperated with non-Muslim peasants.
103
Reasons for
these rebellions were of economic character not a result of religious tensions.
Therefore, the everyday experience of others in an intercultural society nourished
the sense of togetherness (neighbourliness) although it might seem paradox at first. Even
though three groups with the three different national identities lived together, this never
sharpened division among them. Quite contrary, it shaped their particular national identities in
a unique way creating a new one on a higher level that will be deconstructed only by
100
Sorabji, Cornelia (1994) A very modern War, in Watson, H., Hinde, R., War: a cruel necessity: the bases
of institutionalized violence, I.B. Tauris, London and New York
101
After the last war this is no longer the truth though. According to 1991 B&H census 61,24% of Croats,
44,24% of Serbs and 47,36% of Bosniaks had been relocated during the war. See Vuki, Tomo (2010)
Demografski pregled na stanje Katolika (Hrvata) u Bosni i Hercegovini (1996-2008) in Hrvati u BiH: ustavni
poloaj, kulturni razvoj i nacionalni identitet, Centar za demokraciju i pravo Miko Tripalo and Pravni fakultet
Sveuilita u Zagrebu, Zagreb pp. 45 - 62 [eng. Demografic overview of the situation of Catholic (Croats)in
Bosnia and Herzegovina in Croats in B&H: constitutional status. Cultural development and national identity]
102
Elayet (later vilayet) was a territorial and administrative unit of the Ottaman Empire.
103
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: p. 122
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extensive use of violence. Above (or perhaps under) the Croatian there existed this particular
identity that is not necessarily contradicting the previous one but it did make a difference.
Cvitkovi recognizes three objective characteristics of Croats in Bosnia and
Herzegovina and lists them as follows: language, religion and national consciousness.
104
Language is probably least solid element of the three since its quite difficult to talk about
three different languages: Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian. Garde underlines that in Yugoslav
region rural dialects make up a very homogeneous entity. For him Bosnian, Croatian and
Serbian can only be seen as three different norms of the same language and not three
completely separate languages. He estimates that differences between mentioned norms are
approximately 5 to 10 percent with most of the different words being relatively infrequent. He
concludes that one would have to read several lines of the text before establishing in which
language/norm text is written.
105
Differences within Bosnia and Herzegovina are even less
noticeable. To recognize someones accent means only to approximately know where from in
B&H is he or she coming from and not of what nationality they are.
106
Therefore, it is difficult to agree with Cvitkovi that language constitutes one of the
objective characteristics since language Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina speak is hard to
distinct from others. Even if inhabitants of Herzegovina have distinctive accent, being from
Herzegovina is no guarantee one is Catholic/Croat.
However, what can be claimed is that Croatian standard language (norm) and Serbian
standard language (norm) do differ enough for anyone to recognize them although the one
who speaks only one of the two languages can understand and speak both. Standard language
is of course artificial, result of an attempt to create a norm that will be thought in schools and
104
Cvitkovi, Ivan (2006) Hrvatski identitet u Bosni i Hercegovini, Synopsis d.o.o., Zagreb and Sarajevo, pp.
58 76 [eng. Croatian Identity in Bosnia and Herzegovina]
105
Garde, Paul (2004) Unity and Plurality in the Serbo-Croatian Linguistic Sphere in J udit, Tony, Lacorne,
Denis Language, Nation, and State. Identity Politics in a Multilingual Age, Palgrave, New York, pp. 215 - 230
106
Today this is more and more often not the case. After extensive ethnic cleansing in the first half of the 1990's
it is increasingly true that place of origin and ethnicity coincide.
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used in public sphere. Together with standardization of language comes also the official
literature and language history that are used to proof historic continuity of one language. If the
term language is used in such way than it could be argued that language constitutes one of
the objective characteristics Cvitkovi talks about. Bosnian Franciscan Ignacije Gavran in
series of his articles on Croatian culture often writes about Croatian writers and literature
like Marko Maruli
107
and his piece Judita.
108
In that way, notion of what Croatian language
(literature) is sets Catholics/Croats of B&H apart form others who dont share the same
notion.
It has already been said much on the question of religion and identity in Bosnia and
Herzegovina. In previous chapter strong emphases had been made on the link between the
Franciscan Order and the Catholic population as well as the transformation of Catholics into
Croats with national ideas making their way into B&H from surrounding territories. This
chapter also continued down this line and insisted that definition of Catholic/Croat identity in
B&H often depended on definitions of other religious identities in the country.
Therefore, it is clear that religion played (and still plays) crucial role in Croat identity
in B&H. This part of the chapter will end with Cvitkovis acknowledgment that common
religion proved to be empirically the most relevant for majority of those in Bosnia and
Herzegovina who self-identity as Croats.
109
The last characteristic Cvitkovi mentions is more of a synthesis of everything
mentioned here, rather then being only one element. National consciousness implies many
different factors linking numerous people who use it as an imaginary link between
107
Marko Maruli is considered to be the father of Croatian literature. He was born in present day Split (Croatia)
in 15
th
century.
108
Gavran, Ignacije (1988) Putovi i putokazi: Niz lanaka o naoj prolosti, Svijetlo rijei, Sarajevo, pp. 9 14
[eng. Paths and Pinters: Series of articles on our history] Publisher Svijetlo rijei published four books of
these articles in which Ignacije Gavran writes about major Croatian historical events, persona, writers, books,
places and so on. He regularly uses word our when referring to these topics of his articles.
109
Cvitkovi, Ivan (2006) Hrvatski identitet u Bosni i Hercegovini, Synopsis d.o.o., Zagreb and Sarajevo, pp.
67 [eng. Croatian Identity in Bosnia and Herzegovina]
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themselves. Language, religion, culture, historical experience and so on (as much as all of
these elements might be constructed) constitute a basis for any common identity. Croats in
Bosnia and Herzegovina believe in them and thus they entered one Croatian national corpus.
The only element that was not mentioned in previous paragraph and that proves to be
important especially today (and especially in respect to the topic of this thesis) is the state.
The state to which a nation belongs (or rather vice versa) hasnt been an issue before 1990s
since all Croats shared only one.
110
Cvitkovi talks about state identity as though its
separate from national identity of Croats and uses such distinction to explain why some
Croats in B&H are finding it easier to identify with Croatia then country they live in.
111
It is exactly with this final element of the state that Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina
are having issues and demonstrate their different attitudes. Although all being Croats and
being Croats in particular context of B&H, they differ in a way they identity themselves and
disagree on how should the state of Bosnia and Herzegovina be administrated and what is the
future of it. After the break up of Yugoslavia and establishment of the state borders between
Croatia and B&H, it would seem that state became the new basis for self-identification
among some Croats in the later one. The third chapter will deal with this into more detail.
These first two chapters focused on explaining historical background and describing
characteristics of Croatian national identity in general and in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The
following chapters will provide results of field research that confirmed differences in attitudes
and later on offer a possible explanation for why and how this division was possible.
110
It has been noted previously that since 1878 and occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina by Austro
Hungarian Empire until 1990s and brake up of Yugoslavia, Croats lived in one country.
111
Ibid. pp. 105 - 115
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CHAPTER III- The Interviews and The Research Results
The first chapter of this study already emphasized to some extent different historical
experience of population in Bosnia and in Herzegovina. However, before moving to explain
these differences into more detail, this chapter will present results of the research conducted in
Bosnia and Herzegovina from April 14 to April 25, 2010. The incentive for conducting the
research came, as it has been already mentioned in the introduction, from ongoing debate on
the differences among the Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the need to either both
confirm them and explore their nature or discharge them.
3.1. Time, Pl ace and Subjects of the Interviews
The aim of the research was to collect qualitative (not quantitative) data on differing
attitudes of Croats living in B&H. Attitudes that were of specific interest for this research
112
are related to homeland issue
113
, the status of Croat entity in Bosnia and Herzegovina
114
, the
need for the reform of the administrative structure of B&H
115
and the future of B&H.
Considering the time and fund limits the research never intended to have a sample
representative of all Croats in B&H. Main intention was to compare answers of Croats from
Herzegovina and Croats from Bosnia, detect where the main differences lie and finally to seek
for the sources of it. Besides that, certain amount of interviews (specifically with members of
the political elite, the university professors, members of the Franciscan Order and members of
the official Church Order) was intended to provide a better understanding of research topic(s).
As it has already been mentioned, research started on April 14, 2010. The first
interviews were conducted in Zagreb where four students from Bosnia and Herzegovina were
112
Attitudes that most likely mirror differences among Croats in respect to the main hypothesis of this thesis.
113
What is the homeland of the Croats living in Bosnia and Herzegovina?
114
Are the Croats endangered in B&H? Why and how, if yes?
115
Is a reform needed? If yes on what basis should it be implemented?
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interviewed together with Mr. Tonino Picula.
116
After Zagreb followed Dubrovnik and
already mentioned interview
117
with Mr. Marinko Mari. On April 19 and April 20 interviews
continued in Bosnia and Herzegovina in Mostar and Meugorje where 14 Croats had been
questioned together with professors Boo epi
118
and Boo Golua
119
and members of the
regional government, Minister Luka Faletar
120
and Pero iro Pavlovi.
121
From April 21 till
April 25 a total of 19 people were interviewed in Sarajevo and Fojnice (on April 23) in
addition to interviews with Franciscans Fr. Luka Markei,
122
Fr. Mato Topi,
123
Fr. Drago
Boji
124
and Professors Mirko Pejanovi
125
and Ivan Cvitkovi
126
.
Four cities in Bosnia and Herzegovina had been chosen for interviews. Mostar and
Meugorje are situated in Herzegovina region, while Sarajevo and Fojnice are situated in the
116
Mr. Tonino Picula is currently a member of Croatian Parliament [cro. Hrvatski Sabor] and was also a
Minister of Foreign Affairs in Croatian Government in the period 2000 2003. His input on Croatian politics
towards Bosnia and Herzegovina, before, during and after his mandate was most useful.
117
See the Introduction.
118
Boo epi is a retired professor on Faculty of Law, University of Mostar. He lectured, among others, Legal
Sociology and Political system courses. He is also author of the books (among others): Enigma Bosna i
Hercegovina [eng. Enigma Bosnia and Herzegovina]; Hrvatski entitet u Bosni i Hercegovini: za i protiv
[eng. Croatian entity in Bosnia and Herzegovina: for and against];Istroenost Daytona : problemi i tekoe
daljnjeg razvitka [eng. Deterioration of Dayton: problems and difficulties of further development] and
Bosna i Hercegovina 1990.-2025. : rasprave o prolosti, sadanjosti i budunosti Bosne i Hercegovine [eng.
Bosnia and Herzegovina 1990 2025: debates on past, present and future of Bosnia and Herzegovina]
119
Boo Golua is a professor of History on Faculty of Philosophy, University of Mostar and also a vice-dean
for education on the same faculty. He is also a chief editor of the pastoral-sheet of the dioceses of Herzegovina
Crkva na kamenu [eng. Church on the rock].
120
Luka Faletar is a current Minister of Health in the Cantonal Government of Herzegovina Neretva Canton
and member of HDZ 1990 (political party).
121
Pero iro Pavlovi is a spokesman for the Government of Herzegovina Neretva Canton and member of
HDZ 1990.
122
Fr. Luka Markei is a prominent member of the Franciscan Order (Franciscan Province Silver Bosnia),
respected publicist, president of the Croatian National Council of B&H [cro. Hrvatsko nacionalno vijee BiH]
and was also chief editor of Bosna Franciscana, official magazine of the Franciscan Theology in Sarajevo. He
is also the author of the Hrvati i katolici u Bosni i Hercegovini [eng. Croats and Catholics in Bosnia and
Herzegovina] and one of the editors of Hrvati u BiH : ustavnoi poloaj, kulturni razvoj i nacionalni identitet
[eng. Croats in B&H: constitutional status. Cultural development and national identity]
123
Fr. Mato Topi is a member of the Franciscan Order (Franciscan Province Silver Bosnia) and chief editor
of Svijetlo rijei [eng. Light of the Word] a publishing house of the Franciscan Province Silver Bosnia. He is
author of series of works on population of Rama (region on the border between Herzegovina and Bosnia).
124
Fr. Drago Boji is a young member of the Franciscan Order (Franciscan Province Silver Bosnia). He
recently acquired his PhD on Faculty of Theology, University of Vienna. The topic of his PhD thesis was
"Katoliki tisak u Bosni i Hercegovini. Franjevaki mjeseni magazin Svjetlo rijei" [eng. Catholic press in
Bosnia and Herzegovina. Franciscan motherly magazine Light of the Word]
125
Mirko Pejanovi is a current dean of the Faculty of Political Science, University of Sarajevo. In the war time
period he was a member of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina. He is also the author of The Political
Development of Bosnia and Herzegovina in The Post-Dayton Period.
126
Ivan Cvitkovi is a professor at the Faculty of Political Science, University of Sarajevo and an author of the
book Hrvatski identitet u Bosni i Hercegovini [eng. Croatian Identity in Bosnia and Herzegovina]
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region of Central Bosnia. Based on data provided by the Catholic Church there are 454 921
Catholics in Bosnia and Herzegovina. To this number they add 50 000 more Croats that they
estimate do not declare as Catholics, rounding up the final estimate of Croats in B&H at 500
000 or around 13% of the total population.
127
According to the same estimates from 2008,
Mostar diocese
128
had 192 403 Catholics while Sarajevo diocese
129
had 204 060 Catholics
which cumulatively makes majority of Croats in B&H.
130
This was the main reason why
Sarajevo and Fojnice were selected for interviewing Croats from Bosnia and Mostar and
Meugorje for Croats from Herzegovina.
The structure of subjects interviewed in Bosnia and Herzegovina according to the
place of interview, sex and age:
Sex Age
Number of people
interviewed
M F -35 35+
Sarajevo and
Fojnice
19 7 12 8 11
Mostar and
Meugorje
14 7 6 5 9
Total 33 14 19 13 20
Table I: The structure of interviewed subjects according
to the place of the interview, sex and age
127
Vuki, Tomo (2010) Demografski pregled na stanje Katolika (Hrvata) u Bosni i Hercegovini (1996-2008)
in Hrvati u BiH: ustavni poloaj, kulturni razvoj i nacionalni identitet,Centar za demokraciju i pravo Miko
Tripalo and Pravni fakultet Sveuilita u Zagrebu, Zagreb pp. 45 - 62 [eng. Demografic overview of the situation
of Catholic (Croats)in Bosnia and Herzegovina in Croats in B&H: constitutional status. Cultural development
and national identity]
128
Mostar and Meugorje are under jurisdiction of Mostar diocese. Mostar is also a capital of Herzegovina
Neretva Canton with the Croatian population majority. Meugorje is situated south to Mostar and is one of the
mayor Catholic pilgrimages and has a special meaning for Croats in B&H.
129
Sarajevo and Fojnice are under the jurisdiction of Sarajevo diocese. Sarajevo is also the capital of B&H and
Fojnice is a city west to Sarajevo with a small Croatian community and one of the oldest Franciscan monasteries.
130
Ibid. pp. 50- 54
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In addition, four more interviews were conducted with students from Bosnia and
Herzegovina in Zagreb, making the total number of the interviewed (common) people 37.
One student is from Herzegovina, one from Northern Bosnia and two are from Sarajevo. Of
four of them, three are female and one is male. The interview was conducted as a group
interview with all four students.
3.2. The Intervi ew types
The research itself consisted of the two types of interviews. The first type was the life
story semi-structured interview prepared for the common
131
people. The idea was to avoid
media-like interviews that encourage well structured opinion answers that are often framed by
the public opinion. Instead, interviews started with a short life experience story after which
subjects were encouraged to talk about topics/events relevant for the research as part of their
own experience. By embedding the conversation topics into their life experience it was much
easier to interpret the "story" and the framing separately.
The topics for interviews were used only as guideline for the interviewer and rarely all
of them were covered during a single interview. Different subjects had different stories and
experiences and therefore were encouraged to discuss different topics from the list. The
intention was to make subjects provide certain opinions and these could be acquired through
different stories, depending on personal experience of each subject. Therefore, there was no
need to cover all of the interview topics with each interviewee. As soon as the targeted
opinions were collected, individual interview would be brought to an end. All of the
interviews had been recorded and later on analyzed for the attitude comparison.
