Jasmina Tešanović: Christmas in Serbia

(Essay by Jasmina Tešanović, photoshop by Oibibio)

Since December 20th, 2007, ever-smaller Serbia is
surrounded by the ever-larger European Union.
Nine countries have joined – bringing to 24 the number
of nations to have abolished internal passport
controls.

The latest wave of members includes eight former
communist states, and Malta.

Switzerland will become the 25th Schengen country when
it joins next year.

The enlarged free-travel area encompasses some 400
million people – 30 percent more than the population
of the U.S.

This wall is called Schengen, imposed against the
Others in the region who will not comply with the
standards emanating from Brussels. Every state
around Serbia has come to make its peace, more or
less, with the huge fact of European soft-power. Serbs
do not comply.

The negotiations in Vienna about the breakaway Serbian
province of Kosovo have clamorously failed, yet
again. The province is threatening to proclaim a
unilateral independence from Serbia, which will
likely be recognized by every state in the EU except
for Cyprus. Serbia is declaring that it will fight
to the bitter end for its ancient heritage, although
Kosovo is currently inhabited by a 90 percent Albanian
populace.

The Serbian president Boris Tadic just returned from
the US where he sought the understanding of
Condoleezza Rice. God knows why.

The Russians, with their newly assertive and deeply
nationalist policy, are busily buying up Serbia with
their boom in oil funds. Serbia as an economic and
diplomatic pawn within EU territory would be very
handy for Russian intrigues and wonderfully painful
for everyone else including Serbs.

With its own clamorous failure in the negations in
Vienna, the European Union timorously hands over a
European problem and a fractious chunk of European
territory, back to the planet's violently assertive
power players: Russia and the US.

European reluctance was symbolized last week in
Vicenza, Italy, where a big anti-NATO rally was held.
Vicenza holds a major airbase from which NATO, in
1999, launched the (mostly American) warplanes that
bombed a European state for the first time since 1945.

This holiday season, Serbia will observe the New
World Order's consumer rite of Christmas, then perform
the pagan ritual of New Year, when people hit the
streets, flinging firecrackers and firing weapons into
the sky in a storm of resolutions, wishes and kisses
before the Serbian Orthodox Christmas.

The upcoming presidential elections in January
20th 2008 will show supposedly what small Serbia
has decided for its own fate: to become European,
Russian or American. In reality, Serbia stands
decoratively armed as the banana republic of
Ruritania, a frozen-conflict in love with melodramatic
national notions from a historical pulp novel, with
its own rules and edicts, which it flings into the
teeth of a disbelieving world. The world does not
comply with Serbia.

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Jasmina Tešanović is an author, filmmaker, and wandering thinker who shares her thoughts with BoingBoing from time to time. Email: politicalidiot at yahoo dot com. Her blog is here.

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Previous essays by Jasmina Tešanović on BoingBoing:

Neonazism in Serbia
Korea – South, not North.
"I heard they are making a movie on her life."
Serbia and the Flames
Return to Srebenica

Sagmeister in Belgrade

Jasmina Tešanović: What About the Russians?

Milan Martic sentenced in Hague

Mothers of Mass Graves
Hope for Serbia
Stelarc in Ritopek
Sarajevo Mon Amour

MBOs
Killing Journalists

Jasmina Tešanović: Where Did Our History Go?
Serbia Not Guilty of Genocide

Carnival of Ruritania
"Good Morning, Fascist Serbia!"
Faking Bombings
Dispatch from Amsterdam
Where are your Americans now?

Anna Politkovskaya Silenced
Slaughter in the Monastery

Mermaid's Trail

A Burial in Srebenica
Report from a concert by a Serbian war criminal
To Hague, to Hague

Preachers and Fascists, Out of My Panties

Floods and Bombs


Scorpions Trial, April 13
The Muslim Women 
– Belgrade: New Normality
Serbia: An Underworld Journey
Scorpions Trial, Day Three: March 15, 2006
Scorpions Trial, Day Two: March 14, 2006
Scorpions Trial, Day One: March 13, 2006
The Long Goodbye
Milosevic Arrives in Belgrade
Slobodan Milosevic Died
Milosevic Funeral