Time of Death - North American Society for Serbian Studies
Transcription
Time of Death - North American Society for Serbian Studies
3 SERBIAN STUDIES PUBLISHED BY TilE NORTH AMERICAN SOCIEI'Y FOR SERBIAN STUDIES CONTENTS VOLUME 5, NUMBER 4 FALL 1990 Edit Petrovic and Andrei Simic MONTENEGRIN COLONISTS IN VOJVODINA: OBJECTIVE AND SUBJECTIVE MEASURES OF ETHNICITY 1 5 Nicholas Moravcevich THE PORTRAIT OF NIKOLA PASIC IN DOBRICA COSIC'S NOVEL TIME OF DEATH 21 Zora Devrnja Zimmerman ON THE HERMENEUTICS OF ORAL POETRY: AN ANALYSIS OF THE KOSOVO MYTH OS 31 Svetlana Velmar-Jankovic THE RECEPTION OF MOMCILO NASTASIJEVIC IN SERBIA AND YUGOSLAVIA SINCE 1938 41 Dragan Kujundzic THE EARLY CRNJANSKI: THE UNBEARABLE LIGHTNESS OF WRITING 55 BOOK REVIEWS Slavko Todorovich The Chilandarians: Serbian Monks on the Greek Mountain . Boulder, Colorado East European Monographs, 1989 (Paul Pavlovich) 69 Nicholas Moravcevich 21 THE PORTRAIT OF NlKOLA PASIC IN DOBRICA COSIC'S NOVEL TIME OF DEATH Tolstoyan in scope and Dantesque in perception Cosic's vast panorama of Serbia's most difficult struggle for survival in its modern history contains a kaleidoscopic mixture of historical and fictional personages, each of whom may appear to a casual reader to be equally significant in his own corner of the vast novel's polyphonic structure. Yet, a closer, more analytical examination of the novel's dynamis clearly reveals that ideologically the most significant portion of its action revolves around three characters, each of whom symbolically represents an entire segment of the national life and aspirations. The first of these archetypal figures is of course Vukasin Katie, the apostle of the liberal Serbian intelligentsia, the quintessential Westernizer, the Cartesian rebel against the shifty parochialism of the contemporary Serbian politics and a firm believer in the immutable value of high moral principles in both political theory and practice. Uncompromising in the political arena almost to the point of self-righteousness, he, like a modern Diogenes, most of the time stands alone above the crowd of petty politicians lamenting in vain over the follies of a small nation that stubbornly clings to goals that are logically beyond its reach. The Serbian tragedy of 1915 is the ultimate crucible of his spiritual mellowing through which he finally discovers in himself that long dormant affinity with his native roots, with that woe-surfaited, sullen, sinewy peasant Serbia whose stubborn resistance descends to the lower depths of the irrational, untouched by the neat formulae of Cartesian logic and the predictable limits of the struggle for political gains. The second archetypal figure in this thematic triangle is General Zivojin MiSic, the tenacious commander of the First Serbian Army and the hero of the great ballle of Suvobor Mountain, in which the Austrian invaders, already in possession of one third of the Serbian national territory and confident of an easy victory, arc suddenly stopped, defeated and chased out of Serbia altogether by that same molly peasant force which to them only a few days before seemed to be on the brink of total exhaustion. MiSic is the epitome of the crusty Serbian nationalist. Endowed with an unshakable faith in the tenacity and stamina of the Serbian peasant soldier when he is de- Nicholas Moravcevich 22 fending his threshold, Misic manages bettor than any of th o high Serbian military commanders lo combine his vast formal knowledge of the art of war with an uncanny, visceral sense for the capacity of endurance that can be expected from a common man in circumstances of unprecedented national calamity. Himself a child from a peasant family of modest means, he never lost that simplicity, and integrity which characterize the unpretentious, rural existence and that healthy down-to-earth common sense which form s th o essence of popular wisdom. And il is precisely his strong bond with .Ll~e people and the gift of sharp common sense that make Genera l MJSLC rather skeptical about the grand idea of the Yugoslav unity that is so readily embraced by the bevy of the politicians and officers around him. In MiSic's view a common homeland of all tho South Slavs would be an edifice erected by very unequal partners, and as such would have little