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by R W Seaton-Watson


  firing on the crowd and killing Salim Agié, a young

  Moslem.

  On 8 June, 1912, another young Bosnian student, Luka

  Jukic, made an unsuccessful attempt upon the life of

  Cuvaj in the streets of Zagreb, killing in the process the

  Chief of the Croatian Department of Education and one

  of the policemen who tried to arrest him. Though this

  outrage was followed by numerous arrests of students,

  the exasperated feeling which prevailed is shown by the

  fact that 270 Jugoslav students in Prague signed with

  their own names a letter of open menace and defiance

  to the Dictator. The scattered student groups at the

  various

  Universities

  had

  already

  begun

  to

  organise

  themselves,

  the

  "

  Serbo-Croat

  Nationalist-Radical

  Youth " being formed at Vienna in December 1911.

  Now a whole series of new student organs began to appear

  - — Val in Zagreb, to replace the all too anaemic Hrvatski

  Djak; Prepored in Ljubljana; Ν ovi Srbin at Sombor

  1 ibid., p. 51.

  This fact was brought out at the trial of the assassins, several of whom

  admitted the influence of the pamphlet upon their minds. Cf. " Jugoslovenstvo

  sarajevekih Atentatora," by P. Süjeptevic (Nova Europa, 1 June, 1925, p. 501).

  72

  and Pancevo; Srpska Omladina in Sarajevo; Ujedinjenje

  at Split.1

  In all these groups feeling, of course, varied according

  to temperament. Even the most moderate among them

  went considerably beyond the most advanced of the

  political leaders, and all were firmly convinced of an

  impending crisis in European affairs, upon whose issue

  the fate of their own nation would depend. But, though

  probably a great majority already looked upon Zerajic

  and Jukic as national heroes, there still were a tiny

  handful who actually dabbled in terrorist plans. In

  August 1913 a young Croat student named Dojcic, who

  had come all the way from America for the purpose,

  inflicted a severe, though not dangerous, wound upon

  the new Ban, Baron Skerlecz; and in March 1914 another

  Croat, Jakob Sefer, was caught red-handed at the Zagreb

  Opera, when waiting to shoot Skerlecz in company with

  the Archduke Leopold Salvator.

  By this time not merely the University students, but

  the middle school youth in most Jugoslav towns of

  Austria-Hungary, were thoroughly infected by revolu-

  tionary

  ideas. They

  continually took part in street

  demonstrations against the Cuvaj regime and the Buda-

  pest

  Government,

  and

  disciplinary

  methods

  or

  the

  expulsion of individual pupils sometimes led to sym-

  pathetic

  strikes

  in

  neighbouring schools. The unrest

  in the schools was deliberately fanned by young agitators

  from the Universities, who went secretly from town to

  town and encouraged the formation of student societies

  or clubs. When the Balkan War broke out, and the

  whole South blazed with enthusiasm for the cause of

  Serbia and her allies, some of the wilder spirits swam

  across the Drina to Serbia or slunk by night over the

  1 In 1914 three more began their brief existence: Zastava at Split (Spalato),

  edited by Oskar Tartaglia, the present Mayor; Vihor at Zagreb, and a more

  ambitious

  monthly

  review

  entitled

  Jugoslavia at

  Prague,

  with

  whom

  one

  of

  the moving spirits was Ljuba Leontic" (since the war founder of a widespread

  patriotic Jugoslav organisation on semi-Fascist lines, known as the " Orjuna ").

  73

  Montenegrin frontier, and joined the irregular volunteer

  bands which served as outposts for the Serbian Army as

  it invaded Macedonia. It was thus that the first real

  contact was established between the ringleaders of the

  Bosnian movement and the most reckless elements in

  Serbia. This was still further promoted by the policy

  of the Austro-Hungarian authorities; for in a good many

  cases

  youths who were expelled

  from all

  Bosnian

  gymnasia, and expressly disqualified from entering any

  school in Austria or Hungary, had no choice left but to

  renounce all further education or to throw themselves

  on the mercy of their free kinsmen in Serbia.

  This overcharged atmosphere was admirably suited

  to such a born agitator as Vladimir Gacinovic, who left

  Vienna in the winter of 1912 in order to fight as a Monte-

  negrin volunteer before Skutari, and then resumed his

  sociological studies at Lausanne University, but remained

  in close contact with many of his contemporaries and

  juniors at home. Indeed, to quote one of his most

  intimate associates, " he held the half of revolutionary

  Bosnia in his hands; almost all the younger priests and

  teachers were with him." By his pamphlet, and by his

  articles in Zora and Srpska Omladina, he had hypnotised

  the younger generation. His high moral phrases, leading

  to the same strangely immoral conclusions as the writings

  of Savinkov1 and similar Russian terrorists, kindled

  raw youth to action. " The young men must prepare

  themselves for sacrifices,"' was his message from the

  very outset; and the best sacrifice consisted in taking

  the same risks as Zerajic.

