Transcript
Please, introduce yourself
with your full name
and the date and
the place of your birth.
My name is
Lazar Stojanović.
I was born in Belgrade
on March 1, in 1944,
in a family whose members were neither
workers nor peasants,
but my late father was a doctor and my late
mother was a geography and history teacher.
Their nationality is
also Serbian.
My father is originally
from Sikirica
near Paračin and
my mother is from
Kopljar near Aranđelovac.
However, this never defined
their political beliefs,
nor did it represent the cultural matrix
by which my late parents lived.
What is your occupation
and what do you do?
I am an idler,
or an unemployed director.
I do all the things that irritate me
and all the things that I love.
It is a very wide span of things,
from which one can
come to a conclusion that
I am not an expert at anything.
It seems to me that
regardless of the concept
of a Renaissance man
being impossible
where we live, and that's why the
knowledge funds and many different theories
metastasized so much that it is impossible
to comprehend them the way that people
during previous
centuries could.
As long as we're
motivated by our curiosity,
we have the urge,
and then it becomes our duty,
to be well informed
about what is
happening in culture,
science, political
life and primarily in
that certain social-psychological
process in our immediate environment.
So, if I can say so,
99 per cent of my time is spent on it.
A for the way
I make my living,
which I still do, regardless of my
old age, I have no pension,
although I am at that age when I should
probably have it.
Trades I sell, services I sell
changed significantly during my life.
What I did the longest,
were the media jobs,
primarily journalism.
So, I pursued them in all the media
and in all capacities; from the field
reporter to the main editor.
Then it also included very
different forms of writing
like essays, like
film reviews, polemics, prose, satire.
I also wrote poetry,
but I never published it.
I was also actively engaged in graphic
design when it was done
with simpler and more primitive means
than today.
But at that time, it depended much more on
the idea you had, on
what you wanted to make.
And, it goes without saying, I painted.
I thought it would be something I would
study in life, but then I quit,
so I haven’t been doing it for decades now.
And nothing is saved.
It is something I pursued the longest,
something I teach.
Today, it is also something that is
my occasional profession.
When somebody hires me to write something,
I do it.
However, what I do more regularly,
and it is directly the trade I sell,
is translating, especially a less common
form of translating,
the simultaneous translation.
I also performed it the same way I did
journalism, in all capacities.
Therefore, I initially
went through all the
stages of development
within that job.
From an escort-translator, the one that
takes you around, who either
does some patrol or
takes them shopping,
through a seminar-translator,
who usually performs the consecutive,
hears what somebody says then translates it
at some seminars and meetings,
to simultaneous translating, which entails
this slight schizophrenia -
it is when you listen and
speak at the same time.
It is something I
do to this day.
I find it particularly
useful for one reason,
which I think is rare, and it is,
when I'm not able to do it anymore,
when I'm not able to automatically
say in the other language what
I listen in one language,
then I'll know I'm too old
and I shouldn’t do it anymore.
It is that one job.
Of course, whenever there's a chance,
whenever there's a budget
involved, whenever
there's a good will
and the conditions,
I do what I was primarily
educated for, and it is
to make an occasional
movie or a theatrical production.
Or something that I also classify
as performance or theatre;
I get politically engaged
in a practical manner.
I think that would be all.
The things which brought me food in life,
I changed jobs and professions very easily.
And I loved them.
What I believe I did the best in my life,
was being a bartender.
I was a very good bartender in England.
People loved it.
It is probably connected with my first
college study, it is psychology.
Because the art of working at a bar
is not in how skilled you are
or how successfully or attractively you mix
those drinks and turn them into cocktails,
but in the way you talk to drunks
and how much they'd love you.
One other thing, which
is not a common
profession but I invented
it travelling through
the Middle East and looking for
the most convenient job to do.
I traded semi-precious stones
and small diamonds called bort.
They are 0.3
carat diamonds.
I mostly traded in India.
The place where the cutting is the cheapest
and production the best is Bombay
and the market is the whole world.
It was something I had to
learn for that occasion.
Then when I finished…
For a long time, I worked for
international organisations
primarily for the United Nations,
but also for OESCE before that, and so.
When I finished that, sometime in 2006,
and returned to America,
then I took a good look around and
thought about what I could do there,
what was going well there.
At that time, the real estates business
was flourishing.
Then I studied for that,
passed the relevant exams.
I was an apprentice for a year,
got the certificate and the state permit,
because this job
is licensed by the state.
A broker for the
State of New York.
I supported myself doing
this for several years.
Concisely put, the answer to
your question is that whenever
there is a need to provide for
everyday life,
I think about the most convenient
profession and if I can do it.
I learn how to do it
and I do it well.
And when there is an opportunity to do what
I like to do and what I was trained for,
I never miss
such opportunity.
One moment, I apologise.
If we could just, the glass...
Certainly, certainly.
Besides, when you talk to me,
my sentences are endless.
It is like the ending in Joyce's Ulysses,
no stops and commas.
It will be a problem
in editing, I know, but there it is!
This is a 5-minute answer to a
trivial question. (shrugs his shoulders)
Don’t worry
we will jump cut it.
You have already mentioned,
but I will expand on my question.
Where are your parents from originally,
your family?
My grandfather, my father's father was
a teacher in Sikirica, near Paračin,
where my father was born.
Then my father completed
his medical studies
and got politically active in the Party
of Ljubo Davidović, in the Democrats,
before the war. Because of that, he
couldn’t get a job.
The only way to get a job, because
at that time, and it has since recently
been so, the army was
politically neutral.
The political orientation
didn’t matter.
He was hired by the Royal
army as a military doctor.
And as World War II started,
he was taken into captivity.
There he treated...
Being a bit headstrong, he was
sent to a Russian camp as a doctor.
There, he caught
the spotted typhus.
He was supposed
to die but didn't.
Then Milan Nedić conducted
the exchange - sent the
healthy doctors there,
took the sick ones out.
My father was sent back to Serbia
in 1943.
There, the Chetniks immediately
tried to mobilise him,
which instantly made him
join the Partisans.
At the end of the war, the Partisans
gave him his rank back. Afterwards, he was
a military doctor for the YNA, but not
a member of the Communist Party.
It all lasted until
the end of 1950.
At that time, he held
the rank of major.
See how little
he advanced,
he joined the war
with the rank of captain.
Since tuberculosis was his
speciality, tuberculosis and
all lung conditions, before that
the internal medicine and so,
then he was the head of the sanatorium
in Skrad, Gorski Kotar, in Croatia.
He was technically in the head position,
but not by his military rank, though.
After the Informbureau,
in 1950 he joined the Party,
believing that it was
then a different kind of Party.
In a way that was similar to
the way I joined the League of Communists,
thinking, after Ranković was removed,
that it was some other Party.
Then he was promoted to
the rank of colonel.
We moved to Belgrade.
I finished high school
and college there, while elementary school
I finished in Skrad.
That first service of his, I was
born in Belgrade, but soon afterwards
we went to Skopje, where he was the
head of the Military Hospital in Skopje.
So, the first language
I spoke was Macedonian.
After that, we moved to Gorski kotar,
then to Belgrade again.
Therefore, my experience
of the country I lived in was in fact
Yugoslavia,
and not Serbia.
And I immediately started speaking other
languages that were spoken in Yugoslavia,
because in Gorski kotar they speak a
mix of Slovenian and Croatian.
So, among ourselves we speak something
that resembles Slovenian, and with foreigners
something that
resembles Croatian.
I think it largely encouraged
my interest in languages.
When it comes to Slavic
languages that are
spoken in Yugoslavia,
I spoke all of them.
I don't do
it anymore.
It was very useful for my
journalistic jobs.
Especially when I worked
as an agency reporter
because I could follow Ljubljana's
"Delo" as well as "Nova Makedonija"...
As for my mother, her father
was a farmer.
But, an advanced farmer, in a sense
of an agriculturally professional man.
A very wealthy man who owned half
of the village, that village Kopljari,
who educated his children
and was a very respectable citizen.
I should probably say a peasant,
but because most of the time
he spent in Aranđelovac and Belgrade
and Mladenovac, he is a citizen after all.
To end up killed in World War II,
by none other than the Partisans,
for family and
property reasons.
