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"Their trumpets again are of a peculiar barbarian kind; they blow into them and produce a harsh sound which suits the tumult of war." "Droit du sang : la nationalité française est transmise par filiation paternelle ou maternelle légitime ou naturelle, en France ou à l'étranger sans aucune condition autre que l'établissement légal de la filiation pendant la minorité de l'enfant (Art. 18 et 18-1 du Code Civil – Art. 20-1 du Code civil)." Objectif 2009: "Apprendre le vivre ensemble". ![]() ![]() |
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Well, she's a Bosnian-Croat. An ethnic Croat living in the State of Bosnia and that happens to identify herself more with the State she lives in (Bosnia) than with her ethnicity (Croatian).
It is not anything related to recent migrations, ethnic Croats have been living in the territories that nowadays make up Bosnia-Herzegovina for centuries. |
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Anyway... Erik, your girl is a Bosnian-Croat, catholic, who's family has rather a Bosnian, than Croatian identity (state, not ethnicity, like Galaico already said). You got the same situations with Bosnian muslims. They can have a Bosnian muslim, Bosnian, Bosniak, Croatian, Serbian, Yugoslavian idetntity. It depands on the individual, or whole family, and what identity the y chose to have. My fathers side is Croatian for example (most are muslim, some catholic-converted from Islam, but all pro-catholic, and of course pro-Croatian), while my mothers family just refers to them selfs as Bosnians (both my parents are "Bosnian muslims", in some way, to make it easy to you). Quote:
![]() I showed you one time the pic of this mixed girl (Croat-Bosniak-Serb). You remember? The one who lives in Russia. She is of this type
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The greatest enemy will hide in the last place you would ever look ![]() |
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Thanks for clarifying, but gosh, Balkan is too complicated for me
I guess I could see some similarities between different provinces in Scandinavia before the current states were established, but here people would probably have defined themselves by province (some still do), not by the nationality of the government they currently happened to be under... She's quite anti-Muslim, which was how I began to wonder in the first place. A very nice girl, but she's not very ethnically conscious and will probably never move back. Instead she seems to want to be assimilated, attending a Protestant church, having learnt almost flawless Swedish, etc.
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People from the countries where once was former Yugoslavia often like to state which province they're from, besides stating ethnicity.
I'm myself, for example, half Herzegovian/half Montenegrin and ethnically Serb. When it comes to term Bosnian, you can say that Bosnian is anyone from the region of Bosnia, regardless of someone's ethnicity. Having this in mind, Muslims don't have any exclusive right to term Bosnian, especially because they don't live only in the republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina but also in the republic of Serbia ( south-western part called Raška) and republic of Montenegro ( northern part). For the sake of homogenizing their ethnic territory and creating separate identity outside of just religious affinity, Muslims started using term Bosniak ( mostly in last 15 years), although they weren't known under this name for most part of their history, which sometimes confuses foreigners. |
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The greatest enemy will hide in the last place you would ever look ![]() |
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Balkans may seem complicated in some cases, but in this particular one it is not that much. The simple fact is that Bosnia and Herzegovina is not a nation, but a state, in which thre nations/nationalities/ethicities live: Croats, Serbs and Bosniaks/Musulmans. One part of Bosnian Croats (a minority), while not denying their belonging to the Croatian nation, identify themselves more with the state of Bosnia, than with their ethnic belonging. Maybe that is the case of this girl. |
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While the rest of mankind seeks for the sake of finding and of knowing, the Westerner of today seeks for the sake of seeking; the Gospel saying, 'Seek and ye shall find,' is a dead letter for him, in the full force of this phrase, since he calls 'death' anything and everything that constitutes a definite finality, just as he gives the name 'life' to what is no more than fruitless agitation. René Guénon, East and West
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Why? People act different. Like Marulus said, nobody of them denies their Croatian ethnicity but for some reason some identify more with the state they are living in. They would not be the first or last one who do this.
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The greatest enemy will hide in the last place you would ever look ![]() |
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In the areas of Bosnia and Herzegovina where only Croats live this phenomenon is practically absent. |
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Bogumili (a ni vragu nisu mrski)...
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DEATH
___ Misery loves company And company loves more More loves everybody else But hell is others |
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Well i would say that she is probably from Sarajevo, Zenica or Travnik( the tru pre-war multiethnic cities wit many mixed marriages).
Even today in those cities people said that they are bosnians rather than croats, bosniaks or serbs. In my area ond other areas with croatian majority(herzegovina, central bosna, posavina) its hard to find similar case like yours. |
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Let me exhumate this thread to ask a question to all Serbs and Croats:
Why have you not made joint efforts to put an end to the Bosnian question? Haven't you had many chances to do it?
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“The West is ripe for the picking, ready for the fall. We are being sold for the endless corporate multinational pursuit of creating one faceless mono-culture” Primordial [2007] To The Nameless Dead ![]() "A Nação não se discute" |
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Ok now. In the Croatian and Serbian real world beyond any romanticism and pan- ideologies of internet warriors and hegemonic nutt-head dictators, there isn't anything called the "Bosnian question" in the way you have put it (i.e: oh glorious sons of Europe, Serbs and Croats, UNITE as one kin and take back what for eons is yours). No, sorry, this is not how it looks. E.g. for some Serbians, the annexion of teritorries from Bosnia and Hercegovina isn't more of a different question then their claims over Croatian land as their own. Same goes for some Croats wanting parts of Vojvodina back, to be parts of Croatia (luckely both of them are a minority now). You have to understand that Serbia has caused a great portion of Croatia's problems in her past, and Serbs think likewise about Croatia I believe. There isn't any plausible reason wich could make them "joining efforts" against this particular third side. Everyone is on it's own now, and always was if you ask me. You as well could have asked yourself why Hungarians and Serbs don't join and solve the "Croatian question" together (as both have claims on Croatian land, and sometimes even over Croats). Bosnia is a minor "problem", merely a reflexion of all issues, going on in this region (ex-Yugoslavia in small if you want). Ask Serbs on this forum. They only want the national freedom of Serbs in Bosnia, nothing more (no territories or anything similar). Same goes for Croats. This is the only Bosnian question wich exists, autonomy for nations regardless of the state in wich they now resist.
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The greatest enemy will hide in the last place you would ever look ![]() |