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K O S O V A
The Albanians in
Yugoslavia in light of historical documents
By Dr. S.S. Juka
edited in New York in 1984
Part: One | Two | Three
Footnotes |
Part One
At present, nobody would think of considering the Slavs as
the descendants of the Illyrians. Nonetheless, in the first half of the 19th century, when
the nationalities problem - which before Napoleon was practically nonexistent - acquired a
preeminent importance, the belief that the Illyrians were the ancestors of the Slavs was
very strong.1 This conviction, which persisted in some circles until the turn
of the century and even beyond, evoked at that time much fervor and exaltation. These
feelings may be conveyed by a passage taken from Edmund Spencer's "Turkey, Russia,
the Black Sea, and Circassia" (London, 1854):
How flattering must it have been to a people (i.e. the
Slavs) so long the bondsmen of the Tatar and the Turk, the German and the Magyar, to be
told in their own language (by the preachers of panslavism) and in their own journals,
that they were the descendants of those illustrious Illyrians, who won by their valor the
glorious epithet of the Slavon (men of renown)2 from the great Macedonian chief
- the conqueror of the world. But all this was necessary - and much more that is fabulous
and fanciful in their history - to inspirit, to awaken a pride of race among a people who
had been long sunk in abject slavery ... (p.43).
In "Travels in European Turkey" (London, 1850):
E. Spencer gives an account of the Illyrian Empire:
...The Illyrians founded an immense empire extending from
Epirus ... to the Danube and the Black Sea and comprehending the whole of the maritime
coast of Hungary to Venice and Triest, with Istria, Carnolia, Carinthia, Styria, and
Friuli... History and tradition affords us many interesting details of the battles of the
Illyrians with the ancient Greeks and the Romans... Napoleon was well versed in the
history of these people when he flattered their national pride...(Vol. I, pp. 93-94)
* * *
As indicated by E. Spencer, the Illyrians fought, in fact,
for a long time against the Romans, who eventually conquered the whole of Illyria in A.D.
9. Many Illyrian soldiers, who susbsequently served in the Roman army rose to high
positions. Some became emperors and viceroys: Claudius II, Aurelian, Probus, Diocletian,
Maximilian, Constantius, Valens, and Valentinian. Mention should also be made of Saint
Jerome, one of the greatest scholars of his time. The Illyrians gave to Byzantium three of
its greatest emperors: Constantine, who officially accepted Christianity; Justinius, who
built Saint Sophia; and Justinianus, famous for his Code of Laws. The philologist Paul
Kretschmer went so far as to maintain that the Illyrians actually founded Byzantium.
* * *
Proud of what they considered their heritage (see E.
Spencer, Travels... I, p. 94), the South Slavs became eager to recreate ancient Illyria by
forming a union among themselves. Napoleon, who following the Franco-Austrian War had
formed the short-lived (1809-1814) Illyrian Provinces, inspired in them the idea of
calling their state-to-be Illyria. This state was to comprehend Croatia, Slovenia, the
Dalmatian coast with its hinterland Bosnia and Hercegovina, Montenegro, Serbia, Macedonia,
Bulgaria, and Thrace.
However, by the time the dream of the South Slavs came
true, i.e., by the time two great Empires were overthrown and the South Slavic state was
created on the ancient Illyrian soil, it was evident that the country could no longer be
called Illyria. For, by that time, it had become obvious that the descendance of the Slavs
from the Illyrians was but a myth. Irrefutable historical documents demonstrated clearly
that the Slavs were latecomers in the region inhabited by them.
With the myth that had connected the Slavs with the
Illyrians withered and died also the legend of the mighty huntress Illyria who had given
birth to three sons: Tcheck, Leh, and Rouss (see E. Spencer, Travels... I, p.92). Yet the
fact remains that the Illyrian myth had kindled among the South Slavs the national idea by
inspiring in them self-confidence and pride.