A man who shared his first and last name,
Vojin Gajić, respectively,
was later declared
a national hero.
A pre-war communist who
was helped by my grandpa
out of some family vanity.
There is that rule - don't ever
do any good to anyone
because it will
come back to haunt you.
He was slaughtered.
Which is a rare occasion,
for the Partisans to slaughter someone.
I used that story, which is told by my,
at the time, alive grandmother, his wife,
in my movie "Plastic Jesus",
which also caused some controversy.
Certainly, when the political situation
got settled, and it was 3 to 4 years ago,
grandpa was rehabilitated
and that is all right now.
However, his murderer still has a
statue in that village.
It is a proof to our
divided soul.
It was my mother's
father.
She graduated from college.
The first job she got, was a substitute,
a teacher at a commercial school in Niš,
where my father also worked.
They got, so to say,
involved, got married.
Then the war started.
However, it wasn't until
after the war that
they got the opportunity
to have children.
So, my parents were parents
at a later age.
They were 36 and 31 when I was born,
then two years later, my brother.
This is roughly the story
about my family.
What was your personal feeling
and attitude connected to
World War II, the Partisan Movement,
the Independent State of Croatia,
the Chetnik Movement by Draža Mihajlović,
the government of Milan Nedić?
Did your attitudes and emotions
change during time and in what way?
As a child, in elementary school already,
I grew in an atmosphere
of a fierce
communist propaganda.
I became aware of what was
happening only after the Informbureau,
after I turned six,
seven years old.
I learned early on
what censorship was,
what one is and isn't allowed to say.
In a quite unusual way:
one issue of the magazine "Borba"
on its first page showed
Aleksandar Ranković's photo,
and because I loved to draw,
I coloured it by adding Ranković
moustache, beard
and glasses.
My father, as he returned
from work, saw it.
Well, I shoved it to him, bragging
about my interesting drawing.
That made him
really furious.
He turned white. He said:
"Don't ever do it again.
What you did is horrible."
He creased the papers, and since
it was winter, he threw them into the fire.
It was a cognitive shock for me.
If I, in an attempt to enhance
a photo, did something that was forbidden
because I changed it, damaged it or whatever,
how come, when he threw the same thing into the fire
he didn't do something even worse?!
And I couldn't get an explanation,
couldn't even to ask for it
because my father was really
overwhelmed because of it.
So, for the first time,
when I was five, six years old,
I learned what was
and what wasn't allowed.
And, obviously, believed,
just like anybody else,
ethat this was
the best of all
the possible worlds, that it was
one perfect country,
that neither Russians
nor Americans liked us,
that dirty capitalists were there,
and the state communists there.
And that we were something
special, something
particularly valuable and
particularly different.
I grew up in Skrad in
Gorski kotar,
where I lived in great friendship
with my surroundings.
Primarily, because my father,
a doctor, treated all those people
and he was very
loved and appreciated.
But, come Sunday, all the kids,
secretly, go through the grove
to church on a mass, but not me.
I could never understand that.
Then, not in a sense
of some hostility or tension,
but differences occurred and I
had to think about them.
Of course, my solution to that matter
was that it was all a bunch of nonsense.
Who on earth believes in some church,
some gods. And why would I?
I tried to convince myself
that I was superior in that matter,
but socially and
psychologically looking, I was
inferior because all of
them did it but not me.
After that, when I was ten,
I came to Belgrade.
And it was only then
that I realised, again
talking with my kids,
little thugs mostly.
It was the time when all Belgrade
was divided into blocks and gangs.
I first went to school there,
on Cvetni square.
It is now the Eighth Gymnasium,
then it was the Third???
Then, near the British Embassy
I continued high school.
The gangs here were in Mišarska street,
then in Sarajevska street,
then, of course, who'd dare
to go to Dušanovac.
It was there, out of sheer need for
protest, and nothing more,
no ideological content, there were many
Chetnik outbursts among those kids.
And I heard of the Ustashe and started
to think about them only when I came
to Belgrade, not while I was in Croatia.
Something like that was
unheard of during those years.
So, if you showed any sign of affection,
understanding, or even interest
in that, something really
ugly would happen to you.
So, it wasn't something
that could be seen.
Certainly, in such
a pattern, in that cliché
that they were
the national enemies,
the fascist traitors and all that,
it wasn't a matter to give it a thought.
I was one hundred per cent committed
to the Partisans. Those were my drawings.
The Chetniks and the Ustashe went
to some other compartment.
Up until
(thinking),
the end of the 1950s,
the beginning of the 1960s,
that was
my opinion.
Then I joined some labour actions,
I was even in charge of the local ones.
I was really
committed.
At that time
there were...
I saw Milovan Đilas,
because it was during those years,
a man who was like
my second father later in life,
I saw him as
a national enemy,
as something not to make any
contact with, or anything for that matter.
Then the Party came with its
self-management and with
the attempt to define some sort of
Yugoslavian form of socialism that would
be different from the
government socialism
that prevailed over the
entire Eastern Bloc.
There was a tendency to
develop self-management in schools,
and among the youth. I was
one of its proponents then.
That was my first
popularity in Belgrade,
separating the school
life, culture, studying
and sports from the
politics and ideology.
There was no
antagonism involved
because I was also perceived as
a part of this political trend
where we were all doing the same thing,
some in this, some in that department.
But very soon, it became apparent
in practice that there were ideological
pressures aiming at influencing this
sphere of social life of the youth.
And one type of the youth resistance
against such political pressures.
So, this was something that I had already,
aged sixteen, started
to realise
and experience.
And to actively participate in, trying to
widen this human sphere within politics.
And I had no interest in
the political sphere.
When I came to college, I
understood the post-war history better,
as well as the
pre-war history.
Before that...
My father's attempts to tell me
what it was like before the war...
Both my mother and my father took part in
the student protests before the war
and were very active
democratic students,
mostly of social-democratic
provenance.
I saw it as
an annoyance, a nonsense
and "what do some
old people...",
but we went through the revolution and
we are now building something else.
Our topics are
completely different.
Who is that Pera Živković
with his 6 January Dictatorship?!
And what does it all mean?
It's worthless.
Many years after, I realised that
it's a matter of arithmetic proportions.
If you are referring to something that
was happening twenty years ago
and you are only sixteen,
then it's a remote past to you.
If you are fifty, sixty years old and
talking about something that was happening
twenty years ago,
it was yesterday.
I am saying this because it always
comes to my mind when I'm talking to
young people about the events from
the past, about the 1960s, the 1970s
in these areas, because I know, by some
psychological default,
that those young
people must have
the same feeling as I did
when my father told me about
the events
between the two wars.
That is how I went through those
times of opportunists.
That is the time to be quiet and when one
knows it is wiser to keep quiet.
A man
does what...
Reads what he can get hold of,
gives his best friend some
forbidden book to read,
but keeps quiet because
he knows he'll be
punished if he doesn't.
Then, we hardly knew anything
because it was forbidden to talk
about Goli otok or the terrors during
World War II.
A lot was known
about the fascist terror
but not about that other
terror that follows
the revolution, the
so-called revolutionary,
which is something that is
inherent to the revolution definition.
One can hardly have
a revolution without it,
but it was kept hidden
and it wasn't known.
Not only in connection to the events in
Yugoslavia, but before all, in connection
to the October Revolution
and the events in Russia
because it was sacred.
Regardless of the different
political position
Yugoslavia held in
international relations,
the attitude towards the revolution in
Yugoslavia remained completely the same.
Lenin and Stalin, whose policies we
don't share, but nothing about the camps,
nothing about the persecutions,
nothing about the terrors.
There was no opposition literature
that would pour into Yugoslavia.
It went on until the first shift of
political conditions in Yugoslavia,
which occurred
in economy primarily,
after Tito's speech in Split in 1962,
when there was some more
private initiative, the possibility
to establish small businesses,
for people to take out some items
to the market, to sell them, and so on.
Something similar to
Lenin's NEP.
It was a circumstance
that makes one joyful,
but not something
that would change my
way of life.
But it was good.
It remained that way until 1966,
when Ranković was removed,
when all of us
said: "Wow!"
I was a second-year
student then. It seemed to
be the end of the police
governance over the country.
