fbpx
Wikipedia

LGBT history in Yugoslavia

Homosexuality in Yugoslavia was first decriminalized in the Socialist Republics of Croatia, Slovenia, Montenegro and the Socialist Autonomous Province of Vojvodina in 1977.[1] In other regions anti-LGBT legislation was, to varying degrees, progressively not implemented. The capital city of Belgrade, together with Zagreb and Ljubljana, became some of the first spots of an organized LGBT movement in the Balkans.

The years in which the constitutive republics and provinces of Yugoslavia decriminalized homosexuality

Following the violent breakup of Yugoslavia some authors analyzed regional cooperation and networks in former Yugoslavia as a form of conscious rejection of nationalism representing important features of contemporary LGBTQ activism in South East Europe.[2]

Kingdom of Yugoslavia edit

In the first post-medieval Criminal Code of the Principality of Serbia, named "Kaznitelni zakon" (Law of Penalties), adopted in 1860, sexual intercourse "against the order of nature" between males became punishable by from 6 months' to 4 years' imprisonment. As typical for the time, homosexual relations between women were excluded.[3][4] In 1937, Belgrade-based daily newspaper Politika published news about a young man from Central Serbia who arrived in Belgrade with his brothers to change his gender.[5]

World War II edit

Independent State of Croatia edit

In the Nazi Germany puppet state Independent State of Croatia (NDH), homosexuals were persecuted and sent to concentration camps such as Jasenovac, regardless of their nationalities or ideological orientations.[6] Very little research has been done on the experiences of homosexuals during the World War II in Yugoslavia; only a small insight was given by the Croatian author Ilija Jakovljević in his text Konclogor na Savi (English: Concentration Camp on Sava), in which he mentioned that in prison on Square N16 in Zagreb he met a "lover of the male body", referring only to the man's identity and not whether he was imprisoned for his sexual orientation.[7]

National Liberation War 1941–1945 edit

There are two accounts about homosexual Yugoslav Partisans during World War II in Yugoslavia. One known death sentence was issued by a Croatian detachment of the National Liberation Army for the commander of the Croatian Partisans' communication network, Josip Mardešić, after he was discovered to have had affairs with his male subordinates.[8] The other account was given by Milovan Djilas in his war memoirs, where he tells a story from Sandžak where "one Muslim, a good soldier and a zealous communist" was exposed as homosexual by other soldiers to the Regional Secretary, Rifat Burdžović.[9] The Regional Secretary in doubt asked Djilas if he should "execute [the] freak?", while Djilas remained in doubt, admitting that, at the time, he neither knew Communist Party of Yugoslavia (KPJ) practice nor anything said on such matters by Marx and Lenin.[9] At the end, he concluded that "from such vices suffer proletarians, and not only bourgeoisie decadents" and that it cannot be tolerated for homosexuals to have any party functions, nor to be among the leaders of the partisan movement.[9] Djilas said that he only later learned that "that homosexual, who in appearance was sheer manhood, was very brave and courageously fell in battle".[9][10]

Socialist Yugoslavia edit

Postwar persecution edit

In the postwar period, there were more examples of persecution and inhumane treatment of homosexual individuals. One of the cases took place in 1952 in Dubrovnik, where members of Communist Party arrested homosexuals, put bags with pejorative inscriptions on their heads and led them through the city.[11] When the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was formed, it adopted the Yugoslav Criminal Code of 1929, a previous law of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia which forbade "lewdness against the order of nature" (anal intercourse). In 1959, male homosexuality was officially criminalized in Yugoslavia, with a penalty of imprisonment for one year. [9][12][13] Around five hundred male homosexuals have been imprisoned between 1951 and 1977, about half of which served probation, and others served shorter sentences. For comparison, many Western European countries (such as West Germany, United Kingdom and Italy) convicted several tens of thousands of homosexuals during the same period.[14]

