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INTRODUCTION
The present book came as a result of several years of study of
the history of Serbs in Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia, and the
history of Serbo-Croat relations. Its aim is, on the basis of
unimpeachable sources and from all possible standpoints, to shed
light on one-and-a-half century long Croatian policy towards the
Serbs. The book offers answers to many hitherto unexplained and
officially obscured questions.
I have tried to explain how and on what basis hatred grew within
the Croatian community towards the Serbs, with what aims in view
it was continually intensified until it reached a paroxysm of
bloodshed for the innocent Serbian and orthodox inhabitants.
The facts which I have disclosed prove beyond the shadow of a
doubt that the basis of all misunderstandings between the Croats
and the Serbs is the "Croatian state and historical right".
On the basis of this right, Croatian politicians continually,
from the 1948-49 revolution to this day, strove to create a great,
ethnically pure and catholic Croatian state. Because the Serbs
were not prepared to renounce their national singularities and
their Serbian orthodox religion, they were all the time the butt
of Croatian political parties and many prominent individuals who
based the Croatian national idea on the so-called state and historical
right. The reader will note that ideas of the genocidal annihilation
of the Serbs, of a great, ethnically and catholically pure Croatia,
have outlived all their state, political and social systems. These
ideas have stubbornly persisted from Ante Starcevic, Eugen Kvaternik,
Mihovil Pavlinovic, Josip Frank, Frane Supilo, Stjepan Radic and
Ante Pavelic to Franjo Tudjman.
In this book I have attempted to clarify the idea of the genocidal
destruction of the Serbs in Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia for
historical, ideological-political, national, geopolitical, religious,
sociological, psychological and other reasons. Thanks to the abundance
of seminal information, such an approach enabled me to throw light
upon the problem of genocide and greater-Croatian aspirations
from different angles, which has not been done so far by historians.
In view of the plethora of documents, the book could well have
been much more voluminous. However, it would then be less readable.
My wish is that this book, without a great intellectual and physical
effort, should be perused by the greatest possible number of readers.
My intention is not to inflame passions but to bring out scientifically
verified evidence, to unmask untruths, and to make the well-meaning
but insufficiently or badly informed people see the light. New
scholarly knowledge should stand in the way of any possible new
delusion about Croato-Serbian relations. I believe this to be
necessary before a new wrong move is made in relations with the
Croats and Croatia, thereby causing new bloodshed. It is my duty
to say this because there are absolutely no encouraging signs
whatever that anything is being changed in the present policy
of Croatia. On the contrary, this policy, like one hundred years
earlier, relies in everything on state and historic right, on
the institution of Croatian "political" people, on aspirations
to create a greater, ethnically and religiously pure Croatia.
As long as it is so, it is clear that Croatia will not be able
to free itself of genocidal ideas and will not renounce its long-standing
aspiration to enlarge its state boundaries at the expense of the
neighbouring ethnic and national regions, in order to improve
its own not very happy geopolitical position.
I am aware that the gloomy subject of this book will not cheer
the readers, but I believe that it will clear up their notions
about brotherhood, unity, concord, togetherness, coexistence and
Yugoslavism. As its author, I do not entertain the illusion that
I shall succeed overnight in changing prejudices and systematically
instilled feelings. However, as a scholar and writer, I have felt
an irresistible need to write this book and save my soul. I believe
that, as an historian, I have no right to be silent in the face
of truth, however painful and ugly it is. I have told the truth
without hatred, with a noble aim to point out the evil, so that
it should be stigmatised, stopped and uprooted.
Belgrade, October 1997.
Vasilije Dj. Krestic
Copyright © 1997 Vasilije Krestic
Copyright © 1997,98 Bigz - Izdavacko preduzece d.o.o., Beograd
Copyright © 1997,98 Serbian Unity Congress All Rights Reserved.
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