It seemed that all the talk about
humanisation, the spreading of democracy,
the improvement of our property status,
and above all, cultural freedoms,
could be managed better
and through the existing apparatus.
Many years before that, even since
high school, they pushed me into the Party
and I refused to do it,
at this moment I decided to join the Party
and try to use this platform
to advocate the ideas I believed in
and this democratisation of sorts,
primarily, I'd say, civil freedoms.
At that time, I wasn't particularly aware
of the serious threat to human rights
but to those civil freedoms you'd
find in any civilised constitution -
freedom of opinion, freedom of assembly,
freedom of speech, freedom of press,
which I found the
most important,
and still think it may be
the most important.
As soon as I got involved,
I began to act that way,
I began to
write that way.
So, my friends and I
reached the student movement in 1968.
We consciously and explicitly
talked about the Party being ours
and not theirs and that our mission in
the Party would be to act liberally.
As many books had already
been read by that time...
I am not referring
to myself only,
but to the whole generation that was
just hungry for what was coming
either from the historic analysis, some
Russian dissident literature
or from what was
forbidden between the two wars.
Then we started reading everything that
was illegal and dangerous to carry into
the country, but was important to us.
It was when I became engaged.
I'd say I still do it today
if there are possibilities and if
somebody accepts what I do,
regarding the protection of civil
liberties, promotion of human rights
and the attempt to, in that widely
conceived world of human rights, to act
and to try to
improve that position.
In relation to the rights that
are wider than religious,
ethnic and
political prosecutions,
including those relating to
education, the health care,
living conditions, work conditions,
organising not only workers but
every significant social group that has
an interest that can be described as
different than
the majority.
I would define all of it
as some sort of democratisation.
Because it never happened in Serbia,
didn't even happen in Yugoslavia,
although it seemed at one point,
with Ante Marković, that such
a possibility exists.
Then it seemed once again, with late
Zoran Đinđić, whom I knew well,
that such a possibility exists on
a political level, as an option for Serbia.
It didn't happen. And it is still
referred to as something we would like
to see happening,
but it didn't happen.
That is more or
less that evolution.
I think that the important part of
your question referred to people who
were engaged on the fascist side
during World War II,
or at least to those who weren't engaged
on the communist side.
I spent a lot of time, especially
in London, with late Borislav Pekić.
I knew not only his story of a little
man who tried to get involved
in a democratic way, but
not within SKOJ, and
who was subject to
repression because of it.
I knew, because I
cooperated with them, that there was
a strong democratic opposition
abroad, in our diaspora.
The opposition that doesn't only come
to what the Yugoslavian propaganda
that time was claiming,
to the Ustashe and the Chetniks.
That platform seemed useful to me,
operational. The values that it
promoted were for the most part
the values I advocated.
The most important man in that story was
late Vane Ivanović.
The network that Desimir Tošić, who
was then the main editor at "Naša reč",
promoted was developed
across the western world.
That organisation was neither
powerful nor wealthy,
but it sure did
function.
And it was attractive to a very
significant part of our diaspora.
So, that story didn't come down to
the Ustashe and the Chetniks.
I tried to inform about it
and promote that fact in Yugoslavia
against the
government propaganda.
In the context of the
values that the democrats
advocate, one of the most
important is the rule of law.
For the basic elements of the
rule of law to be available,
you must have
a legal system
you can rely on, you must trust,
if not the court proceedings, then at least
in the purpose of those judgements and in
the effects of those proceedings.
When the review of the
history began entailing a
serious effort for the
fascists of our history to be
rehabilitated and perhaps to provide their
descendants with that kind of
ancestral assets that would serve them
to strengthen their present position.
Because democracy
allows that.
Today, we have prominently fascist
affiliations in the political arena.
My standpoint was that anything that was
the revolutionary justice was also based on
more or less imaginary,
which I was also a victim to,
verdicts,
proceedings.
Or there were terrors without any
verdicts or proceedings.
I strongly supported the effort to revoke
the legal effect of those misjudgements
in the interest
of the rule of law.
Not to rehabilitate the people prosecuted
or convicted by those judgements,
but to set aside those judgements
and to leave to historians,
who are the most
competent in this,
to discuss and determine what
the political and moral responsibility
of some of those
people would be.
Where those judgements
didn't occur.... I
am saying this primarily
keeping in mind
the setting aside of the
Draža Mihajlović
judgement, whose trial
was quite irregular.
It seems to me that any honest lawyer
must proclaim that proceeding, that
kind of judgement insignificant,
of no value.
But it doesn't mean that
we are rehabilitating
the war crimes committed
by Draža Mihajlović!
Somebody needs to
deal with it.
This should only open the road
to a more serious dealing with this issue.
That's why I was shocked when
the professor at Law Faculty, Antić,
also a counsellor to
president Nikolić...
A man who is a lawyer
said that this is now
the beginning of the
Draža Mihajlović rehabilitation
as a movement of personality, conviction
and political activity.
It isn't that. And when a law expert
says so, it is something like
the surgeon slaughtering his patient
instead of operating him.
This cannot
be done.
We are presently under a lot of pressure
to rehabilitate Milan Nedić.
He wasn't even prosecuted.
Therefore, this isn't
about the setting aside
of certain judgements,
or opinions, and so on.
He was proclaimed a national enemy
and his property was confiscated.
Whether he is or isn't a national
enemy, should be put for consideration
primarily by the competent
public, the historians,
people involved with
political theory,
but it should be decided by a
much wider forum. Much wider than Serbia.
If this is the way we'll treat
Petain, Quisling, a range of other
proclaimed fascists in the world,
then we can ask the same question
in relation to
Milan Nedić.
If not, if the norm is
applied, that someone
who supported and
promoted fascism,
not to mention the crimes
committed thereby,
then such an attitude
cannot be rehabilitated.
If we refer to crimes, whether they were
committed by Draža, Medić or Tito,
I advocate and believe that it isn't hard
to defend such a standpoint,
that crimes must be prosecuted
regardless of who commits them.
Because when we open this
question, then we have
the perpetrator and the
victim, and not policies.
This mixing of politics and law proved to
be very dangerous throughout history
and almost always
implied harmful consequences.
I'd say always, but I don't want to
offend the French Revolution.
As for the Partisans, I
understand and I became
aware of it at the beginning
of my studies, that
like in many places in the world, the
resistance movement against the fascism was
taken under communist party's umbrella
and turned into the communist revolution,
where Dragoljub Mićunović
also participated, so
he witnessed the way
those elections were manipulated.
I don't have a good opinion of it,
and I can't support it,
and I don't think it was
the right thing to do.
But I am completely aware that the
history isn't managed by moral principles.
If you have a political situation where the
government can be taken over, you do it.
If, at the beginning of World War II,
before Germany attacked
the Soviet Union, there
was a policy that
Yugoslavia is a dungeon
of the people that should be taken apart,
and if those Germans are primarily
treated as people for which you say:
"It makes no difference if it's a local
capitalist or a foreign occupier"
Then, when the Germans attack the Soviet
Union, you completely change that policy
just to say two years later:
"That Yugoslavia is something that
we'll create and protect,
only some other kind."
I completely understand
such political meandering.
We see it every day, we see it at the
top of this country and at this moment.
People who said one thing
five years ago are now
doing and saying something
completely different.
I don't even blame it
on late Josp Broz,
but that manipulation led
Yugoslavia into the Soviet Union.
Instead, what
could have
happened, was for us to enter some
structure where civil rights,
human rights, civil freedoms and
democracy are more respected than
in that Eastern Bloc.
Therefore, that chance was missed.
That is the responsibility of
the Partisans and the communists.
And not personally.
It is also a part of the history.
But, what I've said, maybe
I shouldn't have said because
I think it is absolutely
inappropriate to analyse
history from the point of view
of moral principles.
Are we supposed to mention Rome, Nero
as a good or a bad person?
Well, no, history is something else.
There, that's Partisans,
Chetniks and Ustashe for you.
I apologise, can I draw the chair
a bit closer?
Of course, go ahead,
yes, yes.
There is one
more thing.
Since we're talking about the
Partisans, the Ustashe
and the Chetniks, but not the Germans.
