Lighthouses  
                    MILAN BUDIMIR  (1891-1975), FAMOUS SCIENTIST AND TRADITIONAL TEACHER 
                      The Deepest  Heartbeats of the Balkans 
                      He went a long way from Mrkonjić Grad to  resolving the most delicate pre-Antique mysteries of the Peninsula.  He earned his doctorate degree in Vienna  in Indo-European religion. He knew Andrić and Kočić, taught Gavrilo Princip,  traveled with Nušić to Masarik’s birthday. Although he went blind before the  age of 30, he set the foundations of Serbian Balkan Sciences and fortified  classic philology. He despised ”any kind of mad running after Europe”  and called upon the ”resurrection of the Balkan spirit and Balkan Homeland” 
                    By: Đorđe M. Srbulović 
                     
                         True knowledge,  the one that separates a person from its contemporaries for centuries, has a  feature of initiation. It implies that the Teacher, who possesses, develops and  transfers it to others, must go through everything destined for him, but  remaining upright in his Path. With it, he testifies Virtue and his life gains  the magnificence that doesn’t end in his earthly life. The lives of Teachers  last and multiply, transfer and continue in others, without the latter knowing  whose life, whose deeds, thoughts and knowledge have been granted to them.  Their task is to continue the Path, and those worthy of Learning do it. 
                      All this is  reflected in the life and work of Milan Budimir. Who would’ve known?! The  beginnings were so unpromising on that November 2, 1891 in Mrkonjić Grad, homeland  of Vrhovina, with Roman and Turkish roads, as he used to say. ”In the God  forbidden land!” Mother  Jovanka, illiterate, honorable and traditional woman,  father Đorđe, barber, merchant, inn owner, seller of traditional calendars and  other books published by the ”Bookstore of M. Popović Brothers” in Novi Sad. These were the first  encounters of Milan Budimir with books. According to his words, his father  spoke the ijekavian dialect and his mother ikavian, so already in his home, he  discovered different words, pronunciations and meanings. He attended the  Serbian-Orthodox elementary school in Mrkonjić Grad, in the class of Pavle Ubavić,  who later became senator. At the end of his life, in the early 1970s, in an  interview to publicist Kosta Dimitrijević, Budimir said that he still knew the  church songs he had learned then. 
                      He was a man of  encyclopedic knowledge, a great erudite, always full of energy. (Nula dise  sine linea. Not a single day without a line written. That sentence was his  life motto and he often used to repeat it.) Joy was in the essence of his being  – as Vojislav Đurić estimated the character of his professor. 
                    CLAIRVOYANCE OF  BLIND POETS 
                     After the first  four grades of elementary school, thanks to the municipality scholarship, he  went to Sarajevo  to continue his education in the classic gymnasium. He was good in languages,  so already in junior high school he learned Greek and Latin, later Hebrew and  several living languages: German, Hungarian, Russian, Italian, French… ”At the time I  could read by myself, I read literature in twelve languages.” 
                      By 1910, when  he graduated from the gymnasium, he had become member of ”one of the many  students’ associations, first Serbian, later Yugoslavian”. But not just any… He  became member of the organization, which Božidar Purić named ”Young Bosnia” in Corfu Humorist in 1917! Budimir met  the somewhat younger Gavrilo Princip, whom he held classes, as well as  Gaćinović, for whom he said that only after his arrival the organization became  serious and strong. Gaćinović was a real, born revolutionary; it is known that  he used to meet Trotsky. 
                       From 1910 to 1914,  Budimir was in Vienna,  studying classic philology and comparative linguistics. He was also active  there, in students’ organizations ”Zora” and ”Akademac”. Due to his participation in the demonstrations against the ”dual monarchy”,  he was in fifteen prisons. This ruined his health, so he went blind before the  age of thirty. The hand of God: Budimir left more than 200 scientific works and  studies of the blind poet Homer and his Iliad.  He wrote most of them after going blind – at the same time opening the eyes of  the entire world towards new paths of knowledge he had searched for, as well as  towards the disappeared time, as academician Srejović used to say. This, along  with many other things, took him to the very top of Serbian, European and world  knowledge. At the end of his life, the work he wrote about the third blind  great man – Filip Višnjić, will be the cause of Budimir’s persecution by  Bosnian and Yugoslav communists. 
