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Muslim Identity in the Balkans before the Establishment of Nation States
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 November 2018
Extract
In analyzing national and ethnic identities in the Balkans, one notices a “delay” in the development of the Muslim national identity. The Bosniaks and Albanians, for example, developed a national consciousness in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. In contrast to the Southeastern European Christians, the Muslim inhabitants followed the official religion of the dominant political class of the Ottoman Empire—Islam—a faith that (theoretically, at least) privileged religious belief over ethnicity or nationalism. These two concepts, alien to Ottoman intellectual tradition, became fully understood by the Ottoman elite only in the early twentieth century. Although the Muslims under Ottoman rule often perceived themselves as different from their co-religionist rulers in Istanbul, as shall be demonstrated in this paper, they nevertheless shared the religion of the rulers of the Empire and practised a religion that suppressed the development of national identity far more explicitly than did Christianity. Thus, it was the decline of the Ottoman Empire in the nineteenth century, and the consequent recognition that this state was ceasing to protect the interests and identity of the Muslim population in Southeastern Europe, which led to the development of ethnic and national identity among the Muslims.
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Notes
1. “Bosniaks” here refers to the Slavic Muslim population of Bosnia and Sanjak.Google Scholar
2. In 1875 an estimated two-thirds of the 600,000 northern Albanians (Gegs) were Muslim, while three-quarters of the 800,000 southern Albanian Tosks followed Islam. Georges Castellan, Histoire des Balkans (Paris: Fayard, 1995), p. 358.Google Scholar
3. On this subject see Alexandre Popovic, “Représentation du Passé et Transmission de l'Identité Chez les Musulmans des Balkans,” in Culture Musulmanes Balkaniques (Istanbul: Les Editions Isis, 1994), pp. 275–281; Castellan, Histoire des Balkans, pp. 219–212. Nationalist historiography has frequently misused the Ottoman period to justify persecution of Muslim inhabitants of the new nation states. Most recently this occurred in Serbia with several leading Orientalists helping to justify the war against the Muslims in Bosnia and Kosovo; see H. T. Norris, Islam in the Balkans: Religion and Society between Europe and the Arab World (Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 1993), pp. 295–298.Google Scholar
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5. Along the Black Sea coast in the area south of the Danube delta.Google Scholar
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23. It is important to note that, unlike in Western European feudal society, even people of a modest background could rise high in the state apparatus. The only precondition for such mobility was Islamic faith.Google Scholar
24. Marmullaku, Albania and the Albanians , p. 16.Google Scholar
25. Löhner, “Religiöse Kultur in Albanien,” p. 168; Bata, “Das Verhältnis von Christentum und Islam bei den Albanern in Geschichte und Gegenwart,” p. 160.Google Scholar
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27. Miranda Vickers, The Albanians. A Modern History (London and New York: I. B. Tauris, 1995), pp. 16–17.Google Scholar
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29. Bartl, Albanien, pp. 90–91. Writing in Albanian with the Latin alphabet began substantially earlier, with the first book published in 1555. These books were, however, mostly published in Italy. Marmullaku, Albania and the Albanians, p. 17.Google Scholar
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34. The best writings on the Bosnian Church can be found in John V. A. Fine, The Bosnian Church. A New Interpretation: A Study of the Bosnian Church and Its Place in State and Society from the Thirteenth to the Fifteenth Centuries (Boulder and New York: Columbia University & East European Monographs, 1975).Google Scholar
35. Ludwig Steinhoff, “Von der Konfession zur Naton: Die Muslime in Bosnien-Herzegowina,” in Hans-Dieter Döpman, ed., Religion und Gesellschaft in Südosteuropa (Munich: Südosteuropa-Gesellschaft, 1997), pp. 255–256. Both Croatian and Serbian nationalist historiography have claimed the Muslims to be converted Croats or Serbs. On this matter see Francine Friedman, The Bosnian Muslims. Denial of a Nation (Boulder: Westview, 1996), pp. 20–21. A prominent example is the Croatian President and historian Franjo Tudjman: “An objective examination of the numerical composition of the population of Bosnia and Hercegovina cannot ignore that the majority of the Moslems is in its ethnic character and speech incontrovertibly of Croatian origin.” Franjo Tudjman, Nationalism in Contemporary Europe (Boulder and New York: Columbia University & East European Monographs, 1981), pp. 113–114.Google Scholar