I am usually inclined to
treating soldiers as people
who didn't voluntarily join the army,
especially keeping in mind that Wermacht
was not an extension to
the German National-socialist Party
in a way that, let's say Stalin's army
was an extension to the Communist Party.
That's why I think we should have
much more understanding.
I think that Gunter Grass
had that kind of understanding
for people who, against their will, went to
war and often found themselves in
situation to commit crimes they
otherwise don't agree with.
So, it is, like when we
talked about victims and perpetrators.
When you talk about occupiers, fascists,
communists, certain forces
and certain armies, one should always
keep in mind and not automatically follow
your initial instincts in
these matters, that those
people aren't here because
they chose to do it.
Did your family
follow political events?
Very much. I must say that it is
something I am grateful for.
Most of the civil world, as
my parents were, weren't in politics,
they tried to
keep away.
They saw it as
something dangerous.
Among our friends and relatives
there were many people who got burned.
Then, the usual reaction is not
to follow those political events.
It is one conversation that happened to me
ten, twenty times later,
when these
political changes occurred.
When people say: "I kept out
of politics during those communist times.
I am in no way
responsible for it.
I didn't meddle in.
I tried to keep my distance."
I usually tell them:
"Well, you know, you've never
read the first three, four pages
of the newspapers, anyway.
You would start reading papers
from the page five."
My family wasn't like that
We read from the first page on.
But it was never discussed
in our family.
What was your attitude
towards brotherhood and unity?
It seemed strange, when I was a child,
that somebody would even point it out,
broadcast and develop it by
those visits and so on.
It seemed natural to me,
as you wouldn't advertise breathing
or drinking water, there is no reason
to advertise brotherhood and unity.
After, I realised that
first, once you introduce
some freedom of speech
into a society,
then it suddenly gives voice to all the
ideas you never knew existed.
And second, that you will always be against
democracy if you don't allow these ideas
the opportunity to
develop.
Because expressing opinions isn't
a violence but civil liberty.
So, I had the chance to get to know
some of those ideas and realise that
on the one hand, advocating brotherhood
and unity is an active policy trying to
eliminate
other policies.
And on the other hand, I realised that it
holds a way for all other
political options to be prosecuted as being
against brotherhood and unity,
but it isn't necessarily so,
because not all nationalists are fascists.
And not all nationalisms are necessarily
based upon hatred towards other nations.
There is a kind of supporters'
political rhetoric where, if
you advocate the Serbian monasteries or
promote the dynasties of kings in Croatia
or Islam, as one
source of basic cultural patterns
of social life, the source of values,
in let's say Bosnia, and you don't treat it
as Christian converts
or as an import of
something alien to our
Slavic body...???
If you do that, within this context,
then you are doing something very valuable
in terms of keeping, piling up
and developing these cultural assets
which then become the cultural assets and
the fund of ideas belonging to the world,
and not only to
your community.
However, whenever there's a repression
that tries to eliminate such approach,
you immediately get the resistance, which
then chooses more aggressive forms.
Then they say: "You won't
let me pray in the
streets, I will then
proclaim the caliphate."
As soon as you add violence
into that equation,
you find yourself in a political situation
where you should think about
the resistance strategy,
the movement in
relation to the system
and the possibilities
for your ideas to win.
And then you have the war.
You can have it the same way
in any political order.
We cannot define political orientation
as national or international,
as something good by itself,
but in relation to what it creates.
It is something I
understood immediately and was
really deep into it at the end
of the 1960s,
really engaged.
And managed to maintain great relations
with both sides.
We were rather efficient, and it is
something that was mainly done by me,
in developing, within
that margin of common
interest between
Belgrade and Zagreb,
contacts with their
younger nationalists.
We believed that, due to having
a common enemy and a large number of
matching demands, like the freedom
of press, assembly, speech and so on,
then some of it was
also done together.
Later on, of course, the repression
and the history chewed it up,
but we are still good friends
and have no problems of the sorts.
Because it was
that kind of nationalism.
It wasn't the nationalism of Ustashe
or Chetniks, which afterwards,
as the conflicts and the wars escalated
on this territory, got precedence.
And about which, regardless on
what side, I have nothing
good
I could say.
Because the projects on
the countries they offer,
respectively, the projects
on social organisations
that they offer are directly
connected to the crimes to be committed.
Like it was NDH
and like it was Nedić's country.
Now that I've mentioned that, there
was an active policy in NDH, belonging
to a political organisation aiming at
repressing certain other religious beliefs,
certain ethnic groups,
and one system of
values that would
equalise the citizens.
With Quislings, whether it was Petain
Quisling or Nedić, you don't have it,
but how can I give as little as possible
and commit as little crimes as possible,
and preserve what
I'm working with.
Which doesn't lessen the crime, only
represents a different political position.
Today, we love to use different
political positions to develop normative
systems where we can say:
"No, wait, Pavelić is a much cleaner
figure because he led
the movement that won,
regardless of the
crimes he committed."
And on this other side, we say:
"Don't, a man wouldn't even do it
if he didn't have to do it
by saving the Serbian people."
Now, we completely falsely
compare those two things
which we have to deal with
starting with the committed crimes,
and not with the good intentions
or good political ideas.
As Dante said, the road to hell
is paved with good intentions.
They don't have any historical or political
value. What somebody intended to do,
is for the courts to solve.
Or the psychiatrists.
This is neither
historical nor political problem.
What was your attitude towards the
self-managing socialism?
Very positive, not towards the
self-managing socialism, but towards
the intent to develop a platform
on this political idea.
The first thing I was
able to understand
was that it wasn't
Marx but Prudhon.
And that it has
nothing to do...
It has to do with Lenin's text which
explained that something like that existed
in Russian tradition only as
the collective ownership of something.
I realised that there was a terrific
potential for developing cooperation
between people based on
their common interest,
which opens an opportunity
within a society for
people to build into
it without obstacles.
However, it never existed.
And I realised it early on.
If you don't have, and it
is something basic, if you
don't have the opportunity
for vertical organisation,
you only have the possibility
for horizontal.
If you completely falsely and
inappropriately, as a working collective,
get the access to decide on
technological processes,
it can only lead to ruin because you
aren't an engineer, you are a worker.
And thereby you don't have the
possibilities to see how we develop it,
who we will cooperate with
within that process
and what the position of this process
in a wider social life is.
That path is forbidden because
it is discussed by the Party.
Then you are tricked, then,
instead of a bagel you can eat
they give you a plaster bagel which looks
like a bagel, but you cannot eat it.
That experience I had, wasn't even
remotely like that, because I was here
and when you live in something
you get used to it.
However, I had numerous
friends from abroad,
and it is more than twenty people,
who used to come here when they were young
to study this self-management because
they were really impressed, to
write dissertations on it, and to, as much
as possible, to take part in that process.
Then I unmistakeably watched
the development of a pattern
of social behaviour with these people.
They'd come and excitedly talk about that
thing among the people that would kindly
nod their heads and say:
"Yes, Yes, certainly!" (nods his head)
"It is important, yes, yes, yes.
We have that.
We know it's good."
(sarcastically)
Then they'd start to
study that and to
talk to certain
politicians and professors,
And then they'd slowly
turn quiet.
They'd realise
it doesn't exist.
Then they'd silently go away or they'd
change the subject of their master's thesis
in order to
somehow fit it in.
Or they'd simply write anything. They'd
finish up and run as fast as they could.
Those who stayed, stayed, at least those
I know, only because they were married.
And as a rule, they'd
change their profession.
In connection with this self-management, I
had the chance to talk a lot
with late Milovan Đilas about it.
He is the author of that idea.
That idea didn't emerge
from anarchism but from
Aneurin Bevan, from
social-democratic ideas.
So, the workers' self-management
seemed to be the most suitable phrase.
And they gave that task to a teacher
from Slovenia, Edvard Kardelj.
Then they removed Đilas, left Kardelj
and that story became funny.
It didn't exist
in practice.
But, I often engage in conflicts with
my peers because some remember it
as if it
had existed.
One of my friends said:
"We were the ones deciding,"
because she was a teacher at a faculty
"whenever we are to hire somebody,
then the whole collective sits down
and we decide."
It is similar to voting
for the major in Hong Kong;
I give you the list, and within
that framework you have your freedom.
