In the late 1960s and early 1970s, policy institutes, academics, and government agencies in socialist Yugoslavia began distributing remarkable surveys in which they asked respondents whether Yugoslavs were racist or not. One 1971 survey conducted by the Institute for Developing Countries in Zagreb, for example, asked more than one hundred African, Asian, Latin American, and Arab students studying at the University of Zagreb to respond to the question, “are there racists in Yugoslavia?” (Ima li rasista u Jugoslaviji?).Footnote 1 Another survey from the same year queried University of Belgrade students who lived in the same dormitory as Black African students whether they would assent to their brother or sister marrying a Black person (crnac), while others interrogated schoolchildren about their attitudes towards foreigners and ethnic others, including Black people.Footnote 2 These studies marked an empirical attempt to understand the phenomenon of racial prejudice among Yugoslavs at a time when Cold War and decolonial politics gave racism increased salience in Yugoslav media and politics. They also appeared at a time when social scientists in Yugoslavia took more assiduously to studying ethnic and nationalist attitudes, a result of heightened public debate about the rights of Yugoslavia's constituent groups.Footnote 3 As some of the surveys made explicit, however, these novel studies about racism in Yugoslavia were frequently prompted by accusations about the mistreatment of Black African students who had come to the country on scholarships through Yugoslavia's participation in the Non-Aligned Movement.Footnote 4 During the long 1960s, these students’ public protests and private consultations with Yugoslav officials led to a sustained conversation about racialized identity and racism in socialist Yugoslavia.
The new field of critical race studies in eastern Europe has largely focused on the ways historical actors and scholars have elided “race” (racialization) as a meaningful political or analytical category in the region.Footnote 5 Indeed, in response to foreign students’ charges of racial prejudice on the part of Yugoslav citizens, Yugoslav officials often explained racism away as something foreign to socialist Yugoslav society; “race” and “racism” in the political context of the 1950s and 60s were features of capitalist western Europe, its overseas colonies, and above all, Jim-Crow America. Thus, although sixty percent of Black African students in the 1971 Zagreb survey responded that, indeed, there were “racists in Yugoslavia” to one degree or another, the authors of the study determined that “these responses, nevertheless, say more about the sensitivity of certain foreign students than they do about the racist views of a segment of Yugoslav society”Footnote 6 The reports’ authors concluded their commentary on the survey with the following remark: “one cannot speak of the phenomenon of racial discrimination in these cases, as some foreign students claim, because we consider there are no preconditions or historical roots for such a phenomenon.”Footnote 7 Over the 1960s and early 1970s, however, other social scientists, Party officials, and cultural critics produced a body of knowledge that recognized anti-black racial prejudice as a part of Yugoslav reality. One scholar in 1974 concluded that “there are indications that we ourselves are not free of racial prejudices in its narrow sense even though we are firmly against any kind of expression of racist prejudice in our official statements and declarations. Some studies have shown that certain forms of racial prejudice exist among us.”Footnote 8 Rather than silence and elision, a close study of archival documents, literature, and social science studies in Yugoslavia in the 1960s and 70s reveals a dynamic and explicit self-interrogation of Yugoslavs’ racial attitudes and identity.
This article examines debates, scholarly studies, and cultural representations of the phenomenon of racism in Yugoslavia and Yugoslavs’ relationship to whiteness in the 1960s and 70s. I argue that, in combination with a pervasive postwar discourse of racism and anti-racism linked to decolonization and Cold War politics, the persistent petitioning and activism of Black African students helped provoke official, scholarly, and public discussions about the controversial question of racism in Yugoslav society during this time. This debate raised important conceptual and practical questions with which both Yugoslavs and many Black African students in Yugoslavia grappled. Could anti-black racism exist in a socialist country without a clear colonial past or tangible links to imperialism or the Atlantic slave trade? If so, in what ways did racialization, racial thinking, and racial prejudice manifest themselves in an anti-racist state in contrast to places such as the United States, the United Kingdom, or South Africa? The salience of Black students’ accusations about racism eventually made something that was taboo in the 1950s and early 1960s—namely, entertaining the prospect that anti-black racial prejudice existed in non-aligned, socialist, and anti-racist Yugoslavia—become the subject of official inquiry, scholarly debate, and popular literature by the late 1960s. Importantly, the relative candidness with which academic studies and popular literature addressed racism indicates a reflexivity about “racial” questions on the part of socialist Yugoslav society, something that scholarship has largely neglected in favor of focusing on the suppression or elision of race and the inadequacy of state socialist responses to the problem of domestic expressions of prejudice. In highlighting the public and nuanced conversation about racism in socialist Yugoslavia that Black African students helped initiate, this article counters notions of both a passive socialist civil society on the one hand, and ephemeral, ineffectual “Third World” actors on the other.Footnote 9
In the first section of this article, I address how attention to socialist reflexivity about racism challenges scholars’ reliance on Cold War frameworks of static state socialism. I then discuss the construction of a Yugoslav anti-racist identity that, while distancing the country from “colonial Europe,” paradoxically reified Yugoslavs’ white, European identity. While non-aligned politics in Yugoslavia crafted a discourse that situated Yugoslavs as part of a “postcolonial” Third World, it existed alongside language casting Black Africans as racial others within a hierarchy of social, political, and cultural progress. Next, I turn to the archive to examine discussions and debates that took place between Black African students and Yugoslav officials regarding the kinds of prejudice foreign students encountered and the ways both students and Yugoslav officials attempted to make sense of apparent racism in a non-racist state. These discussions and foreign student activism prompted a proliferation of surveys and studies focused on this problem by the end of the 1960s and early 1970s. Finally, I analyze a self-stylized anti-racist novel about a transracial romance between a young Yugoslav woman and Sudanese male student to show how ideas about racism and anti-racism appeared in popular literature. The sources of this article, while eclectic, are centered on published Yugoslav social science scholarship and archival collections from the Archives of Yugoslavia. These collections include those of the Student Alliance of Yugoslavia (SSJ), the Socialist Youth Alliance of Yugoslavia, the Federal Executive Council, and others that oversaw international students in Yugoslavia. Overall, the sources in this article represent material from the Socialist Republic (SR) of Slovenia, SR Croatia, and SR Serbia, Yugoslav republics that dominated the popular and political culture of Yugoslavia. This is a potential limitation of this article as racialization and conversations about racism may have looked differently in places such as SR Bosnia, SR Macedonia, and the Autonomus Province (AP) of Kosovo. Future studies may shed more light on the local languages of racialization and racism in the socialist period.
