mark of the indemnity," says M. Ribor, the
chairman of the Constituent Assembly. "And we do not receive financial
aid. On the other hand, is not France financing Hungary--the eternal
potential enemy of Jugo-Slavia?"
There is no certainty about the attitude of France and England.
England is felt to have cooled a little towards Serbia. France is a
source of bewilderment. The decoration of Belgrade with the Cross of
the Legion of Honour was accepted in very good part, and the French
Marshal who brought it was lauded to the skies. But the after-thought
was, when he went away--What did he come for? Was it not perhaps to
flatter Serbia into undertaking a part in some new war, perhaps against
the German, perhaps against the Soviets?
Suspicion is a marked characteristic of political life in Belgrade,
suspicion and fear. They are afraid of the Croat for his separatism,
of the Magyar for his malevolence, of the French for their intrigues,
of the Russians for their numbers and their superior gifts, of the
Austrians for their commercial enterprise. Secret agents abound, and
are evidently excellent. An enormous amount of information is
collected--information too disquieting and too voluminous to be coped
with.
The Serbs, however, have evidently tried hard to accommodate all
talents and all opinions in the new State. In the new Constitution
complete freedom of religion is being guaranteed to all sects; the
monarchy will be strictly constitutional; and all political ideas
except separatism and Bolshevism will be tolerated. Regarding
Bolshevism the Serbs have taken a strong line. It is a criminal
offence, and propagandists are liable to swift arrest. No
discrimination of any kind will be made against subjects of the kingdom
of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes on the ground of race.
Serbia by herself has not a large educated class. She has not enough
of her own to administer Jugoslavia, and consequently she looks
naturally to the employment of the Croat and Slovene educated class,
and also to the refugee Russians. Many Russian professors in exile
have found posts; Russian engineers and technicians are readily
accepted in the hope that their services may be used. In the Ministry
and in the Government offices the other races are amply represented.
Ribor himself, the Speaker of the Constituent Assembly, is a Croat.
The previous obligations of the Austrian Government have in many cases
been taken over. Those who receive
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