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Revision of the Nagodba - Serbs
and Croats Part Ways
The Serbian opposition in
Hungary and Croatia acted in conjunction with the anti-Nagodba
policy conducted by the Serbian government. Organized within the
Serbian National Freethinkers Party, the opposition made up of
Serbs from Croatia and Hungary was not prepared to grant any
concessions to the Hungarians and Croatian Unionists. For these
reasons it did not condone negotiations between the Hungarian
government and individual members of the National Party. It
wanted first to see the Croatian Sabor come into session,
whereupon it would select men from its ranks to conduct the
talks.78 When, at the end of December 1871, the
Croatian Nationalists went to negotiate anyway, the Serbian
opposition rejected all possible links with the Unionists.79
It was against the revision of the Nagodba, because it believed
that the acceptance of the revision would imply recognition of
the 1868 Nagodba, which it had rejected lock, stock and barrel.
The only legal possibility for negotiations with the Hungarians
was seen by the Serbian National Freethinkers Party in Article 42
of the Croatian Sabor Act of 1861. It wanted this article of the
Act to be the starting point of negotiations on Croatia's full
autonomy, which would consist in the Ban's accountability to the
Croatian Sabor, full independence of Croatian finances, and the
right of the Croatian Sabor to determine the proportional quota
for common expenditure with Hungary, and which would generally
reflect the full internal independence of Croatia. The Serbian
National Freethinkers Party did not call for the breaking off of
the union between Croatia and Hungary, but, as Zastava
pointed out, for the establishment of a state link "which is
not shameful and detrimental to the Triune Kingdom."80
When the Croatian Sabor was
dissolved on January 19, 1872, the Serbian opposition from
Hungary and Croatia denounced it as an act doing injury to
"the dignity of the Sabor and national pride." Miletic
made a protest in the Hungarian Diet, and his Zastava
wrote that the dissolving of the Sabor cut "the last thread
of mutual understanding" and that for the Serbian and
Croatian people there was no other way but to "gather
strength for their new struggle."81 Pavlovic's Pancevac
almost openly fomented trouble when it wrote that it admired the
"lamb-like meekness with which the people bore this injury
in silence" and pointed out that "Hungarian
mischief-making with this country and people has already exceeded
all measure" and it would be very fortunate "if it does
not bring consequences which may be dangerous for peace and order
in this country." The entire Serbian opposition regarded the
dissolution of the Sabor as a pretext for the beginning of a new
struggle between the government and the people, in which it
demanded of the latter to grant full trust to the National Party.82
Because of the strongly
expressed anti-Nagodba sentiments, the Hungarian and German
press, which reflected the government's interests, sharply
attacked the Serbian opposition. The strongest attacks were
directed against Miletic, who was accused of goading and
instigating the Nationalists not to make peace with the
Hungarians.83 At the same time, the Serbian opposition
press vociferously demanded the closest possible political links
between the Serbs and Croats, harmony and unity. An excerpt from
an article in Subotic's Narod provides a good
illustration: "The good point about the common suffering of
related tribes is that the tribal quarrels and dissensions are
set aside, mutual injuries are forgiven and forgotten, and the
kindred tribes are banding more tightly together, realizing the
value of kinship. The good point about the common sufferings of
the Croats and Serbs is that the old quarrels and disputes about
their nations are today swept aside as something belonging to the
past, which in the present makes no sense. Today historians and
linguists may debate what is Serbian and what is Croatian;
hotheads may carry the bigotry of script to extremes;
reactionaries may point out differences between denominations -
but debates about Serbianism and Croatianism can no longer affect
the trend of the Serbo-Croatian people.'s policy. Thanks to the
Austrian and Hungarian policies, the difference in policies
between the Serbs and Croats has to cease. The Croats have been
able to realize that they should support neither Austrian nor
Hungarian policies, but hold their own, once their policy
becomes pure Croatian, once Croatianism ceases to be an
instrument of Austrian and Hungarian policy or of clerical
propaganda against Serbianism. And by the same token, once
Serbianism ceases to be the instrument of Serbia's selfish
policy, or the instrument of the Orthodox clergy in the hands of
Austrian and Hungarian reactionaries against Croatianism, then
there is no longer any difference in policies between the Serbs
and Croats, and then there can be only one people, the
Serbo-Croatian or Croato-Serbian people." Narod wrote
further on: "We, the Southern Slavs, can only have a future
in togetherness; hence we must support one another. Until such
time as the tribal differences created by history, dialects,
confessions, customs and state and political separateness have
been erased, one tribe must not be intent on absorbing the other,
but each in its own sphere should work toward this common
future."