  It is not generally known that in Lausanne Gacinovic

  was in close relations with the Russian revolutionaries,

  and, among others, with Trotsky, who even wrote a

  of that strangest of Russian books, The Pale Horse, by " Ropshin " (Savinkov,

  the murderer of Plehve and the Grand Duke Serge), which opens with a meeting

  of a Nihilists, reading St. Gospel together, as a preparation for the murder

  of governor!

  3 Spomenica, p.32.

  74

  preface to a selection of his French articles.1 From some

  of these men he learnt the art of bomb-making, and began

  plotting outrages. In January 1913 he invited certain

  young Bosnians — among them two Moslems, Mehmed-

  basic and Mustafa Golubic — to meet him at Toulouse,

  and here he provided them with weapons and poison,

  for the purpose of attempting the life of General Potiorek,

  the Governor of Bosnia, and forestalling their own

  capture

  by

  suicide.

  But

  the

  youthful

  conspirators'

  nerve failed them; fearing a Customs examination on

  their return across the Austrian frontier, they threw

  the weapons out of the carriage window, and nothing

  further came of this design.

  None the less, they and others of their contemporaries

  continued to dream of terrorist action, and rema
ined in

  continual

  correspondence

  with

  Gacinovié. But, while

  most of the semi-secret societies which they had formed

  never got far beyond the theory of revolution, there was

  formed, mainly at his instance, a secret terrorist group,

  or " Kruzok," in more than one of the Bosnian towns,

  and notably in Sarajevo, where his friend Danilo Ilic,

  a young schoolmaster, who had also served for a time as

  a Komitadji in Macedonia, was the link between many

  who were otherwise completely unknown to each other.

  The extent to which discipline had been undermined

  among the youth of Bosnia is very clearly shown by a

  series of confidential memoranda drawn up immediately

  before and after the tragedy by high officials in the Joint

  Finance Ministry in Vienna and kindly placed at my

  disposal by one of them since the war. Incidentally,

  these documents throw light upon the jealousy and lack

  of co-ordination between the Landesregierung in Sarajevo

  1 A Croat edition of these was published in Vienna in 1922, under the title of

  Sarajevski Atentat (Bibliotéka Svêtlost, édition Slave) and contains the preface

  by " L. T." Trotsky, however, disapproved of Gacinovié's views as too exclu-

  sively nationalist.

  2 This account is based on verbal statement made to me by some of Gaéinovié's

  intimates, now living in Sarajevo.

  75

  and its nominal superior, the Finance Ministry in Vienna

  __a circumstance which, as will transpire later, was,

  more than anything else, responsible for the success of

  the murder plot against the Archduke. 1

  It appears that in the course of 1913 a secret organisa-

  tion

  called

  the

  "

  Serbo-Croat

  Nationalist

  Youth

  "

  ("

  Srpsko-Hrvatska

  Nacionalisticka

  Omladina

  ")

  was

  formed in Sarajevo. It had no office or statutes, but

  took as its model a similar society in Belgrade called

  " National Unity " (" Narodno Jedinstvo "), with which

  Gaéinovic had formerly been in relations. Its aim was

  to win the rising generation for the idea of throwing off

  the Habsburg yoke and achieving Jugoslav Unity under

  Serbia; and its efforts were concentrated above all upon

  pupils in the various teachers' training colleges. Sub-

  sections existed in Tuzla, Mostar, Trebinje, and Ban-

  jaluka, but the centre of the whole movement was in

  Zagreb, where it was intended to hold, on 16 July, 1914,

  a sort of congress of delegates from all the training

  colleges in the various Jugoslav provinces, and to lay

  plans for future agitation.1

  Specially active as wandering prophets of revolution

  were the Slovene student Endlicher and a budding

  school-teacher named Laza Gjukié. These and others

  set themselves deliberately to undermine discipline in

  the secondary schools, and the conditions in the gymnasia

  of Mostar and Tuzla were typical of the result. In the

  former a number of senior students " by their provoca-

  tive behaviour towards the teachers, kept the school

  in a ferment," and organised insubordination in every

  class, until it ended in open insults and disturbances

  1 See pp. 106-7;

  2 Report No. 5544 of Dr. N. Mandic, Vice-Governor (LandeschefStellvertreter)

  of Bosnia, addressed to the

  Zentralstelle für den defensiven Kundschaftsdienst

  (Headquarters

  for

  Counter-espionage),

  then

  situated

  in

  Zagreb.

  Through

  the

  °Ourtesy of friends in Zagreb, I was able to obtain this document from the

  archives of the Zagreb police. The document asserts that the Sarajevo group

  Cumbers about 100 members, and gives the names of six ringleaders, of whom

  only one, Laza Gjukic, is known to us from nationalist sources.