In this same vein, this article primarily focuses on the role and image of Black international students in socialist Yugoslavia. Other groups in socialist Yugoslavia such as Roma and Albanians also commonly experienced racialization and racial prejudice.Footnote 10 However, while Albanians are included unevenly as a category in the early surveys of racism and ethnic prejudice sampled here, anti-Romani and anti-Albanian prejudice only appear as a sustained topic of this literature in the late 1970s, 1980s, and particularly the 1990s.Footnote 11 This relative silence has multiple explanations and is as significant as the dialogue probing Yugoslav racial prejudice. Acknowledging and studying anti-Romani and anti-Albanian prejudice was a potentially explosive venture within the fraught politics of socialist Yugoslavia of this period. Furthermore, Black international students may have enjoyed more international prominence and power than local Romani and Albanian groups in the 1960s and early 1970s. Cold War anxieties about damage to Yugoslavia's international reputation may have informed Yugoslav officials and intellectuals’ attentiveness to Black international students’ complaints about racism in ways that did not inform their approach to Romani and Albanian activism about prejudice and systemic discrimination in Yugoslavia. In this light, conversations and studies acknowledging anti-black prejudice in Yugoslavia can also be read critically as an exercise of Yugoslav global positioning and managing complex international politics as Jelena Subotić and Srdjan Vucetic have suggested.Footnote 12
Racism and “Static” State Socialism
Over the past two decades, scholars have pursued a dynamic new field of study into race, racialization, and whiteness in eastern Europe, a region in which these categories have typically not been applied to social analysis.Footnote 13 This scholarship has ranged in topic from the racialization of Jews and other groups in imperial Russia, the position of Roma in racial taxonomies of central Europe, and the whiteness of dominant Slavic-speaking populations in places such as socialist/postsocialist Bulgaria and Yugoslavia.Footnote 14 As a whole, this scholarship has posited race as an “exceptional” category in the region, meaning one that scholars and historical actors alike have traditionally subsumed under other categories such as ethnicity and nationality.Footnote 15 Following trends in critical European race studies, scholars of the region argue that ideas about race, specifically whiteness, played a formative role in shaping identity construction in central and southeastern Europe, but that “whiteness” has largely functioned as a “concealed ethnicity.”Footnote 16 This insight is borrowed from studies showing how social and political interests in places such as Sweden, France, or the United Kingdom elide racialized identities in an attempt to distance these societies from colonial or colonial-adjacent pasts.Footnote 17 Unlike much of western and central Europe, however, which are seemingly inextricably imbricated in the categories of European and white, whiteness in spaces marked as eastern Europe is more conditional and contingent on place, historical context, and specific social relations.Footnote 18 Thus, while people from Poland or Bulgaria, for example, may rely on notions of whiteness to racialize themselves and other groups, they themselves are often racialized as non-white and non-European within dominant European political discourse.Footnote 19
Critical race scholars of the region have introduced whiteness as an analytical category to connect east European identity construction to global racial hierarchies and global (post)coloniality and thereby liberate it from limiting local frameworks.Footnote 20 However, the study of racialization and racism in socialist eastern Europe has, paradoxically, sometimes reified the difference and distance of central and east European societies from European and global patterns. Specifically, certain strands of scholarship on racialization in socialist Europe have adopted positions about identity and racism in the region in ways that reproduce Cold War narratives of east European and socialist societies as static, backward, and, in some places, uniquely racist.Footnote 21 Importantly, a common Cold War trope of a closed socialist eastern Europe, unpenetrated by, and unreceptive to, transnational influences, has, ironically, obscured the salience of racism as a topic of political debate and public discussion during state socialism. For example, Aniko Imre, a pioneer of racialization studies in central and eastern Europe, has argued that the category of race remained outside political discourse in the region for so long partially because of what she characterizes as an insular culture of state socialism:
With the collapse of socialism, East Europeans have suddenly awakened from their relative imprisonment within the Soviet Bloc to find their national boundaries vulnerable to influences from a world that had moved on to an increasingly transnational order. They have been confronted with the possibility that identities are far from taken-for-granted, not the least because of the power of global communication and information networks. It is not surprising that, emerging from the discredited communist rhetoric of egalitarianism and internationalism, East Europeans have fallen back on nationalismFootnote 22
Here, a static socialist “East” is opposed to a dynamic and transnational global order that formed unencumbered by the weight of socialism. Such notions about “Eastern Europe,” and the identification of “global mobility” with the west or the post-socialist period, reinforce an association of socialism with parochialism and social stagnation.Footnote 23 This premise erases not only the rich history of Second World-Third World exchange and socialist internationalism, but also the significant role that explicit discourse about race and racism played in the Second World's global experience of the twentieth century.Footnote 24 Socialist societies, precisely because of officially sanctioned internationalist principles and their unique openness to the decolonizing world of Asia, Africa, and Latin America, in fact witnessed robust exchanges about racialized identities, “whiteness,” and the problem of racism. While circumscribed and limited by the controls on the freedom of information in many socialist states, discussions about the nature of racial identities and racism informed ideas about Yugoslavs’ place in the world.