131
The word common is used to differentiate between two groups of interviewed subjects and not to describe
in any way people in the group. The group of common subjects is opposed to group of expert subjects. The
common group was asked about their life experience from which attitudes were later deducted in analyses. The
group of experts on the other hand was directly asked to give expert opinions on series of topics relevant for the
research.
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The topics for the common people interview were structured as follows:
1. Brake-up of Yugoslavia experience
Events in Serbia and Kosovo in the late 1980s
Croatian national movement lead by HDZ and Franjo Tuman
Referendum on independence in Croatia
Formation of SAO Krajna (Serb quasi-state)
First news of conflicts in Croatia
Infamous Kara speech in Bosnian Parliament
Izetbegovi and hisBosniak party (SDA)
Referendum on independence of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Formation of Serb dominated quasi-states in Bosnia
2. War time experience
First conflicts in Eastern Bosnia (city of Zvornik)
Siege of Sarajevo
Formation of Croatian Communities that would eventually form Croatian
quasi-state in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Conflicts among Croats and Muslims (Mostar, Travnik)
Formation of Croatian quasi-militia (HOS) and their crimes
Destruction of Mostars Old Bridge by Croatian forces
The fall of North Bosnian regionBosanska Posavina with the majority of
Croatian population
Ideas of separation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Tuman-Miloevi plan)
Dayton peace treaty
3. Dayton Bosnia experience
Bosnia and Herzegovina itself
State institutions
Cantonal institutions
Role of the Church (especially Franciscans)
Death of the first Croatian president Franjo Tuman
Death of Alija Izetbegovi
Croatian elections and results in 2000
Split in HDZ of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Other parties in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Status of Republic of Srpska
eljko Komi as the first non-HDZ Croat member of The Presidency
4. In general additional questions
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What is your opinion on the future of Bosnia and Herzegovina?
What is your opinion on dual-citizenship?
What do you think of iroki Brijeg incident when a young Croat from
Sarajevo, supporter of football club Sarajevo, was killed by Croatian
police officer?
Who represents Croatian interests in Bosnia in the best way? Why?
What do you see as main threat(s) to Croatian population in B&H?
How do you see the role of the Republic of Croatia?
Do you vote on Croatian national elections? Why?
What is your opinion on European Union and Croatias accession?
The second type of the interview was much more structured: the expert interview. The
aim was not to acquire personal experiences but expert opinions on the topic of the research
and the thesis. Therefore, as opposed to the first type of the interview, the expert interviews
could move to a more general level. The information provided was used for a better
understanding of the situation of Croats in B&H, conflicts among them and broader political,
sociological and cultural context of it. In case of expert interviews all of the subjects are listed
here by their names and their professions.
132
All of the interviews had been recorded,
however, only few allowed for their statements to be used in this thesis which does not reduce
the importance and relevance of these interviews for my better understanding of the topic(s) at
hand.
The expert interviews were structured as follows:
1. Franciscan Order
Importance of history for identity formation of Croats in B&H
Barii affair from mid 19 century
Division among Franciscan Order and possible connection with
identity division
132
See footnotes 116 - 125
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The first years of democracy in Bosnia (political split of official
Church hierarchy and Franciscans )
The role of the Order in the WW II
Order under the Communist rule
Order today
2. Competing Nationalisms
Historical importance of Croatian national idea for the identity
formation of Croats in B&H
The WWII experience (B&H under Ustaa regime)
Importance of Republican borders in Yugoslavia
HDZ and SDA political platform and their impact
Media coverage of events that preceded the conflict(s)
Impact of Tumans and Izetbegovis speeches
The role of Croatia in the War in Bosnia (Gojko uak and the
Herzegovina lobby)
Croatian policies of dual citizenship and trans-border voting
Impact of 2000 changes in Croatia (policy changes toward Bosnia
and Herzegovina)
Electoral victory of eljko Komi
3. In general additional questions
How does political system, introduced by Dayton agreements, effect
identity politics in B&H?
What is your opinion on the future of Bosnia and Herzegovina?
What do you think of iroki Brijeg incident when a young Croat from
Sarajevo, supporter of football club Sarajevo was killed by Croatian
police officer?
What are the Croatian interests in Bosnia and Herzegovina? Who
represents then in the best way?
What do you see as main threat(s) to interests of the Croatian population in
B&H?
How do you see the role of the Republic of Croatia today compared to 10
years ago?
What is your opinion on European Union and Croatias accession and
possible effects this might have on the Croats in B&H?
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3.3. Results of the research simil arities and differences
After 37 interviews, although without representative sample, certain trends could have
been established. Following the hypothesis that there is a division in attitudes (towards the
state of B&H among Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina, as well as towards its reform and its
future) that follows regional divisions the research aimed at either confirming or discharging
such claim. The results of the first part of the research that has already been presented in the
previous two chapters showed that Croats in Bosnia and Croats in Herzegovina had different
historical experience which allows Cvitkovi to claim how () to be Croat in Grude
(Herzegovina) is one thing, and to be a Croat in Zenica or Sarajevo (Bosnia) is
completely a different thing.
133
The second part of the research (the interviews) aimed at
confirming such claim and exploring how these differences reflect in peoples attitudes
toward previously mentioned topics.
After analyzing the collected data, two main groups of attitudes (for the purpose of this
thesis) had been crystallized. The first group contains attitudes that are shared to some extent
by the majority of the interviewed subjects, while the other group contains those attitudes,
relevant to this thesis, which the interviewed subjects did not share.
All of the subjects without exception expressed their Croatian identity and marked
Catholicism as its main characteristic. The differences however exist and flawlessly follow
the line of the regional division. Unlike those from Herzegovina, subjects in Sarajevo and
Fojnice were usually referring to themselves in one of the three ways
134
: as the Catholics, as
the Catholic Croats or as the Bosnian Croats. Out of 19 interviewees only two (both male
133
Cvitkovi, Ivan (2010) Hrvatski identitet u Bosni i Hercegovini in Hrvati u BiH: ustavni poloaj, kulturni
razvoj i nacionalni identitet, Centar za demokraciju i pravo Miko Tripalo and Pravni fakultet Sveuilita u
Zagrebu, Zagreb pp. 107-122 [eng. Croatian Identity in Bosnia and Herzegovina in Croats in B&H:
constitutional status. Cultural development and national identity]
134
It is not implied here that subjects used exclusively one of these terms. Indeed in most cases, subjects used all
three terms.
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between 18 and 23 years old) referred to themselves only as the Croats. The word
Catholic
135
was the most used word when they talked about Croatian identity. Contrary to
this, in Herzegovina: only 2 subjects used the Catholic Croats to identify themselves, one
used it when talking about Croats in B&H in general but not when talking about himself, no
one used the Bosnian Croat and the Catholic and 14 of 14 used at the same time terms
the Croat and the Herzegovinian.
136
One additional difference, indirectly related to the one just mentioned, concerns the
attitudes toward the neighbours of other religion. Croats from Bosnia regularly emphasized
good relations with their Muslim neighbours.
137
The peaceful life and coexistence before the
war was often mentioned among Croats interviewed in Sarajevo and Fojnice. When talking
about pre-war period they often tell stories of visiting their Muslim friends for Muslim
holidays and vice versa.
138
In Herzegovina, on the contrary, only 3 subjects in Mostar told
such stories while most other people either spoke of Muslims in negative terms or expressed
their respect and wish not to mingle and mix in any way. In Sarajevo and Fojnice some form
of neighbourliness was regularly mentioned when discussing everyday life. All of the
interviewees mentioned their non-Muslim neighbours in some context: living in the same
building, sharing office space, sitting together in school, drinking together and so on. In
Herzegovina non-Catholics were only mentioned as those who live on the other side of the
river (in Mostar) and with whom a deal had to be made in order to maintain peace in the city.
When discussing everyday business, Muslims were hardly ever mentioned and, if they were,
they were not described in a positive way.
135
Cro. Katolik
136
Cro. Hercegovac
137
Orthodox neighbors were mentioned on 4 occasions. The logical explanation reveals itself in the fact that the
Croats of Sarajevo and Fojnice are predominantly mixed with Muslims while the Serb population is small.
