Granice i spone: Mali Zvornik i Sakar u tokovima deosmanizacije Balkana XIX i XX stoljeća // Borders and bonds: Mali Zvornik and Sakar during the deosmanization of the Balkans of the XIX and XX century
Journal Title: Historijski pogledi/Historical views - Year 2021, Vol 4, Issue 5
Abstract
Knowledge of world / European history is important for a more complete understanding of complex processes, for comparisons and placing national and regional history in a broader context that provides more meaningful answers. What determines the course of history is sometimes “a series of smaller events in the midst of the context of big ideas”. The borders of the region are determined by geographical, cultural and geopolitical characteristics, as well as the political interests of those builders whose interpretation has dominance. In expanding or narrowing the territory of the Balkans, politics was usually more decisive than geography. Historical events in that area should be presented from the positions of all its peoples, including Muslim communities. Their narratives also form a legitimate part of the picture of that past. Muslims were not the “favorites” of multiple Balkan historiographies that minimized and marginalized their component, functioning as factors shaping their own national and political ideologies. Historiography does not only deal with the reconstruction of the past, but, with all the difficulties and pitfalls, it also interprets it. A fragmentary study of the destinies of Muslim communities hinders the identification of the broader processes and common denominators of their parcelized history. The processes of de-Ottomanization and Balkanization also led to their particular consciousness within the newly formed, post-Ottoman states. Their historical experience is largely not “condensed, preserved, and generationally transmitted”. The attitude that Muslims are “foreigners” in Europe is part of the mentality and process known as the “Eastern Question”. Minds are not too prone to change. Calling all Muslims “Turks” is not the result of ignorance, but of a concrete attitude. It was not until the Berlin Congress of 1878 that the question of their protection became somewhat relevant. The system of such protection was inadequate, without supervisory mechanisms to control the implementation of commitments. Major political changes most often brought about religious and ethnic changes and displacements in the Balkans. In the study of the decades-long process of formation of the Serbian state in the 19th century in the area of the Smederevo Sandzak and the emigration of Muslims from it, special attention is paid to the fate of two small settlements (Mali Zvornik and Sakar) on the right bank of the Drina. After the surrender of the towns to the Serbs in 1862, only Mali Zvornik and Sakar remained in the hands of the Muslims. The origin of the settlement of Mali Zvornik is connected to the existence of the Zvornik fortress and the town of Zvornik on the left bank of the Drina, which was first mentioned in 1412. Mali Zvornik grew on the right bank of the Drina as part of the town of Zvornik. In the first half of the 18th century, travel writers mention that Mala or Mahala of the Bosnian town of Zvornik, whose inhabitants were called Maholjani, was located there. South of Mali Zvornik lies village of Sakar. In the 19th century, in Mali Zvornik and Sakar, on the border with the Smederevo Sandzak, Muslims made up the majority of the population. As only the Drina separated them from the settlements of Divič and Tabaci on its other side, the inhabitants of these settlements were firmly connected by kinship, friendship and marriage, and they were economically oriented towards each other. The Principality of Serbia was persistent in its demands to get Mali Zvornik and Sakar, having in mind their geostrategic position. By the decision of the Berlin Congress in 1878, they became part of Serbia. Until 1912, these were the only settlements in it with a majority Muslim population. They lost that majority over time. What is conditionally called “local” history, in addition to great narratives, indicates, confirmed by various experiences, the multidimensionality of the past, its features and specifics in a particular area.
Authors and Affiliations
SAFET BANDŽOVIĆ
PRIKAZ//REVIEW: HISTORIJSKI POGLEDI // HISTORICAL VIEWS, God. II, br. 2, Centar za istraživanje moderne i savremene historije Tuzla, Tuzla 2019, 485 str.
PRIKAZ//REVIEW: HISTORIJSKI POGLEDI // HISTORICAL VIEWS, God. II, br. 2, Centar za istraživanje moderne i savremene historije Tuzla, Tuzla 2019, 485 str.
POLITIČKI ZEMLJOTRES U SR BOSNI I HERCEGOVINI NAKON OKTOBRA 1969. GODINE. ODNOS REPUBLIČKOG I SAVEZNOG RUKOVODSTVA POČETKOM 1970-tih GODINA // THE POLITICAL EARTHQUAKE IN THE SR BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA AFTER OKTOBER 1969. THE RELATION OF THE REPUBLICAN AND FEDERAL LEADERSHIP IN THE EARLY 1970s.
On October 26 and 27, 1969, a devastating earthquake hit Banja Luka and fourteen neighbouring municipalities. The reconstruction of the affected area will become a very important issue causing a kind of earthquake in the...
IZVJEŠTAJ/CONFERENCE REPORT Izvještaj sa okruglog stola “HISTORIJSKI ZNAČAJ PRIJEMA REPUBLIKE BOSNE I I HERCEGOVINE U ČLANSTVO ORGANIZACIJE UJEDINJENIH NACIJA – 26 godina poslije”, Tuzla, 15. decembar 2018. godine
IZVJEŠTAJ/CONFERENCE REPORT Izvještaj sa okruglog stola “HISTORIJSKI ZNAČAJ PRIJEMA REPUBLIKE BOSNE I I HERCEGOVINE U ČLANSTVO ORGANIZACIJE UJEDINJENIH NACIJA – 26 godina poslije”, Tuzla, 15. decembar 2018. godine
PRIKAZ // REVIEW: Asmir Crnkić, Mirza Ahmetbašić, Bosanska Krupa u vrijeme austrougarske uprave, JU Arhiv Unsko-sanskog kantona Bihać, Bihać 2020, 246 str.
PRIKAZ // REVIEW: Asmir Crnkić, Mirza Ahmetbašić, Bosanska Krupa u vrijeme austrougarske uprave, JU Arhiv Unsko-sanskog kantona Bihać, Bihać 2020, 246 str.
Dejtonski mirovni sporazum – Okončanje velikodržavnih pretenzija? // The Dayton peace agreement – The end of greater state claims?
The General Framework Agreement for Peace in Bosnia and Herzegovina (Dayton Peace Agreement) accepted in Paris on December 14, 1995 was signed by: for the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina Alija Izetbegović, for the Rep...