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SERBS AND THE 1873 REVISION OF
THE CROATO-HUNGARIAN NAGODBA
Right at the outset of this
chapter it should be pointed out, in regard to the 1873 revision
of the Croato-Hungarian Nagodba (compromise), that it had a
completely opposite effect on Serb-Croat relations from the
Croato-Hungarian Nagodba of 1868, a fact which has not been duly
noted in historiography. The original Nagodba had a positive
effect on those relations, since both the Nagodba and the dualist
system, introduced under the Austro-Hungarian compromise (Ausgleich)
of 1867, were equally threatening to both Serbs and Croats, who
in the face of a common danger tended to come closer together and
cast aside almost all their earlier differences and conflicts.
The revision to a very large extent broke up this unity. Whereas
the Nagodba had been an integrating factor for Serbs and Croats,
its revision was a disintegrating factor. Since it was an event
of crucial significance in the history of the Serbs and Croats,
which had enduring and unfavourable consequences for their
subsequent development, the revision of the Nagodba will be
discussed here in detail, with special reference to the attitude
of the Serbs not only from Croatia but also from Hungary and the
Principality of Serbia towards this state treaty.
The process of integration of
the Serbian and Croatian political movements, begun after the
Austro-Prussian war of 1866, was not stopped by the forcible
introduction of the Croato-Hungarian Nagodba of 1868. On the
contrary, it was continued, until the Nagodba's revision in 1873.
In terms of the scope and results of these relations and
cooperation, it would be no exaggeration to say that the years
between 1866 and 1873, and of course the revolutionary events of
1848/49, were among the brightest moments of Serbian and Croatian
history in the 19th century.
The question of rapprochement
and cooperation between Serbs from Hungary and Croats and the
unification of their political movements would be presented too
simplicistically if it were to be linked solely to the
Croato-Hungarian Nagodba and its unfavourable provisions for
Croatia's autonomy. The hostility of the Croats to the Nagodba
and Rauch, gave the Serbs, mindful of the interests of the Serbs
in Croatia, every reason to link up with the Croats. Both were
against dualism, and the Serbs from Hungary offered the Croats a
hand of friendship because they wanted their support against the
Hungarian government over the so-called Law on the Equality of
Nationalities, which was voted in the Hungarian Diet soon after
the coming into force of the Croato-Hungarian Nagodba. In other
words, as the Nagodba forced the Croats to look for support among
the Serbs, so the Serbs from Hungary, to protect themselves
against the unfavourable provisions of the said law, wanted an
alliance with the Croats.
Just a few months after the
passing of the Croato-Hungarian Nagodba, Serbs in Hungary adopted
early in 1869, the Becskerek Programme and devoted considerable
attention to Croatia and its constitutional position within
Hungary. Drafting his programme, Svetozar Miletic wrote: "As
regards the Triune Kingdom, the Serbs in the Hungarian Parliament
should espouse those principles which lead to a true federation
of these countries with Hungary, and then seek a change in the
legislation which made the Triune Kingdom a province of
Hungary." The Becskerek Programme further on states that the
Serbs, "in the field of interstate policy wholly support the
aspirations of the Croato-Serbian people for full autonomy within
the Triune Kingdom." The principal task of the newly founded
Serbian National Freethinkers Party, according to the Programme,
was "in the interest of the Serbo-Croatian people within the
Triune Kingdom," to oppose "the illegally implemented
compromise" and "to promote the autonomous and material
rights of our people across the Danube, on the basis of state
equality and federal independence."
A political leader of the
liberal section of Serbian burghers in Hungary, Svetozar Miletic,
in the spring of 1867, in debates on Croatia in the Hungarian
Diet, defended its territorial integrity, demanding the
attachment of Rijeka and broad autonomy such as was demanded by
the Croatian royal deputation in 1866. Although sharply attacked
on this score in the Diet, Miletic stood up again in defence of
Croatia in November 1867. He denounced Rauch's unconstitutional
rule and declared without shilly-shallying that a favourable
settlement of Croato-Hungarian differences "not only from a
general political but also from a particular national standpoint
must be uppermost in our minds... because there is no doubt that
success in finding a compromise with Croatia and Slavonia would
influence and be a guarantee for success in the solution of the
nationality question." The leader of the Serbs from Hungary
also denounced gerrymandering in view of the forthcoming
elections in Croatia, and proclaimed as illegal the Croatian
Sabor constituted according to this scheme, as well as all its
resolutions, pointing out that they would commit neither present
nor future generations.2
Rauch as an exponent of the
dualist system in Croatia was sharply attacked by Miletic when he
ordered Cyrillic to be banned in Srem as an official alphabet.