Nevertheless, an emphasis on the repressed or sublimated nature of racializing language and behavior during state socialism is pervasive in the relevant scholarly literature. As seen above, the focus on the elided character of race in east European critical race studies is a double-edged sword that can contribute to the image of the region as static, and of society under state socialism as racially reactionary. Recent scholarship on socialist Yugoslavia, for example, has presented the state's socialist, anti-colonial, and non-aligned politics as “performative.”Footnote 25 This language renders state socialist anti-racism and solidarity politics insincere, intended merely to suppress or distract from, rather than address, problems of racism and prejudice. This approach to anti-racism in Yugoslavia, while offering valuable insights into the oft-instrumentalized political goals of non-aligned solidarity rhetoric, casts Yugoslavs’ treatment of the issue of racism as inauthentic or outmoded in opposition to an imagined authentic anti-racism.Footnote 26 The (unintentional) implications in many scholarly discussions on socialist racial discourse reify the classic stereotypes that juxtapose a 1960s world experiencing vibrant social movements, activism, and protests centered around racism and racial justice with a world made up of out-of-touch socialist functionaries, passive civil society, and archaic mentalities.Footnote 27
In light of this scholarship, this article aims to do two things: first, it acknowledges and addresses the reality of racism and racialization in Yugoslavia to counter entrenched narratives that romanticize socialist Yugoslav anti-racism or minimize state racism. Besides common, everyday prejudice, socialist anti-racism, as has been demonstrated by many scholars over the past decade, was an ideology with its own internal contradictions that often produced paternalistic and racist attitudes.Footnote 28 Second, while pointing out the racist and racializing tendencies of socialist authorities and citizens, this article also recovers an active, and often public dialogue about race and racism in Yugoslavia in the 1960s and 70s. The image of a static or disingenuous socialist discourse on racism prevails, in part, because many existing studies do not make use of sources that show a plethora of self-reflexive discussions and academic research interrogating Yugoslav prejudice, nor do they consider the energetic political and social activism of both Yugoslav and African actors in Yugoslavia around racism.Footnote 29 Rather than race-blind, out-of-touch, or provincial in comparison to an ostensibly more open, cosmopolitan, capitalist world, social and government institutions in Yugoslavia responded to accusations of racism by international students with a sustained and complex conversation about Yugoslavs’ attitudes towards racialized difference and racism. While this dialogue often produced denialism or more racism, it also engendered new understandings of Yugoslav identity and revealed the limits of socialist anti-racism. In following these conversations about racism, this article adds to existing scholarship, which has begun to highlight the complex, polysemous racial discourses in socialist Yugoslav society.Footnote 30
In addition to this corrective of Cold War narratives of insular state socialism, this article introduces novel agents of political and social change in socialist Yugoslavia by centering actors from the Global South. This follows recent scholarship that positions students from the Global South and their politics of protest in Europe not only as Cold War political spectacle, but as catalysts of political and social change.Footnote 31 In 1960s Yugoslavia, the activism (and often mere presence) of hundreds of Black African students who came to Yugoslavia through non-aligned networks helped make racism a topic of serious public and scholarly debate. This article thus positions students and other actors from the Global South as agents in an active process of identity formation in socialist Yugoslavia. I argue that the movement in the 1960s and early 1970s to interrogate anti-black racism in Yugoslavia problematized Yugoslav identification with the “Third World” and destabilized notions of Yugoslav exceptionalism by reinforcing Yugoslavs’ identity as white Europeans. Simply put, through intimate interaction and conflict with Black others, non-aligned politics enabled Yugoslavs to construct their own modern, European identity.Footnote 32
Racism and Anti-Racism in Postwar Yugoslavia
While scholars have demonstrated racial imaginaries active in the Yugoslav region since the early modern period, subtle shifts in the language and symbols accompanied these imaginaries across different historical periods.Footnote 33 The 1950s and 60s marked one such shift as the intensification of decolonization in Africa and Asia, Cold War politics, and socialist Yugoslavia's deepening relationship with the Global South all combined to make skin color and blackness more prominent in Yugoslav discourse about local racialized identities and racism than in previous periods. Discourse about racialized identities in the Yugoslav region in the nineteenth and early twentieth century often involved a broad mix of cultural signifiers such as lifestyle, religion, place of origin, as well as biological markers such as blood, height, and other features, including skin color.Footnote 34 These strains of racialization are evident in the well-known writings of physical anthropologists (the “Nordic” and “Dinaric races,” for example) and eugenicists of the early twentieth century and the interwar period.Footnote 35 The racial discourse of the postwar period can itself be differentiated chronologically as the experience of the Holocaust and the particular racism of antisemitism dominated immediate postwar conversations about racism in Yugoslavia and across Europe.Footnote 36 In Yugoslavia, official texts and media of the immediate postwar period often invoked the category of racism in a local context when discussing anti-Jewish violence during the war.Footnote 37
International politics and domestic media in the 1950s and 60s expanded the possible associations and meaning of racism for the Yugoslav public. Yugoslavia's non-aligned relationships and its intensified anti-colonial activism during this period elevated the problem of a global anti-blackness (most prominently apartheid in South Africa and segregation in the United Sates) as the paradigmatic form of racism. Mentions of segregation, apartheid, Jim Crow, and white dominance over Black people in the Congo and elsewhere came to feature frequently in Yugoslav media, popular literature, and official writing.Footnote 38 Yugoslav leaders seamlessly wove a black-white anti-racism into official formulations of non-aligned liberation politics. At the international conference “Peace, Colonialism, and Aid for Undeveloped Countries” held in Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia in 1960, Latinka Perović, a future leader of the League of Communists of SR Serbia stated that the world needed a peace “in which basic human rights would be equally afforded to Black people, not just white, and to members of small nations, not just large ones.”Footnote 39 Thus, in Yugoslavia's domestic media and international politics, the concept of racism became more narrowly connected to colonialism and the idea of white people's prejudice against Black people in ways that it had not been previously. This mirrored the evolution of language in international fora. For example, the 1967 UNESCO “Statement on Race and Racial Prejudice” featured “Negro slavery” and European colonialism more prominently as a corrective to the organization's earlier 1950 statement on racism.Footnote 40 Most intriguingly, Yugoslav legal scholars in the early 1970s argued that the Yugoslav criminal code needed to be updated and expanded to include “skin color” as a basis for discrimination and hate crimes. Legal scholars argued that racism in Yugoslav legal practice was too narrowly associated with religious prejudice.Footnote 41
