Anti-Bosniak sentiment is a view of suspicion,
resentment, or hostility towards the
Bosniak people, history and culture. It can be
observed in both individual bigotry as well as organized
discrimination and persecution of Bosniaks as an ethnic or cultural
group. Although its roots as a social phenomenon can be traced back
to the
Ottoman period, the matter is particularly
notable in modern times due to the ethnic-based conflicts of the
Yugoslav
wars, the greater international awareness of the region that
resulted from them, and a noted increase in the prevalence of
Islamophobic
attitudes in much of the
Western world<ref
name=Islamophobia>Allen, Christopher; & Nielsen, Jørgen S.
(May, 2002).
Summary
Report on Islamophobia. European Monitoring Centre on Racism
and Xenophobia.</ref> (Bosniaks are predominantly
Muslim).
The former
Yugoslavia
Early roots (Until 1878)
The earliest
examples of anti-Bosniak sentiment can perhaps be found during the
time of Ottoman rule, where Bosniaks suffered as a result of the
religious furvor inspired by the empire's
frequent
clashes with non-Islamic states and peoples. The first major
event examplifying this happened following the
Austrian
take-over of Ottoman controlled
Lika in
1685.
Prior to this, the region had been a part of the
Bosnian administrative unit
(
eyalet), and housed a large Muslim population. With the
Austrian conquest, 30,000 were forced to flee to Bosnia proper in
the next two years alone.<ref name=Malcolm>Malcolm, Noel
(1994). Bosnia A Short History. New York University Press. ISBN
0-8147-5520-8.</ref> Meanwhile, the 1,700 Muslims that
remained were forcibly converted to
Catholicism.<ref name=Malcolm/> A
similar situation simultaneously played out in
Slavonia, and violence against and
expulsion of Muslims by the Austrians would happen once again in
1718.<ref
name=Malcolm/>
The rise of
nationalism in the region during the early
19th century
led to significant ethno-religious tension within the empire
itself. The discord and hatred subjugated peoples developed towards
the
Ottomans
over the course of their struggles for independence in turn led to
a sentiment of contempt and resentment against the area's slavic
Muslims, who were generally equated with the Turkish
overlords.<ref name=Imamovic>Imamović, Mustafa (1996).
Historija Bošnjaka. Sarajevo: BZK Preporod. ISBN
9958-815-00-1</ref> It was under these conditions that in
1847,
Montenegrin
ruler and famous
Serbian language poet,
Petar II Petrović Njegoš
glorified the
1702
pogrom<ref
name=Imamovic/> of Montenegro's Muslim population with the words
"The muezzin shrieks
in fair Cetinje / The
land is filled with the stench of Muhammad"<ref
name=Dzananovic>Džananović, Ibro (2003). "Bosanski Islamski
Kulturni Centar Castrop-Rauxel". Retrieved Apr. 5,
2006.</ref>
Although individual Bosniaks historically
played a significant role in the Ottoman imperial system, such
sentiment led to numerous indiscriminate acts of persecution and
violence against entire communities. For instance; while Serb
revolutionaries in the
first Serbian uprising initially
indicated that they only intended to expel the occupying Ottoman
officials and soldiers, the actual course of the nine year revolt
instead amounted to what Serb historian Stojan Novaković described
as
"a general extermination of Turks from the
populace."<ref name=Imamovic/> Most notable was the
take-over of
Belgrade
in
1807 where - alongside
Greeks and
Jews - many of the city's
Bosniaks were killed, expelled, or forcibly converted.<ref
name=Imamovic/>
Assimilation and discrimination
(1878-1941)
World War II (1941-1945)
The Tito
years (1945-1980)
Nationalism, war and genocide
(1980-1995)
Recent trends (1995-present)
The
West
A May
2002 report
for the
European
Monitoring Centre on Racism and Xenophobia regarding
Islamophobia in the
European Union noted that xenophobic
expressions against Bosniaks had been recorded in
Greece.<ref
name=Islamophobia/>
Examples and
allegations
May,
2001 - On May 5, hundreds of Serbs blocked a
ground-breaking ceremony for the reconstruction of a mosque in
Trebinje, waving nationalist banners and chanting "Kill the Turks".