Like Subotic's Narod,
Jovan Jovanovic Zmaj's Ziza also tried to foster harmony
and brotherhood between the Serbs and Croats. Politically very
committed, an unwavering follower of Svetozar Miletic and the
Serbian National Freethinkers Party, Jovan Jovanovic here again
placed his poetic talent in the service of national interests
when in accordance with the Becskerek Programme he raised his
voice against the Nagodba, its revision, and against all those
who were in favour of it. Ridiculing Baron Jovan Zivkovic, who
belonged to the group of moderate Unionists and advocated fusion
with the Nationalists provided they recognized the Nagodba of
1868, he scourged his political programme and his Unionists,
setting his criticism to verse:
The more threatening your
spectre,
The stronger our faith
Which hunger will not shake.
A heroic people will not
change their faith
In days of trials.
We trust in our stalwart
hearts,
We rely on fraternal bonds,
We follow the Serbian and
Croatian star.
The desire for close political
links between the Serbs and Croats was very pronounced at this
time and was an essential part of the Becskerek Programme. It was
noticeable, however, that during January and February 1872, the
Serbian opposition laid more than usual stress on the need for
harmony and unity of the Serbian and Croatian political movements
and national aims. This was due to a sudden change in the
political drift of the Croatian National Party, its renunciation
of its anti-dualist opposition and the acceptance of the 1868 Act
of Compromise as the platform for its further activity. In other
words, when the leaders of the Serbian National Freethinkers
Party realized that the Croatian National Party had decided to
abandon the arena of anti-dualist struggle, and in order not to
remain isolated vis-r-vis the Hungarians, they called for unity
more forcefully than before. The leading Serbian newspapers, Zastava
and Narod, not only abstained from denouncing their allies
for abandoning the opposition struggle, but using skilful wording
and sophistry justified the policy of the National Party and its
negotiations with the Hungarian government, only occasionally
criticizing it mildly for being too compliant.
With this stance, the Serbian
opposition wanted to preserve its hard won political unity and to
bring the National Party back onto the road of anti-dualist
struggle. Miletic's followers put in considerable effort to dig
the deepest possible gulf between the Nationalists and Unionists,
who were considering a merger. Zastava stressed the
differences between the programmes of the Nationalists and
Unionists, claiming that the former were seeking the broadening
and the latter the narrowing of national and popular rights, that
for the former, a link with Hungary was a means of achieving
their goal, while for the latter, this link was a goal in itself
which they wanted to achieve.
Dissatisfied with the National
Party leaders' excessive indulgence towards the Hungarians, and
convinced that there were no real reasons for it, in the second
half of March 1872, Miletic's followers informed the public on
the points where they disagreed with the Croatian Nationalists.
Among other things, they wanted Hungary to recognize Rijeka and
the Croatian Littoral as a component part of the Croatian lands,
within which Hungary's interests would be safeguarded in this
city and its environs. They considered that no state treaty
should be concluded between Hungary and Croatia without the
previous consent of the inhabitants of the Military Frontier.
Aware that the Military Frontier could not be demilitarized in a
hurry, they pointed out that "the matter at stake is not an
immediate demilitarization; it is that Krajina should have a
voice in the settlement of the state dispensation and that it
should wield its influence also in the transitional period in all
political, judicial, civic and other domains of public and
private law."