Liberalization in the 1970s edit

In the 1970s, following the sexual revolution in much of Western Europe, the legal and social sphere of Yugoslavia started to liberalize towards LGBT rights. In 1973, the Croatian Medical Chamber removed homosexuality from the list of mental disorders.[9] In 1974, a law professor at the University of Ljubljana, Ljubo Bavcon, urged the decriminalization of homosexuality as one of the members of the Commission for the Adoption of Criminal Law of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia.[9] The League of Communists of Yugoslavia held debates on the topic at least three times until 1976, when it requested decriminalization in all republics subject to each party branch approval. Federal units of Yugoslavia that decriminalized homosexuality were the Socialist Republics of Croatia, Slovenia, Montenegro and Socialist Autonomous Province of Vojvodina in 1977.[1] Other parts of the Federation made this move only after the breakup of Yugoslavia: Serbia (excluding Vojvodina) in 1994, Macedonia in 1997 and finally Bosnia and Herzegovina (both the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Republika Srpska) in 1998.[9]

LGBT activism edit

The first six-day long festival of gay culture in Yugoslavia was organized in April 1984 in Ljubljana.[15] In the same year, the first gay organization Magnus was founded in Ljubljana and in 1987, the first lesbian organisation founded was Lezbijska Lilit (LL).[15] The first regular radio broadcast that, amongst other marginalized groups, dealt with gay issues was the 1985 Zagreb-based Frigidna utičnica (English: Frigid Socket) on Omladinski radio, whose host Toni Marošević was openly gay.[7] Because of disapproval from Večernji list and the Večernje novosti program, it was quickly removed from the station programming.[7] In its 1986 proclamation, the organization Magnus demanded the introduction of prohibition of discrimination based on sexual orientation in the Yugoslav Constitution, decriminalization of homosexuality in the whole of Yugoslavia, the introduction of curriculum that would present homosexuality and heterosexuality on equal terms and demanded a protest of the Federal Government of Yugoslavia against the Socialist Republic of Romania, the Soviet Union, Iran and other countries where homosexuality was still criminalized at that time.[15] In 1990 in Hotel Moskva in Belgrade, which was a popular gay gathering place in the 1970s, one gay and lesbian group began to organize meetings and, in January 1991, they founded the organization Arkadija.[7]

LGBT topics in pop culture edit

Music edit

In the second half of the 1970s first songs that deal with issues of lesbian and gay population appear.[16] They were very different in genre, from rock, post-punk, electropop to the traditional folk music.[16] Some of the most popular songs with LGBT themes are "Neki dječaci" (Some Boys) by Prljavo kazalište, 1982 song "Moja prijateljica" (My Friend) by Xenia, "Preživjeti" (To Survive) by KUD Idijoti, 1974 song "Ramo, Ramo" by Muharem Serbezovski, 1980 song "Retko te viđam sa devojkama" (I Rarely See You With Girls) by Idoli, "Javi mi" (Notify Me) by Zabranjeno Pušenje, and "Balada o tvrdim grudima" (Ballad About the Rough Chest) by Šarlo Akrobata.[16]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b L. Grubić-Radakovi. "Seksualna delinkvencija u suvremenom krivičnom pravu" (PDF) (in Serbo-Croatian). Retrieved 13 April 2014.
  2. ^ Binnie, Jon (2016). "Critical queer regionality and LGBTQ politics in Europe". Gender, Place & Culture. 23 (11): 1631–1642. doi:10.1080/0966369X.2015.1136812. S2CID 147229954.
  3. ^ V. Para # 206, p. 82 of the "Kaznitelni zakon 1860" in Slavo-Serbian orthography
  4. ^ Mihailo will go on with liberalising and modernising Serbia during his own second reign, q.v. in Mihailo Obrenović III, Prince of Serbia
  5. ^ Centar za kvir studije. (in Serbian). Archived from the original on 21 October 2012. Retrieved 23 April 2014.
  6. ^ Vuletić, Dean (13 September 2002). "Drugovi po oružju: Homoseksualnost, istoriografija i Drugi svetski rat" [Comrades in arms: Homosexuality, historiography and the Second World War] (PDF) (in Serbo-Croatian). Fabrika knjiga. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  7. ^ a b c d Spahić, Aida; Gavrić, Saša (2012). Čitanka LGBT ljudskih prava, 2. dopunjeno izdanje (PDF) (in Serbo-Croatian). Sarajevo: Sarajevo Open Centre/Heinrich Böll Foundation. ISBN 978-9958-577-02-4. Retrieved 23 April 2014.
  8. ^ Schlagdenhauffen, Régis (18 September 2018). Queer in Europe during the Second World War. Council of Europe. p. 139. ISBN 9789287188632. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h (in Serbo-Croatian). Archived from the original on 26 April 2018. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
  10. ^ Batinić, Jelena (2015). Women and Yugoslav Partisans: A History of World War II Resistance (PDF). New York City: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-09107-8.
  11. ^ Jutarnji list. (in Croatian). Archived from the original on 14 April 2014. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 April 2016. Retrieved 29 April 2017.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 November 2013. Za protivprirodni blud između lica muškog pola, učinilac će se kazniti zatvorom do dve godine.
  14. ^ "Biti gej u SFRJ: zbog 'protuprirodnog bluda' osuđeno oko 500 muškaraca" [Being gay in SFRY: about 500 men convicted of 'unnatural fornication']. www.crol.hr. 15 February 2016. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  15. ^ a b c "TOPLA BRAĆA, HVALA NE! HISTORIJA SLOVENSKOG GEJ I LEZBEJSKOG POKRETA" (in Bosnian). 22 February 2013. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
  16. ^ a b c labris.org. (in Serbian). Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 20 March 2015.