138
Similar stories were told in 15 of 19 interviews in Sarajevo and Fojnice.
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Contrary to one part of the main hypotheses, no significant differences in attitudes
towards the state of Bosnia and Herzegovina were noticed. With exception of 3 subjects from
Herzegovina (one from Mostar and two from Meugorje), all other interviewees agreed that
B&H is their homeland and that Croats should seek for their rights within in. In different ways
32 of 33 subjects shared concerns about huge state bureaucracy, widespread state corruption,
inefficient public administration, low incomes and so on. Although I initially expected to
encounter more separatism in Herzegovina, the interviews proved me wrong and revealed that
interviewed Herzegovinians accept Bosnia and Herzegovina as framework within which to
seek the solution to the problems. This was also confirmed in the interviews with the two
members of the Canton government. However, the differences in opinions exist regarding the
definition of the problem and the ways of possible solutions.
Both groups expressed their fears that Croats would disappear in Bosnia and
Herzegovina if no measures were taken. Massive emigration of the Croats from B&H to, most
often Croatia, was mentioned in all of the interviews and most people agreed that negative
economic situation in the county is to blame.
139
Accept one subject in Meugorje, none of the
subjects mentioned problems that would be intrinsic to Croats.
140
According to these
interviews, Croats are facing the same everyday problems as all the other citizens of Bosnia
and Herzegovina. The low salaries, the low pensions, the small social benefits and so on fit
those problems that can easily be imagined to bother people regardless of their religion and
ethnic background. No subjects thought they lived worse then the others just because they
were Croats and not Bosniaks or Serbs.
139
The mad economic situation is only litotes. The general despair and lack of any optimism dominated
discussions on young people leaving B&H.
140
The subject was interviewed in Meugorje, aged 53, mail, born in Ljubuki, Bosnia and Herzegovina
(Herzegovina) who rarely discussed his personal life and most of the time talked about political issues and his
views. He openly expressed his support for the Ustae movement and stated Herzegovina is within B&H only by
chance.
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It was only after they were directly asked what their problems are as Croats, that
subjects mentioned the difficult life of the Croats. The most popular ideas expressed in
these cases resembled the famous saying: Two beds and three nations.
141
While they
remained ignorant of such issues when casually discussing their personal experiences,
subjects were able to give expected and quite clear answers as soon as the conversation was
framed by interviewers question.
In the case of the interviews in Sarajevo and Fojnice subjects talked about political
issues more often as citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina and rarely as the separate political
group. Most of the interviewed talked about the Croats problems as something shared by all
the others. Its the same for all of us! said one 48-year old unemployed woman in
Sarajevo.
142
All of them agreed that entity politics
143
should be abolished and reform of the
state implemented. Among 19 interviewed: 15 opted for some kind of regionalization of B&H
that would be immune to ethnic structure of the population, one was in favour of the
centralized state and 3 were in favour of creating the third entity for Croats but only in the
region of Herzegovina.
As opposed to this, different ideas were offered in Mostar and Meugorje. Out of 14
interviewees: 13 opted for the establishment of the Croat entity and one was in favour of the
secession. Their main argument is that Croats are endangered; that they have to protect their
interests and that the best way to do this is to insist on establishment of a separate entity
within the state of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Only 5 expressed their opinion that Republic of
Srpska should disappear, while most of other subjects agreed it should be reduced but not
abolished completely. None of the subjects in Herzegovina offered convincible argument how
would the third entity benefit Croats in B&H. We need to administer ourselves on our
141
cro. Dva kreveta i tri nacije
142
cro. Svima nam je isto!
143
Entity politics refers here to the division of Bosnia and Herzegovina on the two entities (Republika Srpska
and The Federation).
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own!; Our voices would be heard!, We would have a television in our own language!,
If Bosniaks and Serbs have an entity, so should we! - these were some of the most often
proclaimed arguments in favour of the Croat entity. However, no one managed to explain how
this (the third entity) would solve any of those problems expressed when talking about
personal life experiences and everyday problems.
In respect to the future of Bosnia and Herzegovina, general conclusion of all
interviewed subjects was that some kind of a reform is necessary if B&H is to survive. In the
case B&H would not survive, a sentence by a 64-year old man in Sarajevo mirrors the
difference between Croats in Bosnia and Croats in Herzegovina: Those in Herzegovina will
always have Croatia; we are here today and will most probably be tomorrow as well.
144
This chapter presented only a small portion of data collected from April 14 till April
25. Only the results that were considered to be of importance for this thesis had been selected
and provided here in order to test the hypothesis that Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina
disagree on the important issues of the state, its reform and its future. A short summary would
therefore confirm that although Croats in B&H generally accept B&H as a framework for
solving their problems, they disagree on how these problems should be solved, what kind of
reform should be executed and where would B&H go in the future.
Only establishing the differences does not provide answer to many questions. The fact
that the Palestinians and the Israelis have disagreements on many issues is a general
knowledge and these issues are not difficult to identify. The same can apply for the situation
with the Catholics and the Protestants in the Northern Ireland. However, the more relevant
question would be reasons are behind these disagreements. The following chapter will offer a
possible answer to the main question: Why do the Croats in Herzegovina and the Croats in
Bosnia disagree?
144
cro. Oni u Hercegovini e uvijek imati Hrvatsku; mi smo danas tu, a vrlo vjerojatno i sutra
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CHAPTER IV- Explaining the Differences
The previous three chapters presented results of the research on Croats of
Bosnia and Herzegovina. The data for the first and the second chapter of this thesis had been
acquired mostly in the libraries, then with the help and the guidance of my mentors and finally
through interviews with the experts on the topic. Third chapter came as a result of acquired
data from series of interviews conducted in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The aim of these chapters was to, each in its own segment, help understand the
division of Croat population of B&H. The first chapter provided historical background
demonstrating how Croats in Herzegovina and Croats in Bosnia had different historical
experiences. The second one provided the context of the division by explaining how Croatian
national identity developed and how it shaped in B&H. Finally, the third chapter provided
some empirical data on how and where these differences materialize.
The forth chapter, the present one, will offer the possible explanation for the
differences presented so far. Although there are no illusions in Bosnia and Herzegovina that
there is some kind of barrier between Croats in Herzegovina and Croats in Bosnia, most
academic articles dont go further from establishing that Herzegovinians have strong regional
identity. Mladen An
145
, Radoslav Dodig
146
, Ivo Lu
147
are just some of the authors who
wrote on the topic and all of whom dedicated their articles to proving and confirming how and
why is there such a strong regional identity present among Croats in Herzegovina. Although it
is important to detect and describe these differences, they are of little use if no explanation for
them is offered. By just establishing them we leave a lot of important questions unanswered.
145
An, Mladen (2005) to je Bosna bez Hercegovine? in National Security and The Future 3-4 (6), pp. 87
127 [eng. What is Bosnia without Herzegovina?]
146
Dodig, Radoslav (2005) Hercegovina ili esej o zemlji na enaru in National Security and The Future 3-4
(6) 2005, pp 129 149 [eng. Herzegovina or essay on the land on the edge]
147
Lu, Ivo (2005) Ima li Hercegovine? (Tko i zato negira Hercegovinu i Hercegovce?) in National
Security and The Future 3-4 (6), pp. 37 86 [eng. Is there Herzegovina? (Who and why denies Herzegovina and
Herzegovinians?)]
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Contrary to those attempts to explain the division among Croats in Bosnia and
Herzegovina using only one dimension (the differing historical experience that nourished
different identities) and thus falling into a trap of oversimplification, this chapter will offer
four factors that together help understand the reasons behind the division and how it is
possible.
The chapter will therefore be organized around the following four topics: 1. historical
experience/regional identities; 2. political factor/failed politics; 3. population
structure/experience of the others; and 4. unstable society/insecure future.
4.1. The Histori cal Experiences and Regi onal Identities
The historical overview of the last two centuries in the first chapter focused on Croats
in Bosnia and Herzegovina and paid special attention to those events and periods that had
been experienced differently in Herzegovina and Bosnia. Leaning onto what has already been
said there; this section will conclude how different historical experiences laid foundation for
development of two different mentalities and nourished a strong regional Herzegovinian
identity.