  76

  and led to a formal enquiry. From the minutes of the

  teaching staff at Tuzla it appears that here several of

  the older pupils publicly insulted their professors in

  class, and even assaulted one of them; that demonstra-

  tions and disturbances were frequent; and that a pupil

  of the seventh class during religious instruction spat in

  the face of the Orthodox catechist, simply because he

  belonged to the moderate Serb party which at that time

  supported

  the

  Bosnian

  Government.1

  In

  these

  and

  other cases disciplinary measures seem to have com-

  pletely failed, to an extent which is well-nigh incon-

  ceivable to Western minds. But the fact that this

  failure was frankly admitted on all sides illustrates better

  than anything else how untenable not merely political,

  but even social conditions in Bosnia had become on the

  eve of the catastrophe. The remedy actually adopted

  by the Ministry was, on 30 June, 1913, to close the Mostar

  Gymnasium for a whole year. But here the cure was

  almost worse than the disease, for the youths thus set *

  at liberty were either admitted to other schools, and

  carried the infection with them (this was the case at

  Tuzla), or swelled the ranks of revolutionary hotheads

  who were already to be found in every town in the

  South.2

  The slightest incident brought these youths into the

  street.

  In

  Sarajevo

  there

  were

  protests

  before

  the

  Italian Consulate in connection with the Italo-Slovene

  quarrel at Trieste; or, again, German shop-inscriptions

  in the town were systematically damaged or besmirched,

  1 See Report 968 of 16 July, 1914 (" betreffend Mittelschulen, Sanirung der

  Zustande an denselben ") — Regierungsrat Cerovic to Minister Bilinski.

  2 A very valuable testimony to the gravity of this movement will be found in a

  pamphlet

  of

  Count

  Berchtold's

  confidential

  secretary,

  Count

  Alexander

  Hoyos

  (who was sent on so decisive a mission to Berlin on 4 July, 1914) — Der deutsch-

  englische Gegensatz und sein Einfluss auf die Balkanpolitik Oesterreich-Ungarns,

  p. 74. " All who knew the country " (i.e. Bosnia) " had the impression that an

  explosion was near at hand. Especially in the schools Panserb propaganda had

  created such chaotic conditions that a regular continuance of instruction scarcely

  seemed possible. The Bosnian Government declared

  most urgently that

  severe

  measures must be taken to check the Serbian agitation, if a catastrophe was to

  be avoided."

  77

  as a protest against Germanisation. In Mostar there

  was a demonstration against a German theatrical com-

  pany, in Tuzla against
the Austrian national anthem

  and the person of the Emperor. Amid this atmosphere

  of constant excitement and agitation the most fantastic

  rumours

  circulated,

  and

  were

  rendered

  plausible

  by

  events in the Balkans, by the Austrian mobilisation and

  military movements, and by the series of attempted

  assassinations inaugurated by Zerajic — five in four years.

  One consequence, which it is important to emphasise,

  was that there was such constant talk about " Attentats "

  and outrages in all circles, alike official and non-official,

  that at last it ceased to be taken as seriously as it deserved.

  This is one of those general assertions which is hardly

  susceptible of exact proof, because it rests on personal

  experience and recollections, but which will certainly

  not be challenged by anyone who had lived even for

  a month or two in that atmosphere. It is a point of

  detail which bears very materially upon the question

  of possible precautions or warnings.

  During the winter of 1913-14 the " Kruzoci " already

  mentioned continued their work, and began deliberately

  to plan a fresh outrage. The stricter methods introduced

  by General Potiorek as Governor of Bosnia naturally

  rendered him specially obnoxious; but he was well

  protected and not easily reached. Early in 1914 Danilo

  Ilic set himself to collect youths ready for some desperate

  outrage, but neither he nor his accomplices appear to

  have had a clear idea as to where or against whom they

  were to act. At this moment the forthcoming visit of

  the Heir Apparent to Bosnia was announced in the Press,

  and Ilic's friend Pusara cut the announcement out of a

  local newspaper, gummed it on a postcard, and posted

  !t without further comment to Vaso Cabrinovic, a young

  Bosnian who had been expelled two years before for

  Socialist tendencies, and was now working as a type-

  setter in the State Printing Press at Belgrade. Cabrinovic

  78

  showed it to another young Bosnian, Gavrilo Princip,

  who was finishing his studies in great poverty at a Bel-

  grade gymnasium. The incident proves — as was sub-

  sequently admitted at the trial — that their heads were

  already full of terrorist ideas, and that the barest prompt-

  ing from their friends at home was needed to set them

  in motion. (It also proves, incidentally, that the initia-

  tive came from Bosnia, not from Serbia.)

 

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