The Serbian opposition was
unhappy over the narrow scope of the self-government given to
Croatia under the 1868 Nagodba and sought to broaden it as much
as possible. More than this, it wanted to secure guarantees for
its realization. But those guarantees which the leaders of the
Croatian National Party asked for in the negotiations did not
satisfy the Serbian opposition. The Nationalist leaders demanded
that the ban should not depend on the minister in charge of
Croatian affairs, least of all in legislative and executive
proposals and in his petitions. They also wanted the chiefs of
various departments in the Croatian government to be accountable
for their acts. Zastava wrote that these guarantees were
not sufficient, and on behalf of the Serbian National
Freethinkers Party it suggested that the ban should be appointed
directly by the Emperor himself, thus circumventing the
requirement of recommendation and counter-signature by the
Hungarian prime minister. The reason given by Zastava was
that "Croatia and Slavonia must have guarantees that the ban
will follow the majority in the Croatian Sabor, even if its
policy is contrary to that of the Hungarian government, because
if the Hungarian government rather than the Croatian Sabor
determined the direction of internal autonomous policy, then
autonomy would be an empty word, which it is today." As
regards other matters, the Serbian opposition was on the same or
similar ground as the Croatian National Party. Lest there should
be any undesired disagreements because of the existing
differences, the representatives of the Serbian opposition
declared that they did not doubt the honesty and patriotic
intentions of the leadership of the National Party, but that they
were not ready to yield and agree to half-baked and provisional
solutions. Should such solutions nevertheless be adopted, they
hinted at the possibility of the formation of a new Croatian
Radical Party from discontented Nationalists, who at this time
were in the minority, but, as pointed out by Zastava,
might in due course become "a leavening agent for the
future."
At the moment when the
leadership of the Croatian National Party, at the end of 1871 and
beginning of 1872, made an about-turn by abandoning the
parliamentary struggle, it included several prominent Serbian
politicians in its ranks. These politicians not only approved the
new course of action by the National Party but, like Supreme
Court justice Maksimilijan Prica and attorney Nikola Krestic,
played an important role in it. Prica and Krestic belonged to the
still very thin stratum of the Serbian bourgeois society in
Croatia who had come to the conclusion that the continued
struggle against Hungarians could do them more harm than good.
They represented the wealthy middle class, notably merchants, who
had their minds set on profitable business with Budapest and
Viennese financial, industrial and commercial circles and wanted
peace rather than war with the Hungarians.90
Furthermore, they represented the interests of the dependent
intelligentsia holding various civil service posts, who were
political fence-sitters and ready to cooperate with whatever
party was in a position to offer them more. When they came to the
conclusion that the leaders of the National Party also favoured
peace and agreement with the Hungarian government, Prica and
Krestic did not want to be overtaken by events. They placed
themselves at the head of the Croatian pro-Nagodba policy,
disregarding the fact that their stance would split the ranks of
the solidly unified and the most numerous Serbian National
Freethinkers Party. By abandoning the oppositionist struggle and
signalling their readiness to recognize the Nagodba, that of 1867
as well as the one of 1868, Prica and Krestic became the
protagonists of the subsequently well-known notables' policy.
This policy, which came into being in the course of the struggle
over the Nagodba revision among the Serbs in Croatia, in the
course of time gained in strength and for many years played an
important role. At this time, at the end of 1872 and beginning of
1873, it gained a following in the same bourgeois classes of
Serbian society in Hungary.91 The notables' policy in
Croatia was endorsed at the time of and after the revision of the
Croato-Hungarian Nagodba by those few Serbs who, mostly in order
to further their careers, had espoused the Unionist policy. Thus
the notables came into being as policies on the revision were
coordinated between the former Independents of Mazuranic, who had
several years earlier agreed under certain conditions to
Schmerling's Reichsrat, and those Unionists who had approved the
so-called "honest union" with Hungary. Zastava
wrote that the revision of the Nagodba was "the fruit of the
embrace between old Independents and new Unionists," whose
supporters were mostly "present or future civil
servants."92 It should be remembered that the
Serbian National Freethinkers Party in Croatia had split over the
question of the Nagodba revision. Most of its rank and file
remained loyal to the policy of the Becskerek Programme, the
policy of parliamentary struggle in opposition, while a lesser
number went along with the Croatian National Party, its
opportunistic policy and the revision of the Nagodba. For the
same reasons, as will be seen presently, it led to a split
between the Serbs from Hungary and the Croats, a dispute between
two of their strongest and largest political parties, which in
subsequent decades had far-reaching negative political
consequences for both nations. When these facts are borne in
mind, it is clear that Béni Kállay's evaluations, expressed on
January 20, 1872, that concessions to Croatia granted in the
revised Nagodba would bring the two nations into conflict, were
founded on an excellent knowledge of relations between the Croats
and the Serbs. The Consul's infernal plan worked exactly as he
had conceived it.
