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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!tulane!ukma!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!daemon
- From: harelb@math.cornell.edu (Harel Barzilai)
- Subject: Z MAGAZINE: _Community Lost_
- Message-ID: <1992Dec12.060401.4202@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: daemon@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
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- Organization: ?
- Date: Sat, 12 Dec 1992 06:04:01 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 134
-
- ...Via "P-News"...
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- Topic 41 Community Lost
- pnews "Z" 8:36 pm Dec 11, 1992
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- /* ---------- "Community Lost" ---------- */
- From: Hank Roth <odin@world.std.com>
- Subject: Community Lost
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- From: Philip Feeley <pfeeley@unixg.ubc.ca>
- To: odin@world.std.com
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-
-
- =============================
- C O M M U N I T Y L O S T
- =============================
- by Gordana Rabrenovic, Z Magazine, Nov. '92, p. 37
-
-
- For the last two years I've been torn apart by what is
- happening in Yugoslavia. Eight years ago, when my husband and I left
- and came to the United States we had a country. Today we do not.
-
- What is being destroyed in the former Yugoslavia are not just
- cities and villages, but also the concept of an integrated and
- ethnically diverse society. In their desire to create homogeneous
- regions, nationalist groups are driving out, killing or imprisoning
- everyone who is not a "legitimate" member of their group. The
- underlying logic of such actions is that it is impossible to live
- sagely in heterogeneous communities.
-
- However, for 27 years I had a very different experience. I
- lived in a large cosmopolitan city, Belgrade. My friends were of
- different ethnic origins, and so were my family members. My father
- was Montenegrin, his two best friends and godparents to his children
- were Croatians. One of his sisters married a Croatian, another a
- Macedonian. His brother's wife was from Bosnia. One of his nieces
- married a Slovenian, another a Hungarian.
-
- We had fights in our family, but they had nothing to do with
- our ethnic origins. There were fights between men and women over
- their roles in the family, and between parents and children over
- children's rights and responsibilities.
-
- When my cousins and I are asked about our own ethnic identity,
- we identify ourselves as Yugoslavs. We do not want to chose between
- our mothers' and fathers' ethnic groups. We are the losers in this
- war, just like the Croatian woman who, when urged to move to Croatia,
- responded: "But, why should I go? I do not know anybody there."
-
- The existence of diversity within Yugoslavia made it possible
- for writers, painters, and free-spirited thinkers to break norms in
- their own communities and still be able to work in another. I
- remember in the early 1980s a number of intellectuals moved to
- Belgrade or Zagreb to escape the totalitarian regime of the Bosnian
- and Herzegovin government. But in the late 1980s the most democratic
- views and the only alternative to nationalist policy came from
- Sarajevo through an independent television station with a Yugoslavian
- orientation.
-
- Nationalism is so popular these days because it promises order
- and stability by conforming to uniform sets of rules. Now when old
- ideologies of class-based socialism are dead, the new nation or ethnic
- based socialism is emerging. The ethnic leaders promise prosperity,
- democracy, and full employment but only for their own members.
- Nationalism is a new political resource. And the way to gain power is
- to capitalize on peoples' emotions and question their loyalty to their
- ancestors.
-
- Diversity was part of a set of beliefs known as the
- Enlightenment- based modernity. I grew up believing in the power of
- science and education to bring progress and economic development.
- Society was supposed to be based on the ability and achievement of
- individuals that created opportunity for everyone. In reality,
- Yugoslavia was divided between developed and underdeveloped regions,
- between modern cities and traditional towns and villages. Not
- everybody shared equally in the fruits of modernity. When the
- Yugoslavian economic development slowed down, living costs increased,
- and unemployment became chronic. Nationalistic ideologies flourished.
- They divided people into groups of "us" versus "them." "Us" became
- the suppressed, exploited victims. "Them" became the exploiters who
- snatched our jobs and stole our opportunities.
-
- It is not surprising that the fiercest fighting and "ethnic
- cleansing" is taking place in the most divers, but also most unevenly
- developed, part of Yugoslavia: Bosnia an Herzegovina. Destruction of
- Sarajevo symbolizes the failure of modernity, the failure to sustain
- and ethnically diverse community and to expand economic development to
- the less fortunate. The longer the fighting goes on, the less
- realistic it is that after the war a common life can be recreated.
-
- When the war finally stops, the survivors will have to face
- the consequences of the imposed ethnically homogeneous society. In
- such a society, unity, identity, and stability based on ethnic
- background will result in a lack of tolerance for individual freedom
- or individual development. What kind of social and political order
- will develop? Who will then be the enemy?
-
- What will happen to my family in former Yugoslavia? It will
- be much harder for us to maintain our relationships across barricaded
- communities. But more than that, I see my niece and nephews with few
- options and a terrifying future which at best simply limits their
- education and opportunities; at worst, it makes them likely victims of
- continued fighting, killing and maiming. For this war to stop, the
- people of former Yugoslavia must face the economic and political
- consequences. They must know that their enemy is not a member of
- another ethnic group but their leaders who are robbing them of their
- future.
-
- (Gordana Rabrenovic is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at
- Northeastern University. She teaches Urban Sociology, Community and
- Sociology of Family.)
-
- If you write to Z for sub or sample issue or anything, please tell
- them you heard of them online as they are not convinced it's a good
- idea for them to get online --HB
-
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- "Z is an independent, progressive monthly magazine of critical thinking
- on political, cultural, social, and economic life in the United
- States. It sees the racial, sexual, class, and political dimensions
- of personal life as fundamental to understanding and improving
- contemporary circumstances; and it aims to assist activist efforts to
- attain a better future."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- Subscriptions: One Year $25; Two Years $40; Three Years $55
- $18 student/low-income // Sample issue: $3.00
- *******************
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- Z Magazine, // 150 W Canton St., // Boston MA 02118 // (617)236-5878
- [Some 100 pages per issue, no advertisements]
- *********************
- [Z is a project of the nonprofit Institute for Social & Cultural Change]
-