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Specter of Nationalism Haunts Eastern Europe


Article # : 17552 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 7 / 1990  2,386 Words
Author : Robert R. King
Robert R. King, the author of Minorities Under Communism: Nationalities as a Source of Tension Among Balkan Communist States (Harvard University Press, 1973), worked in East European affairs at the National Security Council in the Carter White House. He is former assistant director of research at Radio Free Europe in Munich, West Germany, and currently works on Capital Hill.

       In 1848, as revolutionary fervor swept across Europe from Paris to Budapest and beyond, the young Karl Marx wrote in his Communist Manifesto, "A specter is haunting Europe-the specter of communism," Now, almost a century and a half after Marx penned those words, another specter is haunting Europe - and particularly the half of Europe that for the last half century was dominated by the communism Marx inspired. The specter is nationalism.
       
        For Americans, nationality is synonymous with citizenship. Territory defines nationality. Generally, immigrants to America become Americans, although some maintain ties with their roots by identifying themselves as Polish-Americans, Hungarian-Americans, Lithuanian-Americans, or other combinations. For the most part, this conception of nationality held for Western Europe as well.
       
        In Central and Eastern Europe, however, ethnic identity does not match state boundaries. As national identity developed in the 19th century, the Russian, Prussian (and later German), Austrian, and Turkish empires encompassed numerous peoples separated by culture, religion, language, and tradition. At the same time German, Polish, and Italian language/cultural populations were ruled by separate governments. In areas that had been under Turkish rule since the 15th century-the Balkans (Romania, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria) and large areas of the Soviet Union-religion came to be a major determinant of nationality. The Turkish sultans separated their subjects, regardless of where they happened to live, into religious communities (millets), and the appropriate religious leaders were responsible for regulating most aspects of communal ... (1911 of 15567 Characters)
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