36. Fine, The Bosnian Church , p. 387.Google Scholar
37. Balić, “Der Islam und seine geschichtliche Bedeutung,” p. 74.Google Scholar
38. Noel Malcolm, Bosnia. A Short History (London: New York University Press, 1994), pp. 83–84.Google Scholar
39. Ibid., pp. 86–87.Google Scholar
40. See Mustafa Imamović, Historija Bošnijaka (Sarajevo: Preporod, 1997), pp. 290–304.Google Scholar
41. John V. A. Fine, “The Historical Roots of Bosnia's Unique Ethnic Identity,” paper presented at the conference “The Bosnia Paradigm” (Sarajevo, 18–21 November 1998).Google Scholar
42. Obradović played a pivotal role in promoting enlightenment in Serbia. He conceived the South Slavs as one nation and promoted the Serbian language. He sought to reduce religious differences in order to promote the unity of the South Slavs. Cited in Arnakis, “The Role of Religion in the Development of Balkan Nationalism,” pp. 142–143.Google Scholar
43. See, for example, the extensive description of the cultural life in Ottoman Bosnia in Smail Balić, Das Unbekannte Bosnien. Europas Brücke zur islamischen Welt (Cologne, Weimar, and Vienna: Böhlau Verlag, 1992). For discussion on the Ottoman heritage see Edin Hajdarpašić, “Glorious Epochs, Ghastly Ages, and the Meanings of History: Views on Ottoman Bosnia,” unpublished essay (1999).Google Scholar
44. Ivo Andrić, The Development of Spiritual Life in Bosnia under the Influence of Turkish Rule (Durham, NC and London: Duke University Press, 1990), p. 67.Google Scholar
45. Ibid., p. 69.Google Scholar
46. The term “voluntary” is not to claim that the population decided to convert purely for their own advantage. The situation was frequently such that the population had only little reason to remain Christian, in the light of economic, social, and spiritual hardship. See Maria Todorova, “The Ottoman Legacy in the Balkans,” in L. Carl Brown, ed., Imperial Legacy. The Ottoman Imprint on the Balkans and the Middle East (New York: Columbia University Press, 1996), pp. 49–50.Google Scholar
47. Hans-Joachim Härtel, “Die muslimische Minorität in Bulgarien,” in Michael Weithmann, ed., Der ruhelose Balkan (Munich: DTV, 1993), p. 209.Google Scholar
48. Sugar, Southeastern Europe , p. 44.Google Scholar
49. Ibid., pp. 50–51.Google Scholar
50. On the role of the Balkan Christian populations in the wars between European powers and the Ottoman Empire, see Veinstein, “Les provinces balkaniques (1606–1774),” pp. 315–321.Google Scholar
51. Andrić, The Development of Spiritual Life in Bosnia , p. 19.Google Scholar
52. Majer, “Gesellschaftliche und religöse Auswirkungen der Osmanenzeit in Südosteuropa,” p. 119.Google Scholar
53. Balić, Das Unbekannte Bosnien. Europas Brücke zur islamischen Welt , p. 101.Google Scholar
54. Majer, “Gesellschaftliche und religöse Auswirkungen der Osmanenzeit in Südosteuropa,” p. 128.Google Scholar
55. Ibid., p. 129.Google Scholar
56. Sugar, Southeastern Europe , p. 55.Google Scholar
57. Arnakis, “The Role of Religion in the Development of Balkan Nationalism,” p. 124.Google Scholar
58. Balić, “Der Islam und seine geschichtliche Bedeutung für Südosteuropa,” p. 73.Google Scholar
59. Ibid.Google Scholar
60. Arnakis, “The Role of Religion in the Development of Balkan Nationalism,” p. 121. Arnakis points to the lack of empirical evidence of a link between conversion and devshirme. He notes, however, that large-scale conversions took place in rural areas, since the urban commercial centers, where few conversions took place, were mostly exempted from the child levy. Large rural areas were also not affected and an explanation of the difference between urban and rural conversion would necessitate taking into account a multitude of factors, well beyond the devshirme (i.e. ethnic composition, penetration of Christian churches, role of folk churches).Google Scholar
61. Andrić, The Development of Spiritual Life in Bosnia , pp. 20–21.Google Scholar
62. Amra Mahmutagić, “Some Considerations on the Process of the Acceptence of Islam in Bosnia and Herzegovina,” paper presented at the conference “The Bosnia Paradigm” (Sarajevo, 18–21 November 1998).Google Scholar
63. Balić, “Der Islam und seine geschichtliche Bedeutung für Südosteuropa,” p. 73.Google Scholar
64. Ibid. George G. Arnakis on the other hand concludes that these cases of cross-religious cooperation of children divided through the devshirme are rare. The Sokolovići are for him the exception rather than the rule. Arnakis, “The Role of Religion in the Development of Balkan Nationalism,” p. 123.Google Scholar
65. Ibid., p. 116.Google Scholar
66. Todorova, “The Ottoman Legacy in the Balkans,” p. 46.Google Scholar
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