In addition to the mentioned
notables, members of the National Party, and dependent civil
servants, adherents of the Unionists, the conservative-clerical
Serbian circles who were at loggerheads with Svetozar Miletic and
his party were also prepared to support a compact with the
Hungarian government. These elements, not feeling sufficiently
strong, had relied on the Hungarian government ever since 1867.
This numerically small segment of the Serbian community in Srem
was headed by the grand zupan Svetozar Kusevic and the
archimandrite of the Grgeteg monastery, German Andjelic.93
They found for their collaborator the known hireling in the pay
of the Hungarian government, Dr. Jovan Grujic Jota, who in Novi
Sad published the paper Srbski narod and championed a
compromise agreement with the Hungarians.
When the Croatian Sabor was
dissolved in January 1872, the Serbian National Freethinkers
Party started preparations for the electoral campaign. In no way
prepared to yield to the Hungarian government and Unionists,
their leaders considered that it was of crucial significance for
the National Party to defeat its opponents as convincingly as
possible. They thought that if it was strong, it would not have
to make many concessions. As in previous elections, once again
the Serbs devoted particular attention to Srem. With the National
Party's victory in Srem, the leaders of the Serbian National
Freethinkers Party wanted to show that a vast majority of Serbs
were prepared to defend Croatia's national interests to the
bitter end. The electoral campaign was well organized. The
Unionists' goals were mercilessly unmasked, and the Unionists
themselves were shown to be nothing but flunkies of the Hungarian
government, careerists who for the sake of personal gain worked
against national interests. They were particularly attacked as
sowers of dissension and hatred between the Orthodox and
Catholics, between the Serbs and Croats.95 On the
other hand, the National Party's committee in Srem, which managed
the electoral campaign, called for unity, for cooperation and
brotherhood, and wrote in its proclamation to the voters:
"Do not look at another man's confession, because at stake
here is not only what is good for the Serbs but what is good and
profitable for all of us. If things are bad for the Serb, they
cannot be good for the Croat, or German, or Hungarian, and
conversely, if they are good for the Serb, they cannot be bad for
the Croat, or German, or Hungarian."96 Another
prominent personality who took part in the electoral campaign
through the Serbian opposition press in Hungary was Vaso Pelagic.