Rauch issued this decree supposedly following a request filed by
the "Catholic inhabitants of the county of Srem," which
was submitted to the Croatian Sabor on October 11, 1869. Miletic
immediately understood that by abolishing the Cyrillic alphabet,
Rauch and his collaborators were intent on bringing dissension
between the Serbs and Croats and, in order to prevent it, wrote
an article in Zastava in which he delivered a stinging
attack against the Croatian Ban, his followers and the Sabor,
which he described as a political doss house.3 Because
of this article, which called for concord and unity between Serbs
and Croats, Miletic was condemned to one year of imprisonment, a
500 forints fine, and payment of court costs and his own upkeep
while in prison.
Like Miletic and his Zastava,
the newspaper Pancevac also opposed the abolition of the
Cyrillic alphabet, not because it was particularly enthusiastic
about it, but because it was clear that with their act, Rauch and
Andrássy wanted to "stab Serb-Croat concord in the
heart."4 For the same motives, to protect the
established Croat-Serb accord, Regent Jovan Ristic instructed
Djordje Stratimirovic to write against the decision on the
abolition of Cyrillic script, making it clear that the Hungarians
were behind this decision.5 While he was alive, Prince
Mihailo also joined the struggle against Rauch and his violent
methods. Making use of his good relations with the Hungarians, he
sought support from his trusted men in Budapest in a bid to have
Rauch dismissed from his post of acting Ban, to be replaced by
Count Julije Jankovic, a member of the Unionist minority.
Contemporaries who were advised of Prince Mihailo's secret
diplomatic threats, believed that he would have succeeded in his
action were he not overtaken by death, because they were in no
doubt whatever that Count Andrássy cared less for Levin Rauch
than for Serbia's friendship.6 Owing to such good and
close relations between the Serbs and Croats, which were then
cultivated on both sides, and owing to their common aims - to
bring down Rauch, to fight the inequitable Nagodba with Hungary,
and to establish the broadest possible autonomy for Croatia -
editor of Zatocenik Ivan Voncina visited Belgrade in
October 1869, before starting a series of articles against Rauch,
and asked the Serbian government for financial assistance for his
newspaper.7
After the Nagodba of 1868, Serbs
from Hungary, Croatia, and Serbia did everything in their power
to foster political unity with the Croats, so that with united
forces they could fight not only Rauch but also the system which
he represented. Several times Miletic called for this unity in
the columns of Zastava, describing it as a component part
of the programme of the Serbian National Freethinkers Party.8
Taking up the idea of the
political unity of the Serbs and Croats, the editor of Pancevac
and member of the left wing of the Serbian National Freethinkers
Party, Jovan Pavlovic, went one step further than Miletic. Aware
that the Serbs and Croats in Austria-Hungary did not have the
strength to fight an armed struggle for their rights, not having
behind them either Serbia, or Montenegro, or any other "area
for operation against the enemy," he put forward the
proposal that the Serbs and Croats should make the Triune Kingdom
their only remaining "reliable buttress," their
Piedmont in the Habsburg Monarchy. The most important step in the
realization of this objective was, in Pavlovic's view, to bring
down Levin Rauch and establish a popular government. "If
this comes to pass," Pavlovic wrote, "then we in
Austria-Hungary have acquired a Piedmont; then it will be much
easier to make further gains wherever we see that our national
cause is under pressure; then the Triune Kingdom will help our
people in Hungary to attain a better position; then it will
become, on the one hand, a rampart against foreign onslaught,
bent on swallowing up our brothers in the East, and on the other,
a living source from which these same brothers of ours could draw
strength in their further struggle for liberation." Wishing
to make Croatia a Piedmont of the Serbs and Croats in
Austria-Hungary, Pavlovic particularly addressed the Serbs of
Srem. He warned them against the Rauch administration's electoral
machinations, proclaimed the victory of the national cause as
sacred, and urged voters to cast their ballots only for tried and
true patriots and not to allow themselves to be deceived or
intimidated by political enemies.9
As the Serbs in Croatia and
Hungary were doing their utmost to foster political unity with
the Croats, having created a single movement to destroy Rauch and
his Nagodba, in the winter of 1870, there began a new gradual
rapprochement between the political leadership of the Croatian
National Party and the official representatives of the
Principality of Serbia. The initiative for this rapprochement was
given by Regent Jovan Ristic through his envoy, Josip Toncic.
