Balkan Idols: Religion and Nationalism in Yugoslav States
Balkan Idols: Religion and Nationalism in Yugoslav States
Balkan Idols: Religion and Nationalism in Yugoslav States
Create successful ePaper yourself
Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.
59. Ramet, <strong>Nationalism</strong> <strong>and</strong> Federalism <strong>in</strong> <strong>Yugoslav</strong>ia: 1962–1991.<br />
60. Ibid.<br />
61. “When Marriage Is Sleep<strong>in</strong>g with Enemy,” Newsweek, 5 October 1992.<br />
Newsweek cited a survey conducted <strong>in</strong> the late 1980s by the University of Belgrade.<br />
62. See Nikola Dug<strong>and</strong>zˇija, “Religija i nacija u zagrebačkoj regiji” (<strong>Religion</strong><br />
<strong>and</strong> nation <strong>in</strong> the Zagreb region), <strong>in</strong> Religija i drusˇtvo, ed. S ˇ tefica Bahtijarevic<br />
<strong>and</strong> Branko Bosˇnjak (Zagreb: Centar za idejno-teorijski rad Gradskog komiteta<br />
Saveza komunista Hrvatske, 1987), p. 100. See also Vrcan, “<strong>Religion</strong>, Nation <strong>and</strong><br />
Class <strong>in</strong> Contemporary <strong>Yugoslav</strong>ia,” pp. 97–98.<br />
63. Dug<strong>and</strong>zˇija, “Religija i nacija,” pp. 99–100.<br />
64. Ibid., p. 101.<br />
65. Ibid., pp. 98–101.<br />
66. For example, the number of respondents who considered nationality as<br />
very important <strong>in</strong> choos<strong>in</strong>g one’s friends <strong>and</strong> spouse was 61 percent <strong>in</strong> ethnic<br />
Albanians <strong>and</strong> 7.6 percent <strong>in</strong> <strong>Yugoslav</strong>s by nationality. Vrcan, “<strong>Religion</strong>, Nation<br />
<strong>and</strong> Class <strong>in</strong> Contemporary <strong>Yugoslav</strong>ia,” p. 98.<br />
67. Ibid., p. 97.<br />
68. Hans Kohn, Pan-Slavism: Its History <strong>and</strong> Ideology (Notre Dame, IN: University<br />
of Notre Dame Press, 1953).<br />
69. Ibid., p. 71.<br />
70. As Hans Kohn noted, “World War II brought an unexpected revival <strong>in</strong><br />
an unprecedented breadth <strong>and</strong> <strong>in</strong>tensity of the Pan-Slavic idea that seemed dead<br />
<strong>in</strong> the 1930s.” Ibid., p. 251.<br />
71. Ibid., p. 252. See more on Russian Pan-Slavism <strong>in</strong> Michael Boro Petrovich,<br />
The Emergence of Russian Panslavism, 1856–1870 (Westport, CT.: Greenwood<br />
Press, 1985).<br />
72. Djilas describes the atmosphere <strong>in</strong> terms such as “rapture,” “<strong>in</strong>toxicat<strong>in</strong>g<br />
ecstasy,” <strong>and</strong> “tumultuous rhythmic outbursts.” Wartime, pp. 359–361.<br />
73. Dedijer, Novi prilozi, 2:929.<br />
74. See “Tako je pisao Tudjman (5)” (Thus wrote Tudjman, no. 5), Feral<br />
Tribune, 25 August 1997.<br />
75. Pjesme o Titu, pp. 28, 81.<br />
76. Doder, The <strong>Yugoslav</strong>s, p. 117.<br />
77. Milovan Djilas, Druzˇenje s Titom (Harrow, UK: Aleksa Djilas, 1980),<br />
pp. 118–119.<br />
78. El-Sadat, Those I Have Known, pp. 90, 93, <strong>and</strong> 96.<br />
79. Ibid., p. 89.<br />
80. Ibid., p. 93.<br />
81. One of the probably most <strong>in</strong>terest<strong>in</strong>g though little-known comparisons<br />
between Titoism <strong>and</strong> other contemporary dictatorships can be found <strong>in</strong> Enrique<br />
Triana Carrasquilla, Franco-Tito: Españña-<strong>Yugoslav</strong>ia, paralelo extraord<strong>in</strong>ario (Bogota:<br />
Fuerzas Militares, 1990).<br />
82. In 1999, the government of Montenegro sold the Seagull to American<br />
bus<strong>in</strong>essman John Paul Papanicolau.<br />
83. El-Sadat, Those I Have Known, p. 94.<br />
84. Zbirka propisa o upotrebi imena i lika i o čuvanju dela Josipa Broza Tita, o<br />
grbu, zastavi i himni SFRJ, o praznicima i odlikovanjima SFRJ, o nagradama i o<br />
proglasˇavanju opsˇtenarodne zˇalosti u SFRJ (Belgrade: Nov<strong>in</strong>sko-izdavačka ustanova<br />
Sluzˇbeni list SFRJ, 1987).<br />
85. NIN, 14 August 1988.<br />
274 notes to pages 101–104