I watched Sarajevo again recently and then started wondering about the country we learned about in school: Yugoslavia. Of course, I know that merging of territories and countries had “unmerged” in the recent decades. I thought I had some inkling of what was and what is. As it turns out, a little bit of research has made me aware that it is complicated. I would not want to be faced with being tested on the information; if I did badly, I think I would ask the instructor to just wait because, given the history of the Balkans, my answers might suddenly be right again.
I read one article that cautioned people not to confuse Serbian Bosnians with Serb Bosnians, and I almost started looking for a wall to bang my head against. For the record, Serbian Bosnians are ethnic Bosnians who live in Serbia and Serb Bosnians are ethnic Serbs who live in Bosnia.
As I am starting to understand it, your national identity and citizenship may not necessarily be the same thing in former Yugoslavia. I know we have hyphenated Americans, but for the most part, I don’t think very many would be upset about flopping down a U.S. passport when in – to use what we Americans call anyplace other than here – a foreign country.
I had to take a break when I read about a Serbian Republic (Republika Srpska) surrounded by Bosnia. The break was especially important when I glimpsed a reference to another Serbian Republic (Serbian Krajina) in Croatia in the next sentence.
I’m going to wait to see if there are Croatian Bosnians (or Serbians) and Croat Bosnians (or Serbians). I think I really need that head-banging wall.