prospect for long term tranquility and survival. Moreover, in the pursuit of this dream Misic sees and laments the abandonment of a much older and more logical quest for an unified Serbia to which the nation was dedicated throughou t ils modern history. And so, with all his instincts General Misic senses that the Austro-German military threat to the country may, despite ils awesomeness, ultimately prove a lesser peril for national survival than the mushrooming popular belief among the Serbs in tho possibility of a brotherly union with the Croats and Slovenes, a goal whose realization would require the voluntary and permanent sacrifice of both Serbia's yet unrealized national aspirations and its very stalehood. This is why to all Katie's arguments about the need for the South Slav union, MiSic's can only reply: To je vase politicko maloumlje! Neccmo bili ni veCi ni jaci ujedinjenjem sa nasim sadasn jim ratnim pro.Li~ nicima, koje nikad nismo upoznali kao bracu. AIL th zato dobra poznajemo kao ralne neprijatelje. Sa njim~ koji juriSaju od Drine psujuci nam majku opan~arsku 1 pravoslavnu, sa njima koji sa uperon im bajoncli~~ vii":u - "Predajte se, braco Srbi!" - n e mozomo nikad btti slobodni. 1 The craftiest weaver of that very Yugoslav dream which so worries General Misic and the third great figure of this novel's archetypal Nicholas Moravcevich 23 triumvirate is the Prime Minister of the Royal Serbian Government and the leader of the country's ruling Radical Party, Nikola Pasic. In the Fall of 1914, when we first meet him in CosiC's novel, he already has behind him some thirty-six years of keenest involvement in his country's political life and almost twenty-five years of service in the highest offices of the national government. Tempered by his vast experience as a politician and statesman, Cosic's Pasic, holding the helm of state in the most agonizing moments of Serbia's modern history, appears as a towering symbol of his nation's dogged determination to carve its own destiny according to its own choices and free from the arrogant dictates of either its friends or foes among the great nations of Europe. And for this impossible stand, his past struggles for survival have given him formidable credentials. As Cosic himself summarizes: Otac mu je bio seljak, a on je stigao do carskih trpeza i razgovarao sa carem Rusije. Bio Bakunjinov drug i anarhista, pa je Srbija pod njegovim vocstvom postala najjaca ddava od doba Nemanjica. U Svajcarskoj saznao sta je demokratija, licno od Bakunjina sta je revolucija. Nisu ga hteli za profesora geodezije, a morali su da ga izaberu za vodju najvece politicke stranke. Na vlast se uspeo najstrmijim putem: robijao, provukao se kroz sramotu, izdaje, klevete. Povijao se i svijao. I temenovao pred prestolom Obrenovica. Pljuvali ga kao izdajnika, pa ga prorokom nazivali. Bezao je iz zemlje kao provalnik ducandzijskih kasa, vratio se kao spasilac Srbije. Najco se emigrantskog hleba i Bugarske soli. Nista mu nije poklonjeno, niSta. 2 A broad understanding of human nature, accumulated in the decades of struggle for political and personal survival has taught Pasic how to listen in silence and pay attention to details, how to exploit trivia to diffuse tensions, hostility and fears, how to be cautious and patient when formulating decisions and swift when executing them, conciliatory in tone with everyone but unyielding on principles, attentive to and respectful of opponents and leary of overzealous followers. Not blessed with the gift of flamboyant oratory, he accomplished his goals and often disarmed his opponents with a certain Nicholas Moravcevich 24 folksy directness and simplicity of manner that showed his indifference toward the outer trappings of power. The very same manner helped him very much to retain all his life a strong and direct link with the land's peasant masses for whose desires and inclinations he had an unfailing instinct and a most profound respect. That same brevity of expression and preference for silence over rhetorical verbosity which served him so well with his rural followers, his political opponents frequently found disturbing rather than praiseworthy. On that subject the Italian diplomat Carlo Sforza, who know Pasic well and whose book on him Cosic most likely had consulted, says the following: Pasic's long silence suggested tho sinister intrigues of a grand vizier. In truth, Pasic's laconic style, his hatred of all rhetorical pathos were but a silent lesson offered to those of his compatriots who allowed themselves an excessive display of their sentiments - or who quite simply indulged in those eternal discussions that so many Slavs mistake for action. 