When Ristic offered via Toncic cooperation with the National
Party and asked them for certain political services, Mrazovic on
behalf of this party accepted the offer but demanded that Serbia
back not Hungarian but rather Croatian and Serbian interests in
Croatia and southern Hungary. He suggested that the Croatian and
Serbian presses should help one another, that the Croats should
contribute to Serbian and Serbs to Croatian newspapers, and that
the Serbian papers (Vidovdan and Jedinstvo) should
show more sympathy in reporting on the Croatian movement.
Furthermore, Mrazovic said that the Croats saw a better future
only in solidarity with the other Southern Slavs and asked from
Serbia at least moral support, if no other was available.
After certain minor differences
were ironed out, cooperation was established between the National
Party and the Serbian government, in accordance with Matija
Mrazovic's demands. Ristic's representative Toncic rejected
Mrazovic's claims that the Serbian government served the
Hungarians against the Croats and Serbs from Hungary, but did
admit that the government did not attack the Hungarians, for
political as well as for economic and military reasons. Almost at
the same time as collaboration was established between the
government of Serbia and the National Party in the field of the
press, as the two sides readily admitted that no success was
possible without solidarity, Bishop Strossmayer and Ristic were
about to agree on the destiny of Bosnia and Hercegovina. When the
Hungarians offered Bosnia and Hercegovina to Serbia, Ristic
expressed his readiness to come to an understanding on these
regions with the National Party. Learning about this, the Bishop
welcomed Ristic's stance on Bosnia and wrote to him that the
National Party would "help him in every possible way"
and stressed strongly that they would rather "a thousand
times renounce their own existence and die than quarrel with you
over any portion of the country." Strossmayer added:
"We are endeavouring to bring concord and unity among our
people, and there is no one or anything in the world that would
make us differ over it." Relations between the Croatian
National Party and the official representatives of Serbia were
not upset even after Strossmayer's imprudent statement to the
London Catholic weekly Tablet, in which the Bishop let it
be known that he was certain that "the Catholic part of my
people, after achieving an all-round education and spiritual
culture, is predestined to spread these bases and to bring the
sundered part back to Catholic unity." The Serbian
newspapers which received subsidies from the Hungarian state, Srbski
narod of Novi Sad and Vidovdan of Belgrade, tried very
hard to exploit Strossmayer's statement hoping to discredit him
completely in the eyes of the Serbian public, precisely at the
moment when the National Party together with the Serbs started a
determined struggle against Levin Rauch. By morally discrediting
the party leader, a blow would be struck at the very foundations
of the party, crippling it in its struggle against the Unionists.
The Serbs from the ranks of the United Serbian Youth, the Serbian
National Freethinkers Party and the official circles of the
Principality, aware of the significance and gravity of the
political moment and prepared to enter into sincere collaboration
with the Croatian National Party, not only did not join in the
attacks against Strossmayer for his incautious remarks, but
defended him at the moment when he and Croatia needed protection.
Others who rallied to the Bishop's side were Ljubomir Kaljevic in
Srbija, spokesman for the United Youth, and Mihailo
Polit-Desancic in Jovan Subotic's Narod. They gave the
Croats enormous moral support, thereby furthering the struggle
against Rauch and the Unionist system and helping to bring about
their downfall.
In agreement with Regent Ristic,
Metropolitan Mihailo, who was in correspondence with Strossmayer,
showed much tact and understanding when, in his letter of March
14, 1871, he overlooked his statement because he believed that at
that particular moment the most important thing was for the
Croats and Serbs, both Orthodox and Catolics, to help the Serbian
government in its political aims. Ristic and Strossmayer had no
difficulty in agreeing that religious differences should not
stand in the way of their joint national and political efforts.