Before such opinions emerged, however, official media and political leaders in Yugoslavia consistently externalized racism, presenting it and any legacy of European colonialism as foreign to socialist Yugoslav society. In their early overtures to postcolonial states of the Global South, Yugoslav diplomats and Party leaders distanced the socialist state from the taint of colonialism and its racial division of the world by disassociating the Yugoslav region from “colonial” Europe. At the first Bandung conference in 1955, for example, Yugoslavia's official observers reported disapprovingly that leaders of postcolonial states, particularly Sukarno of Indonesia, were promoting “Afro-Asian exclusionism” by simplistically dividing the world into peace-seeking Afro-Asia and colonialist Europe. The Yugoslav observers were understandably vexed by their presumed allies’ generalizations that conflated Yugoslavia with the colonial metropoles of western Europe.Footnote 42 A reflex to deny any link to colonial Europe continued throughout the socialist period. When, for example, the museum of African History in Belgrade was dedicated in 1977, a large anchor that once belonged to an Atlantic slaving ship (le Négrier) was positioned near the museum's entrance. Next to this anchor, a plaque was placed with the following inscription: “ the peoples of Yugoslavia never participated in this trade of human beings.”Footnote 43 In official speech, Yugoslav officials went further, laying claim to a shared colonized past and postcolonial present with the peoples of the decolonizing world on account of their common history of “suffering and enslavement” to colonial powers.Footnote 44 Slavery was frequently cited as a historical condition that connected Yugoslavs with Africans and other colonized peoples.Footnote 45 Yugoslav officials, writers, intellectuals, and other commentators conflated the legacies of the Ottoman empire, the Austro-Hungarian empire, Nazi Germany, and even the Kingdom of Yugoslavia with that of west European colonial rule in Africa, Asia, and Latin America to buttress Yugoslavia's postcolonial credentials.Footnote 46 Popular authors and youth also placed Yugoslavia in a “new world” side-by-side with Afro-Asia, opposed to the “old world” of colonial Europe.Footnote 47
Yet scholars have convincingly argued that insulating Yugoslavia, state socialism, or non-western Europe from the legacy of colonialism and global racial formations such as whiteness and blackness is ahistorical.Footnote 48 Not only did tangible colonial histories intersect the region of Yugoslavia—whether through Catholic missionaries to the New World or local exotic “human zoos” full of people from Africa in the region's Habsburg lands—but a striving for Europeanness and whiteness has marked the region as a conspicuous legacy of colonialism.Footnote 49 As a constellation of cultural signifiers connected to, but not reducible to, light skin, whiteness informed the dominant frame of Yugoslav non-aligned and development theory. As articulated by Yugoslav non-aligned theorists and Party leaders such as Edvard Kardelj and Leo Mates, socialist Yugoslav visions of “Afro-Asian” underdevelopment were informed by a racialized, hierarchical notion of human progress. Kardelj and Mates (and Tito) spoke and wrote of the Global South in the general modernizing, historicist, and Eurocentric register characteristic of both European and postcolonial national elites. While Kardelj used “backwardness” as a framework to contextualize the Global South, Leo Mates, in his major work Non-Alignment: Theory and Current Practice, centered the revolutionary and progressive movement in Europe as the paradigm of human political and social organization.Footnote 50 Archival sources confirm this same strain of thought: official Party reports in the 1960s often characterized most African societies as not yet developed enough to produce or support a true socialist revolution like the one Yugoslavia and other European states had produced.Footnote 51
Grappling with Yugoslav Whiteness in the Global 1960s
While foreigners’ conflation of Yugoslavs with white, western Europeans by non-aligned allies caused cognitive dissonance and indignation, it also helped construct and reaffirm Yugoslav whiteness and Europeanness in subtle ways. This process of self-racialization and the construction of Yugoslav whiteness can be seen clearly in Yugoslav travel narratives through Africa and other places in the Global South during the 1960s. Crno na belo (Black on White), an account by the celebrated novelist Oskar Davičo, offered Yugoslav audiences insights into the postcolonial politics of racialization. After traveling through west Africa in 1961 and becoming frustrated by the stigma that his white skin held for his African interlocutors, Davičo asked rhetorically whether or not all men were “equal regardless of the color of their skin? We are brothers. We are comrades. Is not he (the African) aware of this reality? Or must the complexes created by the colonial system endure longer than him?”Footnote 52 Cryptically referring to himself as a “former white man,” Davičo continued his account with a lament:
It doesn't make sense, but I can't help it, I feel shame. The nation to which I belong and the class whose son I am have never coerced, never enslaved, never murdered. For centuries we were slaves ourselves. But no matter. I am white and that is all the passersby see. If only I could wear an abbreviated version of my country's history on my lapel! I look like a Frenchman, an Englishman, a Belgian, a Portuguese, a Boer, a segregationist, and a member of a lynch mob from Little Rock to them. I'm ashamed to think that in the eyes of an African I could resemble their kind. If I could change the color of my skin, I would do so without hesitation.Footnote 53
While some scholars have interpreted Davičo's renunciation of his whiteness as a way of “seeking similarities” and solidarity with Black Africans, Davičo's bitter guilt ultimately serves to emphasize the difference between him and his African comrades by reinforcing the ostensible immutability of his white identity.Footnote 54 And although Davičo's Jewish heritage and imprisonment in an Axis detainment camp during the Second World War deepens the complexity of his musings on whiteness, his romanticization of internationalist fraternity and paternalistic tone towards Africans suffering from “complexes” situates Davičo in a longer historical tradition of European epistemic hegemony over non-Europeans.Footnote 55 Yugoslav proximity to whiteness, with its colonial origins, is what enabled such hegemony.