3 Both Pasic's pregnant silences and his skill to channel discourse with but a few understated summary phrases in the direction he found most desirable, have been admirably captured by Cosic in his depiction of the joint meeting of the Serbian govern men l, tho Supreme Headquarters of the Army, and Crown Prince Alok sandar in the Fall of 1914 in Valjevo, and of the Prime Minister's preparation for an even more agonizing secret meeting of tho Serbian Parliament in the early Fall of 1915 in Nish, shortly before the second AustroGerman attack on Serbia. As Cosic shows, the participants in both of these gatherings are debating how to respond to the harsh Allied demands that Serbia hands over Macedonia to the Bulgarians and Banal to the Romanians as a price of their joining the Entente powers against tho AustroGerman coalition. Such an appalling request from a small nation that went to war against the Central Powers in response to an ultimatum that actually asked for a lesser sacrifice, is the lasl straw for everyone present and Pasic skillfully exploits this justifiable anger over such a horrible injustice brought about by those vory allies who had solemnly sworn to help Serbia in her most crucial struggle for Nicholas Moravcevich 25 survival. At the Valjevo gathering, he first plainly discloses the scope of this harsh demand and after that deliberately avoids entering into the heated discussion concerning the requested territorial sacrifices until all those present are utterly exhausted. Then, in the simplest language possible, he quickly outlines the only available course left to his beleaguered nation by slating to Crown Prince Aleksandar: "Pa, ovaj, Prestolonaslednice. Mislim da je stanje jasno. Ne damo Makedoniju. Da kod saveznika jos jace zakukamo za municiju i pomoc. I da se borimo do pobede." 4 This he restates for himself even more clearly several months. later, as he prepares his notes for the secret session of the Serbian Parliament on the eve of the second Austro-German invasion of the country in the Fall of 1915. While the Suvobor Mountain victory of General Misic, which followed the already mentioned Council at Valjevo, allowed Pasic some time to procrastinate with the Serbian response to the Allied request, the impending new enemy invasion revives that painful issue in all its immediacy again. Yet Pasic is unshaken by the obvious injustice of compelling Serbia after all it had done for the Allied cause to make this sacrifice as well, for he had never expected to find any generosity in the foreign policies of the great powers. Cosic repeatedly underlines that the essence of his political genius lies in his early realization that Serbia can only save itself as a nation if it deliberately overlooks the duplicity of its allies, if it delays as much as possible with the territorial payments for the socalled "friendship" of its Balkan neighbors and if it continues to fight against its foes for victory with all its might and far beyond the boundaries of political prudence or easy national gain. Therefore, CosiC's Pasic notes at the end that in the Parliament debate he would disarm opponents of this policy by admitting at the outset everything that they may want to point out, concluding: Vukasinu Katicu i slicnima javno reci: znam, gospodo da su saveznici nepravedni i bezdusni prema Srbiji i znam da to nije prvi put. Zrtvuju nas i sada, ne ticemo ih se mnogo. Ako se pobunimo ili izjavimo - ne verujemo vam, necemo s varna - bice im jos lakse da nas se otarase. Sa saveznicima danas nikako njihovom politikom - neverstvom i ucenom. U takvim igrama gubi Srbija. Mora im se, dakle, verovati. Makar se i pravili Nicholas Moravcevich 26 da verujemo. Nikako drukcijc. I istrajavanjem u veri vrsiti pritisak na njih. Prod Evropom i citavim svetom zaduzili ih vernoscu. Danas kad im na Balkanu niko vise nc veruje - Srbija trcba da ih zaduzi i prezaduzi vernoscu. 