* * *
Illyrism originated in Croatia. The Austro-Hungarians used
to consider it as a movement inspired and supported by the Russians. The latter, however,
often regarded its propagators as Austrian agents.3
Russia, who was planning to exercise her own influence in
the Balkans was brought, at various occasions, into conflict with Austria. Owing to this
fact, she could not fully accept Illyria as the dynamic symbol for the unification of the
South Slavs. Instead, she found it more appropriate to make use of another term; she
coined Great Serbia.4
Great Serbia was to comprise roughly the same territories
as Illyria, but to these was to be added North Albania.
Russia's role in the formation of the Balkan states is
paramount. It has been rightly remarked that without Russis's aid none of the Balkan
nations would have probably achieved independence. Albania is the only nation to have
stood desperately alone in her struggle for freedom.
When considering the problem of the Albanian borders, it
is essential to be aware of the dominant role played quite early by the Russians relative
to the Balkan nations. For it is a very common error to think that the unification of the
South Slavs is an idea that emerged after World War I and that the Albanian borders would
probably not have been quite what they presently are, had they been discussed with respect
to Yugoslavia and not in regard to Serbia and Montenegro, as was the case.
* * *
In 1878, at the Congress of Berlin, the idea of Great
Serbia, which goes as far back as the 18th century, served as a guideline relative to
territorial claims, but it could not, of course, be disclosed and openly discussed; it
would have been premature. Indeed, even for the sake of the future unification, it was
much more appropriate to be first concerned with the revindication of the South Slavs as
single states and not as a group.
At the Congress, it was thus merely insisted that Serbia
be aggrandized and that a seaport be given to Montenegro, which was very poor.
In fact, when the French savant Ami Boue visited
Montenegro in 1836, he was struck by its poverty, claiming that it would be doomed to
remain for a long time without resources because neither Turkey nor Austria would be
willing to conquer rocks; adding, however, that Russia could have used her influence to
induce Austria to ceding to Montenegro the seaport Cattaro which was of no great
importance to herself.5
Yet, forty years later, at the Congress of Berlin, there
was no question of allotting Cattaro (Kotor) to Montenegro. She was awarded, instead,
Antebari (Tivar) and, a little later, Dulcigno (Ulqin), a harbor which from 877 to 1560
had been the see of a Catholic bishopric. It had practically never been under Slav rule.
Moreover, its population was 95% Albanian.
But the Principality of Montenegro, which was made up of
rocks, did not merely need a seaport; it also lacked pasture land. It was thus awarded
Podgorica (recently Titograd), Shpuza, the rich valleys of Plava and Gusigne, Hoti, Gruda,
and Triepshi, which were Albanian strongholds. As pointed out by Justin Godard, after the
Treaty of Berlin, Montenegro's territory doubled (L'Albanie en 1921, Paris, 1922, p.9.).
Montenegro, on account of her small size, was in an excellent position to extend her
territory at Albania's expense and at the same time come closer to Serbia, i.e., toward
achieving her goal of unification. As for Serbia, who was much pitied for her lack of
access to the sea, she received, in compensation, Kurumlija, Leskovac, Vranja and
Ni, a region whose population was mainly Albanian.
These important acquisitions made by Serbia and Montenegro
were to be added later to the greater nation that tese single states were planing to form.
* * *
The Albanians became alarmed when the preliminary Peace
Treaty of San Stefano had created a huge Bulgaria, which was to include territory
nominally under Turkish rule, but inhabited by Albanians. Since 1330, when the Bulgarians
lost their independence, there had been no noticeable uprising in the Balkan nation. In
all probability, Bulgaria's independence would not have come about without Russia's
assistance.
Although the Albanians did not have anybody to back their
claims, they reacted very rapidly. In the fall of 1877, they formed a committee - Le
Comite central pour la defense des droits de la nation albanaise - whose purpose was to
denounce the states that were planning to expand their territory at Albania's expense.
The committee invited the neighboring countries to a
peaceful coexistence, but added that it was determined to defend Albania's national
rights.
Albania was at that time a domain of the Turkish Empire
comprising four vilayets or provinces: Shkodra - which included the Dukagjini Plateau
(Metohija), Monastir (presently Bitolja), Janina, and Shkup (Skopje), presently in
Macedonia. This latter province was more readily called Kosova by the Turks in memory of
the victory of a battle on the Plain of Kossovo, the "Campo dei Merli" of old
Venetian maps. The capital of this province had at times been Pritina.6
* * *
Owing to the efforts of the committee headed by A.