Other Yugoslav narratives written of this period featured imagery and fetishizing language remarkably similar to Davičo's account. These revived older tropes that celebrated the vitality of Balkan backwardness and non-European anti-culture or barbarism (a trope most commonly associated with the Zenitizam movement of the 1920s).Footnote 56 The Slovenian writer Jože Javoršek's (Jože Brejc) highly literary, intertextual novel Okus Sveta (A Taste of the World) exemplifies this synthesis. First published in the momentous year of 1961, the narrative follows Javoršek's circumnavigation of the globe on an ocean liner and features all the tropes of Balkan liminality and ambiguity, but now expressed in the idiom of post-coloniality. Upon leaving Europe at the beginning of the novel, Javoršek symbolically renounces his Europeanness:
No one could understand my wild, yet pure desire to break free from Europe and consign my false and conceited “Europeanness” to the depths of the deepest ocean for the most hideous creatures to devour. Quite simply, I wanted to kill the European in me and purge myself of the cultivation of the “Mediterranean man” with his contrived classics and hollow culture through which Europeans have enslaved, murdered, and corrupted people across the globe.Footnote 57
Javoršek then foresees the day when there will no longer be a European identity by noting that “cultural mixing” is the dominant trend of the day, marking the onset of a “universal culture.”Footnote 58 As if to usher in this new culture as quickly as possible, Javoršek maintains a regime of strict austerity and non-fraternization towards his fellow European passengers. When a wealthy English woman raised in Singapore as the daughter of a colonial official becomes infatuated with him, Javoršek resists her advances and the sensual corruption of Europe in his quest to meet the “new world” unblemished. He tells her that “we are from two different worlds even if we are by our upbringing akin. You are England—the old world. I am a man of the new world.”Footnote 59
Javoršek's sense of belonging to the non-European world is shaken, however, when he reaches America, the land of “Indians” and formerly enslaved Africans. Upon noting how racial minorities in the United States are derisively perceived and treated, Javoršek at first claims his place among them: “When I think about it, I am actually quite primitive as I only feel comfortable around people who are considered primitive”Footnote 60 However, his esprit de corps with minorities in the United States receives a shock upon arriving in Harlem, New York. Here, Javoršek experiences a mixture of fear and guilt as he walks the streets of the neighborhood:
The truth is, I would eagerly paint myself black this very moment for a silent panic had overtaken me Or should I shout my nationality right there on the street? I don't think that would change anything for the better as it appears all white people are guilty for this completely abnormal situation, which can only be understood if experienced on your own skin” (ako se ne iskusi na vlastitoj koži).Footnote 61
In both Davičo and Javoršek's narratives, fetishizing skin color, black and white, ultimately functions paradoxically to reify difference, rather than dispel it. At the end of their narratives, both authors find their skin, and apparently corresponding cultural identity, seemingly unalterable.
Black African Students and “Petite-bourgeois Mentalities”
In addition to traveling abroad in the Global South, intimate encounters at home with visitors from Africa, Asia, and Latin America gradually shaped Yugoslavs’ understanding of their imbrication in whiteness and their place in global racial hierarchies. Most notably, the mid-1950s witnessed a precipitous increase in the number of students from Asia, Africa, and Latin America seeking degrees at friendly socialist universities in Europe. This “post-colonial education migration,” as one scholar has described it, initially performed an important symbolic function in Yugoslavia's domestic politics, one arguably greater than in other socialist states of the Eastern Bloc.Footnote 62 For Yugoslavs and postcolonial citizens alike, the country served as the paradigm of Cold War cosmopolitanism and international solidarity, a place neither “East” nor “West,” but non-aligned and straddling the border of the Second and Third Worlds. The state's carefully curated national narrative of Cold War exceptionalism based on Yugoslavia's high-profile schism with the Soviet Union, its “self-managed” workers socialism, and its pioneering role in the Non-Aligned Movement in the 1950s and early 1960s buttressed this worldview. In turn, African, Asian, Arab, and Latin American students became the most conspicuous domestic symbol of socialist Yugoslavia's exceptionalism in international politics. For Yugoslavia's citizens, the act of hosting students from postcolonial countries exemplified this openness, while foreign students’ ostensible eagerness to study in Yugoslavia confirmed the admiration and respect that the world reportedly held for Yugoslavia.Footnote 63 Images of students from decolonizing states studying, working, and even protesting side-by-side with Yugoslavs served to validate the progressive credentials of the state at times when the Soviet Union, China, and others sought to discredit Yugoslavia as a reactionary, capitalist, and even neo-colonial regime.Footnote 64 Yugoslavia, just like the Soviet Union and other socialist bloc states, actively cultivated an image of the state as an anti-racist, workers’ utopia where the cultural differences created by colonialism did not matter. The effectiveness of this discourse can be seen in the case of Nwaeze Anyanwu. A chemistry graduate of UC Berkeley originally from Nigeria, Anyanwu wrote the Yugoslav consul in San Francisco in 1955 asking for a scholarship to study in Yugoslavia. He had heard from his friends that “African blacks” were treated well in Yugoslavia and that more and more students from less-developed countries were flocking to Yugoslavia.Footnote 65 Such attitudes informed the decision of many students from the Global South to study in Yugoslavia.
