Editorial Publishings
Relations to Religious Institutions-Mosques, Tombs, Tekiyas in the Večernja Pošta (1921-1933)
Authors
-
Anida IbričićPhD Student, University of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Synopsis
Various written traces, especially numerous newspapers and periodicals, present a view of Islamic thought in Bosnia and Herzegovina, just as Večernja pošta did. Večernja pošta is a political and informative newspaper that was published in Sarajevo every weekday from 1921 to 1933. The paper was published for thirteen volumes:
VOLUME I, issue number 1 - 150 (July 1 - November 29, 1921); vol. II, no. 151 – 447 (January 2 – December 29, 1922); vol. III, no. 448 – 745 (January 2 – December 31, 1923); vol. IV, no. 746 - 1047 (January 2 - December 31, 1924); vol. V, no. 1048 - 1348 (12 January – 31 December 1925); vol. VI, no. 1349 – 1650 (January 2 – December 31, 1926); vol. VII, no. 1651 – 1950 (January 2 – December 31, 1927); vol. VIII, no. 1951 - 2255 (January 2 - December 31, 1928); vol. IX, no. 2256 - 2561 (January 2 - December 31, 1929); vol. X, no. 2562 - 2866 (January 1 - December 31, 1930); vol. XI, 2867 - 3169 (January 2 - December 31, 1931); vol. XII, no. 3170 - 3471 (January 3 – December 31, 1932) and vol. XIII. no. 3472 - 3516 (January 2 - November 21, 1933). The chief and responsible editor of the paper was Jozo Sironić, as well as the owner. Among the editors were Čedomil Borojević, Maksim Svara, Eugen Džikovski, Milan Lavicki, Milan Maraković, Luka Popovac, Zvonko Šprajcer, Jovo Bošković (for Mostar), Slobodan Mišić Paležanski (for Dubrovnik), Mile Borojević, Rudimir Rudi Roter. Some of the later owners were Mile Borojević and Eugen Džikovski. The paper is printed in the Latin script, in Serbian and Croatian. It was printed in the printing houses: Bosanska pošta, Hrvatska tiskara, printing house of Dušan D. Dozet and Nova RELATIONS TO RELIGIOUS INSTITUTIONS-MOSQUES, TOMBS, TEKIYAS IN THE VEČERNJA POŠTA (1921-1933) tiskara Vrček i drug in Sarajevo.1 The newspaper Večernja pošta announced every positive work related to building cultural, economic and political individuality in accordance with the principles of national and state unity. In this regard, in the continuation of the paper, Islamic thought is presented in the Večernja pošta newspaper through its relationship to religious institutions - mosques, graves, tekkes in Bosnia and Herzegovina, during the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. Chronological articles are presented which are connected in a certain way with religious Muslim institutions, and which will give an accurate picture of the desired relationship, which is the goal of this paper.
Volumes I (1921); IV (1924) and VII (1927), the pages of the Večernja pošta newspaper do not have articles directly related to Muslim religious institutions. However, of course, there are articles related to Muslims, mostly on reisul-ul-ulema and the Islamic community in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The complete volume XII (1932) list has not been preserved, and for this reason we have no information about the articles.
Copyright
Copyright (c) 2025 Sevba Abdula (Volume editor); , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , Abdullah Eren, , , , , , , , , , , , , (Chapter Author)
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Downloads
Publication Information
-
Publication TypeChapter
-
Volume
-
Pages59-68
-
PublishedJune 1, 2025
-
Series
-
Series PositionResearch 7
Abdula, S., & Köroğlu, A. . (Eds.). (2025). Relations to Religious Institutions-Mosques, Tombs, Tekiyas in the Večernja Pošta (1921-1933). In R. Suma, Balkan Periodicals: The Trajectory of Islamic Thought in the Interwar Period: Vol. Research 7 (pp. 59-68). Idefe Publications. https://doi.org/10.5331/