Frasheri,7 80 delegates representing all four provinces convened at
the city of Prizren, in the Vilayet of Shkup (Kosova) in June 1878, three days prior to
the opening of the Congress of Berlin, whose purpose was to reconsider the decision
reached by San Stefano's preliminary Peace Treaty. The assembly of these delegates was
henceforth called The League of Prizren. Its task was to defend Albania's rights.
Kosova became thus for the Albanians the center of their
resistance and they have ever since regarded this territory as a symbol of their struggle
for independence.
* * *
Various letters, telegrams, petitions, and memoranda
signed by Albanians inhabiting all four provinces were dispatched to heads of state and
ambassadors. Their reading reveals the exasperation and bitterness of the Albanians, who,
judging by their messages, preferred to be annihilated rather than to be included in a
Slav state.
Below are excerpts of a long memorandum; they convey some
of the feelings experienced by the Albanians:
...To annex to Montenegro or to any other Slav state,
countries inhabited ab antiquo by Albanians who differ essentially in their language, in
their origin, in their customs, in their traditions, and in their religion, would be not
only a crying injustice, but further an impolitic act, which cannot fail to cause
complaints, discontent and sanguinary conflicts...
...notwithstanding their longing to escape the misfortunes
which Turkish rule has inflicted on them for five centuries, the Albanians will never
submit themselves to any Slav State which Russia may attempt to put forward; race,
language, customs (...) national pride, everything, in a word, is opposed to such a state
of things; and it is neither just nor prudent to free them from a yoke only to place them
under another, which would in no way ameliorate their social position.8
Yet despite all the requests sent to heads of state by so
many Albanians, Albania was not granted autonomy. Similar to Metternich who once claimed
that Italy was merely a geographic expression, but that there was no Italian nation,
Bismarck declared that "Albania is merely a geographic expression; there is no
Albanian nation.9
* * *
Whereas Moslem Bosnia was assigned to Austria, Serbia
(proclaimed an independent kingdom by the Congress) and Montenegro were allotted regions
whose population was purely Albanian.
As soon as the Serbs occupied the ceded territories, the
Albanians were asked to evacuate them. With respect to the Albanians inhabiting those
areas, Mr. Gould, Consul of Great Britain in Belgrade, wrote to the Marquis of Salisbury,
Secretary of the Foreign Office of Great Britain, on Nov. 26, 1878:
I hear that the Servian Government has behaved with great
and unnecessary harshness, not to say cruelty, toward the Albanians in the recently ceded
districts. If my information is correct, and I have every reason to believe it to be so,
the peaceful and industrious inhabitants of over 100 Albanian villages in the Toplitza and
Vranja Valley were ruthlessly driven forth from their homesteads by the Servians in the
early part of this year. These wretched people have ever since been wandering about in a
starving condition in the wild country beyond the Servian frontier. They have not been
allowed to gather in their crops on their own lands, which were reaped by the Servian
soldiery... I ... casually stated to his Excellency (Ristic) that these facts had come to
my knowledge, and that should they be confirmed I felt certain Her Majesty's Government
and the majority of the Great Powers would call the Servian Government to account, and
insist upon strict justice being done to these unfortunate people, whose only crime was
their belonging to an alien race and another creed...10
Yet the Serbs did not stop their harsh measures against
the Albanians. Tens of thousands were brutally forced to evacuate these areas inhabited by
them from time immemorial without receiving any compensation for their losses.
The Servian government confiscated all property owned by
the Albanians despite the articles 35 and 39 of the "Berlin Negotiations"
stipulating that the Albanians living in the regions ceded to Serbia would have the same
civil rights as the Serbs.
As to the number of the Albanians inhabiting those
territories, various statistics and extant documents give contradictory figures. According
to a note of the administrative divisions dating from 1873, the district of the Sandjak of
Ni had about 100 000 Albanians. As regards the number of refugees, the figures given
by Prof. J. Cvijic for those who settled in Kosova is 30 000, that furnished by English
documents, 100 000. According to Turkish sources, the number of the Albanians who were
forced to leave the region amounted to 300 000.