He called upon the Serbs and Croats to join forces so that
"with combined strength and with concerted efforts we shall
assume our rightful place as a worthy and happy people in the
history of the world." In verses dedicated to the electoral
campaign, which celebrated brotherhood, in contrast to the
Unionists, who sowed discord, Pelagic said:
Cast a stone at him who
pretends
To separate the Serb from the
Croat
Whereas in the earlier electoral
struggles the Unionists managed to win over broader strata of the
population by making them promises of a social character, even
though they never intended to fulfil them, the managers of the
electoral campaigns in Srem did not limit their activity only to
promises of national and civic rights and constitutional
freedoms. Like the Unionists, they also promised that in the
event of victory, they would try to resolve relations between the
former feudalist gentry and serfs to the advantage of the people,
and to see to it that, wherever possible, they would obtain
"benefits for the people"; that they would call for the
construction of railways, canals, and roads, "so that the
people can obtain a better price for their sweat and
labour"; and that they would try to gain independence for
the political administration and judiciary.98 The
opposition Serbian press from Hungary attentively monitored the
electoral moves in Croatia and, in order to help the National
Party defeat the Unionists with as wide a margin as possible,
sought to expose all the illegitimate doings of the Croatian
government. In turn, the Hungarian authorities brought pressure
to bear against the Serbian newspapers and took them to court.99
Thanks to good party
organization, efficient campaigning and coordinated action by the
Orthodox and Catholic clergy, the National Party won in Srem in
all the constituencies except in Vukovar, where the moderate
Unionist, Jovan Zivkovic, was elected. As the National Party
throughout Croatia and Slavonia won a total of 47 seats, and the
Unionists and moderate Unionists only 28, followers of the
opposition from the ranks of the Serbian National Freethinkers
Party, those from Hungary as well as those from Croatia and above
all from Srem, considered that after this new electoral victory,
the Croatian National Party should not make any concessions to
the Hungarian government in the latter's demands for the revision
of the Nagodba. The Serbian oppositionists did not want to
surrender to the Hungarian government preferring to fight in
union with the Croats for Croatia's rights and for its broader
autonomy, but also for the national liberation and unification of
all South Slavs. Presenting this programme to the public, Mihailo
Polit-Desancic, a few days before the elections, communicated his
views on a joint national and political action by the Serbs and
Croats. He wrote: "Zagreb is again showing itself in its
full splendour, as the bright spot which receives the rays from
the west and pours them on the southeast. These rays reach far
and reflect off the weapons which Serbia and Montenegro are
holding in their hands for the liberation of their people. The
Triune Kingdom is leading the moral struggle for a Yugoslavia.
The liberation of Southern Slavs beyond Austria's borders cannot
be attempted by the Triune Kingdom. This task must be given to
Serbia and Montenegro. But the Triune Kingdom's task is, to
foster and promote within the framework of the present
Austro-Hungarian state, the cultural development of their
brothers beyond the Sava and Una rivers. It would at the same
time help to assuage the ferment which was caused by the mutual
tribal friction between the Serbs and Croats. That stage has now
been overcome, and the ferment has come to an end. The Triune
Kingdom has its own tasks, and Serbia and Montenegro theirs, all
of them together to civilize the Yugoslavs. In the course of
their common trials, during the great efforts of the
constitutional struggle, and afterwards in their splendid
victory, the Serbs and Croats have learned about each other,
about what they have always been, not only brothers but also one
and the same people. After the great victory, the Catholics and
the Orthodox stood embraced as they cried Victory to each other
in one and the same mother tongue. The former differences between
the Serbs and Croats are today only memories of a bad
dream."100
This writing by Polit-Desancic
and distribution of roles in the future common Serbian and
Croatian liberation action were fully in accordance with the
policy which Bishop Strossmayer had laid out to Regent Ristic at
the end of March 1871, when he wrote that it was both fair and
reasonable that he and his followers should leave it to Serbia to
judge "when the time is ripe for the undertaking and which
methods are to be used for the purpose." It was also in line
with the Bishop's statement made to Ristic early in April of the
same year: "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."