Yet foreign students, particularly Black African students, did frequently experience racial prejudice in Yugoslavia. Black students from places like Sudan, Togo, Kenya, Tanzania, Northern Rhodesia (later Zambia), Nigeria, Ghana, and Guinea often reported instances of verbal assaults laced with racial slurs, physical beatings, police brutality, denial of service at restaurants, unequal treatment in student dorms, Yugoslav anxiety about miscegenation, and media or literature featuring racist stereotypes about Africa and Africans.Footnote 66 More often than not, officials at various Yugoslav universities, the Union of Yugoslav Students, or the Federal Bureau of International Technical Cooperation characterized the complaints as “isolated” incidents rooted in Yugoslav students’ “hooliganism,” youthful indiscretions, “reactionary politics,” or simple misunderstandings rather than examples of any widespread anti-black racial prejudice.Footnote 67 Yugoslav officials sometimes preferred to ascribe the cause of these complaints to African students’ own overdeveloped sensitivity and “inferiority complexes.”Footnote 68 When a group of students from Sudan reported racially-tinged harassment to the director of the student dorms at the University of Belgrade in 1960, for example, they were told that “there were good and bad people” everywhere and that their experience was not an example of discrimination because Yugoslavia had an official policy of peaceful coexistence; she then explained in her report that the Sudanese students, because of their “black skin,” were being overly sensitive to the actions of individuals.Footnote 69 In 1963, the president of Yugoslavia's Union of Yugoslav students, Novak Pribičević, told a young Kenyan student who had complained about Yugoslavs’ use of the words “monkey,” “boy,” and “negro” (but who, interestingly, never used the word “racism”) that the “roots” of the colonizers’ behavior and the causes of certain Yugoslav citizens’ “excesses” were completely different.Footnote 70
Locating Yugoslav racism in youthful “excess,” “hooliganism,” or, as some officials claimed, “petite-bourgeois mentalities,” did not simply represent a circumlocution or avoidance of an unpalatable conclusion, but hinted at a problem of competing definitions of racism.Footnote 71 For Yugoslavs of this period, racism was associated, above all, with a state-sanctioned system of discriminatory laws and segregation.Footnote 72 Through frequent debates and intimate interactions with Black African students over the course of the 1960s, however, the concept of racism in Yugoslavia expanded in ways that could incorporate the forms of prejudice experienced by Black Africans there. From official and popular definitions of anti-black racial prejudice as exclusively a phenomenon of colonial societies and their metropoles and as a system of discriminatory laws, it expanded to include the everyday popular attitudes and behaviors that implicated Yugoslavs.
One particularly frank central committee discussion of the Union of Yugoslav Students in 1961 illustrates how sympathetic Yugoslav officials struggled to define a phenomenon of prejudice that was not systemic in the sense of discriminatory laws or de facto segregation (far from it), but that was nevertheless pervasive and injurious. In their regular course of discussing Black African students’ complaints of racism, Ivan Šošić, a committee member from SR Croatia, objected to his colleagues’ dismissive attitude to the students’ grievances:
In our students’ relations with foreign students the problem of segregation (segregacija) has appeared, the existence of which I have personally witnessed myself, so it is probably not merely talk and allegations by foreign students, but rather the truth. It is the truth. I personally experienced it when I was riding in a car with a black man, a foreign student, and he was attacked in the city. I was sitting next to him and it was a very, very unpleasant thing. Perhaps it does not have the generalized character or the same essence and content like it has in America or in some other country, but the problem exists here among us. I believe that our society will somehow accommodate not only students, but that in a few years it will not be so strange to see a black person.Footnote 73
Šošić's use of the term “segregacija” is noteworthy. One could characterize Šošić's use of the word segregation to describe the racially-motivated attack he witnessed as a mere mistake, but it does highlight Yugoslavs’ legalistic approach to the question of anti-black prejudice. The use of the word segregation also suggests that one of the most, if not the most, important points of reference and sources of vocabulary for discussions of race and racism in Yugoslavia was Jim Crow United States and South Africa. This is important as it shows how Yugoslav officials were actively trying to understand racial prejudice in Yugoslavia by triangulating between multiple contexts of racism. The semantic journey of the word segregacija in Serbo-Croatian is also important. From its original meaning referring to the expropriation of nobles’ land and its redistribution to former serfs in Habsburg South Slav lands in the mid-nineteenth century, the term segregacija in Serbo-Croatian eventually assumed the meaning of the legalized separation of people through mid-twentieth-century media coverage of American race relations. In the 1960s, the term was appropriated by Yugoslav scholars to describe class differentiation in Yugoslav cities and now has widespread use in the region to describe de facto discrimination against local Roma populations.Footnote 74
Black African students, not surprisingly, were often more precise in their use of terminology. While Cold War politics and the power of public accusations of racism informed some postcolonial students’ methods of accusing Yugoslavs of racism, many, if not most, carefully qualified their use of terms like racism and discrimination when discussing their accusations with officials. Most Black African students in particular very carefully delineated what they viewed as racist behavior in Yugoslavia from racist regimes much more frequently and consistently than they conflated Yugoslavia with the United States or colonial regimes in Africa. The students were not necessarily caught up in rigid ideological binaries of Cold War and imperialism, as Yugoslav officials sometimes claimed, but rather grappled like Mr. Šošić, with a complex phenomenon. In 1960, for example, a student from Togo told representatives of the University of Belgrade: “we know that racial discrimination like they have in America doesn't exist here, but these individual incidents cause us pain. It sometimes happens that they tell us there's nothing left to serve in a restaurant and then they later serve other guests”Footnote 75 Other students similarly declined to conflate socialist Yugoslavia with racist regimes like the United States and South Africa. Emmanuel Kossivi from Togo, in his attempt to describe the problem, indicated that postcolonial students were “becoming reactionaries” in Yugoslavia because of the discrepancy between Yugoslav rhetoric and what they experienced in their everyday lives:
In western countries you know that racial discrimination exists and you know down which street a foreign black student can go, but none of that exists here; there is no racial prejudice or laws— this isn't Rhodesia, but it's still bad because there are individual citizens who insult black students and Yugoslav students who attack them. What's more, a black student receives no protection from security services and the police especially when he's in the company of a white womanFootnote 76
Like other Black African students, Kossivi hesitated to use the language of segregation, discrimination, and even racism when explaining conditions for Black African students in Yugoslavia given the obvious incongruence between Yugoslavia and colonial African states; nevertheless, he pointed to a clear pattern of racial prejudice that he and other Black African students experienced in Yugoslavia.