A huge breakthrough in the political
practice in Yugoslavia was
when there was no more
voting for a list as a whole
but when they'd add
few more names to it.
Then it means you have
your freedom, don't
have to choose this
one, that one will do.
It will be ten on
the list of fifteen.
And for years before that, it was - we
choose ten, here's the list of ten.
That's what
we choose.
For that purpose, and it is
convenient, because this really
directly reflected
upon my life...
The Socialist Alliance of the Working
People is a massive political organisation
which was established for
the purpose of the elections,
for the purpose of what I've just
told you.
I give you the list, and on the Socialist
Alliance you choose the delegates
from the list
I gave you.
Then again, I gather those delegates
and they choose the higher level,
and I completely control them.
They are on the list I gave you.
Of course, one wasn't
allowed to talk about it.
The way it reflected
upon my life is somewhat bizarre.
At the beginning of this conversation
I mentioned that I am at an age to retire,
and I have
no pension.
(sigh)
Several associations contacted me.
My diplomas and awards
allow me to be
a member of certain associations.
And it's a wide spectrum, from
translators' to philosophers' associations.
There are
at least ten.
My late friend, actor Mića Tomić,
a doctor and an actor, persuaded me
to do it because he was a coordinator
of some of those artistic associations.
There was only
one problem:
all those associations were,
according to the law, a collective
member of the Socialist
Alliance of the Working People.
The idea of somebody signing me in
against my will, automatically,
collectively into some
political organisation,
is something that still
gives me the chills.
I cannot
accept that.
I haven't found anybody who would
think or act in a similar way.
It is probably the reason why
I cannot explain my case
to the pension fund.
It cannot be resolved.
However, I'm not even trying
to resolve it.
But I want to say, this connection
between political associations
and your basic life conditions is
so strong that people don't even notice it.
While breathing, people forget
about the existence of air, they think
it is empty, and there, well,
breathing exists...
But no, there
is that air.
This is the political substance which
will poison you if you enter it,
even on a
massive basis.
Did you have any
knowledge or information
regarding the
treatment of
political opponents in former Yugoslavia?
What was your attitude towards it?
My first experience
of that kind...
When we were protesting
against that system...
I'm using the plural
because it was after all
a massive student movement,
a sort of rebellion.
Saying that the Party
was Stalinist and repressive,
I thought I was speaking metaphorically,
that it wasn't so.
Then I joined the army,
the guard,
where it was even worse
than I could imagine.
It resembled the Party
meetings in 1946.
I had the chance to hear of, and also
in my social surroundings and in my family,
there were many people
who were subject to political repression.
But nobody talked willingly or easily about
it, most of them didn't talk at all.
My first wife's father, my father-in-law,
the academy professor at that time,
was an "Ibeovac" (a Stalinist),
The father of my second wife,
Nataša Kandić, was also an "Ibeovac".
They said little, but
it was very hard.
They supported me because it seemed to
them that at least somebody was protesting.
People who were after the war
persecuted as the so-called "landers",
based on the system of compulsory
deliveries of produce,
In my grandmother's village, she is
the heroine of my movie "Plastic Jesus",
there were tens,
even hundreds.
And people who have, as
former Chetniks, since
I didn't have such contact
with the Ustashe,
I was too young to come across
such people while I lived in Croatia,
later on, I lived more in Serbia,
and I saw more of these people.
I found them every now and then. When
somebody sees I speak openly,
then they tell me:
"I was..."
A man in your
movie crew appears and says:
"You know, as a 'Youth' I was
with Draža." And so...
They told me
about the repression.
However, what I really learned about
the repression, and in a wider context,
on the territory of the whole Yugoslavia,
it happened when I was imprisoned.
There were several people who were
extremely significant to me.
That is why I treat the prison in my life
as an additional university.
There I initially made friends,
it was very precious to me,
with Adem Demaçi,
who was...
That is how and when I understood how big,
how long-lasting and how serious
the problem with
Albanians in Yugoslavia was
and got
involved in that direction.
The other person who was very
interesting and important to me
was late
Đura Đurović.
He was one of the
leading pre-war masons
and a member of the
Draža Mihajlović staff.
A lawyer, a Doctor of Law.
Obtained his PhD at Sorbonne.
An intellectual, a man who wasn't
involved in any war activities,
or anything, but as a prominent
citizen he was called here, he did that.
Draža also had one
Muslim among his staff and...
It was all slightly different
in the beginning.
He informed me of the numerous things
that happened during the war
and after the war to him, because right
after the war, he was imprisoned for
six years because he was
a member of that staff.
One of the most intersting aquaintances
and friendships I had at the time
was with late Vojkan Lukić, the third
most important manager of UDBA at the time.
He was the head
of UDBA in Serbia.
Penezić was a coordinator for political
activities and what not, and Ranković
was at
the very top.
When they removed Ranković,
they removed all
of them, as well. Penezić
died before that.
But, then I gained insight in how it
functioned on their side.
And it was sordid and
completely improvised. It figures!
I could tell you a hundred stories.
But, also extremely repressive!
For example, when they went to Bosnia
after the fall of Užička Republic,
and because they came from
Serbia and most of them were Serbs,
the locals took them in as brothers
and immediately helped them, gave them food
let them sleep, let's see
what can be done next, and so on..
And then they wait
for the dark to fall to...
to kill it,
the herd.
And, so, a bunch of
other things.
Of course, those weren't the only
or the most important friendships
and associations
I had then.
It was quite an elite group,
including the late lawyer
Subotić, who was the president
of the Lawyer's Association of Serbia.
There was also late
Mihajlo Đurić, who was an
extremely precious and
important man to me.
We could talk
about philosophy, literature and music.
(smiling)
A large number of Albanian political
prisoners, with whom I developed
connections I could later
rely on in my engagement with Kosovo.
Then the whole so-called
"Bar group???
The new communists, which
was really interesting,
because people, believing that there were
no constitutional obstacles, thought that
by establishing the new communist party
they were doing something very legal
and that they would now
change that society.
What is perhaps the most interesting,
you get some people who are actually
politically persecuted, and convicted for
the so-called economic violations,
like Kojić and Elazar???
You get some respectful economists.
Then you have a certain society I
could compare to,
even consider much better than
the society which Josip Broz
had while he
was imprisoned before the war,
with Moša Pijade, Porabić, who
was translating Das Capital and so.
I think I got
the better end of the deal.
It was
excellent.
Were you informed
of the events from the late
1960s and early
1970s,
student protests
in Belgrade and Zagreb,
the removal of the Liberals in Serbia
the Road Affair in Slovenia?
What was your attitude
towards these events?
I think I
participated in these events.
I even developed and
led some of those activities.
I think that the circle of people who
took part in them are still connected.
I think it was a decisive
period of my life,
and in the life of Yugoslavia,
a very significant one.
(shrugs his shoulders)
If we start talking about this we will
talk for three more hours. (laughter)
So, it's some other story.
- All right.
Let's put it like
this; what were
the consequences
of your actions?
Expected.
When you enter a conflict, you must expect
either a victory or a failure.
And if you are at least reasonable,
you must know you won't win.
That helps you
develop certain strategies.
Then you try to do something
in order to, as much as possible,
achieve your goal, trying to
minimise the sacrifices and the dangers
that threaten you. Within that framework,
I was able to endure for twenty years.
Even later. And later, it was
less dangerous.
I must say that under Milošević's rule
it was considerably less dangerous
than during Broz's
rule, and now it is
much less dangerous
than under Milošević.
I hope that with the
resolution of pro-Russian
and pro-European
conflicts in Serbia,
and everything is at one point finished,
we will live in a society
where it won't be
dangerous anymore
to take political stands
or give political statements.
Can you tell us more
about the conditions
of your
detention in prison?
Were there any
particular forms of
ideological indoctrination
and re-education?
Are you still in touch with
some of the prisoners?
Did you have a possibility to
communicate with your family, friends?
When it comes to maintaining the contact
with the people who were also
politically prosecuted or at least
politically aware, so they qualified for it
even though they were imprisoned for
some other criminal activities.
Contacts with those people, not as frequent
as they may wish or as
I would want, remained
to this day.
Only by dying, one leaves that contact.