5 And to this conviction CosiC's Pasic remains faithful to the very end of the tragic Serbian retreat before the joint Austro-German and Bulgarian onslaught. As the unoccupied national territory gradually becomes smaller and smaller and the promised Allied help remains nowhere in sight, FasiG's popularity begins to wane even among his hardiest supporters. Yet the escalating national calamity only strengthens his belief in the utmost need for an additional super-human defense effort on the part of the exhausted nation, its demoralized army and its disillusioned leadership. To that effect he orders tho evacuation of all national institutions, all movable cultural and historical relics, all children over fourteen years of age and a large portion of tho civilian population from the captured cities and towns, and thus he gradually turns the initial military retreat into a vast national exodus. Pressed from three sides by the pursuing enemies, tho nation on the move is slowly squeezed into the desolate region of Kosovo, the last corner of the national territory and the one in which five cen turies earlier the medieval Empire of Serbia was crushed by the ouoman Turks. Yet even then, in the town of Prizrcn, during tho last joint meeting of the Government and the Supreme Army Headquarters held on Serbian soil, CosiC's Pasic, amidst universal gloom prophetically announces: Iako kapitulacija ima jake osnove i pravc razloge, narodu skracuje htve, ja smatram da mi no treba da kapituliramo iz jednog jedinog razloga. Iako smo isterani sa svoje teritorije, cvrsto sam ubedjon da mi ovaj rat mozemo dobiti. Pred nama je najveca pobeda u nasoj istoriji. Daleka je, ali je ja jasno vi dim. 6 Confident of this, Pasic counsels the withdrawal of both the army and the civilian escapees through the Albanian mountains to the sea and Allied help. The winter exodus westward, which ensues, is the Nicholas Moravcevich 26 da verujemo. Nikako drukcije. 1 istrajavanjem u veri vrsili pritisak na njih. Prod Evropom i citavim svet?m zaduziti ih vernoscu. Danas kad im na Balkanu n1ko viSe ne veruje - Srbija trcba da ih zad uzi i prezaduzi vernoscu .5 And to this conviction CosiC's Pasic rem ai ns faithful to the ver~ end of the tragic Serbian retreat before the joint Austro-Gorman an Bulgarian onslaught. As the unoccupied national territory gradually becomes smaller and smaller and the promised Allied help remain s nowhere in sight, Pasic's popularity begins to wane even among his hardiest s uppo~tf ers. Yet the escalating national calamity only strengthens his belle in the utmost need for an additional super-human defense effort ?11 the part of the exhausted nation, its demoralized army an? its dJ~i illusioned leadership. To that effect he orders the evacua l1o~ of all national institutions, all movable cultural and historical rohcs, a children over fourteen years of age and a large portion of tho civilian population from the captured cities and towns, and thus he gradually turns the initial military retreat into a vas t nation al exodus. Pressed from three sides by the pursuing enemies, tho nation on the move is slowly squeezed into the desolate region of Kosovo, the l~st corner of the national territory and the one in which five ccntunes earlier the medieval Empire of Serbia was crushed by the Ollo~.an Turks. Yet even then, in the town of Prizren , during tho las t JO!llt meeting of the Government and the Supremo Army Headquarters held on Serbian soil, Cosic's Pasic, amidst universa l gloom prophetically announces: Iako kapilulacija ima jake osnove i prave razloge, narodu skracuje htve, ja smatram da mi no treba da kap~ iluliramo iz jednog jedinog razloga. Iako smo iste_ram sa svoje teritorije, cvrsto sam ubodjcn da mi ova) ~a~ mozemo dobili. Pred nama je najveca pobeda u naso) istoriji. Daleka je, ali je ja jasno vidim. 