Deeply convinced that only a
free and independent Croatia, enjoying full autonomy, was capable
of making a contribution to the common action of liberation and
unification of the South Slav peoples and their lands, the
Serbian opposition was not prepared to yield to the Hungarian
government. For this reason, Miletic and his followers precisely
proclaimed all the earlier negotiations by populist leaders with
the Hungarian government to be null and void and wrote that
"there can be no question" of any revision of the
Nagodba based on these negotiations.101 When the
Hungarian government after the elections again called for a
reconciliation between the Unionists and Nationalists, Zastava
was dead set against it. It disagreed with the policy of
reconciliation "because it is deadly" for the interests
of the Triune Kingdom and the people there. Even when acting Ban
A. Vakanovic brought to the Croatian Sabor 47 ex officio
members of parliament to support the Hungarian government's
policy, the Serbian opposition, contrary to the Croatian
Nationalists, was loath to give way.102 It rejected
all the demands of the Unionist Party, which the latter put
before the Nationalists as a condition for reconciliation. It
condemned the opportunistic policy to which the National Party
was increasingly inclining, stressing that the Hungarian
government and the Unionists "need to be dealt with in a
radical manner." Zastava wrote: "However things
may turn out, if the National Party wants to survive, it has only
one way open to it, and it is one that is radical but strictly
legal. It is better for it to wait for the dissolution of the
Sabor on that terrain than on the other. In the first case, it
will not only maintain its present position among the people but
will even increase it, if that is at all possible, whereas in the
other case, it would dissipate people's energies." Zastava
also wrote: "Should the National Party, motivated by
expediency, take the road of opportunism, it will draw the carpet
from under its own feet. Those who lead the way in this will not
be regarded by us as true friends of the people."103
Pavlovic's Pancevac was
even more outspoken. It wrote that the Nationalists with their
submissive stand would "impair the principle of solidarity
which should link the Serbo-Croatian people in the Triune Kingdom
with the Serbian and other people of the same blood in
Hungary." In this manner, Pancevac pointed out, they
would make it obvious that their selfish interests were more
important to them than solidarity, supplying "new evidence
of divisions among the Slavs, which unfortunately have been found
to exist in many recent instances."104
Contrary to Polit-Desancic's
expectation that a victory at the May elections of 1872 would put
an end to all differences between the Serbs and Croats, and that
the "former differences" between them would be but
"memories of a bad dream," this victory, won with the
votes of the Serbs and with their unselfish moral support, marked
the beginning of new disagreements and conflicts between the
Croats and Serbs. Soon after the May elections, the National
Party openly espoused an opportunistic policy, jettisoning the
September Manifesto and its opposition activity. The rift between
it and the Serbian National Freethinkers Party, which had stood
by its earlier opposition programme, became inevitable. Like the
Serbian government, the leadership of the Serbian National
Freethinkers Party, which daily drifted away from the
Nationalists, openly sided with Milan Makanac. Zastava
wrote that Makanac's "extreme left-wing" party was
"the party of the real future, which will be entitled upon
demilitarization of Krajina to raise the question of its
settlement."105 A large segment of the Serbian
people who were not prepared to accept capitulation to the
Hungarian government openly sided with Milan Makanac, whom they
glorified in verse:
Long may you live, our
granite support,
We are all behind you,
Makanac, old sport!
Until the adoption of the
revised Nagodba, the Serbian opposition brought strong pressure
to bear upon the leadership of the Croatian National Party to
abandon opportunistic policies. It took advantage of every
convenient occasion to point out the harmful consequences likely
to be suffered by the country and the people of Croatia if the
anti-Nagodba opposition struggle were to be renounced. The
Serbian press warned that the leadership of the National Party
was slowly losing the trust of the people, who were not ready to
give in to the Hungarian government.107 Preparing
public opinion for the continuance of the struggle on the basis
of the Becskerek Programme and urging the leaders of the National
Party to fight for greater independence of Croatia vis-r-vis
Hungary, Zastava wrote that the outcome of that struggle
would show whether "the present national-democratic
generation" was worse and weaker "than the
aristocratic-feudal generation during the time of Tomo
Bakac," the Croatian ban who, defending the Croatians' state
individuality, launched the famous slogan that "one kingdom
does not lay down the law to another kingdom."108
The Serbian opposition asked the National Party to rely less on
historical rights and constitutionality and to seek strength in
the concord and unity of the Serbs and Croats, and not to be a
dupe to the promises of the Hungarian rulers, who, by granting
small concessions, were bent upon setting the Croats and Serbs at
each other's throats.109 Instead of a policy of
expediency, Polit-Desancic recommended to the National Party that
it conduct a policy of self-reliance vis-r-vis Hungary, pointing
out that "the Triune Kingdom should never despair about its
future because it is inhabited by the Serbo-Croatian people, who
have support elsewhere and whose future does not depend on
Hungary and the Magyars."110
Endeavours by the Serbian
opposition to keep the Croatian National Party as an ally in the
struggle against Hungarian rule and to forge a common policy in
dealing with the Eastern Question produced no result. Fatigued by
many years of being in the opposition, and desiring to be rid of
the Unionist system of rule, the National Party did not take much
notice of its erstwhile Serbian allies or of their warnings. It
concluded a compromise agreement which did not satisfy the
Croatian and Serbian national interests, but did satisfy those of
the Hungarian government. The National Party, in order to bring
down the Unionists and take over power, betrayed both its own
programme and its alliance with the Serbian opposition which was
led by Svetozar Miletic. This is why the revision of the Nagodba
is a major watershed in the history of relations between the
Serbs and Croats. Dissatisfied with what was gained with the
revision, the Serbs of the Serbian National Freethinkers Party
attacked it, while the Croatian Nationalists defended it. Thus
began the decades-long dispute and conflict which from one year
to the next, until the victory of a new course in Croatian
politics, widened and deepened in accordance with the earlier
mentioned diabolical plan and evil forecasts of Consul Béni
Kállay.