Those contacts are forever.
It is not always with the like-minded
people, far from it.
But they are people who, based on their
common experience, are like classmates
or college friends, or fellow
soldiers, who always remain that.
As for the treatment, it wasn't any
camp treatment
like those in Manjača and those in
the German camps during
World War II
or those in Stalin's camps.
Or those in Yugoslavia immediately after
the war, even in the time of buy-out
even in 1946, 1947
and 1948.
No. It was more or less
a normal prison, but
overcrowded, so that the number of the
prisoners was more than double.
Because there were many
arrests in those years.
I am talking about
the early 1970s.
Those conditions were
really poor.
Not to mention...
There was the basic
health protection.
The food was neat, but
not to go there,
it wasn't something a normal
person would eat.
And it isn't something to be compared with
what was eaten in the army,
which I am well aware of, because from
the army I went to prison, so suddenly
the army looked like a luxurious restaurant
in comparison to what was eaten there.
Well, one can live with it. Alive man
gets used to it, as Solzhenitsyn
remarkably described in "One
Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich"
Almost every day ended the same way as
his novel - "It wasn't raining.
They didn't make me work hard.
I found two cigarette butts.
All in all, it
wasn't a bad day.
It wasn't like that.
It wasn't horrible.
Once a month I could
see my closest relatives
during a 45-minute long visit.
Every other month I had one package.
Then, the strict and regular prison
weren't the same. We called the strict one
a sentence, for us, political prisoners,
and the regular, with more
privileges,
was for the others.
To get those privileges, one
could qualify.
When I had served more
than half of my sentence
they offered me this
kind of privilege.
My attitude was that I didn't go to
prison to obtain privileges and ranks,
that I wasn't here by my own will and
that I am completely uninterested for it.
You cannot sell yourself for two
packs of cigarettes.
If they offered something better and bigger
I don't know, but they weren't offering.
The most interesting thing is that there
was a lot of physical abuse,
beatings, prison riots
and all kinds of police setups,
but it didn't involve
political prisoners.
It considered some criminals,
the usual criminals with whom
the country, the police respectively,
had some conflicts with
And, what is more interesting, those from
diaspora, who were kidnapped or caught
somehow in this territory,
who advocated
the terrorism or organising
against the state,
therefore, those people who were
liquidated by the Broz regime abroad,
but if he caught them alive, he
wouldn't liquidate them, but put them
into prisons, but then
they'd get beaten.
It didn't happen to us,
the political prisoners.
Despite our protesting and
speaking against it,
and other numerous ways we expressed
and practiced our solidarity with those
people who were subject to those
prominently illegal proceedings,
we were
off the hook.
What is maybe interesting,
politically interesting:
since there were many of us, let's say
about thirty political prisoners,
not counting
the Bar group and the Albanians
I am not saying this because I don't
consider them as equally qualified
political prisoners, but because in those
two groups, sometimes the interests
were differently
formulated.
We used to consider creating pressure
and pushing for separation and
special treatment because there was no
reason, and in some countries and in the
pre-war Yugoslavia it was
that way; if you are held
responsible for those
actions, they separate you,
you are neither a thief nor a murderer
but you did something else.
So, we decided,
I proposed the idea,
that there were only a few of us, that
it won't be good and that we won't be able
to protect our interest, nor will we
have the adequate influence or the
authority in the prison surroundings
if we wanted to separate.
So, we, especially late
Pavluško, Miširović and I
mostly held great authority with
the prisoners because we wrote
their pleas and complaints, argued
with the country instead of them.
Not hiding that
it was us who were doing it.
We fought for the
books and against the
censorship, both for
ourselves and for them.
For example, we fought for the Bible to
enter prison, and we never
succeeded. The Bible as well as the Qur'an.
We didn't succeed.
But the prison state
knew how to appreciate it.
Therefore, our
protection was perfect.
We weren't protected by the police
but by the prisoners.
But, then you have to be with them,
you're not supposed to have demands as
a political prisoner,
to act as a special species,
"I've got nothing to
do with thieves".
You have to have more understanding
for that...
Have you ever received
any compensation due
to imprisonment and
if yes, what kind?
Did you get any sort of
recognition for your
suffering in prison,
and if yes, what kind?
No, never anything. But, I must say
I never even asked for it.
Because my stand is that they have to
do it themselves, I shouldn't beg for it.
At one point
my friend,
I was really engaged in the Roma issues
and cooperated a lot with this man,
was a delegate in the Parliament,
he suggested that the Serbian Parliament
rehabilitates me and conducts judicial
proceedings for this rehabilitation.
They refused to put it
on the agenda.
It was during Slobodan Milošević's time.
They didn't want to deal with it.
Afterwards, nobody
raised that issue.
Money sure is a nice thing, but
I have everything I need in my life.
I don't depend on somebody
compensating for my troubles.
And for sure, I won't beg for
somebody to rehabilitate me.
It should be their
own doing.
Rajko Đurić,
that is the man in question,
afterwards, on several occasions said
it was the Parliament's shame that
they're not able to
support something like that.
My case is convenient for such a matter;
when you have people who were
prosecuted for organising
themselves against the state,
organising the dissolution
of constitutional order,
for different forms of
prominently political acts,
then you primarily have to prove
that it wasn't so.
Here you have a prosecution
of one movie.
Although, that is the outcome
of a range of activities,
of a certain police attitude that
it should be solved that way.
There is also this recklessness
"why don't we condemn him
for making
that movie?"
You can't do that, it is the freedom of
speech, it is some work of art,
even failed,
but still a work of art by its status.
It was easier to
defend it then.
That, however,
wasn't done.
It seems to me that the rehabilitation
shouldn't focus
primarily or only on the people who had
suffered the worst or the obvious
forms of repression. I always say that the
epression in culture involved something
that had nothing to
do with the legal
system, and it is the
career reprimanding.
Many of my younger colleagues never
got the chance to make their own movie
just because they
belonged to that generation
or to that set of ideas or were engaged
in June protests,
then they couldn't get a job
in television, of movie budgets,
or space in the press to
publish something of their own.
I think, regardless of the repression,
that I was in a better position because I
did get such an opportunity
and I used it.
And it should primarily somehow,
be acknowledged, at least admitted,
that those people were broken
in their careers for political reasons.
And they couldn't keep their heads
above the surface.
Were you informed on political
upheavals in Yugoslavia during the 1980s?
Yes, yes. Once again, I
participated in all of it.
I was primarily a journalist, but
also pursued numerous other things.
One thing, which is my idea, but
not a great idea, a man doesn't have
a patent on it, but one that had
political consequences, it developed
into a trade that was later on
before the court,
it is an "open university".
It happened then.
The eighties are something after
my release from prison.
I was in prison
until 1975.
If you were once characterized as
a prisoner, then the gloves are off,
there is no
self-consciousness of any kind.
Then you shoot precisely, then
you shoot in the head. I did that.
However, I did it even before,
only in a more limited aspect.
But then we
played with open cards.
Prison is a significant experience
which helps you know yourself,
to realize what you
can withstand.
Before experiencing something,
you can't quite be certain
how you'll go through it,
if you can do it.
Once you realise you can, then the state
has a much more dangerous opponent.
Those were the
eighties.
One of my proposals,
in 1985, 1986, I suppose,
no, no, it's already Sloba Milošević...
No! 1982, 1983.
In "Filmske novosti", I was supposed to
back up that project, so it
fell apart later on,
as well as "Filmske novosti".
One thing, that would, on the one hand
be very valuable if it had been done
and on the other hand, in the best possible
manner expresses my political views,
and the way I perceive political
involvement in culture or the media.
It is a documentary that was supposed
to be called "Yugoslavia 100 minutes",
It was before the
breakup of Yugoslavia
and my aim was to
use one minute,
which is a completely
conceptual project,
to give one minute to 50
most prominent politicians
and 50 most prominent oppositionists,
of any provenance
from all the main
places in Yugoslavia.
And that makes
100 minutes.
They would appear
in alphabetical order.
So, no politics
would be involved.
They would get one minute to say
what they consider to be the main problem
in Yugoslavia at this moment
and how it could be
overcome.
In one minute
From Stane Dolanac to Šešelj,
the full range.
