Group: | Argentines of Serbian descent |
Flag: | |
Population: | 5,000[1] |
Langs: | Argentine Spanish, Serbian |
Rels: | Serbian Orthodox Church and Roman Catholicism |
Related: | Montenegrin Argentines, Bosnian Argentines, Croatian Argentines, Slovene Argentines, Hungarian Argentines, Romanian Argentines, Bulgarian Argentines, Macedonian Argentines, Czech Argentines, Polish Argentines, Slovak Argentines, Ukrainian Argentines, Belarusian Argentines, Russian Argentines, Jewish Argentines |
Serbian Argentines or Serb Argentines (es|Argentinos Serbios; sr|Српски Аргентинци|Srpski Argentinci) refers to Argentine citizens of ethnic Serb descent or a Serbia-born person who resides in Argentina.
Although today Serbia and Montenegro are different countries, it is difficult to account separately the immigration flow from each of them, since the majority declares as Serbs.[2] There are estimated 5,000[1] or 30,000[3] people of Serbian and Montenegrin origin living in Argentina today. They mostly originate from the territories of today’s Montenegro and Croatia (Dalmatia), and, to a lesser extent, from Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina.[3] They live in different regions of Argentina, but mostly in the provinces Chaco, Buenos Aires and Santa Fe.
The research (Ethnographic Institute of the SASA) demonstrated that this diaspora is very much emotionally bounded to its ethnic origin, even though they are greatly assimilated. They are frequently unable to clearly define their ethnic identity, and thus a great number of them use the term “our” to refer to their origin, language, culture, and community.[4] Anyway, members of this diaspora consider themselves both as an integral part of Serbian people and loyal citizens of Argentina. Only a small number of immigrant descendants use Serbian language.[5]
Some of homeland clubs, founded by first generations of emigrants in late 19th and early 20th century are still active and represent places where emigrants and their descendants gather. As much as modern life allows them nowadays, this diaspora make efforts to gather at homeland clubs to satisfy specific cultural needs.[6] It is important to mention that Serbian Orthodox Eparchy of Buenos Aires also plays important role of these people, it's usually their connection with the spiritual and cultural heritage.[7]