As hinted at above, by far the most frequent complaints of Black students involved the question of their relationship with Yugoslav women, whether intimate, casual, or as colleagues. While the Yugoslav state, like many other socialist states, did not prohibit marriage between Yugoslavs and non-Yugoslavs, the fraternizing of Black men with white Yugoslav women appeared to clash with the moral sensibilities of large swathes of the general public and police in Yugoslavia.Footnote 77 In Ljubljana, Zagreb, and Belgrade, Black students from the late 1950s regularly recounted incidents of Yugoslav students, citizens, and police officers harassing them while they socialized with, studied with, or dated white Yugoslav women. In June 1960 in Belgrade, for example, students from Togo and Ghana reported that a group of residents in New Belgrade called them monkeys and the women they were with prostitutes. The students also alleged that police constantly asked for their female companions’ identification when found together in public.Footnote 78 The pervasive policing of interracial intimacy became such a problem that Black African students in Belgrade took to publicly protesting. In 1961, Sudanese and other African students demonstrated in front of government buildings in downtown Belgrade because of the harassment of their contacts with Yugoslav women by Yugoslav police and students.Footnote 79 Similar problems prevailed in Zagreb and Ljubljana. In Ljubljana, an organization of Black African students named “Black Africa” (made up mostly of students from Ghana) wrote letters to the political leadership of SR Slovenia, and even Tito, informing them of racially-motivated harassment and particularly of the problem of intolerance of interracial intimacy.Footnote 80 One Kenyan student claimed that male Slovenian students would frequently break up Black-Yugoslav dancing partners and chastise them with the question, “aren't Slovenian men good enough for you?” (In interviews, former students from Africa recount similar encounters in the 1980s with almost verbatim language, confirming the regularity of aggression towards interracial couples).Footnote 81 The issue was also a key contributing factor for a mass protest in 1963 in which over ninety percent of the foreign students in Ljubljana participated, including Asian, Arab, and African students.Footnote 82
By the late 1960s, these accusations had persisted long enough and become so public that Yugoslavs officials, scholars, and popular authors began devoting attention to studying the problem of Yugoslavs’ racial attitudes. Given that many of the surveys and studies about the phenomenon of racism in Yugoslavia that appeared from the end of the 1960s referenced Black African and other foreign students’ experiences, it is clear that the students’ complaints and activism were a significant factor in the attention devoted to the issue of racism in Yugoslavia.Footnote 83 In 1969, the renowned Slovenian academic and first president of the Yugoslav Sociological Society, Jože Goričar (1907–1985), conducted a study about foreign students’ experience in Yugoslavia. Based on survey questions posed to foreign students in Ljubljana, one section of the study concluded that foreign students experienced the most prejudicial treatment at dances and when socializing with Yugoslav women.Footnote 84 Two years later in 1971, a more detailed study appeared in Belgrade when Nikola Tomić, a psychology student, submitted a thesis titled “The social distance of university students towards black people.” In his master thesis, Tomić queried Yugoslav students at the University of Belgrade on their views about black-skinned people, not just students.Footnote 85 One question asked the students whether they would accept their brother or sister marrying a black person. Sixty-six percent of respondents indicated that they would not agree with such a union, while twelve percent responded that they probably or definitely would. Some respondents expressed that they would be hesitant not because of personal reservations, but rather out of concern for the possible negative reaction of their family or wider community.Footnote 86 Tomić's thesis was quickly picked up and cited by well-know scholars such as the sociologist Nikola Rot, who worked on questions of racism, ethnic prejudice, and national identity and who organized international conferences in Yugoslavia on the topic of racism. Whereas previous published journalistic and scholarly literature on racism exclusively cast anti-black racism as a problem of colonial regimes and the United States, scholarship and journalistic reporting in the 1970s and 1980s came to include, albeit in small doses, socialist Yugoslavia into their analyses.Footnote 87
Yugoslav literature of the period also took up the problem of anti-black racism and the topic of transgressive romance between Yugoslav and black students. In 1972, the prolific, award-winning author Anton Ingolič (1907–1992) published a book titled Onduo, moj črni fant (Onduo, My Black Boyfriend) in Slovene, which was translated into Serbo-Croatian in 1975.Footnote 88 The novel tells the story of Vida, a young Slovenian woman, who falls in love with a Black Sudanese student named Onduo shortly after he arrives to study in the SR Slovenian capital of Ljubljana. The two begin an intimate relationship, which they hide from Vida's family, her coworkers at a hairdressing salon, and the general public. Through Vida and Onduo's taboo relationship, Ingolič reveals a Ljubljana characterized by deep racial prejudice and xenophobia. When Onduo impregnates Vida, the two decide to marry and to disclose their relationship to Vida's family and coworkers. This decision causes an intense backlash. After Vida's family refuses to allow the couple into Vida's childhood home and disowns Vida on the spot—and after her work colleagues harass her for marrying a “negro”—the two decide to leave Yugoslavia for Sudan.Footnote 89 There, Vida tragically dies of apparent malaria on the