And it wouldn't be a problem
to produce it because it is very cheap.
I believe, if we had that thing today,
it would seem weird to us,
but it would make
an important document.
We don't have it.
But there, that's one of my engagements.
What was your attitude towards
Slobodan Milošević's political rise?
I knew Sloba Milosevic back in
1968, during the University Committee,
as a Stalinist.
Since my friend Nebojša Popov
mostly covered Slobodan Milošević
during his legal studies,
we knew him rather well even before
he became something important,
therefore, while he was still in
the City Committee
after that.
While he was developing
in the shadow of Ivan
Stambolić, we were all
somewhat puzzled as to
how one liberal Ivan Stambolić is
suddenly a mentor to somebody
of a rather Stalinist
provenance.
From the moment when in Kosovo he
said: "No one shall beat these people!"
I knew exactly what I was dealing with.
I immediately engaged myself that way.
My engagement against Slobodan
Milošević is only five minutes
younger than his
first appearance.
He is an extremely
dangerous man.
That manner of political
instrumentalisation of the ethnic
resentment is, in my opinion, the most
dangerous what could have been done.
I immediately knew what
I was dealing with,
and later, once the Knin rebellion started,
I went there to try to
engage there. All the time I was
here, I engaged against him.
And also by other means that were
at my disposition beyond Serbia:
as an editor on a radio ship in
the Adriatic, as a media officer
in William Walker's Verification Mission,
when it all started in Kosovo,
then as the head of Department for
Languages and Conference Management at
the UN mission in Kosovo, for about
seven years while it lasted.
All I could do against
Slobodan Milošević's regime, I did.
Therefore, my limited
resourcefulness and my limited powers
are to blame I
didn't do more.
He is still alive,
Slobodan Milošević.
He still rules Serbia.
And that war still hasn't finished.
What was your attitude towards
the declaration of Croatian independence
and the emergence of a multiparty
system in Croatia?
I think it was a
big misfortune.
I am certain, that if
it hadn't been for
Slobodan Milošević and
the history, primarily
his attempt to export
assemblies to Slovenia,
then, starting the conflicts in Slavonia,
which he later repeated in Bosnia as well,
there would be
no Franjo Tuđman.
Franjo Tuđman's victory in the elections
is no expression
of a fierce nationalist mood
in Croatia, but an expression of a strong
reaction against the dangerous nationalism
of Yugoslavia that was imposed upon Croatia
already after World War II,
and wasn't confirmed by the referendum.
I could understand what had
happened, but I believed that the
the greatest misfortune was that,
being obstructed in numerous ways,
Ante Marković was unable to
organise his elections in Croatia,
and when he organised them in Serbia,
it was already doomed.
Therefore, I think that the whole
situation was manipulated.
Maybe the most interesting thing about
Croatian independence is that
it had the same source as
the economic policy of
Slobodan Milošević, and that is the policy
of stealing from the alliance funds.
That borrowing from the National Bank
of Yugoslavia based on foreign currency
deposits was for mainly
done by Slobodan
Milošević, half as much and
immediately after him,
by Franjo Tuđman, then to a
lesser extent the Slovenians
and very little by
Macedonia and Bosnia.
That economic moment, in fact,
showed to what extent
a platform of common interests existed,
which was, during their negotiations
on the division of Bosnia,
pretty obvious.
What is interesting in
connection to Croatian independence
is that the question on how much it
would develop and remain
if it hadn't been for the Krajina
rebellion,which was in fact organised
and armed and managed and completely
instrumentalised by Belgrade.
I had the chance to discuss it with
the people who were in charge of it
and to those who inspired and organised it
all from here and to those there.
I also filmed some of it
and so.
Therefore, how Croatia integrates today,
primarily into Europe, then through Europe
again to Balkans, is in fact
one unnatural manner of natural process;
from the top to the bottom.
And all of it didn't have to happen.
At the moment when the Yugoslav Prime
Minister was Ante Marković
we had certain economic, financial
and political assumptions
and an international position that would
enable us to join Europe even then.
Because I was
at that time...
Late prime minister Mikulić used to say
we weren't interested because
it is one foreign party, when
in reality, he couldn't do anything.
At that time, I was leading
the first party, and we are
referring to the multi-party
system in Yugoslavia,
that is different from
the Communist Party.
It was the Transnational
Radical Party led by Marco Panella.
I was in charge of the
Yugoslavian branch at the time.
Our slogan was -
"Europe now".
Then it all, of course,
fell apart.
It fell apart in an interesting
manner, which is again inherent
to the multi-party system - my
friends decided to establish UJDI,
the Association for Yugoslav
Democratic Initiative.
I had issues
with it.
I said: "You know what, don't push
Yugoslavia into the title!
I would be ready to commit to
something that would promote
free expression of the citizens,
to see who's where.
Also, it doesn't matter how many
nationalists we have in Yugoslavia
and how many founders of
small national parties,
there will always be
as many Yugoslavians
all over Yugoslavia that they
will be the majority in Yugoslavia,
regardless of the fact that everywhere
locally they will be the minority."
It didn't suit them because the
attitude was somewhat socialist.
What was funny, then my friends
told me: "You know what,
we cover the same society.
Why don't you shut down your party,
so we can work, because we
count on the same 200 people."
I did so; transferred it to one colleague,
a professor. It slowly fades away.
And I continue with my engagement for
UJDI, like late Srđa Popović
to perform, and as their
proponent and I also wrote for them
and participated in their activities.
And I wasn't their member
because I considered it failed and
it proved failed
to go on Yugoslavian initiative,
so after the breakup of Yugoslavia
you're gone.
And it didn't have to be that way.
It was similar later on with the
best publication that was ever published
in Yugoslavia, it is the magazine
"Republic" which was shut down later on.
Why on earth "Republic"?
Is this anti-monarchism
the most important thing we
can say to people?
Say "rule of law", say "freedom",
say "cactus". Think of something!
Just not "Republic"!
It automatically rejects all...
However, no! "Republic" when we
write it, we refer to
"Res publica",
a public affair.
Allright, you may think so,
but not our readers, though.
There, that was the engagement
at that time.
You didn't get tired?
No, no, my doctor says
I can still do it for two, three years.
Two to three years?
- At least. - Or more! (laughter)
About the war.
Did you, immediately
before and during the war
act contrary to the
prevailing surroundings?
Why did you decide
to act that way?
As soon as the war started, I was...
We thought, a group of friends and I,
because we didn't have human resources to
establish a party, since there was already
a democratic party we wouldn't join
because it didn't have a straightforward
platform, we shouldn't establish a party.
Let's make newspapers.
So we
established "Vreme"
However, the state fell apart,
so can't do.
With the breakup of the state, I tried to,
mainly out of the state,
but always coming back, so somebody
can arrest me or kill me if they thought
that it is something they
have to do,
I worked for those foreign elements or
international elements
that were against the regime.
And I'd do it again.
It is efficient.
It turns out you are better protected
than if you only in your environment
say something. You will become more
dangerous but a better protected
enemy if you maximise your format,
and volume all the way instead of
acting timidly and cautiously in
the face of your enemy.
Your enemy will
have more respect for you
It applies to chess, as well,
not only to politics.
What were the consequences
of your actions?
I'd say, catastrophic
and on-going.
Compared to the opposition against Broz,
by overcoming the socio-psychological
mechanism that could best
be monitored through
Miša Mihailov, Milivoj Đilas,
some of our prominent,
and there were only a few,
the dissidents from those times.
The regime threat was so severe
that the surroundings simply discard you.
Then we all say: "Ignore him,
he is the enemy, you can't be with him".
It also happened
to me.
It was before
Broz died.
Then, without anyone's decision
or formal intervention,
when he died in 1980, they already started
looking for me in 1981.
They gave me certain jobs,
approached me on the streets
people who had
avoided me before that.
And it was obvious that I was, to a
certain extent, accepted by the group.
There is no need to say a lot,
but I was accepted.
Then, there was the next arrest,
prosecution, the Open University and so on.
Sloba Milošević was engaged
on the opposite side.
Some friends, who are still
prominent in these areas approached me:
"How can you,
as a Serb, do that?"
I'd say: "If you think of me as Serbian,
then think of me the way
Germans saw Tomas Mann
or Marlene Dietrich during Hitler's era.
