The term SerbMuslims refers to ethnic Serbs who are Muslims by their religious affiliation. Since it is defined by ethnicity and religion, term Serb Muslims should not be confused with term Serbian Muslims which refers generally to all adherents of Islam in Serbia, regardless of their ethnicity.
Use of the term
The term has several particular uses:
In ethnographic, historical and comparative religious studies it is used as a designation for Islamizedfamilies of ethnic Serb descent.
It has been used as a self-identification in former Yugoslavia.
It is used in historical studies to identify Ottoman people of Serb origin.
Since Serbs were, and still are, predominantly Eastern Orthodox Christians, their first significant historical encounter with Islam occurred in the second half of 14th century, and was marked by Turkish invasion and conquest of Serbian lands. That interval was marked by first wave of Islamization among Serbs: in some regions, substantial minority left Christianity and converted into Islam, willingly or by necessity, under the influence of Ottoman authorities. The most notable Muslim of Serb ethnicity was Mehmed-paša Sokolović, Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire, who was ethnic Serb by birth, and so was Omar Pasha Latas.
Muslims joined the Serbian army in World War I. The majority were Muslims who had a Serb identity, declaring as Serbs. Among notable soldiers were Avdo Hasanbegović, Šukrija Kurtović, Ibrahim Hadžimerović, Fehim Musakadić, Hamid Kukić, Rešid Kurtagić, who all fought as Serbian volunteer officers at the Salonica Front. Among the most active in the group of Muslims who were engaged in Yugoslav propaganda on Austro-Hungarian Muslim POWs were A. Hasanbegović, Azis Sarić, F. Musakadić, Alija Džemidžić, R. Kurtagić, Asim Šeremeta, Hamid Kukić and Ibrahim Hadžiomerović.
In the 1948 census, Muslims in Yugoslavia were allowed to declare as "Serb-Muslims", "Croat-Muslims" or "Undetermined" Muslims, the overwhelming majority choosing the option undetermined. Some prominent Muslims in Yugoslavia openly declared as Serbs, such as writer Meša Selimović.
Yugoslav Wars
During early talks of the partition of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Ejup Ganić remarked that the Bosniaks "are Islamized Serbs", and should thus join the Serb side, at a time when the SDA shifted in favour of siding with the Serbs and continuing struggling against the Croats. Political analyst Jochen Hippler noted in 1994 that "Muslims are mostly ethnically Serb, a minority Croat, but this did not save them from being slaughtered by their fellow ethnic groups for being different." Serb nationalists usually insisted that Bosnian Muslims were Serbs that had abandoned their faith. Serbian historiography emphasizes an Orthodox Serbian origin for the Bosniaks who are interpreted as relinquishing ties to that ethno-religious heritage after converting to Islam and later denying it by refusing to accept a Serbian identity. Bosnian Muslims within the bulk of Serbian nationalist historiography are presented as the descendants of the mentally ill, lazy, slaves, greedy landlords, prisoners, thieves, outcasts or as Serbs who confused and defeated chose to follow their enemies religion.
Censuses
Serbian censuses
In the 2014 census in Serbia, of those who declared as ethnic Serbs, 0.04% declared Islam as their religion.
Notable people
Avdo Karabegović, Bosnian writer
Osman Đikić, Bosnian writer
Muhamed Mehmedbašić, Bosnian revolutionary
Mustafa Golubić, Chetnik
Hasan Rebac, writer
Ismet Popovac, World War II Chetnik
Fehim Musakadić, World War I Serbian soldier and World War II Chetnik