banks of the Nile before she is able to give birth to the couple's child and Onduo, bereft, commits suicide by throwing himself into the river. Onduo, My Black Boyfriend dramatizes Yugoslav anxiety about interracial romance and ultimately miscegenation, about which many Black African students complained. The novel is an important historical artifact as it memorializes the relatively common, yet controversial interracial relationships from the Yugoslav perspective. In Ingolič's treatment of socialist Slovenian society, anti-blackness has deep roots that penetrate both the more traditional rural milieu of Vida's childhood village and the ostensibly more progressive and socialist urban center of Ljubljana. Furthermore, an important intertextual aspect of Ingolič's novel hints at the longer historical context of anti-blackness in the region. The name of Ingolič's protagonist is also the name of one of the most well-known characters of Slovenian folklore, “Lepa Vida,” of which the most famous rendition is an early nineteenth-century epic poem written by Slovenia's national poet France Prešeren.Footnote 90 In the poem, a “black man from across the sea” (črn zamorec) seduces Vida who, in the poem's narrative, essentially abandons her home and children and, symbolically, her nation. In this interpretation, the image of Africa and its dark-skinned people imbricate both medieval and modern Slovenian society in a racialized discourse of whiteness and blackness.
Onduo, My Black Boyfriend helps illuminate how seemingly contradictory discourses of anti-racism and anti-black racialization co-existed in Yugoslavia, sometimes within the same text. On the one hand, in the preface to the 1975 Serbo-Croatian translation, the translator of the novel explicitly framed the work as an anti-racist text meant to demonstrate “how relations between people of different skin colors should be, or better, how they should not be allowed to be”Footnote 91 The story provocatively implicates socialist Slovenian and Yugoslav society in a deep, historical tradition of anti-black racism. On the other hand, the novel itself is rife with language and imagery that exoticizes Onduo and presents familiar racializing stereotypes of the hyper-sexualized black male body.Footnote 92 Moreover, the novel's conclusion, which associates Africa and this interracial union with death, with no hope of offspring, adds to the polysemous nature and ambiguity of the text.Footnote 93 Thus, while the novel may have subverted officially sanctioned ways of thinking about anti-racism in Yugoslavia, it could also, at the same time, reinforce dominant racializing and racist conceptualizations of Black Africans in Yugoslav society.
The 1960s marked an important transnational, global moment not only for the capitalist west and the postcolonial world, but also for socialist states in eastern Europe.Footnote 94 Often cast as static and insular, state socialist societies actively participated in shaping an interconnected postwar world through a robust internationalist tradition of cultural exchange and political protest.Footnote 95 For Yugoslavia and other socialist states, decolonization held more than mere political and diplomatic import. From the cultural imaginary to novel social and material relations, intimacy with the Global South shaped Yugoslav society in significant ways. The circulation and interrogation of ideas about race, racism, and postcolonial thought in the long 1960s constitutes one overlooked aspect of this exchange in the literature on state socialist internationalism. This exchange between socialist Yugoslavia and actors from the Global South counters persisting narratives that posit western origins for histories of the global 1960s and thereby marginalize both the Second and Third Worlds.Footnote 96 The elision of socialist reflexivity to racism, in particular, has also served to perpetuate notions of a stagnant socialist east, one mired in reactionary racial thought and behavior. While political interests and internalized ideology about what and where anti-black racism could be often stifled or predetermined official conclusions about domestic prejudice, Yugoslav writers, social scientists, and some officials offered important critical assessments about racism in Yugoslavia in the 1960s and 70s. From something seemingly foreign, Yugoslavs began to locate anti-black racism at home as well.
Finally, this article has centered postcolonial politics and postcolonial actors as important vectors of the debate about racism in Yugoslavia. As such, it speaks to a scholarly methodology and politics of “decolonizing” Slavic and East European studies.Footnote 97 A decolonial approach interrogates dominant knowledge production, identities, and power relations created by colonial language, practices, and ideology.Footnote 98 A decolonial history in Slavic or state socialist studies complicates, for example, narratives of socialist anti-racism and reframes entrenched understandings of group identities (by introducing concepts such as whiteness, for example). In this vein, this article has described how black African students presented a challenge to widespread notions of Yugoslav racial exceptionalism and Yugoslav self-understanding and thus, in effect, acted as agents in “decolonizing” state socialist politics. Decolonization is thus a form of politics that goes beyond conventional narratives of state socialist internationalist politics and anti-colonial solidarity. While sensitive to the incongruence and tension of postcolonial language and epistemologies between different contexts, decolonial scholarship can reveal important insights into how not only African students but also local “Others” in the region mobilized and appropriated language and practices to decolonize knowledge and politics in state socialism.Footnote 99 Such scholarship offers important new perspectives on global socialism and eastern Europe that does not parochialize the region or reproduce conventional north-to-south routes of influence.