That way we
can talk.
I'm no less Serbian,
but the problem is that it isn't
neither my policy nor my profession
but it is yours."
And then Slobodan Milošević was overthrown
and all of his associates, more or less
remained within the apparatus.
At first it seemed they
wouldn't, then Tadić,
decided to compromise,
to rehabilitate Dačić
in order to
take power...
And my strong political conviction, which
was familiar to Tadić, and it doesn't
matter that it was mine, it wasn't just
mine, there was this political conviction
that it was better to have a strong and
clearly articulated opposition
than getting power at any cost, which ties
your hands and prevents you
from pursuing democratic policy.
At that time, I wasn't well accepted,
although it was better than
during Milošević's
era, due to my
cooperation with
the United Nations
still referred to as the enemies
by our people
because of the attitude
towards NATO, referred
to as anti-Serbian,
because of the bombings
and so on. I don't know how
we will handle this
And because of all the talking in various
places, since the reporters
are interested in getting an interview,
only to turn it into a scandal.
I am the one suffering the
consequences, after all.
But all right, it is
the price of it all.
So it was all much better
than in Milošević's time,
but never completely.
I can still say that it
takes a lot of effort for me
to show affection and appreciation
towards people, to treat them
gently and carefully, whether they are
fascists or communists or just Serbs.
Or if they are not Serbs, to explain
to some of my Muslim, Croat
Slovenian or Albanian friends that not all
Serbs are the same, some are different.
That, if we are the same nation
it doesn't necessarily mean that
we have some open questions
or some different interests.
It still goes on and I have to say
that people here were still keeping me
at arm's length, it is,
"we shall talk but not kiss"
as our priests
would say:
"We will pray for each other,
but we will not pray together."
By defending myself from it and trying to
somehow establish my existence,
independent of any groups
or political forces, I believe I have
created one position outside Serbia,
that even my enemies can't discredit.
As Matija Bečković used to say
while we were dissidents:
"I don't mind if you say bad things
about me, you have to talk about me,
it is enough for me."
That's how you live.
Were you a part of the Anti-war
Campaign in the 1990s?
Absolutely, all the way,
in everything they did.
First, it was done by my closest friends,
second, whenever I was here,
even though I was mostly in the America
at that time, whenever I was here
my involvement
was direct.
Therefore, I didn't just participate in
those demonstrations, assemblies,
and so on, which I still
do, but it included
my ideas and resources
to some extent.
And by doing the things I believed
I was capable of or could do.
Almost all of it - black armband, carrying
bells and so on, I did in cooperation with
my set designer Emir Geljo.
It remained my style to this day,
even though it isn't necessary any more,
but then it was always better to
where something came from.
Then, when everyone who was
somehow connected to the Black Wave
was excluded from the cultural public, then
with my friends who weren't banished
I'd talk
about it...
I participated in editing and helped them
put their movies together,
but without the mention of
my name.
It was the same in America, during the
blacklisting, and in Stalin's time,
and it
is normal.
I still go with the flow,
even though it isn't necessary.
It is possible that I signed only
one-fourth of the things I did.
Everything else is either signed by others,
or... And I believe it is great that way.
In the Middle Ages,
the names of the
authors of the frescoes
and monasteries,
it doesn't matter who did them.
We do it for God,
no matter how it turns out.
What is your opinion on the bombing
of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia?
The best.
That's it?
- That's it.
What do you think about the process
of dealing with the past,
war consequences,
political violence consequences?
Dealing with the past, even if for the
reform and the establishment of the rule of
law, almost anywhere in the world it is
necessary to establish some material
preconditions and that people
have something to eat, not
to kill each other over a bowl
of rice, here it isn't so.
This is Europe.
We haven't got problems with some rice.
But we do have issues with
dealing with the past.
It makes things harder, deforms and
very often completely falsifies our way
of comprehending our daily lives and
blocks the possibility to connect,
to integrate if it's about Europe or
any world that surrounds us,
or the former Yugoslavia territory and
ultimately prevents the possibility
of a free, investigative and creative
approach to any open issue
concerning culture, education or
organisation of cultural life.
We're over our heads in this tar.
It is very difficult to get out of it.
What I find especially disheartening
is that the generational shift
doesn't guarantee
solving this issue.
Dealing with the past for people from the
Balkans, Serbia especially,
is very important because it is like
wanting to save somebody from cancer so
don't cut off just the growth, but you
have to remove much more tissue,
maybe three times more
than the growth.
Here, dealing with the past wasn't even
done in connection to the Kosovo battle.
And with what still hurts us and
what is at the core of the issues we have
with Kosovo are
the Balkan wars.
If we are dealing with
the people who think
that the assassination
of King Alexander
is something extremely different than the
assassination of Franz Ferdinand,
I really don't have anything
to say to them.
There is one absolute compatibility, those
two things are structurally identical.
Secondly, If the era of
five hundred years when we were
a part of the developed
Ottoman Empire, which in the
end, with the dissolution
of the Ottoman Empire
started displaying symptoms of
decay and symptoms of withdrawal
from the rule of law in the name of
local oppressors.
If we can's see it as
a period which is an inherent part
of the Serbian history, and not
the Turkish occupation over Serbia,
that didn't even exist,
than that part of dealing
with the past must be
done as soon as possible.
Because everything we have
today was created then. It is us!
When foreigners come and listen to our
music, they say, yes, great,
Middle-Eastern music,
Turkish music.
And to us, it's something
completely different.
We see a great difference between
Sarajevo and Banja Luka ćevap.
Really,
come on!
If a person from Holland
comes here and eats
ćevapi, they don't
see that difference.
therefore, dealing with the past is
much more important to us, an I'd say,
harder, despite the fact
that the number of crimes
is less than it was with
Germany after the war.
I know there is no serious
and successful way that
this can happen.
But may it happen at all.
I hope it doesn't prevent us
from integrating into a civilised world.
As my late friend
Vane Ivanović liked to say,
it's not written in stone that Serbia or
Croatia will exist in a hundred years time.
We have to become aware of the
burden of our dynasties that haven't
even lasted for 40 years,
what kind of dynasties are those.
What is the Army's role in Serbian politics
before World War I
and in entering
the Balkan wars.
And, of course, the most important thing
to be left for last -
how long will we remain Russia's hostages,
to our extent, in this part of the world?
We must figure out how it happened,
that's the past we need to deal with.
We must figure out what Russian
tsar Nikolai means to us, he didn't only
ruin our, but his own
country, as well.
And we can't find a way
out of it.
And the last question: what
do you expect from the future?
What do you wish for yourself, your closest
people and the wider social community?
Above all,
civilising.
I wish people were more curious
and literate, more open and to somehow
realise that life is not about
what you ate, but about
the value system by which you live, where
you can share with the people around you.
in a modern globalised world
that surrounding is the world.
I really wished that Serbism wasn't
anybody's profession or policy,
but a system of cultural values that we
wish, simultaneously with all the others
to share with the world.
I wish this piece of the world
became normal.
But don't think my wish will
contribute much to make it happen.
This lasted a bit, right?
- All right, all right.
Experience I have with these matters
is that the adrenaline in the conversation
rises with those who ask and
those who answer questions, so we all say:
Wow, this was good!
We can make something out of it.
It wasn't! You'll see
when you listen to it.
A mile long sentences,
a chewing gum.
Nobody with a sane mind
could watch it.
But, well, you'll do with it
what you can...
If we mix you well
with Mićunović… Kidding.
Yes, yes, yes.
It's yours.
Give me that thing to sign, that release.
- Yes, we will.
So I don't file a suit later on,
take a million dollars from you.
It must be in the next 70 years
because the paper says
that after 70 years it
becomes public property.
It's two questions.
- You know what.
Let me just shoot the scenes for covering.
- Certainly.
If we miss something on this occasion,
I am at your disposal,
whether to sign something...
I like it that you are left-handed.
My president Obama writes that way
and creative people
very often.
I like it, too.
However, I am ambidextrous,
maybe that's why I have
some understanding for it.
Here? (signs) - Yes.
Shall I fill this in?
- Yes, it should be filled in.
- All right.
I like the
term "the narrator".