Assured by Ristic that "there is no interest" which
would "sunder Serbia and Serbs from the Yugoslav
community," the Bishop said: "I am always, body and
soul, at your service, together with my friends." In March
1871, the Bishop wrote on behalf of the National Party that it
was just and reasonable that he and his followers should leave it
to Serbia to estimate "when the time is ripe for the
undertaking, and which methods are to be used for the
purpose." Strossmayer told the Serbian Regent; "When in
your opinion the decisive hour has struck, you shall have in me a
sincere friend and a true brother, who will wholeheartedly
support you and your plans."
The National Party, led by
Strossmayer, left it up to Serbia to direct political action in
the Eastern Question, aware that Croatia at that moment, under
Hungarian rule, would be unable to make any moves to resolve it
the way they had planned a few years earlier, within the
framework of a federalist monarchy. This is why Strossmayer,
early in April 1871, fully equated the political interests of the
Serbs and Croats, saying: "Not only shall we not place any
encumbrances on the Serbian government in the execution of its
task, not only shall we not hinder it from annexing Bosnia and
Hercegovina, but we shall beg Serbia to take us in as well, if at
all possible." Thus, without a formal treaty, an agreement
was struck between Serbia and the National Party which did not
resolve all questions in detail, but clearly the two sides had
come so close together that they had become fully aware of their
many mutual obligations and the national and political objectives
they held in common. This alone can explain the fact that
Strossmayer envisaged Croatia's secession from Austria-Hungary
and its adherence to a state of South Slavs to be built around
Serbia and under its leadership.
As the rapprochement between the
Serbian government and the Croatian National Party coincided with
the Franco-Prussian War, it is reasonable to suppose that it was
influenced by this war. This international complication was not
taken advantage of by the Serbs and Croats, but it did
significantly help improve the erstwhile upset relations between
the Serbian government and the National Party.
Having vigilantly watched all
Serbia's moves, particularly its relations with the other
Southern Slavs, the Austro-Hungarian consul in Belgrade, Béni
Kállay, did make good note of this new friendliness between the
Croatian National Party and the official representatives of the
Principality. Aware that any friendship between the Serbs and
Croats might work to the detriment of the interests of Vienna and
Budapest, Kállay set about searching for ways and means of
sowing dissension and fomenting hatred between the two South Slav
nations. Another reason for doing so was the imminent
parliamentary elections for the Croatian Sabor, for he wanted to
break up the unity of the Croato-Serbian opposition and help the
Unionists win as many constituencies as possible. Kállay was
familiar with relations among the Southern Slavs and therefore
knew that the Serbs from Srem were then under the very strong
influence of Serbia. He wrote to Andrássy: "It would not be
amiss to tear this Serbian Orthodox populace from that influence
and bring them closer to the Croats. This would make the existing
hatred between the Serbian and Croatian elements only
worse."20
It is hardly accidental that
only a month after Kállay's letter, a dispute broke out in the
Croatian and Serbian press as to whether Srem and certain parts
of the Military Frontier were Serbian or Croatian lands. But even
if Kállay did manage to trouble relations between the Serbian
and Croatian press over Srem, the Austro-Hungarian consul's
activities could not be related to what happened at the First
General Croatian Teachers' Assembly, held from August 23 to 25,
1871. Although most of Croatian teachers at that time were
politically affiliated with the National Party,22 their Assembly
took no notice of the Serbs and their national sentiments and
aspirations. In accordance with the earlier policies of the
National Party, which were based on the Croatian state and
historical rights and ideas about the so-called political people,
the Teachers' Assembly also took the view that on Croatian state
territory there was only one single, Croatian,
"political" people. Thereby the Serbs from Croatia were
again expunged as a national entity, which was at a time when
they had created a single front with the Croatian National Party,
when they together, with the help of the Serbs from Hungary, had
brought down Rauch, and when in the May elections of 1871, with
the moral support of Serbia, they scored a resounding victory
over the Unionists.23 The Statistical Review of the Triune
