Yugoslav phone books: perhaps the last record of a people

January 20, 2000
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ANN ARBOR—From around the world Yugoslav phone books began arriving at the University of Michigan. Telephone books from 1968 to 1995 bore what might be the only records available to document residency for the close to one million people forced to evacuate Kosovo.

Most of the government archives in Kosovo have been burned, and personal documentation was stripped from refugees prior to their crossing the Kosovo borders to other countries. The major library holdings in Bosnia, including the collections in the National and University Library and the Oriental Institute, were destroyed by Serb Nationalist artillery during the siege of Sarajevo. The Sarajevans were forced to burn the few surviving books for fuel during the winters. And the last Yugoslav census did not always provide reliable and/or consistent demographic information, says Janet Crayne, project coordinator at the U-M Library‘s Slavic Division.

An advisory board representing U-M, Harvard University, the University of Montreal and University of Washington, in collaboration with the microfilmer Norman Ross, Inc., coordinated the collection and filming of phone books from former Yugoslav republics and their successor states Bosnia and Hercegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Yugoslavia (Serbia, Montenegro, Vojvodina and Kosovo) and Slovenia. Donations were international in scope and came from public and academic libraries, as well as from personal collections.

“The most pressing goal now is to provide information on residency property ownership for the Kosovars forced to flee to other countries,” says Crayne. “The information in these phone books could facilitate and expedite repatriation.”

The Yugoslav phone books have a separate section on Kosovo so established Kosovar residences can be noted and traced at least biennially, says Crayne. The project also includes census data from the region for 1971, 1981 and 1991, as well as trade directories.

The information in the books is now being microfilmed, and will be made available to such agencies as the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, the U.S. Department of State, and to organizations compiling databases for that region of the world. At present digitization opportunities are being considered and funding is being sought for such a project.

“We are delighted that these resources have been identified which will provide critical data in support of the repatriation effort for the Kosovar people,” says William Gosling, director of U-M’s University Library. “Janet Crayne and her colleagues are to be commended for their efforts to make this vital data available to support this humanitarian initiative.”

For more information, or to donate phone books,

LibraryHarvard UniversityUnited Nations High Commissioner for Refugees