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Serbophobia, or Anti-Serb sentiment, is a term used to describe a sentiment of hostility or hatred towards Serbs or Serbia.
Use of the term in history
Austrian pre-WWI caricature showing a hand crushing a Serb-looking terrorist. The phrase reads "Serbia must die"
The term was used in the literary and cultural circles since before World War I: Croatian writers Antun Gustav Matoš and Miroslav Krleža had casually described some political and cultural figures as "Serbophobes" (Krleža in the four volume "Talks with Miroslav Krleža", 1985., edited by Enes Čengić), meaning that they perceived an anti-Serbian animus in a person's behavior. Acin-Kosta, Milos in his book Draza Mihailovic i Ravna Gora dedicates a section of his book to Serbophobia during World War II. In the 1986 draft Memorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts Serbophobia is mentioned.[1] Cadik Danon, Chief Rabbi of Yugoslavia et al. in an open letter[2] to the American Jewish Committee in 1995, during the bombing of Republika Srpska by NATO during Bosnian War, wrote of a background of,"... unrestrained anti-Serbian propaganda, raging during all this war, following the Nazi model, but much more efficient means and in a much more sophisticated and more expensive way. ... Even American Jews were not able to withstand this propagandistic poison,... they did not recognize the Nazis and racist nature of the Serbophobic dogma. They did not identify Serbophobia as a twin sister of anti-semitism ...". Instances of SerbophobiaAccording to those who use the term, Serbophobia can range from individual hatred to institutionalised persecution.
The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia submitted to the The International Court of Justice[4] in 1997 claims that acts of genocide against Serbs had been incited by
These claims were later ruled inadmissable by the ICJ.[citation needed]
CriticismCritics associate the use of the term Serbophobia with the politics of Serbian nationalist victimization of late 1980s and 1990s as described, for example, by Christopher Bennett. According to him, Serbian nationalist politicians have made associations to Serbian "martyrdom" in history (from the Battle of Kosovo in 1389 to the genocide during World War II) to justify Serbian politics of the 1980s and 1990s; these associations are allegedly exemplified in Slobodan Milošević's Gazimestan speech at Kosovo in 1989. The reaction to the speech as well as the use of the associated term Serbophobia is a matter of heated debate even today.[8] In late 1988, months before the Revolutions of 1989, Milosevic accused critics of his regime and political tactics like the Slovenian leader Milan Kucan of “spreading fear of Serbia”.[9] According to political scientist David Bruce Macdonald, the term was popularised in the 1980s and 1990s during the re-analysis of Serbian history.[10] The term was often likened to anti-Semitism, and expressed itself as a re-analysis of history where every event that had a negative effect on the Serbs was likened to a "tragedy".[10] Often associated with the politics of Serbian victimization of late 1980s and 1990s[11]. See also
References
External links
Use in various languages
Further readingNational Library of Serbia's catalogue lists following books written about serbophobia:
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