Kingdom of Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia, which was
published as a memento of the First Croatian Teachers' Assembly,
like the catalogue of the First Dalmatian-Croatian-Slavonian
Exhibition of 1864 made no mention whatever of the Serbs. The
Review said that there were 2.5 million Croats in the Triune
Kingdom, of whom 500,000 were Orthodox Croats. In the spirit of
this policy of non-recognition and assimilation of Serbs in
Croatia, the Assembly did not observe the Croatian Sabor's
decision of 1867 naming the official language in Croatia
"Croatian or Serbian." Instead, the Assembly decided;
"All tuition in elementary schools must only be in the
language of the Croatian people, and no other language but
Croatian may be taught in the schools. In schools for alien
inhabitants in Croatia, the Croatian language shall be taught in
addition to the vernacular concerned."24
The proceedings and resolutions
of the First General Croatian Teachers' Assembly did not pass
without comment among the Serbian public. A sharp first reaction
came from the most progressive portion of the Serbian burgher
society, whose spokesman was the newspaper Pancevac, which
a few months earlier had stood up in defence of the Paris Commune
and published the Manifesto of the Communist Party. Pancevac
criticized the failure to mention the Serbs in the Statistical
Review, and also its resolutions on the language and its
name, and the fact that Serbian children were obliged to learn
the Latin alphabet, while Croatian children were under no
obligation to learn Cyrillic.25 The Assembly and its resolutions
were defended by Obzor,26 but it was obvious that neither
side at that moment wanted to deepen and widen the differences.
It is, however, very characteristic that Pancevac, in
connection with the debates on Srem, had foreseen what was going
to happen at the Teachers' Assembly after Rauch's downfall and
after the victory of the National Party. The newspaper had
written: "We know that there are many Croats for whom we are
'Serbian brothers' only when they are in trouble; for example,
when a Rauch has to be brought down or when a toppled kingdom has
to be restored. Once the trouble is over, and once they have
recovered power and strength, they will again ask: 'What Serbs?
We don't see any Serbs in the Triune Kingdom!'" In this
connection, Pancevac reminded its readers, as well as the
National Party followers, about what happened in the Croatian
Sabor in 1861, and wrote: "We still remember the ridiculous
decision of the Zagreb Sabor to elect a committee which was to
'determine what is Serbian and whether such a thing exists in the
Triune Kingdom'."27 It was a friendly warning given on time,
but the Croatian teachers did not take heed. They stuck to the
old tenets of the National Party policies. They wanted accord and
unity with the Serbs outside Croatia, but in their own house they
did not recognize the Serbs, regarding and treating them as
Orthodox Croats.28
The Teachers' Assembly's
attitude toward the Serbs could easily have upset the friendly
relations between the Croatian National Party and the Serbs as a
whole. However, as in the case of the earlier mentioned statement
made by Strossmayer, this did not happen. Guided by higher aims,
above all by the struggle for a wider autonomy of Croatia, which
would be ruled by the National Party, the Serbs and Croats did
not want to break their political unity, although it was clear
that the old differences had not been overcome with the new
cooperation. Although it could not be happy about the work and
conclusions of the Teachers' Assembly, the Serbian government, as
a token of friendship, made a gift of all the books exhibited at
the Assembly's exhibition.29 As the official mouthpiece of the
National Party, Obzor defended the Croatian teachers and
their decisions against Pancevac's criticisms. In order to
reassure the Serbs, it wrote that "no one in his right mind
could use any individual acts, either taken by any gatherings or
by the Sabor, to pass judgement on an entire nation, certainly
not from this Assembly, which did not have a political
significance but was purely academic, and if it showed that
it has failings, so much the better that it has met, for it has
revealed the shortcomings of the teaching profession."30
This sober political view of the new controversy did not absolve
the main issue. On the contrary, on the first suitable occasion,
it would again come to surface as one of the main stumbling
blocks between the Croats and Serbs, but during the struggle
against the Unionists and their Nagodba it was temporarily
shelved and camouflaged with rational political motives.
Copyright © 1997 by Vasilije Krestic
Copyright © 1997 by BIGZ , Beograd
Copyright © 1998 by Serbian Unity Congress
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