                      Although the  persecution additionally ruined his health, this man of joyful spirit stood  tall. After a long illness, he died on October 17, 1975, without a  commemoration, without the right to the Alley of Greats, without selected or  collected works. 
                      Even today he doesn’t  have the place he deserves in Serbian culture. It is true that the famous  Society of Ancient Studies in Belgrade grants the ”Milan Budimir” Award  for Classic Sciences. The library of the Association of the Blind and one  school for visually impaired carry his name. He was declared honorary citizen of  Mrkonjić Grad, his birth town, in December 2012 and one street was named after  him. However, all this wasn’t nearly enough or in accordance with the real  importance of this scientific giant. 
                    THUNDER GODS  AND BALKAN FATES 
                     Due to his poor  sight, he spent World War I in the logistics units, at an office desk. After  the war had ended, he returned to Bosnia and started working, first in Bihać and  then in the Sarajevo gymnasium. He started Novo Djelo, Oko, Slovenski  Jug magazines. One of his  closest associates – Cvijeta Cihler, doctor of biology, became his wife. (When  professor Budimir lost his eye sight, his wife left her career completely and  dedicated herself to his work and the family. It remained so even after she had  lost her hearing, until her death in 1970.) 
                      In 1920, Milan Budimir,  together with Branislav Nušić went to Tomas Masaryk’s 70th birthday celebration.  On his way back, he went to Vienna, where he earned his doctorate degree, with  professors Radermager and Von Arnim as mentors, with the thesis About Thunder Gods of Indo-European People. He  taught at the Belgrade University since 1921. 
                      At the time of  Kingdom of Yugoslavia, during his participation in many international  scientific meetings on Byzantium and philology, professor Budimir developed the  consciousness about the need of scientific research of the entire Balkan area.  When Ratko Parežanin (a great and unfortunately forcedly deleted name of  Serbian culture) informed him about his idea to found the Balkan Institute, developed  in his talks with his godfather Svetozar Spanaćević, Budimir immediately got  involved in those activities together with Professor Petar Skoko from Zagr eb.  Aware of the importance of the commenced work, King Alexander supported the  work of this significant institution organizationally, financially and in every  other way. The text of the program, entitled Balkan Fates, which Budimir wrote with professor Skoko, best shows the  task of the Balkan institute: ”… so the entire civilization, both spiritual and material, created in  the Balkans, would be criticized and formed not from the aspect of Western  Europe, but from the aspect of the Balkan Homeland. Madly running after Europe  and uncritically imitating it, as it has often been the case in the Balkans,  excludes the revival of Balkan nations and resurrection of the Balkan spirit, since  both can be achieved chiefly by contemporary cooperation of the Balkan humans,  Balkan nations and Balkan states.” 
                      The Balkan  Institute gave a scientific view of the peninsula’s history, hardly noticeable  up to then. The Balkans were no longer a synonym for backwardness and  barbarism, but the Eastern Light, cradle  of Europe and European civilization. The most important work the Institute  published until the war, although the financing was stopped after the death of  King Alexander (only a few months after founding), is certainly the two-volume Book on the Balkans, written by the  greatest Balkan and European classic languages, archeology and history scientists  of the time. Besides, also published were the book The Balkans and the Balkan People, and the monograph Belgrade, printed in several languages, which  appeared at the Book Fair in 1940 but was never released, due to Germany’s  opposition. Even today, this Belgrade guide is considered perhaps one of the  best works ever written and printed about the Serbian capital. Furthermore, the  Balkan Institute published four issues of the International Magazines of Balkan Studies until 1939. Even after  World War II, in cooperation with other philologists from then Yugoslavia, Budimir  started the scientific magazine Living  Antiquity in Skopje, which he had given the name and interpretation of the  name. 