As mentioned in the first chapter, in mid 19
th
century the Barii affair revealed
serious differences in the Franciscan Order within which two lines existed: the Bosnian and
the Herzegovinian. Although at first glance one might conclude this was nothing more than a
conflict on the administrative issue(s), the Franciscan records from the period prove
differently and indicate Herzegovinian monasteries had different traditions from those in
Bosnia. These differences were not the result of just some internal Franciscan conflict but
rather were influenced by broader socio-economic differences of two regions that nourished
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development of the two differing mentalities. The Barii Affair and the split among the
Order was only the first loud and clearly visible sign that historiography recorded.
History of Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina, as seen in the first chapter, over and
over again demonstrated Croats in Herzegovina had a different historical experience and this
only confirmed and furthermore sealed their regional identity. Dodig therefore today claims
Herzegovina is a region with a specific Mediterranean heritage and cultural-ethnologic
characteristic
148
opposed to the rest of the country (B&H).
Establishing existence of these two mentalities and regional identities is only a result
of examining historical experience of Croats in Herzegovina and Bosnia. On its own, this fact
provides us with a virtual border between the two groups of Croats in B&H that we can
operate with. As the field research confirmed, different attitudes follow exactly this virtual
line we set by examining history.
Having defined these two groups it is furthermore possible to try to use their historical
experience to explain some of the differences detected in answers of subjects interviewed in
Herzegovina and Bosnia. However, it should be emphasized that the historic experience, as a
factor of the creation of regional identity, can not alone provide the full explanation for noted
differences.
Interviews, as already indicated, showed that Croats in Herzegovina are less likely to
use any form of the word Bosnia when self identifying themselves as opposed to Croats
from Bosnia. Instead they either use the word Croat or Herzegovinian. Taking in account
the proximity of the Croatian border; on numerous occasions confirmed strong links with the
Croatian region of Dalmatia; specific Herzegovinian regional identity; presence of the
etnik movement in Herzegovina in WW II; compared to other Croats in B&H unique
148
Dodig, Radoslav (2005) Hercegovina ili esej ozemlji na enaru in National Security and The Future 3-4 (6)
2005, pp 129 149
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negative experience of Communist rule; and experience in a war time self-proclaimed
Herceg-Bosna autonomous region; it shouldnt be hard to understand why is the Croatian
component of identity so strong in Herzegovina.
Of these elements, probably the most important one in the last 50 years for salience of
this particular Croatian-Herzegovinian identity was the experience of the Communist rule.
With strong presence of the etnik movement in Herzegovina region during the WW II,
percentage of population joining the Ustae movement was higher then in any other region
populated by Croats.
149
After the defeat of fascist forces and with them of Ustae as well,
Herzegovina came to bear the un-proportional burden of responsibility for atrocities
committed by the Ustae regime during the war.
Cvitkovi notes how Communist authorities systematically discriminated against
Croats from Herzegovina: they were unable to get student scholarships, unable to serve in the
Yugoslav Peoples Army
150
, police forces or be appointed to any public office. Furthermore,
Croats from Herzegovina couldnt become teachers, medical personal or judges in
Herzegovina. Usually these positions were filled with people from outside Herzegovina and
most often not of Croatian nationality at all. This, he continues, went on for over 20 years and
started to change during the early 1970s.
151
For over 20 years Croats in Herzegovina had been discriminated only for being Croats
and even more for being Croats of Herzegovina. They had been denied to feel as equal part of
the Yugoslav state for too long and reminded of their Croatian identity too often. This could
have only alienated Herzegovinian Croats from the state, straighten their regional identity,
149
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London
150
Yugoslav People's Army [cro. Jugoslavenska Narodna Armija - JNA] was considered to be one of those
unifying elements in Yugoslavia. Tone Bringe highlights experience of young men in J NA as one of those that
bind young men of different religion and strengthen their sense of a common belonging. For more see Bringe,
Tone (1995) Being Muslim the Bosnian Way, Princeton University Pres, Princeton, pp. 60 - 75
151
Cvitkovi, Ivan (2006) Hrvatski identitet u Bosni i Hercegovini, Synopsis d.o.o., Zagreb and Sarajevo, pp.
186 191 [eng. Croatian Identity in Bosnia and Herzegovina]
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embed the sense of discrimination and insecurity in it, and maintain their view that solution to
their problems and difficult life lies in a break up of the Communist Yugoslavia and a
Croatian self-rule.
Such historic experience provides explanation for why Croats in Herzegovina today
still favour their Croat and regional Herzegovinian identity over any other (that they never
actually had a chance to develop) and why they feel endangered. It also brings us closer to
understanding why they believe third entity is necessary for their protection and therefore
makes a favourable form of the state reform. However, to have a complete picture of where
does this autonomy aim comes from, this chapter moves to the next factor.
4.2. The Remai ni ngs of the Fai led Politics
The political factor that contributes to a better understanding of those differing
attitudes that are the topic of this thesis is to a great extent linked to the already mentioned
state obsession nature of Croatian nationalism on the one side and the failed 1990s politics
implemented in Bosnia and Herzegovina on the other. The political factor should provide the
final answer why Croats from Herzegovina so much favour the third entity solution.
The topic of the involvement of the Republic of Croatia in Bosnia and Herzegovina in
the first part of the 1990s and its role in the Herceg-Bosna autonomous region is a
controversial one.
The current Croatian president Ivo J osipovi visited Sarajevo on April 14, 2010. In his
address to the state parliament president J osipovi talked about destructive effects the last war
had on social ties in Bosnia and Herzegovina and expressed deep regret that Republic of
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Croatias politics in the 1990s contributed to it.
152
Less then a month later in the same city
his predecessor Stjepan Mesi stated that Miloevi and Tuman were trying to divide
B&H and that this is the main reason why he left HDZ and Franjo Tuman.
153
The response from the other side came when the prime minister Kosor (from the
ruling HDZ) stated that Croatia had never been an aggressor but was leading a defensive war
and insisted these were the historic facts.
154
At the same time, one of the prominent leaders
of HDZ, Andrija Hebrang criticized president J osipovi by saying he introduced Croatia as
one of the world aggressors, adding Croatia had never participated in the plans for partition
of B&H.
155
Leaving political debates aside, the facts show that Republic of Croatia was not merely
a neutral observer of the events in B&H. The fact that it was President Tuman who signed
the Dayton Treaty on behalf of Croats in B&H (and not their political leader Mate Boban) is
only the final confirmation. A transcript of a meeting of Tuman with representatives of HDZ
from B&H from 1991 is even clearer. President Tuman stated the following:
Therefore, it seems to me that, as we took advantage of this historic
moment to create an internationally recognized independent Croatia, so I
think it is [also] time to use [the opportunity], to gather the Croatian nation
within the maximum possible borders.
152
Portal J utarnji.hr. J osipovi se ispriao za pokuaje Hrvatske da podijeli Bosnu i Hercegovinu. Jutarnji list,
April 14, 2010. (cro. Duboko alim to je i Republika Hrvatska svojom politikom u 90-im godinama prolog
stoljea tome doprinijela); [eng. Josipovi appologiesed for Croatian attempts to divide Bosnia and
Herzegovina]
153
Tuli, Zlatko. Mesi u Sarajevu: Miloevi i Tuman pokuavali podijeliti. Veernji list, May 4, 2010. [eng.
Mesi in Sarajevo: Miloevi and Tuman werer trying to divide B&H]
154
Adriano, Milovan. Kosor: Pozvat u Josipovia, Hrvatska nije bila agresor u BiH. Jutarnji list, April 15,
2010. [eng. Kosor: I will call for Josipovi; Croatia was not aggressor in B&H]
155
Dauenhauer J ari, Nenad. Hebrang: Josipovi je Hrvatsku uveo u red svjetskih agresora!. Jutarnji list, April
14, 2010. [eng. Hebrang: Josipovi introduced Croatia as one of the world aggressors!]
156
Lovrenovi, I., Luci, P. (2005) Stenogrami o podjeli Bosne, knjiga prve, Kulturna rasvjeta-Civitas, Split-
Sarajevo, pp. 88 [eng. Transcripts on partition of Bosnia, the first book]: Prema tome, ini mi se da, kao to
smo iskoristili ovaj povijesni trenutak da stvorimo samostalnu Hrvatsku meunarodno priznatu, tako mislim da
je vrijeme da iskoristimo, da okupimo hrvatsko nacionalno bie u maksimalno moguim granicama. (...) Prema
tome, meni se ini, da sa jednom pametnom politikom moemo ak dovesti do toga - sa jednim pametnim
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(...)
Therefore, I think, that with one smart policy we can even
accomplish one smart demarcation agreement with the Serbs in Bosnia
we can accomplish [it], instead of the war that threatens from this [not yet]
settled issue and with this accumulation of the army - even [more] to make
this army be a pledge of the implementation of such a demarcation.
156
What Tuman meant by the maximum possible borders remained unclear but
according to the same transcript, the vice-president of the B&Hs branch of HDZ Boo Radi
stated, that the minimum borders for him meant the 1939 borders of Banovina Hrvatska.
157
As
mentioned in the first chapter, Banovina included the whole present day Herzegovina and
smaller portions of Central and Northern Bosnia leaving significant portion of Croatian
population outside of it.
158
Whether these thoughts had ever been put into practice can not be proved for sure.
However, the fact remains that an autonomous region of Herceg-Bosna had been established
and that one of the conclusions of its Presidency was that foundation of this entity provides a
legal basis for unification of its territories with the Republic of Croatia.
159
It is also an
undeniable fact that a war between Croats and Muslims broke in 1993 and ended only under
pressure from international community.
Impact of such politics and events on common people must have been significant.
Lovrenovi emphasizes the education aspect revealing that Croatian children in Herceg-Bosna
razgranienjem, sporazumom sa Srbima u Bosni - da moemo dovesti do toga, da umjesto rata koji prijeti
ovakvom nerjeenom pitanju i sa tim gomilanjem armije - da ak ta armija bude zalog provedbe takvog
razgranienja.
157
Lovrenovi, I., Luci, P. (2005) Stenogrami o podjeli Bosne, knjiga prve, Kulturna rasvjeta-Civitas, Split-
Sarajevo, pp. 100 [eng. Transcripts on partition of Bosnia, the first book]
158
Goldstein, Ivo (1999) Croatia: A History, C. Hurst & Co. Ltd., Lonodn, pp. 128 - 130
159
Komi, Ivo (2010) Ustavnopravni poloaj Hrvata nakon Daytona kontinuitet depolitizacije in Hrvati u
BiH: ustavni poloaj, kulturni razvoj i nacionalni identitet, Centar za demokraciju i pravo Miko Tripalo and
Pravni fakultet Sveuilita u Zagrebu, Zagreb pp. 7-21 [eng. Constitutional status of Croats after Dayton
continuity of depolitization in Croats in B&H: constitutional status. Cultural development and national
identity]
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used Croatian history textbooks, learning about Croatian history, Croatian Geography and
about Croatia as their homeland and Tuman as their president.
160
Komi forwards a
statement of one Croat from Travnik region who stated that () Croatian people in Travnik
region () live with the idea of the final unification with the Croatian state and are ready to
accomplish it by all the means ().
161
Based on such and similar statements it can be argued
that a significant amount of Croats who felt the same, at that moment sized to be citizens of
B&H in their minds and thus lost their state subjectivity. Importance of these events and these
policies is that Croats in Herceg-Bosna no longer felt as a region of Croatian National Sphere
but as a region of the Croatian state. At the same time, numerous Croats in the remaining parts
of Bosnia and Herzegovina were left out and their experience of the war was completely
different. They experienced it as the citizens of B&H, subjected to this state.
That Herceg-Bosna as a region of the Croatian state was only an illusion became
obvious after Dayton, if not even before with the establishment of the Federation of Bosnia
and Herzegovina as a form of the renewed alliance between Croats and Muslims in 1994.
However, experience of Herceg-Bosna couldnt have been just erased from the collective
memory.
The people who expected/hoped to see Herceg-Bosna as part of Croatia by the end of
the war now had to face new circumstances. According to the results of the field research,
they dealt with it by eventually accepting Bosnia and Herzegovina as a permanent framework
for solving their problems. As presented in the third chapter, virtually all of the subjects agree
Bosnia and Herzegovina is their homeland and Republic of Croatia only a neighbouring
country.
160
Lovrenovi, Ivan (2002) Bosanski Hrvati, Durieux, Zagreb, pp. 166 - 167 [eng. The Bosnian Croats]
161
Komi, Ivo (2010) Ustavnopravni poloaj Hrvata nakon Daytona kontinuitet depolitizacije in Hrvati u
BiH: ustavni poloaj, kulturni razvoj i nacionalni identitet, Centar za demokraciju i pravo Miko Tripalo and
Pravni fakultet Sveuilita u Zagrebu, Zagreb pp. 7-21 [eng. Constitutional status of Croats after Dayton
continuity of depolitization in Croats in B&H: constitutional status. Cultural development and national
identity]
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However, it seems that the process of de-subjectivization of one part of Croats in B&H
was irreversible. This chapter argues that request for the third entity within B&H is not only a
result of the historic experience of the endangered and discriminated Croats but also a result
of the remainings of the politics that created an autonomous region of Herceg-Bosna. This
implies that the main responsibility for such request lies on the political elites and not on the
common people.
The answers of the interviewed subjects clearly show that third entity solution is
mentioned only when the conversation became framed by the rhetoric forced by the political
elite and mass media. In their life stories, while confessing the difficulties of their everyday
lifes and how they think it could be improved, none of the subjects mentioned the creation of
the Croat entity.
This factor, adding to the factor of the historic experience that conditioned strong
Croatian identity, explains why Croats in Herzegovina opt for the third/Croat entity when
asked about how the reform of the state should look like. The Croat political elite of
Herzegovina and frame they set up hold the answer to this question.
4.3. Popul ation Structure and the experience of the other
The remaining two factors are relevant because they explain why the alternatives are
unattractive for Croats in Herzegovina and attractive for Croats in Bosnia. So far this chapter
tried to explain why Croats in Herzegovina have strong Croatian identity and why they opt for
the third entity, but little had been said on why they disagree with the other side.
It has been mentioned in the second chapter that one of the important characteristics of
the Croat identity in Bosnia and Herzegovina is the experience of the others. Living with
members of other religious/ethnic groups and sharing everyday life with them necessarily
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influences the way people perceive the world and their reality. This makes their experience
unique and adds to the way they perceive themselves as well. As much as the experience of
the others adds a specific characteristic to someones identity so does the lack of such
experience as well.
By examining the last population census from 1991 and ethnic structure of the
population, one can easily establish that it is an overgeneralization to claim that the
experience of the others is a typical characteristic of the Croatian identity in B&H. Already
a quick look at the Map 5.
162
shows that in some parts of B&H there are simply no others to
have the experience with.
The map is divided into counties which are coloured with one or more colours, each of
which represents one of the three mayor ethnic groups in B&H: red for Serbs, blue for Croats
and green for Bosniaks. The colour(s) of the each county depends on the numerical
relationship between the ethnic groups and numbers show what the relationship is. Those
counties that are coloured in only one colour with number 1 in it represent counties with
ethnically 100% pure population.
As it can be seen on the map, there were six counties in 1991 populated only with
ethnic Croats and all six of them were Herzegovinian counties. In addition, two more counties
in the Northern part of Herzegovina had a predominant Croatian majority with 8 Croats to 1
Bosniak; that is 5 Croats to 1 Bosniak. Only in the Mostar county Croats and Bosniaks were
equal in numbers with a small Serbian population.
As opposed to Herzegovina region, in Central Bosnia Croats did not have majority in
almost any of the numerous counties. Accept in the two counties west from Sarajevo where
they were numerically largest group and the three counties south of the Zenica where they
162
See Appendix 5
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were equal in numbers with Bosniaks, Croats were minority in all other Central Bosnian
counties.
Based on the 1991 census it is obvious that vast majority of Croats in Herzegovina
lived in ethnically homogenous counties. The only exception was the city of Mostar where
Croats mixed with Bosniaks. Contrary to this, in Bosnia Croats did not have any experience
with living in homogenous counties and even more, in most of them they were the smaller
group of the two.
Therefore, it is not surprising that in the interviews subjects from Bosnia often
included neighbours of different religion in their life stories while majority of subjects from
Herzegovina did not. The simple explanation for this is: they had none to talk about.
The lack of the non-Catholic neighbours in Herzegovina on the one side and a life in
mixed communities in Bosnia on the other makes one of the most important differences
between Croats in Herzegovina and Bosnia. It is also a source of misunderstanding between
the two groups of Croats.
When interviewed subjects from Herzegovina described Croats in Bosnia as servile
they did so because decided to evaluate behaviour of Croats in Bosnia from their own
(Herzegovinian) positions that are based on experiences that lack the element of the others;
an element quite present in the experiences of Croats in Bosnia. The same goes for those
interviewees from Bosnia who were unable to understand positions and attitudes of Croats in
Herzegovina because the experience of being a predominant majority is foreign to them.
The support for the concepts of the state reform favoured by Croats in Bosnia and
Croats in Herzegovina is to a great extent conditioned by the experience of the other or the
lack of it. In this case, Croats in Bosnia base their opinion on what they see as their reality and
thats a reality of a mixed community. In the same way Croats in Herzegovina do the same
but with a different reality which is a reality of the majority.
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Therefore, for someone in the hart of Herzegovina probably seems unreasonable to
accept new regional structure with regions in which Croats would no longer have absolute
majority. At the same time, a Croat in Bosnia doesnt understand why this would be a
problem at all since, from his/her perspective, nothing would change.
The aim of this thesis is not to offer a possible solution to this inability of Croats in
B&H to understand each others positions but only to try to explain where it comes from. It
seems reasonable to conclude that in this case misunderstanding is conditioned predominantly
by the structure of the population.
4.4. The unstable soci ety
The last but not the least important factor that should help understand differences
among Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina is something that, paradoxically, all Croats share
and thats the lack of belief in a better future. Interviews clearly showed that all subjects
without exception dont believe in the central state institutions and their capability to push the
country forward. Most of the interviewees couldnt say what and by whom should be done to
make things better, some expressed their fear that the county would fall apart just like
Yugoslavia and one even expressed his wish to see that happen.
Lack of the consensus in Bosnia and Herzegovina is not only present in the process of
decision making but is also deeply embedded in the very foundation of the state.
Circumstances under which present day Bosnia and Herzegovina was formed have already
been explained in previous chapters. It is crucial to see that B&H as a state is not founded on
consensus but rather on two entities in a latent conflict suppressed by the pressure from the
outside with results that are, least to say, questionable.
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It is important to note that there are no relevant political parties along the left centre
right continuum (with the exception of SDP
163
) in legislative institutions across the country.
Political parties with ethic based programs answer to their ethnic communities instead of
citizens. As Professor Pejanovi indicates, () mono ethnic parties revealed themselves as
poor consensus builders
164
and later on concludes that thus (t)he parliament () did not
reach consensus among its members on the majority of questions it was deciding upon which
resulted in that decisions were most frequently made by the High Representative of the
International Community
165
.
Above all of this, or better to say precisely because of it, the international community
introduced The Office of The High Representative (OHR) as a powerful figure to political
system of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Today, this EU administrator has the power to impose
legislation directly and to dismiss elected government officials and civil servants
166
on behalf
of international community. It would be impossible to find any important law passed in
Bosnia and Herzegovina without direct intervention of OHR.
This in short outlines what is Bosnia and Herzegovina today and what it offers to its
citizens. B&H is a country in a constant state of a latent conflict, a country whose right to
exist is challenged not from outside but from within, a country that has more governments
then all other Balkan states together, a country that runs thanks to the international community
and OHR, a country unable to provide for its citizens What can be seen as incentive for
Croats to come together as citizens of B&H and not only as Croats? What kind of cohesion
163
Social Democrat Party of Bosnia and Herzegovina attracts votes across ethnic lines but its success is yet to be
confirmed on up coming elections.
164
Pejanovi, Mirko (2007) The Political Development of Bosnia and Herzegovina in The Post-Dayton Period,
TKD ahinpai, Sarajevo pp. 9
165
Ibid pp. 15
166
Chandler, David (2007) EU State building: Securing the Liberal Peace through EU Enlargement, Global
Society, 21:4, p. 605
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can Bosnia and Herzegovina as a country offer, in this particular case to Croats, to overcome
differences?
At this moment, the only real thing that all Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina share is
pessimism and it just might be too optimistic to expect any time soon for this to become a
factor of cohesion. As long as B&H is a step from being a failed state, as long as it is unable
to be a state of its citizens, Croats in Herzegovina and Croats in Bosnia will not have
incentive to even look beyond their differences.
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CONCLUSION
The history of Croats/Catholics in Bosnia and Herzegovina is without any doubt, at
least since the 19
th
century, a history of a constant and more or less visible duality. From the
19
th
century Franciscan Order split to the War of Yugoslav Succession history on several
occasions treated Croats in Herzegovina and Croats in Bosnia in different ways, making their
historical experiences and collective memories unique each in its own way.
The importance of the presence of the Franciscan Order and their work for the
preservation of Catholicism on the territory of todays B&H is undisputable, as well as their
strong and deep relationship with the local Catholic population. As explained in the first
chapter, different monastery traditions and different mentalities of the Franciscans of
Herzegovina and of Bosnia came to surface in the so called Barii Affair. The crisis that
led to the administrative division of the Franciscan Province only confirmed and sealed what
Dambo refers to as the dichotomy of the two worlds.
167
It would be nave to think this
dichotomy existed only within the Order and was not a result of broader geographical and
socio-economic differences between the two regions that must have influenced all strata of the
society.
As opposed to Christians in Bosnia, in the mid 70s in highland Herzegovina, due to
(traditionally) low crop income Christian peasants started fleeing into the mountains to avoid
paying increased taxes which provoked brutal measures by the authorities.
168
This rebellious
nature of Herzegovina will be confirmed even after the arrival of the Austro Hungarian
167
Dambo, Jozo. Stoljee fra. Grge Martia: Dihotomija svjetova franjevaca Bosne Srebrene. Zbornik radova
Znanstvenog skupa Fra Grgo Marti i njegovo doba, Zagreb, 8. - 9. studenog 1995. (1996): 48 -50. [eng. The
centuries of Fr. Grgo Marti: The dichotomy of the worlds of the Franciscans of Silver Bosnia. Collection of
papers of Scientific conference on Fr. Grgo Marti and his era]
168
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: pp. 132
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army with the so called robbers attacking gendarme posts and army positions.
169
The
difficult life of peasants in Herzegovina would not change in years to come and life conditions
would even deteriorate with the WW I. The experience of a harsh life during the war and after
it in the interwar period (oppression of the first Yugoslavia) is something all Croats in B&H
shared. This would change already in 1939 when Herzegovina and its Croats were unified
with Croatia while the rest of the Bosnia and its Croats were left out.
The Second World War was approaching and consequences of it would be felt
throughout the Yugoslav state. However, as it has been explained in the first and the fourth
chapter, the Herzegovinian experience of the war and even more importantly, the
consequences they suffered in Communist Yugoslavia were unique. Herzegovina Croats were
not allowed to exercise to the full their Yugoslav citizenship and were treated as second class
citizens on the basis of their ethnicity.
The final and the most recent manifestation of differences among Croats in Bosnia
and Herzegovina came with the 1990s and the war that engulfed the country. Even though
faced with a common enemy and same threat of (physical) elimination, Croats in Herzegovina
and Croats in Bosnia showed that they view reality in different ways. The most devastating
result of this would be the establishment of the Croat Community of Herceg Bosna, an
autonomous region officially established as a form of protection of Croats in B&H although it
excluded a significant amount of Croats in Bosnia.
170
The differing historic experience accompanied by particular mentalities constructed a
border of two regional identities in Bosnia and Herzegovina, making the Herzegovina part of
it much more then just a geographical term.
169
Malcolm, Noel (2002) Bosnia: A short history, Pan Macmillan, London: pp.138 - 139
170
Ibid pp. 241 - 249
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In a best Gellenerian tradition it should be noted that these differences exist within a
broader Croatian identity and do not present two separate national identities. Looking at
Gellners onion, Croatian identity would be a layer above regional identities (of
Herzegovina etc.). Although they all are Croats, being a Croat in Bosnia and being a Croat in
Herzegovina was, it seems, never the same thing.
