Slavic Europe

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     Countries where a West Slavic language is the national language      Countries where an East Slavic language is the national language      Countries where a South Slavic language is the national language
     Countries where a West Slavic language is the national language      Countries where an East Slavic language is the national language      Countries where a South Slavic language is the national language

Slavic Europe is a region of Europe where Slavic people live. This area corresponds, more or less, to East-Central and Eastern Europe, and consists of: Belarus, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, the Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro, Poland, Russia, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, the disputed territory of Transnistria, and Ukraine.

The main religions are Orthodox Christianity and Catholicism, with large Muslim populations in some parts formerly ruled by the Ottoman Empire, as well as various constituent parts of Russia. There were also over 4 million Jews living in Slavic Europe until the Holocaust greatly reduced that number and many surviving Jews emigrated to Israel and the United States. There was a large number of Jews in Slavic Eastern Europe because many Jews had been expelled during the Middle Ages from Christian, Western Europe. (See Christianity and anti-Semitism).

Amongst the total Slavic population of Europe, there are local Slavic minorities of Sorbs in Germany and Lipovans in Romania, as well as a Slovenian and Croatian minorities in Northeastern Italy and Southern Austria, and the significant Slavic diaspora in Western Europe.

[edit] The controversy of the term

The unifying term, "Slavic Europe" is considered superficial today. Among those countries deep divisions exist, based on cultural traditions, religion, history and political orientations in some cases dating back as far as 10th century. Even in the early history of Slavic people, they were divided among East, West and South Slavs with each holding various sub-groups. Further divisions lay in religion mainly between Roman Catholicism and Eastern Orthodox Church with the first being part of cultural identity of Western Slavs and the second being followed by East Slavs. This is especially conspicuous between the South Slavic nations of Serbs and Croats which fought ferocious wars against each other.

The division of religion also created divisions of culture and political orientations, as Czechs integrated with German civilisation and became a part of the Holy Roman Empire. Over time nations with West Slavic origins increasingly patterned their thought and institutions on Western models in areas of thought ranging from philosophy, artistic style, literature, and architecture to government, law, and social structure, while Eastern Slavs developed their own culture. For example, while Western Slavs used Latin alphabet, most East Slavs used Cyrillic.

Cultural divisions deepened when East Slavic groups found themselves under Mongol rule, South Slavs fell under the Ottoman Empire, while West Slavs (mostly Czechs) continued to develop their culture within Central European domain. In time interaction between various different nations originating from Slavic people was marked by antagonism and conflicting interests, with many groups feeling alienated from each other by their independent development and viewing the other's way of life as incomprehensible.

In 19th century as national ideology searched for ancestry of ethnic groups, a movement appeared called Pan-Slavism that tried to unite nations of Slavic origins among common interests and develop common identity. This efforts failed for a number of reasons, one of them being attempts of the Imperial Russia to take it over in order to justify territorial expansion and subjugation of nations of Slavic origins such Ukrainians or Poles, the other the fact that due to independent development from each other various antagonism developed and thirdly of different interests between various groups. For example Poles repressed the freedom of Ukrainians both religionally and culturally[citation needed]. Also, while certain Slavic nations such as Czechs and Slovaks in Austro-Hungarian Empire desired Russian protection and wanted its dissolution, Poles comparing their Austrian partition to the Russian or Prussian one, preferred the relative freedom they been given under the Austrian rule.

With the Soviet Union came another period of attempts to use idea of Slavic unity for political purpose, and post-war Soviet propaganda often made use of Pan-slavistic ideology, while before the WW II Poland‘s repressive policy created a great deal of resentment amongst its populous Belorussian and Ukrainian minorities.

Since many countries were multiethnic for long periods of history, their current populations are mixed with people of various ethnic background. Thus the thousand years of independent development have led to creation of various separate national identities, while history has created traditional divides, and conflicting interests.

Due to past history sympathy for idea of Slavic identity and unity was found mostly in Russia, while in many other countries the idea is part of the fringe of politics, with people having no interest or desire for such concepts and viewing them as part of Soviet-dominated politics aimed at the area of Central and Eastern Europe. For example when Polish people were asked in a poll to mark traits they associate with Russians, only 0.4% marked "Slavs" as an answer[1]. Some people interpret this as a demonstration of how little interest the motion of Slavic origins has to the local population.

Thus besides linguistic origins and some common traditions, there is hardly any unifying political factors among countries in the region.

[edit] See also

[edit] Endnotes

  1. ^ Michael Fleischer: Niemcy, Europa, USA i Rosja w polskim systemie kultury, Wrocław 2004