lgbt, history, yugoslavia, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, serbo, croatian, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version, serbo, croatian, article, machine, translation. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Serbo Croatian Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Serbo Croatian article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Serbo Croatian Wikipedia article at sh LGBT historija Jugoslavije see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated sh LGBT historija Jugoslavije to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Homosexuality in Yugoslavia was first decriminalized in the Socialist Republics of Croatia Slovenia Montenegro and the Socialist Autonomous Province of Vojvodina in 1977 1 In other regions anti LGBT legislation was to varying degrees progressively not implemented The capital city of Belgrade together with Zagreb and Ljubljana became some of the first spots of an organized LGBT movement in the Balkans The years in which the constitutive republics and provinces of Yugoslavia decriminalized homosexuality Following the violent breakup of Yugoslavia some authors analyzed regional cooperation and networks in former Yugoslavia as a form of conscious rejection of nationalism representing important features of contemporary LGBTQ activism in South East Europe 2 Contents 1 Kingdom of Yugoslavia 2 World War II 2 1 Independent State of Croatia 2 2 National Liberation War 1941 1945 3 Socialist Yugoslavia 3 1 Postwar persecution 3 2 Liberalization in the 1970s 3 3 LGBT activism 3 4 LGBT topics in pop culture 3 4 1 Music 4 See also 5 ReferencesKingdom of Yugoslavia editIn the first post medieval Criminal Code of the Principality of Serbia named Kaznitelni zakon Law of Penalties adopted in 1860 sexual intercourse against the order of nature between males became punishable by from 6 months to 4 years imprisonment As typical for the time homosexual relations between women were excluded 3 4 In 1937 Belgrade based daily newspaper Politika published news about a young man from Central Serbia who arrived in Belgrade with his brothers to change his gender 5 World War II editIndependent State of Croatia edit See also Persecution of homosexuals in Nazi Germany and the Holocaust In the Nazi Germany puppet state Independent State of Croatia NDH homosexuals were persecuted and sent to concentration camps such as Jasenovac regardless of their nationalities or ideological orientations 6 Very little research has been done on the experiences of homosexuals during the World War II in Yugoslavia only a small insight was given by the Croatian author Ilija Jakovljevic in his text Konclogor na Savi English Concentration Camp on Sava in which he mentioned that in prison on Square N16 in Zagreb he met a lover of the male body referring only to the man s identity and not whether he was imprisoned for his sexual orientation 7 National Liberation War 1941 1945 edit There are two accounts about homosexual Yugoslav Partisans during World War II in Yugoslavia One known death sentence was issued by a Croatian detachment of the National Liberation Army for the commander of the Croatian Partisans communication network Josip Mardesic after he was discovered to have had affairs with his male subordinates 8 The other account was given by Milovan Djilas in his war memoirs where he tells a story from Sandzak where one Muslim a good soldier and a zealous communist was exposed as homosexual by other soldiers to the Regional Secretary Rifat Burdzovic 9 The Regional Secretary in doubt asked Djilas if he should execute the freak while Djilas remained in doubt admitting that at the time he neither knew Communist Party of