Baja Mali Knindža


Mirko Pajčin, better known by his stage name Baja Mali Knindža, is a Bosnian Serb folk singer-songwriter. He is often described as part of the turbo-folk scene and is well known for his pro-Serbian nationalist and pro-Chetnik songs.

Early life

Mirko Pajčin was born on 13 October 1966 to Bosnian Serb parents Neđeljko and Maša in the village of Gubin, Livno, near Livno, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina. He was raised by his grandmother, a widow to his grandfather, also named Mirko, whilst his father worked in Germany and Austria. In 1972, he had issues in his right kidney, which eventually had to be removed; according to Pajčin, his life was "practically saved" by a "famous Jewish doctor" in Sarajevo.
He gained a passion for reading Russian literature whilst attending primary school; he also took an interest in languages and poetry in his schooling, the latter being something he continued to enjoy writing during his adult life.
Pajčin moved to Belgrade in 1980, and studied there in 1981. In 1984, he began singing in the Belgrade municipality of Surčin.

Name

Pajčin was initially nicknamed Baja by his grandfather in his childhood. One of his grandmothers, who lived in Knin, also called him mali Knindža, in reference to his small stature at the time and the Serb paramilitary unit known as the Kninjas. He combined the two nicknames on the advice of his manager at the start of his career.
He is sometimes known by his initials BMK, such as on his official YouTube channel.

Career

Pajčin won a 1989 competition for amateur singers in Livno and released his first album in 1991. His career began just as Yugoslavia began to break up. Throughout the 1990s, he was known for his strong Serbian nationalism and Serbian nationalist songs during the Yugoslav Wars.
His first professional success was the song "Vrati se vojvodo", in which he appealed to Chetnik commander Momčilo Đujić to come back to the areas of the Republic of Serbian Krajina and help lift the spirits of the Croatian Serbs. He said that he would never consider going to Croatia as he claimed that Croat soldiers "burned down his house and desecrated his ancestors' graves".
His most popular albums were Stan'te paše i Ustaše and Živeće ovaj narod, the latter selling 700,000 copies.
Pajčin performs at Kočić's Assembly in near Banja Luka in mid-August every year, typically attracting tens of thousands of people. Since Operation Storm, Pajčin has written many songs about his dream of the Serbs returning to live in territories now inhabited by Croats following the Croatian War of Independence. The songs "Posle oluje" and "4. Avgust" detail the aftermath of Operation Storm in 1995.

Controversies

Pajčin is controversial due to his Serbian nationalism and anti-Croat and anti-Bosniak bias in his song lyrics. Many of his songs are condemned in non-Serb parts of Bosnia and Croatia because of their lyrics, which often reference war leaders during the Yugoslav Wars, even being banned from performing in Croatia, the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Switzerland due to his nationalist music. For example, his song "Ne volim te Alija" describes his intense dislike for Bosnian wartime president Alija Izetbegović, and the song "Tata" from the 1993 album Rat i mir includes the provocative line "My dad is a war criminal".
One song titled "" contains the lyrics "Shut up, shut up, Ujko, I will kill you" as well as "Shut up, shut up, Mujo, I will kill you". He has also sung "Ja ne volim ljude te", which includes the lyrics "Fuck their checkerboard".
He has been criticised for performing concerts at gatherings of the Serbian Progressive Party.

Musical style and lyrics

Pajčin's music is usually described as novokomponovana narodna muzika and turbo-folk. His songs typically follow a ABAB rhyme scheme.
Early on in his career, Pajčin's albums focused on the patriotic themes of protecting Serbdom, Eastern Orthodoxy and Croatian Serbs, protecting them from "Ustaša " and Bosnian Muslims. After the signing of the Dayton Accords, his music would switch in focus to non-war topics, ranging from gambling to love to alcohol. In the late 2010s and 2020s, Pajčin's singles would again shift to patriotic themes, such as in the songs "Srpska Atina", "Volim svoju zemlju", and "Republiko Srpska".

Personal life

Family

Pajčin has six children: three daughters, Smiljana, Ljiljana, and Anđela, and one son, Nenad, conceived with his first wife, Merlina, and two twin boys with his second wife, Dijana, whom he entered a relationship with in 2014 and married in 2017. He lives in Zemun with his second wife and two twin sons, Gavrilo and Danilo. His parents live in Surčin.
His cousin Ksenija Pajčin, a pop-folk recording artist, was murdered by her ex-boyfriend on 16 March 2010. Later that same year, Pajčin released the song "Spavaj, kraljice" in her memory, stating that he was very "shaken" by her death. He is also the cousin of, a fellow singer-songwriter and composer.

Religion

Pajčin is a Serbian Orthodox Christian, and has made numerous references to his faith and God in his songs, such as "Božić je", "Obilić me zove", and "Pravoslavac". He has sung the ethnophyletist phrase "God is a Serb" in two songs: "Živeće ovaj narod" and "Neće biti granica na Drini".

Politics

During the 1990s, Pajčin supported the Serbian Radical Party and even sang at the party's conventions. He also released an album in 1998 titled Srpskim radikalima, which glorifies the party and its leader, Vojislav Šešelj. In 2004, he described himself as apolitical, yet also described his favourite politicians as SRS members Radovan Karadžić and Maja Gojković in the same source.
Since at least 2017, he has performed concerts at gatherings sponsored or otherwise involved with the Serbian Progressive Party, although he has never directly described himself as a party supporter. He expressed his condolences for the Novi Sad railway station canopy collapse victims and postponed his concert two weeks after the collapse.
In a 2025 interview, he stated he is "far from politics".

Interests

Pajčin enjoys buying carpets, TV antennas, sneakers, and tracksuits. He also enjoys vacuuming. He is a smoker and enjoys drinking alcohol, even to the point of drunkenness, having also met his first wife during a drunken stint.
He is a supporter of Red Star Belgrade. He is a fan of the Serbian rock band Riblja Čorba, its frontman Bora Đorđević, as well as the singers Zdravko Čolić and Goca Tržan.
Besides his native Serbian, he can speak English and Russian fluently.

Honours

Discography

Solo

  • 1992 — Ne dam Krajine
  • 1992 — Stan'te paše i Ustaše
  • 1993 — Živeće ovaj narod
  • 1993 — Sve za srpstvo, srpstvo nizašta
  • 1993 — Još se ništa ne zna
  • 1993 — Rat i mir
  • 1993 — Kockar bez sreće
  • 1994 — Pobediće istina
  • 1995 — Igraju se delije
  • 1995 — Idemo dalje
  • 1995 — Zbogom oružje
  • 1997 — Ne dirajte njega
  • 1998 — Povratak u budućnost
  • 1998 — Srpskim radikalima
  • 1999 — Biti il' ne biti
  • 2000 — Zaljubljen i mlad
  • 2001 — Đe si legendo
  • 2002 — Zbogom pameti
  • 2003 — Baja Mali Knindža: uživo
  • 2003 — Luda Žurka - uživo
  • 2006 — Za kim zvona zvone
  • 2007 — Gluvi barut
  • 2011 — Idemo malena
  • 2012 — Lesi se vraća kući
  • 2014 — Govor duše

With

  • 1994 — Braća sa Dinare
  • 1995 — Bila jednom jedna zemlja
  • 1996 — Plači voljena zemljo
  • 1997 — Ja se svoga, ne odričem do groba
  • 1998 — Idemo do kraja