                    GUILTY FOR  BEING AUTOCHTHONOUS  
                     That is how Milan  Budimir, together with Petar Skoko, Ratko Parežanin and other great scientists,  founded Balkan Sciences in our lands. After the beginning of World War II and  the occupation of the country, the Balkan Institute stopped working. In 1969,  the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts Institute of Balkan Sciences was  founded, but it was something different: the Balkan Institute was a mission. 
                      Those familiar  with the works of academician Milan Budimir, classify his voluminous scientific  opus in their doctorate dissertations and scientific works in several wholes: philology  and linguistics research of pre-antique tribes in the Balkans, Slavic lexicons  (origins and primeval homeland of the Slavs), literary research. His textbooks,  books and other works are seen as separate wholes. Above all this is the  book-synthesis, perhaps the most important work of professor Budimir: From the Balkan Eastern Lights. 
                      Milan Budimir was  the first, long before computers proved his theories, who emphasized that the Iliad is the work of ”one man”, referring  to the last two books, which other researchers used to neglect. Furthermore,  searching for the Balkan pre-beginnings, Budimir came upon the pre-Hellenic natives,  whom he called the Pelasts. ”European culture is a copy of the Roman, the Roman a copy of the Greek,  and all this is a great mixture of the mixture”, he used to say. A blend of the  existing and brought by the newcomers. Only the Balkan Slavs are autochthonous heirs  of that great culture, because they are at their immediate source. ”Our language  developed according to the Greek original, not according to the Latin copy.” 
                      That is how  Milan Budimir spoke, created, wrote, taught. The man who visited Laza Kostić at  his deathbed, the man who associated and worked with members of ”Young Bosnia”,  highly appreciated Andrić, Kočić (he knew them both personally) and Tesla. He acquaintance  of the very top of Balkan and world science and boasted he knew ”two emperors –  Bulgarian Boris and our Marko Car (Serbian: emperor)”, the writer. 
                      We brought to  the readers of National Review only  crumbs of the story about Milan Budimir, wishing to renew the memory of this  great man of science and culture, as well as to wake up something important,  yet asleep within us, ”lost in time and space”. Professor Budimir doesn’t need it any more, but we do. We referred to  the doctorate dissertation Milan Budimir as a Balkanologist written by Nebojša Radenković and the  book of Kosta Dimitrijević Life  Confessions. 
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                    Academies,  Cathedras, Recognitions 
                      Milan Budimir was  a regular member of Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, and corresponding member  of the Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts and the Academy of Sciences and  Arts in B&H. He was regular professor and for many years chief of the  Classic Philology Department at the Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy, where he  worked from 1921 until his retirement in 1962. 
                      In 1964 he was  awarded with the Belgrade ”October Award” and Medal of Labor with Red Flag, and in 1967 with the ”Seventh of July  Award”. 
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                    Teacher  
                      He was a  teacher in the traditional sense of the word. Among his numerous students, we  will mention only the most famous ones in the world of science: academicians Franjo  Barišić, Milutin Garašanin, Slobodan Dušanić, Fanula Papazoglu, Vojislav Đurić,  Dragoslav Srejović, Miron Flašar, university professors Momir Jović, Branko Gavela,  Emilija Jovanović Mason, Radoslav Katičić, Ksenija Maricki Gađanski, Miroslava Mirković,  Milena Milin, Miodrag Stojanović, Ninoslava Radošević, Radmila Šalabalić, Bojana  Šijački Manević, metropolitan Amfilohije Radović, PhD, Ljiljana Crepajac, Ivan Gađanski... 
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                    Best Students 
                  Among all his  students, professor Budimir singled-out Ljiljana Crepajac and especially  Miroslav Marković, who was professor at the Cambridge and later chief of the  department in Illinois, USA. Although he had written more than a hundred books until  the age of 50, Marković disappointed and betrayed his professor – as Budimir said  – by agreeing to convert to Catholicism only to be able to advance at the  American university. 
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