6 Confident of this, Pasic counsels the withdrawal of both the armY and the civilian escapees through the Albanian mountains to the sea and Allied help. The winter exodus westward, which ensues, is the Nicholas Moravcevich 27 supreme sacrifice of the tottering nation both for the Allied cause and for its own fading dream of resurrection. Yet when that as well does not spur the Allies to rush food and supplies to the starving survivors of this epic retreat, even Pasic's faith in the national salvation through them _begins to peter out. For the first time since the outbreak of the war Cosic shows him sitting at the Council of State in Skadar without any plan for a way out. There, as Crown Prince Aleksandar concludes his review of the Serbian deplorable situation with the question "What are we to do now", both the assembled ministers and the disillusioned Pasic respond only with a long and , uneasy silence. From this moment until the end of Cosic's novel, Pasic is shown only once more, and in circumstances that even more poignantly underscore the impression that he is an exhausted statesman who has lost control over events and people. The setting for this scene is the Albanian harbor of Medova, from where the Italian Government has finally consented to evacuate to Brindisi only the Serbian King, the highest government officials and the Allied diplomatic representatives. And there, in the harbor commander's office, surrounded and vilified by the thousands of starving Serbian refugees, humiliated and helpless Pasic is again shown not only speechless, but sobbing. In the few remaining pages of the novel Cosic continues in an almost summary form with account of the aftermath of the great exodus. As the French navy finally transports the Serbian army to the island of Corfu and the civilian refugees to Italy, North Africa and France, his vast chronicle of the great Serbian anabasis comes to its end. Whether or not Cosic's choice to conclude his novel at this point is organically justifiable is an issue over which the critics will spill much ink in the days to come. Certainly, the redeployment of the Serbian army several months later on lhe Salonika Front and its final successful struggle to liberate the lost homeland and realize Pasic's dream of tho union of all South Slavs, would not only provide enough material for an interesting fifth volume of this vast work, but would also give an organically more appropriate conclusion to a story rooted in the great historical events of the First World Wa_r. But oven if one sets aside the question of the most appropriate historical (or chronological) span for a composition of this kind, what still remains is Nicholas Moravcevich 28 to determine whether Lh e novel in its present form is orga nically complete from the standpoint of Lhe satisfactory revelation of the destinies of ils most significant characters. And although Cosic himself in his essay "Romani islorija" clearly stales that tho historicallychronological and thematic frame of his novel deliberately encompasses only that part of the Serbian war struggle which ends with its army's belated departure to Corfu, his choice of such narrow temporal boundaries is from Lh e standpoint of character development quite unfortunate. Cosic's treatment of the destiny of any of the three archetypal characters mentioned hero could serve as an example of this, since all of them survive tho agony of the great exodus, but even a ~lance at that of Pasic alone clearly suffices to illustrate the point. Cosic introduces Pasic as a sta tesma n who from the beginning of the war knows better than anyone that Serbia's long range national and political aspirations can be realized only through an unparalleled sacrifice for the Allied cause. Then he shows how the enormity of the nation's actual suffering combined wilh the fear that it might have been in vain because of the Allied failures to recognize it and help brings even Pasic Lo the end of hi s spiritual endurance. And since Pasic leaves in that slate both the port of Medova and the pages of CosiC's novel, its ending sugges ts a profound and lasting personal and political defeat. But sin ce Pasic is a historical personage whose career as a statesman did not end there, we know from a number of historical sources that in a maller of days he recovered and continued to lead his government until every one of his assumptions were pro~en correct by history. This is why his character, as portraye~ by Cosic, appears psychologically incomplete and unfinished. Cosic introduces him to us with certain ideals and aspirations that clearly represent the guiding force of his political philosophy and then allows him to