On June 3, 1978, Rilindja (p.7), published a letter
addressed by these miserable people (who were deprived of all means and many of whom were
sick) to the European Powers requesting that at least a commission be set up to look into
their serious problem.11
Leaving these helpless refugees to their sad fate, the
Serbs colonized the region with astounding rapidity. Referring to the colonization of the
area by the Serbs, V. Cubrilovic stated in his "Memorandum" (about which more
will be told later) that "Toplica and Kosanica, once Albanian regions of ill-repute,
gave Serbia the finest regiment in the wars of 1912-1918".
* * *
Since these territories forcibly annexed to Serbia
belonged nominally to Turkey, the Albanians could not oppose a marked resistance on
account of the fact that they did not have a state of their own and, consequently, were
not provided with an organized army. However, realizing that after the disintegration of
the Turkish Empire, which was imminent, land that had been theirs would remain under Slav
domination, they felt very bitter. They were thus quickly organized and armed by the
League and despite every difficulty defended heroically the districts that had been
adjudged to Montenegro. As a result, the latter failed to take them by force. These
territories were to be ceded by the Great Powers to Montenegro in 1913.
As for Ulqin (Dulcigno), it was quickly occupied by
Albanian troops (which the League had managed to organize in the meantime) as soon as the
Turks evacuated it. The resistance of these troops in that city was so fierce, that the
Great Powers had to send seventeen war vessels in order to compel the Albanians to yield,
giving them a delay of three days. Paying no heed to this naval threat, the Albanians
resisted for more than two months. The Turks dispatched, then, their own troops numbering
eight battalions. As a result, the Albanians found themselves encircled on all sides.
After a desperate battle, they surrendered to the Turks, who, after taking possession of
Ulqin, handed it over to the Montenegrins in June 1880.
In regard to Ulqin, M.E. Durham wrote: "The naval
demonstration was instigated by Gladstone. Dulcigno remains a monument of diplomatic
blunder...it is a constant reminder to the Albanians that they may expect no justice from
Europe, and it has enhanced their hatred for the Slav". (High Albania, London, 1909,
p.9).
Owing to the passionate and tenacious resistance of the
Albanians, the battle of Ulqin received much attention in Europe and elsewhere. Some of
the numerous reports published in French newspapers as well as in the New York Times in
1880 are interesting to read. Below are merely two passages picked at random:
...There are said to be 8 400 Mohammedans and 4 000
Catholic Albanians in the district with a sprinkling of Slavs and Gypsies. These people
are not on the friendliest terms with their Montenegrin neighbors, but they hate the Turks
quite as much...The Albanian League declares ... that the territory of Albania is
sacred... (NYT, Sept. 13,4:3).
Dulcigno12 humorously described...
... That sweetly named town, as is well known, belongs to
Albania, which in turn belongs to Turkey. The Great Powers of Europe, after a pleasant
consultation in Berlin, in Prince Bismarck's back parlor, decided that it should be a good
thing if Montenegro, an independent principality which from lack of seaport has hitherto
been compelled to restrict itself to brigandage instead of piracy, were to have a
convenient seaport like Dulcigno... (NYT, Sept, 4:5).13
* * *
The Catholics resented their annexation to Montenegro just
as much as did the Moslems, if not more. The loss of Ulqin inspired the Franciscan Father
Ndue Shllaku to address the population of that town in terms the reading of which still
moves Albanians to tears.
The other fights with Montenegro were sung by Father
Gjergj Fishta, a Franciscan, in his Epic The Lute of the Highlanders, one of the great
masterpieces of Albanian literature. In this strong and moving work, Fishta shows the
Albanian Catholics side by side with their Moslem brothers in their fight against the
Montenegrins.14
Yet the admirable contribution of the Catholics to the
national cause was completely ignored by the West, as had been the numerous petitions sent
to the Powers by Catholic tribes, who begged not to be annexed to Montenegro.
