VUKOVAR, CROATIA – Can Vukovar also be Bykobap?
Whether the name of the war-scarred town on the Danube should be written in the Latin or Cyrillic alphabet is a sensitive question, and Croatia’s upcoming entry into the European Union is forcing residents of the Balkan country to answer it.
More than 20 years after it was reduced to rubble in a brutal Serb-led army siege, Vukovar is testing if Croatians are ready to respect the EU’s standards on minority rights when their country joins as the 28th member on July 1.
The Croatian government is trying to introduce Serbian Cyrillic writing into areas with sizable ethnic Serb communities, a move that has infuriated Croatia’s war veterans and nationalists. Thousands of flag-waving protesters, some wearing military uniforms, joined a demonstration against the change on Saturday in downtown Vukovar.
Unlike ethnic Croats, the minority Serbs use the Cyrillic alphabet, which is influenced by Orthodox Christianity and is also used by Russians.
Although Vukovar, for instance, sounds the same when written with either alphabet, in Cyrillic it is written as “Bykobap.”
Saturday’s protest was organized by veterans groups, Vukovar wartime defenders and hardline politicians. Carrying banners reading, “This is not Serbia” or “Vukovar is not Bykobap,” the demonstrators warned in a proclamation that “this could lead to new clashes.”
Once a picturesque baroque town, Vukovar has become a symbol of the senseless destruction during the war that followed the breakup of the former Yugoslavia in the early 1990s, leaving more than 100,000 people dead and millions homeless in Europe’s worst carnage since World War II.
Even decades later, many Croats and Serbs in Vukovar and elsewhere continue to live parallel lives, with children attending separate schools and each ethnic community visiting its own cafes or shops.
“I don’t want to ever see Cyrillic here — never,” said Mara Jurcic, whose 25-year-old son, Pavo, was among more than 200 prisoners who were executed and buried in a mass grave at a pig farm near Vukovar.
“They have done so much evil here,” she said.
The European Union maintains that Croatia must protect its minorities — particularly ethnic Serbs — from discrimination and violence.
A Serb representative in Vukovar, Srdjan Milakovic, said that introduction of the Cyrillic script “is not optional,” pointing out that it is part of Croatian law and the EU integration process.
“The worst thing is that all this has revived some old memories,” he said. “But I see no reason to postpone the process.”
Zarko Puhovski, a liberal Croatian analyst, said rebellion is to be expected in the aftermath of the war with Serbia.
“Many people are against it, and that tells you that the situation may not be ready,” Puhovski said. “But if we were to wait until it was ready, it would never happen.”
The fighting in Croatia started when it declared independence from the former federation in 1991, triggering a rebellion by the minority Serbs and an onslaught by the Serb-led Yugoslav Army.
Vukovar, located on the boundary with Serbia, took the first blow.
Once Croatia joins the EU, the still-tense town and the Danube will become the bloc’s eastern border.
During a three-month siege, the Yugoslav Army bombardment all but obliterated the town before it fell in November 1991. The army troops and Serb paramilitary forces overran Vukovar, killing and expelling its residents, and leaving a ghost town of shattered buildings that were pockmarked by grenades and tank fire.
The war ended in 1995, in a U.N.-brokered peace agreement that envisaged the region’s gradual return to Croatian rule.
Although the U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague in the Netherlands has sentenced several Serbian officers and politicians in connection with destruction of Vukovar and the killings, many in Croatia have felt it was not enough.
They say that the introduction of Cyrillic now is a slap in the face.
“It would be as if a sign in Arabic was put up next to ground zero in New York,” nationalist Croatian politician Zoran Vinkovic claimed.
Today, nearly 35 percent of Serbs live in Vukovar, according to the results of a postwar census published in 2011 — enough for the introduction of the Serbian script at road signs, in schools, and on documents.
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