leave without resolving clearly what will happen to those ideals and aspirations after all. The novel in its present form lacks an organically appropriate denouement. Too many of its characters seem to leave its pages as if they were random participants in some amprphous, open-ended, moder.n chronicle. One can only hope that Cosic too will eventually sec th1s and add the necessary sequel to what he has already wrillen, so that his stirring tale of Serbia's crucifixion and agony on the cross of history would also include the ultimate triumph of its res urrection within the framework of the kingdom of Yugoslavia whose true mas- Nicholas Moravcevich 29 ter builder was Nikola Pasic. Aside from this, the question that remains is whether CosiC's portrait of Pasic is accurate and true to life? On that subject Cosic himself has spoken at length while discussing the artistic uses of the historical material in his essay "Roman i istorija." There he states that the most essential thing in fictionalizing historical material is not to tailor, manipulate or twist established historical facts, but to accept them for what they are and then explore and highlight the psychological motivations behind them and emotional responses to them. In his own words: Covek je cilj istorijskog romana; covek a ne dogadjaj; covek a ne funkcija. . .. Romansijer traga za motivacijom covekovog cina i delanja, za pokretackom miSlju i licnim dilemama, za istinitim i uverljivim dozivljavanjima istorijske situacije, za covekovim osecanjima u istorijskom zbivanju. 7 Therefore, despite CosiC's ample utilization of poetic licence in the artistic recreation of the historically significant content of his novel, there is essentially no difference between his portrait of Pasic and that sketched by historians interested in Pasic's political career. The two leading historiographers of Pasic in the West, Carlo Sforza and Alex Dragnich, 8 tell us with no disagreement that he was a methodical and deliberate man with an enormous capacity for hard organizational work and little love for rhetorical embellishments and posturing. Although a superb tactician who seldom tried for the impossible, he also knew how to stand firm on questions of principle. Both a realist and an idealist, he knew how to make a number of small, practical goals become stepping stones toward a large, visionary one far on the horizon, but he also knew how to wait, or, if it was utterly unavoidable, settle for less than the ideal. A thoroughly civilized man, he never lost his composure or dignity in discourse with either high or low, and never lost touch with the common people, who in turn supported him throughout his political life. The image of Pasic from the pages of CosiC's novel is substantially the same, except that Cosic shows all this in a more dramatic, more embellished way. His attention to detail, his rendering of the appro- Nicholas Moravcevich 30 priate atmosphere and mood of the times and his sensitive delving into the psychological motivation behind Pa~ic's most agonizing war decisions enriches our perception of the man and his environment with a sense of empathy that a historical summary cannot elicit. For there where factual historical biographies like Dragn!ch's and Sforza's accurately depict the man and his milieu, an inspired fictional biography like CosiC's reincarnates for us both the man and his times with the tridimensional veracity found only in a groat work of art. And for posterity's remembrance of the greatest modern Serbian statesman, Nikola Pa~ic, to whom to this day his nation has failed to erect a fitting monument in its capital, CosiC's artistic endeavor has finally provided a far more lasting substitute. University of Illinois at Chicago 'Dobrica Cosic. Vreme smrti. In Four Volumes. Beograd : Prosveta, 1972-79. Vol. 4, p. 461. 2 Ibid., Vol. 4, p. 33. '~arlo Sforza. Fifty Years of War and Diplomacy in t110 Balkans: Poshich and the Umon of the Yugoslavs. New York: Columbia University Pross, 1940, P· 47. •o. Cosic. Vreme smrti. 'Ibid., Vol. 4, pp. 97-8. •Ibid., Vol. 4, p. 524. 'An unpublished essay by D. Cosic entitled "Romani istorija," P· 3. •Alex N. Dragnich. Serbia, Nikala Pa§ic, and Yugoslavia . New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1974, pp. 224-29.