The Albanians, who had reacted in a most courageous and
dignified way were to find out that their heroic fights for the national cause were
described as a resistance of Moslem fanatics to Christianity and to Christian civilization
and that the League of Prizren was presented as being supported by the Turks. For
propaganda purposes, Slav Orthodoxy, chauvinistically national in character, was equated
with Christianity and its universal values.15
Whether the Albanians had any premonition that the
decisions of the Berlin Congress would constitute for them only the beginning of a series
of other iniquities and humiliations, is hard to say. The admirable activity they
displayed in the years that followed, suggest that they kept believing in human justice.16
* * *
To be sure, there were, among foreigners, individuals who
considered the plight of the Albanians in an objective way and who tried to assist them.
Thus Lord Goschen, British Ambassador to Constantinople, wrote to Earl Granville,
Secretary of the Foreign Office of Great Britain, on July 26, 1880:
... I venture to submit to your Lordship, as I have done
before, that the Albanian excitement cannot be passed over as a mere maneuver conducted by
the Turks in order to mislead Europe, and evade its will. Nor can it be denied that the
Albanian movement is perfectly natural. As ancient and distinct a race, as any by whom
they are surrounded, they have seen the nationality of these neighboring races taken under
the protection of various European Powers, and gratified in their aspirations for a more
independent existence. They have seen the Bulgarians completely emancipated... They have
seen the ardent desire of Europe to liberate territory inhabited by Greeks from Turkish
rule. They have seen the Slavs in Montenegro protected by the great Slav Empire of the
North with enthusiastic pertinence. They see the Eastern question being solved on the
principle of nationality and the Balkan Peninsula being gradually divided, as it were,
among various races on that principle. Meanwhile, they see that they themselves do not
receive similar treatment. Their nationality is ignored, and territory inhabited by
Albanians is handed over in the north to the Montenegrins, to satisfy Montenegro, the
protege of Russia, and in the south to Greece, the protege of England and France.
Exchanges of territory are proposed, other difficulties arise, but it is still at the
expense of the Albanians, and the Albanians are handed over to Slavs and Greeks without
reference to the principle of nationality. (Public Record Office, London, F.O. 424/100
pp.31-34).
This is but a brief passage of a long letter which shows
Lord Goschen's admirable insight relating to the Albanian question and hence to the Balkan
problem. In this letter Lord Goschen points out that the Turks were using, in regard to
Albanians, "cajolery" and "every other means but the promise of
independence" because, as he remarks, "if the Turks lose Albania, they lose
their cause in Europe". Lord Goschen adds that on account of this fact and since the
Albanians are very eager to detach themselves from Turkey, it would be a blunder on the
part of the Western Powers to overlook the Albanian nationality. In his opinion, a large
Albania would "facilitate the future settlement of the Eastern question in
Europe". Lord Goschen feels sorry that Kirby Green, Consul of Great Britain in
Shkoder, failed to understand the Albanian problem. Above all, he is indignant as to a
ruthless plan worked out by Captain Sale who proposed to tell the Albanians that if they
rebelled against the decisions of the Great Powers, "their villages would be uprooted
and they would incur a further penalty in the contraction of their boundary". Lord
Goschen is convinced that the Albanians do not deserve such treatment "because, after
all, in their attitude of resistance, and in their deep-rooted objection to a portion of
their countrymen being handed over to an alien rule, they are simply acting on the same
principle of nationality as have formed the basis of the recent treatment of the Eastern
question".
Referring to Captain Sale's memorandum relative to the
plan already mentioned, Lord Goschen remarks in the same letter:
...as the memorandum contained the suggestion that a
British agent should be employed to influence the Albanians by fear as to the private and
not only the political consequences of resistance, and as this memorandum will remain on
record amongst the Archives of the Embassy, I have thought it my duty to record my strong
protest against the plan it contains.