The Croat component of the identity of Catholics in B&H has never been contested.
171
As it has been in length argued in the second chapter, Catholics in B&H were caught into
the Croatian Revival Movement and consequently, although with a delay compared to the
mainstream movement, became Croats. Thus they become part of the Croatian National
Sphere
172
in a same way Swiss Germans are part of the German National Sphere.
At the same time, they did not become part of the Croatian National State although
such aims and desires could have been heard among the elite of the Revival Movement. In
1939 this changed but just partially since only the Herzegovina and small parts of Bosnia
unified with Croatia while significant number of Croats in Bosnia remained outside. Some
arguments that could be heard in 1990s based the right of Herceg-Bosna to join Croatia
exactly on the 1939 Cvetkovi-Maek agreement. Again, such ideas would leave significant
number of Croats in Bosnia excluded.
The Dayton treaty and the international recognition of Bosnia and Herzegovina
confirmed that the borders of Croatian National State coincide with the state borders between
Republic of Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. Herceg - Bosna was suspended together
with a possibility of joining Croatia and Croats in Herzegovina with time accepted the new
171
Indeed, some Serb nationalist writers did try to contest it but not for the sake of proving that Croat element
does not exist but rather to prove it is actually the Serb element.
172
The word sphere is not used to describe any kind of sphere of influence that might justify cross border
interference of any state into another. The term is used in a sense of an imagined community that believes to
share some common characteristics.
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reality. Indeed, being a Croat in Bosnia and being a Croat in Herzegovina could have never
been the same thing.
That this is very much so, confirmed the results of the interviews conducted in April
2010 in Mostar and Meugorje in Herzegovina and Sarajevo and Fojnice in Bosnia.
Differences in attitudes followed the line of division between the two regions and the two
regional identities. All of the subjects without exception expressed their Croatian identity and
marked Catholicism as its main characteristic. However, unlike those from Herzegovina,
subjects in Sarajevo and Fojnice were predominantly referring to themselves in one of the
three ways
173
: as the Catholics, as the Catholic Croats or as the Bosnian Croats.
Contrary to this, in Herzegovina 14 of 14 subjects used the terms the Croat and the
Herzegovinian.
174
Interviews also showed that Croats of B&H are aware of these differences which
manifests in the way they refer to each other. Croats in Herzegovina often spoke of Croats in
Bosnia as people of servile nature, while Croats in Bosnia referred to those in Herzegovina
as the big Croats. The differences had also been confirmed with respect to the reform of the
state. While in Bosnia interviewees favored regionalization of B&H on purely economic
bases, in Herzegovina they opted for the third entity and ethnic bases.
To explain such differences just by establishing the differences on different levels
would be completely insufficient and actually wouldnt answer any of the why questions. It
would follow that Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina have different attitudes because they are
different. Would such loop make much or any sense?
Establishing where the differences are, how they manifested in the past, how they
manifest today and within what kind of framework did they develop is, there is no doubt,
173
In most cases, subjects used all of the terms.
174
Cro. Hercegovac
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important for understanding why do they occur. This was the aim of the first three chapters of
this thesis. The aim of these chapters was to, each in its own segment; help understand the
division of Croats in B&H. The first chapter provided historical background demonstrating
how Croats in Herzegovina and Croats in Bosnia had different historical experience. The
second one provided the context of the division by explaining how Croatian national identity
developed and how it shaped in B&H. Finally, the third one provided some empirical data on
how and where these differences materialize.
However, none of these provided possible explanations for the differences presented,
nor answered why Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina disagree on particular issues. The forth
chapter therefore offered a four-dimensional explanation with each dimension explaining at
least one segment of differences and together providing a more understanding and more
whole picture of Croats in B&H and reasons of their ongoing disagreements.
The historical dimension emphasized that the historic experience conditioned strong
Croatian identity in Herzegovina. It provided explanation for why Croats in Herzegovina
today still favor their Croat and regional Herzegovinian identity over any other (that they
never actually had a chance to develop) and why they act as though constant under threat. It
also shed some light on why they believe third entity is necessary for their protection.
The political dimension indicates that the request for the third entity within B&H is
not only a result of the historic experience of the endangered and discriminated Croats but
also a result of the remainings of the politics that created an autonomous region of Herceg-
Bosna. This adds to the previous dimension by explaining furthermore why Croats in
Herzegovina opt for the third/Croat entity when asked about how the reform of the state
should look like.
The population structure dimension ascertained that the lack of the non-Catholic
neighbors in Herzegovina on the one side and a life in mixed communities in Bosnia on the
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other makes one of the most important differences between the two groups of Croats and also
a source of misunderstanding among them. The experience of being minority in Bosnia and
experience of being in predominant majority in Herzegovina explains why Croats from
Herzegovina and Bosnia find it so difficult to understand each others positions. Their
answers in the interviews are in consistence with the fact that groups with a status of regional
minorities and groups with a status of regional majority do have different attitudes and views
concerning majority-minority relations in general.
The last dimension provides insight into the current situation of the state of B&H and
the society as a whole. Its chronic inability to function properly and provide for its citizens
makes it difficult to develop any warm feelings towards it. Lu refers to the state of B&H
as a stepmother as opposed to a real mother.
175
As long as B&H is a step from being a
failed state, as long as it is unable to be a state of its citizens, Croats in Herzegovina and
Croats in Bosnia will not have incentive to even look beyond their differences and see a link
between them in the state they share.
Therefore the different historical experiences, manipulation of the elites, the structure
of the population and the ongoing instability of the state, conditioned different realities in
Herzegovina and in Bosnia which is a main reason behind differing attitudes of its population.
Because of different realities, Croats in Herzegovina and in Bosnia find it difficult to come to
an agreement and even more, to even understand each other.
As Brubaker noted, groupness is a result of the way people perceive their reality.
Considering the four dimensions mentioned in the fourth chapter, the existence of the two
differing notions of realities should not be a surprise. It is precisely in these differing notions
conditioned by the historic experience, influence of the political elite, structure of the
175
Lu, Ivo. Ima li Hercegovine? (Tko i zato negira Hercegovinu i Hercegovce?). National Security and
The Future 3-4, no. 6 (2005): 37 86. [eng. Is there Herzegovina?( Who and why denies Herzegovina and
Herzegovinians?)]
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population and the permanent state instability that one should seek for the sources of different
attitudes between Croats in B&H. The dichotomy of the worlds of Croats in B&H, it would
seem, continues in the 20
th
century as well
The aim of this thesis was never to offer a possible solution for overcoming these
differences among Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina that clearly exist. The intention was
only to provide a better understanding of those differences and why they manifest the way
they do. I conclude that understanding different ways Croats in B&H perceive their realities
holds the answer to differences among them. How to overcome it is a question left for some
future thesis.
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Appendix 1
Map 1. Bosnia and Herzegovina
Map of Bosnia and Herzegovina [map]. Visual Scale. Atlas of The World: Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
http://www.welt-atlas.de/datenbank/karten/karte-1-558.gif (May 20, 2010)
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Appendix 2
Map 2. The map of Banovina of Croatia
Draganovi, K. Stj. Banovina Hrvatska, 1939. - 1941. [map 18]. In: Sanevi, Zdravko.
Pogled u Bosnu. Zagreb: Naprijed, 1998. (pp. 82)
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Appendix 3
Map 3. The map of the Independent State of Croatia
Goldstein, Ivo. Independent State of Croatia 1941 - 1945. [map]. In: Goldstein, Ivo.
Croatia: A History. London: C. Hurst & Co. Ltd., 1999. (pp. 132)
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Appendix 4
Map 4. Map of the post-Dayton Bosnia
Dejtonska karta Bosne i Hercegovine [map]. Visual Scale. Deutsche Welle : Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
http://www.dw-world.de/image/0,,3471801_1,00.jpg (May 22, 2010)
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Appendix 5
Map 5. The ethnic composition of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1991
Draganovi, K. Stj. Konfesionalna karta Bosne i Hercegovine. [map 17]. In: Sanevi,
Zdravko. Pogled u Bosnu. Zagreb: Naprijed, 1998. (pp. 79)

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