An international official, Daniel Ruiz, was injured when protestors
pinned him against a wall and beat him.<ref name=TCM>(May. 5,
2001). Bosnian
Serb nationalist mob attacks state delegation . TCM Breaking
News.</ref> Two days later, at a ceremony to mark the
beginning of the reconstruction of the Ferhadija mosque in
Banja Luka, thousands of Serb nationalists took to the streets and
pelted Bosniak attendees with tear gas grenades, stones and eggs.
Protestors beat visitors and snatched and set fire to their praying
rugs. They also overran the Islamic center, taking down and
torching the flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina's Islamic Community
before replacing it with the flag of Republika Srpska. One of the
Bosniak visitors died in a hospital three weeks later due to
injuries sustained in the event.<ref name=CNN>(May. 7, 2001).
Diplomats trapped in Bosnia riots.
CNN.</ref>March,
2004 - During massive
demonstrations in response to ongoing unrest in
Kosovo, Serbian rioters retaliated to the Albanian destruction
of Serb churches and monasteries by burning down Islam-aga's
Mosque in Niš and the
Bajrakli
Mosque in Belgrade. However, the Muslim community in these
cities is largely made up not of Albanians, but of Bosniaks. Some
observers, including the Human Rights Watch, have been critical of
the way Serbian authorities have handled the legal process that
followed.<ref name=HRW>Human Rights Watch (October, 2005).
Dangerous
Indifference: Violence against Minorities in
Serbia.</ref>June, 2005 -
Numerous examples of anti-Semitic and anti-Bosniak grafiti found in
Niš. Messages glorified the Srebrenica massacre and requested
the expulsion of Bosniaks ("Turks") from the country.<ref
name=HRW/>July,
2005 - 24 out of 28 billboards
erected in Belgrade by the Serbian youth initiative to mark the ten
year anniversary of the Srebrenica massacre were vandalized. One of
the grafitied messages read "There Will Be A Repetition".<ref
name=HRW/>March, 2006
- The first Bosniak returnee to Bratunac and chairman of the municipal council,
Refik Begić, received a threatening letter from an organization
calling itself the "Serb Liberation Army". Hand-written in
cyrillic and signed by an "A. Popović",
the letter read in part "How much more do we have to slaughter you
so that you finally understand that [this land] isn't Turkish, but
Serb... death to Islam..."<ref name=Salford>Huremović, E
(March. 27, 2006). "Srpska
oslobodilačka armija" uputila prijeteće pismo Begiću. Dnevni
Avaz.</ref>Derogatory and insulting terms
Among
the more notable derogatory terms for Bosniaks in
Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian are:
Balije
/ Балије — A vulgar term dating to the Ottoman period. Roughly
designating a Bosniak peasant, the exact etymology is unknown. Some
early sources speculate that it referred to periodically nomadic
Bosniaks living in mountainous areas.<ref
name=Isakovic>Isaković, Alija (1992). Rječnik karakteristične
leksike u bosanskome jeziku. Svjetlost. ISBN
3-929678-03-8.</ref> Today it is the most common derogatory
term for Bosniaks.:*Variations:
Balijesnice/Балијеснице,
Balinčad/Балинчад,
Balindure/Балиндуре.
Muslimani / Муслимани —
Literally "Muslims". Although not inherently offensive, the term
has become antiquated since the adoption of the name "Bosniaks" in
1993, and a deliberate misuse may be considered insulting by
secular Bosniaks.Turci / Турци — Literally "Turks".
During the Ottoman era, Bosniaks referred to themselves as
"Turci" (more commonly: "Turčini"), but
distinguished themselves from ethnic Turks by calling the latter
"Turkuše".<ref name=Isakovic>Isaković, Alija (1992).
Rječnik karakteristične leksike u bosanskome jeziku. Svjetlost.
ISBN 3-929678-03-8.</ref> As the distinction is now archaic,
the label today serves to equate the Bosniaks with the Ottoman
Turks and imply that they are an alien
element.References
<references/>
See
also
Chauvinism List of anti-ethnic
and anti-national terms Nationalism Xenophobia