Jevrem Brković

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Jevrem Brković (Serbian Cyrillic: Јеврем Брковић)(born 29 December 1933 in Seoce, Zeta Banate, Kingdom of Yugoslavia, modern-day Republic of Serbia) is a Montenegrin writer (poet, novelist, journalist), historian and a cultural activist. He is known for his vivid criticism of his political opponents, as well as figures from Montenegrin public life.

Brković spent his early life in Belgrade. In 1975 he was the recipient of the "13th July prize".

While in Belgrade, Brković promoted Serbian nationalism and was in support of Slobodan Milošević at first. A romantic patriotic poet of the same league, he intimately befriended Matija Bećković and Radovan Karadžić. Since the 1990s and after the horrible Yugoslav wars sprung, he affirmed a pro-Montenegrin attitude, and his views were sometimes described as being anti-Serb ones. He was also at the time a harsh critic of the regime, led by Milo Đukanović. In 1994 due to Djukanovic's pressure and political persecutions, Brković left Montenegro for Croatia where he stayed under President Franjo Tudjman's protection 1999, working on his studies that based on the research of Savic Markovic Stedimlija and Croatian historian Ivo Pilar.

In 1999 he returned to Montenegro, when, in his words, "Montenegro once again became Montenegrin". He has since been a strong supporter of Montenegrin independence from the state union of Serbia and Montenegro.

The same year Brković became the founder and first president of the Doclean Academy of Sciences and Arts, a controversial non-governmental cultural organization in Montenegro, dedicated to Stedimlija's research of Montenegrins' original Red Croat identity and to proving that Montenegrins aren't related to the Serbs. Seen as a nationalist organization paired to the official Montenegrin Academy of Sciences and Arts which it reckons pro-Serb, among other, the DANU makes some controversial statements expressing support of the WWII Montenegrin Nazi collaborators. At around the same time, he became the editor of the "Montenegrin Literary Paper" (Crnogorski Književni List - CKL) that is published in Montenegrin, Serbian, Bosnian and Croatian language, thus being the first ever newspaper published in Montenegrin.

He is criticized a lot for his frequent switches of attitudes, from a "Greater Serb nationalist" to a Montenegrin independentist and Croatian sympathizer and even nationalist; his enemies mostly calling him an "Ustaša" because of his newfound Greater Croatian nationalist beliefs. His works also failed to achieve a broader scale of popularity mainly because of frequent uses of obscene and vulgar wording.

Pamphlet of Jevrem Brković's Doclean Academy of Sciences and Arts for the support of election of Milo Đukanović's "Coalition for an independent Montenegro" in 2001
Pamphlet of Jevrem Brković's Doclean Academy of Sciences and Arts for the support of election of Milo Đukanović's "Coalition for an independent Montenegro" in 2001

In 2001, his organization, the Doclean Academy of Sciences and Arts, actively campaigned for the election of Milo Đukanović's "Coalition for an independent Montenegro". They published a novel pamphlet which depicts Montenegro as a Greater Red Croatia and hypothetical pan-Croatian unified lands (Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, western Serbia's Vojvodina (Serbian Bačka and eastern Srem), southwestern "Old Serbia" (Rashka and Kosovo's Metohija) and the northern half of Albania). Such terminology is widely seen as anachronistic and bizarre.

On October 24, 2006 Brković and his driver and bodyguard Srđan Vojičić were attacked by three armed men. Vojičić was shot dead, while Brković escaped with mild injuries. [1] It is speculated that the motive for the attack was the latest Brković's book, "The lover of Doclea" (Ljubavnik Duklje), in which he indirectly ridicules many people from the Montenegrin public life, especially close friends of former Prime Minister Milo Đukanović, but not Đukanović himself.

Jevrem Brkovic is today the commander of a Montenegrin politics-orientated para-military organization, the "Lovćen Brigade".

Brković's son, Balša Brković is also a notable Montenegrin writer.

Contents

[edit] Works

[edit] Poetry

  • Testaments
  • Highlands Country
  • Highlands Homer is dead
  • Sons of Bitches
  • Ancient fog around the home
  • Komite balads
  • Building and destroying of the Ozrović house

[edit] Novels

  • Pantelej on a cornel
  • Duke's men
  • Black spots
  • Monigrens
  • Stone-cutters
  • The Lover of Doclea

[edit] Essays and philosophical works

  • The anatomy of a Stalinist's moral
  • Mine fields of the esthetics
  • The destroyed face of democracy
  • Glossary

[edit] Source