Mostar91 je napisao/la:
I agree with the vast majority of that in which you are claiming except I would like to make the point that the video's goal was not to address contemporary Croatians in BiH as foreign peoples but rather that THEY are the successors of the Roman Catholic population to a LARGER DEGREE Than those In which are Muslims today inhabiting BiH.
I also agree that contemporary Croatians in Bosnia and Herzegovina are the successors of the medieval, pre-Ottoman Roman Catholic population and have also preserved the memory of the old Kingdom of Bosnia better than people in Sarajevo claim to.
Anyone willing to do basic research about the history of Bosnia and Herzegovina will see that. Contemporary BiH Croats have preserved the history of the old kingdom of Bosnia in our monasteries, we have preserved old pre-Ottoman names for towns and areas like Usora, Soli, Uskoplje, Rama, Brotnjo...
Look at where contemporary Croatians live(d) in BiH, many places are of historical significance to the old Bosnian kingdom and part of its core: Rama, Jajce, Travnik, Kraljeva Sutjeska, Fojnica, Vareš, Kresevo, not to mention old towns like Livno or Tomislavgrad (Duvno) where the first Croatian king was crowned. Hrvoje Vukčić Hrvatinić was born in Kotor Varoš. Bihać was never part of the old Bosnian Kingdom even at its maximum. The Ottomans take it in 1592 - over 100 years after the old Bosnian kingdom falls. Neum is given to the Ottomans almost 100 years after that.
The last thing you want to do when creating an identity is to let someone else - especially a group that's numerically smaller to lay claim to that. That's why we see the fight to claim the past. Sarajevo thinks that they are the rightful heirs to the old Bosnian kingdom. Contemporary Croatian in BiH know otherwise.
Hence the need by Sarajevo to try and strip Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina of their identity and turn them to being just ordinary Bosnian Catholics. Sarajevo basically would be able to the say that they alone dominate Bosnia and that the Catholics in Bosnia are a remnant link/bridge to the pre-Ottoman Bosnia...
I remember reading this somewhere on another forum and I am going to paraphrase it here, but I think it makes perfect sense in the context of this conversation.
The Bosnians who ceased to exist when the Ottomans arrived, and the Bosnians who arose from the arrival of the Ottomans are not the same.