According to the Serbian
opposition's view, the revised Nagodba was "nothing other
than the Nagodba of 1868, badly amended." Miletic's Zastava
wrote that nothing was gained by it, "because even what
seems to be gained, such as, for example, the change in the
financial aspect of the earlier Nagodba, is of a highly
problematic nature, since whatever the domestic government of the
Triune Kingdom gains on the economic side, it will lose on the
moral side." Miletic and his followers thought that the
revision of the Nagodba did not bring any improvements,
"even politically, in regard to the legal status of the
Triune Kingdom vis-r-vis Hungary."111 The Serbian
opposition claimed that the revised Nagodba gave Croatia not
state but only provincial autonomy, turning it into a Hungarian
colony.112 Carefully analyzing the revised Nagodba,
the Serbian opposition came to the conclusion that the National
Party had not achieved any of its programme goals, or, according
to Zastava, "not even one single matter of principle:
either in regard to an enlarged autonomy, or in regard to the
status of the ban and the domestic government, or in regard to
financial independence, or in regard to natural resources,
forests in particular - in fact, nothing at all."113
On account of such meagre results, the entire Serbian opposition
press in Hungary regarded the revision of the Nagodba as a
surrender "by that party which used to call itself
National."114
The Serbian opposition did not
merely point to the negative aspects of the revised Nagodba. It
also attempted to explain why and how it had come about. Among
other things, it concluded that it was not the people's fault but
the fault of their leaderships, their intelligentsia, who had
faltered in the struggle because "materially and morally,
they do not stand upon firm footing." Under the
intelligentsia's leadership, the National Party had abandoned its
programme in the hope, Zastava claimed, of grabbing power,
"which opened the doors for various high posts to their
followers."115 According to Zastava, both
Nagodbas, that of 1868 as well as that of 1873, were a product of
the aristocracy, the difference being that "the first was
sponsored by the Magyaron and the second by the Nationalist
bureaucracy."116 The Serbian opposition
interpreted the revision of the Nagodba as a well calculated plan
of the Hungarian government to destroy the National Party and
"from its remnants" in Croatia to create new followers,
since it could no longer rely upon the old ones.117
They believed that with the revision the Hungarian government had
succeeded in creating a breach in the National Party's ranks,
which would inevitably lead to "the breaking-down, or at the
least to the impairment of public morals," and thereby to
the ruin of the party, which had condemned itself to a slow
death.118
The Serbian National
Freethinkers Party held that by accepting the revised Nagodba,
Croatia had renounced a common Serbian and Croatian national,
political, and liberation action, that it had "abdicated
from the South Slav idea," and that in the situation in
which it found itself after 1873, it could not offer even moral
assistance that would "contribute to a higher aim, to the
future of the Serbian and Croatian people in the south."119
Because of this unfavourable attitude to the revised Nagodba, the
Serbian National Freethinkers Party, immediately after
Mazuranic's appointment as ban and the assumption of power by the
Nationalists, proclaimed that it would again be in opposition to
the new Nagodba and would endeavour to change it in a
constitutional way and replace it with "real state
autonomy." Miletic and his followers further proclaimed:
"If the government should pledge its prestige, its
influence, and its official position against its parliamentary
opposition, we shall stand in opposition to it and keep it in
check. The tone (which makes the music) will depend on its
actions, on the quality of its instruments, on the use or misuse
of its official position."120
The outcome was exactly what
Kállay wanted to achieve with the revision of the Nagodba, which
his superiors in Budapest and Vienna, in the first place Count
Andrássy, had in mind when they concluded the compromise with
the Croats. The two strongest parties of the Serbs and Croats,
which until the revision had coordinated their national political
programmes and put up powerful opposition to the dualist system
and the policy of the Hungarian government, parted ways the
moment the Nationalists from Croatia rejected the opposition's
programme and, for the sake of getting rid of the Unionist
government and coming into power themselves, torpedoed the
national and political aims they had heretofore held in common
with the Serbian opposition. What transpired was that the
National Party in conjunction with the Serbian opposition pursued
a joint national political programme, including the liberation
and annexation of Bosnia and Hercegovina, until it won power with
the help of the Serbian government. Having succeeded in it, not
only did it forsake the joint programme but it embarked on a
policy which was directly aimed against their former Serbian
allies and against Serbian interests as a whole. This about-face
in the National Party's stance toward the Serbs was particularly
evident in regard to Bosnia and Hercegovina. The National Party
no longer adhered to the principle laid down by Bishop
Strossmayer in 1871, who, as its most prominent champion, left it
up to Serbia to judge "when the time is ripe for the
undertaking and which methods are to be used for the
purpose." In contrast to Strossmayer, who in April 1871
wrote: "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,"
the National Party after 1873 wanted Bosnia and Hercegovina to be
attached to Croatia. This shift in the National Party's policy
once again full vindicated Consul Kállay's forecasts, because
Bosnia and Hercegovina was to become a large stumbling block
between the Croats and the Serbs, which was skilfully and
perfidiously placed in their way by Austria-Hungary. The Monarchy
thus prepared to grab Bosnia and Hercegovina with the least
amount of hindrances. By giving Croatia the hope of getting
Bosnia and Hercegovina, it broke up the Serbian and Croatian
unity, thereby removing one of the obstacles on the way to its
goal.
The causes of all the
misunderstandings and conflicts arising between the Croats and
Serbs after the Nagodba's revision in 1873 also lay in the
changed political conceptions of the National Party. While it
fought together with the Serbs against the Nagodba and the
dualist system, it neglected the question of Croatian state
rights. When it came to power in 1873, it returned to its old
policy from the period between the collapse of absolutism in 1860
and the victory of the dualist idea in 1866/67. After 1873, all
those contradictions between the Serbs and Croats which had
bedeviled their relations in the mentioned period again came to
surface. Invoking Croatian state rights, the National Party
demanded that Bosnia be attached to Croatia. A corollary to the
idea of state rights was the notion that in the Croatian state
territory there was only one "diplomatic"
("political") people - the Croatian people. As a
result, after 1873, Serbs in Croatia were not recognized as a
separate national entity but were again treated as part of the
Croatian "political" people. The consequence of this
policy, whose aim was Croatization, was a consistent erasure of
the Serbian name and the hindering of Serbs in Croatia in their
further national development. Because the very existence of the
Serbian nation in Croatia was thereby brought into question, a
clash was inevitable.
The Nagodba revision clearly
acted as a disintegrating factor in relations between the Croats
and Serbs. It brought into conflict two national ideas which were
mutually exclusive. As the Croats and Serbs had nothing but harm
from their conflict, while Austria-Hungary reaped benefits, the
1873 revision of the Croato-Hungarian Nagodba was a heavy defeat
not only for the Croatian but also for Serbian policy, and an
important victory for the policy of Vienna and Budapest. With
small and insignificant concessions granted to Croatia,
Austria-Hungary had succeeded in sowing discord between the
Croats and Serbs and in repressing the Yugoslav idea for many
years to come. Thus the Monarchy reduced and broke up the South
Slav movements, and without much difficulty managed to keep them
under control. It was able to pursue its policy without having to
consider the aspirations of the Serbs and Croats. Judging by the
far-reaching repercussions it had, the Nagodba's revision
represents one of the major turning points in the recent history
of the Serbs and Croats.
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