Yugoslavia KPJ practice nor anything said on such matters by Marx and Lenin 9 At the end he concluded that from such vices suffer proletarians and not only bourgeoisie decadents and that it cannot be tolerated for homosexuals to have any party functions nor to be among the leaders of the partisan movement 9 Djilas said that he only later learned that that homosexual who in appearance was sheer manhood was very brave and courageously fell in battle 9 10 Socialist Yugoslavia editPostwar persecution edit In the postwar period there were more examples of persecution and inhumane treatment of homosexual individuals One of the cases took place in 1952 in Dubrovnik where members of Communist Party arrested homosexuals put bags with pejorative inscriptions on their heads and led them through the city 11 When the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was formed it adopted the Yugoslav Criminal Code of 1929 a previous law of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia which forbade lewdness against the order of nature anal intercourse In 1959 male homosexuality was officially criminalized in Yugoslavia with a penalty of imprisonment for one year 9 12 13 Around five hundred male homosexuals have been imprisoned between 1951 and 1977 about half of which served probation and others served shorter sentences For comparison many Western European countries such as West Germany United Kingdom and Italy convicted several tens of thousands of homosexuals during the same period 14 Liberalization in the 1970s edit In the 1970s following the sexual revolution in much of Western Europe the legal and social sphere of Yugoslavia started to liberalize towards LGBT rights In 1973 the Croatian Medical Chamber removed homosexuality from the list of mental disorders 9 In 1974 a law professor at the University of Ljubljana Ljubo Bavcon urged the decriminalization of homosexuality as one of the members of the Commission for the Adoption of Criminal Law of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia 9 The League of Communists of Yugoslavia held debates on the topic at least three times until 1976 when it requested decriminalization in all republics subject to each party branch approval Federal units of Yugoslavia that decriminalized homosexuality were the Socialist Republics of Croatia Slovenia Montenegro and Socialist Autonomous Province of Vojvodina in 1977 1 Other parts of the Federation made this move only after the breakup of Yugoslavia Serbia excluding Vojvodina in 1994 Macedonia in 1997 and finally Bosnia and Herzegovina both the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Republika Srpska in 1998 9 LGBT activism edit The first six day long festival of gay culture in Yugoslavia was organized in April 1984 in Ljubljana 15 In the same year the first gay organization Magnus was founded in Ljubljana and in 1987 the first lesbian organisation founded was Lezbijska Lilit LL 15 The first regular radio broadcast that amongst other marginalized groups dealt with gay issues was the 1985 Zagreb based Frigidna uticnica English Frigid Socket on Omladinski radio whose host Toni Marosevic was openly gay 7 Because of disapproval from Vecernji list and the Vecernje novosti program it was quickly removed from the station programming 7 In its 1986 proclamation the organization Magnus demanded the introduction of prohibition of discrimination based on sexual orientation in the Yugoslav Constitution decriminalization of homosexuality in the whole of Yugoslavia the introduction of curriculum that would present homosexuality and heterosexuality on equal terms and demanded a protest of the Federal Government of Yugoslavia against the Socialist Republic of Romania the Soviet Union