Muslims by nationality

Muslims by nationality was a term used in Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia to describe people who spoke Serbo-Croatian language and professed Islam that weren't identified as one of the other nations. Albanians and other non-Slavic Muslims were not part of this group.

The Constitution of SFRY recognized narodi (nations—native peoples which were explicitly named in the Constitution, giving them special privileges) and narodnosti (nationalitiesminorities, with similar legal status to that of immigrants). In a debate that went on during the 1960s, many Muslim Communist intellectuals argued that Muslims of SFRY are in fact a native Slavic people. As a compromise, the Constitution was amended in 1968 to list Muslims by nationality. Sometimes other terms, such as Muslim with capital M were used (that is, "musliman" was a practicing Muslim while "Musliman" was a member of this nation; Serbo-Croatian uses capital letters for names of peoples but small for names of adherents).

After the 1990s, most of these people, around two million, mostly located in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the region of Sandžak, declare as ethnic Bosniaks (Bošnjaci, sing. Bošnjak), which is a word which was used to mean "Bosnians".

On the other hand, some still use the old name Muslimani (Muslims), especially outside Bosnia and Herzegovina:

See also

See also: Muslims by nationality, 1960s, 1968, 1990s, 2001, 2002, 2003, Albanians, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosniaks