MYTH: "THE CROATIANS ASKED TO JOIN YUGOSLAVIA"
Myth: The people of Croatia asked to join Serbia in forming Yugoslavia in 1918.
Reality: The people of Croatia did not ask to join Serbia in 1918. The elected
representatives of the Croatian people voted for a "Neutral and Peasant Republic of
Croatia" in 1918.
The Yugoslav Committee
The basis of the myth that Croatia willingly joined Serbia is to be found in the
complex history of the Yugoslav Committee. The Yugoslav Committee was formed by exiles
living outside the Croatian homeland during World War I. The Committee was led by Franjo
Supilo and Ante Trumbic and included the famous Croatian sculptor Ivan Mestrovic. Each
repudiated the Committee within a few years of the founding of Yugoslavia.
"Yugoslavs" were Serbian, Croatian and Slovenian people who identified
themselves with the movement toward a single Yugoslavia or South Slavic state. Exiled
Yugoslavs living in North America and Britain were the primary supporters of the Yugoslav
Committee. Having established offices in London and Paris as early as 1915, the Yugoslav
Committee became an active lobby for the cause of a united South Slav state during the
First World war.
The concept of a united South Slavic state had been discussed by Croatian and Slovenian
intellectuals since the mid- nineteenth century. However, the "Yugoslav Idea"
did not mature from the conceptual to practical state of planning. Few of those promoting
such an entity had given any serious consideration to what form the new state should take.
Nevertheless, the Yugoslav Committee issued a manifesto calling for the formation of such
a South Slavic state on May 12, 1915. The document, like the rhetoric of those who
produced it, was vague concerning the form and system of government. It received little
official recognition.
At the same time, Serbia, led by Nikola Pasic's pan-Serbian Radical Party, saw the
"Yugoslav" concept as a useful tool in the long sought development of a
"Greater Serbia". As the War dragged on, the Allies began to think of the
concept of Yugoslavia as a blocking force in the Balkans to counter future German
expansionism. Although no formal agreement was announced until July 1917, the Yugoslav
Committee and the Serbian Government-in-Exile worked hand-in-hand from November 1916
onward.
On July 20, 1917 the Serbian government and the Yugoslav Committee issued the text of
an agreement known as the Declaration of Corfu which called for the formation of a
multi-national state. The document was deliberately mute as to whether the government
would take the form of Western-oriented Croatia or of the Eastern-orientated Serbia. The
vast majority of the Serbian, Croatian and Slovenian people had no knowledge of the
declaration made by a small group of exiled intellectuals and the Serbian
Government-in-Exile. Nonetheless, the signers claimed to speak for all South Slavic
peoples and the Declaration of Corfu became the justification claimed by Serbia for the
forced unification of Croatians and Slovenes under the Serbian crown.
The Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
As the War drew to a close, the Austro-Hungarian Empire began to disintegrate. The
Croatian "Sabor" or Parliament met in Zagreb on October 29, 1918 to declare
"the Kingdom of Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia" to be a free and independent
state. The Habsburg Crown recognized the Croatian government on October 31st. The Croatian
government in Zagreb was fully formed before the fall of Austria on November 3, Germany on
November 11, and Hungary on November 13. The Yugoslav National Council of Slovenes, Croats
and Serbs was organized in Zagreb on October 15, 1918. This twenty-eight member Council
was self- appointed, not elected. Although its president was a Slovene, the Council was
dominated by Svetozar Pribicevic, a Serb. On November 24th this self-appointed group
called for a common state with Serbia. This is the body so often cited as having
"asked" to join Yugoslavia.
The mythology overlooks another Congress held just blocks away on the very next day.
This was the Congress of Stjepan Radic's Croatian Peasant Party attended by almost three
thousand elected delegates from every part of Croatia. The Peasant Party was the largest
and most popular party in Croatia at that time and would remain so during the period
between the Wars. It won absolute majorities in every subsequent election. This Congress
assailed the National Council as arbitrary and unconstitutional and unanimously adopted a
resolution calling for a "Neutral and Peasant Republic of Croatia". Following
this Congress, there were huge demonstrations in the streets of Zagreb supporting
independence.
Zagreb's brief jubilation quickly changed to the sober realization that Croatia would
again be ruled from a foreign capital as Italian, French and French African forces invaded
from the west and Serbian troops invaded from the east.
On December 1, 1918, Serbian Prince Alexander announced the formation of the Kingdom of
Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, with a Serbian King ruling from the Serbian capital of
Belgrade. Despite the neutral sounding name, the country was called Yugoslavia by the
diplomatic community almost from the beginning. Ironically, at the Paris Peace Conference
the Yugoslav delegation openly insisted that it be known as the "Serbian
delegation".
The Paris Peace Conference
At the Peace Conference itself, the Croatians submitted a petition to President Wilson
calling for an independent Croatia. With over 150,000 signatures and the notation that
another 450,000 signatures had been seized by the Serbian Army, the document specifically
asked:
That Mr. Wilson and the representatives of the great Powers should recognize the
independence of the Croatian people;
That an international Commission should be sent to Croatia to inquire;
That a Constituent Assembly should be formed so that the Croatian people be free to
decide their fate;
That the Serbian Army be withdrawn;
That the "Sabor", should be respected as being alone authorized in the
making of laws in Croatia; to-day, they are being dictated by Serbia and executed in the
most brutal manner by the military.
Although submitted to the Paris Peace Conference on May 4th, 1919, the objections of
the Croatian people were noted and then ignored by the United States and other so-called
"Great Powers". President Wilson's famed "Fourteen Points" for which
America had fought a World War were undergoing a metamorphosis at the Conference. Point X
originally called for "...the freest opportunity of autonomous development" for
the nations of Austria-Hungary and Point XI stipulated that "relations of the several
Balkan states to one another be determined by friendly counsel along historically
established lines of allegiance and nationality; and for international guarantees of the
political and economic independence and territorial integrity of the several Balkan
states".
The American delegation's commentary on the revision of Wilson's famous Fourteen Points
noted that:
An internal problem arises out of the refusal of the Croats to accept the domination
of the Serbs of the Serbian Kingdom.
In a classic example of diplomatic double-speak the delegation wrote:
The United States is clearly committed to the programme of national unity and
independence. It must stipulate, however, for the protection of national minorities...it
supports a programming aiming at a Confederation of Southeastern Europe.
Thus, in the eyes of the Allies, in order to protect the Croatian nation, it was
necessary to destroy it.
There was no vote of the Croatian people about their future. By decree, Prince
Alexander dissolved the Croatian National Council, convened a Parliament composed
primarily of members of the Serbian "Skupstina" or Parliament and declared that
all laws of the Serbian Constitution of 1903 were in effect throughout the land. Despite
the fact that the purpose of the new Yugoslavia was supposed to be the unification of all
South Slavs into one state, Serbia, making good on a secret pact with Italy made in 1915,
handed over a large part of the land and population of Croatian Dalmatia to Italy,
including the strategic cities of Rijeka and Zadar. For the first time in thirteen
centuries the ancient Croatian institutions of "Ban" or Viceroy and
"Sabor" or Parliament were abolished by the Serbian King. The long process of
"Serbianization" had begun.