Iran and other countries where homosexuality was still criminalized at that time 15 In 1990 in Hotel Moskva in Belgrade which was a popular gay gathering place in the 1970s one gay and lesbian group began to organize meetings and in January 1991 they founded the organization Arkadija 7 LGBT topics in pop culture edit Music edit In the second half of the 1970s first songs that deal with issues of lesbian and gay population appear 16 They were very different in genre from rock post punk electropop to the traditional folk music 16 Some of the most popular songs with LGBT themes are Neki djecaci Some Boys by Prljavo kazaliste 1982 song Moja prijateljica My Friend by Xenia Prezivjeti To Survive by KUD Idijoti 1974 song Ramo Ramo by Muharem Serbezovski 1980 song Retko te viđam sa devojkama I Rarely See You With Girls by Idoli Javi mi Notify Me by Zabranjeno Pusenje and Balada o tvrdim grudima Ballad About the Rough Chest by Sarlo Akrobata 16 See also editLGBT history in Bosnia and Herzegovina LGBT history in Croatia LGBT history in Kosovo LGBT history in Montenegro LGBT history in North Macedonia LGBT history in Serbia LGBT history in Slovenia Communism and LGBT rightsReferences edit a b L Grubic Radakovi Seksualna delinkvencija u suvremenom krivicnom pravu PDF in Serbo Croatian Retrieved 13 April 2014 Binnie Jon 2016 Critical queer regionality and LGBTQ politics in Europe Gender Place amp Culture 23 11 1631 1642 doi 10 1080 0966369X 2015 1136812 S2CID 147229954 V Para 206 p 82 of the Kaznitelni zakon 1860 in Slavo Serbian orthography Mihailo will go on with liberalising and modernising Serbia during his own second reign q v in Mihailo Obrenovic III Prince of Serbia Centar za kvir studije Politika Promena pola 1937 godine in Serbian Archived from the original on 21 October 2012 Retrieved 23 April 2014 Vuletic Dean 13 September 2002 Drugovi po oruzju Homoseksualnost istoriografija i Drugi svetski rat Comrades in arms Homosexuality historiography and the Second World War PDF in Serbo Croatian Fabrika knjiga Retrieved 16 July 2022 a b c d Spahic Aida Gavric Sasa 2012 Citanka LGBT ljudskih prava 2 dopunjeno izdanje PDF in Serbo Croatian Sarajevo Sarajevo Open Centre Heinrich Boll Foundation ISBN 978 9958 577 02 4 Retrieved 23 April 2014 Schlagdenhauffen Regis 18 September 2018 Queer in Europe during the Second World War Council of Europe p 139 ISBN 9789287188632 Retrieved 16 July 2022 a b c d e f g h LGBT PRAVA U SFRJ in Serbo Croatian Archived from the original on 26 April 2018 Retrieved 13 April 2014 Batinic Jelena 2015 Women and Yugoslav Partisans A History of World War II Resistance PDF New York City Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 09107 8 Jutarnji list Muskarci su se voljeli i u vrijeme Tita in Croatian Archived from the original on 14 April 2014 Retrieved 14 April 2014 Slovenia Age of Consent Archived from the original on 14 April 2016 Retrieved 29 April 2017 Krivicni zakonik Sl list FNRJ br 13 51 clan 186 Archived from the original on 3 November 2013 Za protivprirodni blud između lica muskog pola ucinilac ce se kazniti zatvorom do dve godine Biti gej u SFRJ zbog protuprirodnog bluda osuđeno oko 500 muskaraca Being gay in SFRY about 500 men convicted of unnatural fornication www crol hr 15 February 2016 Retrieved 16 July 2022 a b c TOPLA BRACA HVALA NE HISTORIJA SLOVENSKOG GEJ I LEZBEJSKOG POKRETA in Bosnian 22 February 2013 Retrieved 14 April 2014 a b c labris org LGBT pjesme sa prostora bivse Jugoslavije i neke kasnije in Serbian Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 20 March 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title LGBT history in Yugoslavia amp oldid 1223980303, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.