Similar to Lord Goschen, others were equally disturbed by
the iniquities to which the Albanians were subjected, but their efforts to assist them
were thwarted. With respect to Kosova's population, Lord Fitzmaurice (British
representative on the Eastern Rumelian Commission created by the Treaty of Berlin to work
out an agreement with the Porte) wrote to Earl Grey:
The extension of the Albanian population in the
north-easterly direction toward Prishtina and Vranja is especially marked, and is fully
acknowledged even upon maps such as that of Kiepert, generally regarded as unduly
favorable to the Slav element, and that published by Messrs. Stanford in the interest of
the claims of the Greek Christian population... the recent Albanian movement has a more
vigorous hold on this eastern district than perhaps upon any other ... The vilayet of
Kosova with the exception of a Serb district extending eastward from Mitrovitza, may be
said to be Albanian. (May 26, 1880).17
The iniquities committed in regard to the Albanians are
occasionally acknowledged even by Slavs. Thus N. Todorov writes:
The Albanian people who had also risen in armed struggle,
were denied the right to self-determination and were abandoned to their fate against the
vast human and material resources of the Ottoman Empire, as well as the encroachments of
their neighboring Balkan states". (Todorov, The 0Russo-Turkish war of 1877-1878 and
the Liberation of Bulgaria", East-European Quarterly, 1980, Vol. 14, No. 1,
p.15).
* * *
The Great Powers eventually left the Balkans in the hands
of Austria and Russia. The influence of the latter, however, grew stronger as time went
by.
In regard to Kosova, Russia sent priests to Serbian
monasteries situated in the region exalting, together with the Orthodox faith, heroes and
deeds pertaining to Serbian legends.18 They opened schools which were hotbeds
of Slav propaganda. Clearly, her purpose was to colonize the province where the Serbs were
but an insignificant minority.
The West knew little at that time about the Balkan states.
In fact, the ignorance was such that some missionaries who went to Macedonia to support
the Bulgarian cause confessed that formerly they had been ignorant of the fact that there
were Bulgarians in the Peninsula; they had thought that only Greeks lived there.
Practically nothing was known, of course, relative to the Albanians; those unfamiliar with
the question could be told anything. Thus, when two Russian consuls in Kosova and Monastir
were killed by Albanians (who acted in self-defense), these acts were described as being
committed by 'Moslem fanatics'. The two propaganda agents were presented as martyrs; their
funerals were grandiose. Since Christianity was equated with civilization and Islam with
backwardness, the Christians were regarded as the allies of the Great Powers. Thus the
Catholic Albanians who are animated by patriotic feelings were ignored by design. The
Albanians were depicted merely as backward Moslems and as allies of the Turks.
* * *
Many books and articles were published by the South Slavs
for the purpose of showing the ferocity of the Albanians, their backwardness, their
despicable behavior, their lack of discipline, etc. Vladan Djordjevic, former Prime
Minister of the Kingdom of Serbia, went even so far as to claim that until "as late
as the 19th century", there had been Albanians with tail in their rear! Djordjevic
even referred the reader to J.G. Von Hahn's scholarly work, Albanesische Studien, where,
he asserted, he had found the information.19
The purpose of all these writings was, of course, to draw
a picture that gives to the non-specialist a very poor idea of the Albanians so that
these, by dint of being despised by others may, in their innermost soul, start to despise
themselves.20
* * *
To be sure, there are established scholars - be they
geographers, historians, anthropologists, or serious travelers and explorers - who have
expressed opinions of a very different kind: H.N. Brailsford went even so far as to
maintain that "from Byron's day downward it would be hard to find a Western European
who has learned to know the Albanians without admiring them" (The New Republic, March
1, 1919). In fact those who had nice words on behalf of the Albanians were so numerous
that the Serb S. Protic (Balkanicus) considered the tendency to praise the Albanians as
highly ethical individuals and to describe them as "unusually gifted", to have
become a fashion.21 The fact remains, however, that the latter writings were
not accessible to many. The influential French daily Le Temps, published merely articles
favoring the Slavs and Greeks, for France was then Russia's ally.22
Unknown or misunderstood by the outside world, the
Albanians had to fight, under the most difficult conditions, both their neighbors and the
Turks without being supported by any great power.
* * *
In order to achieve national unity with a delimited
territory, the League had requested the Porte, in July 1878, to turn Albania into one
vilayet. The request had not been granted. As a consequence, the Albanians, under their
gallant leader Isa Boletini, a native of Kosova, openly took a stand against the Turks.
All their activities were centered in the Kosova region, which became the cradle of their
national struggle and thus acquired a special meaning for them.23
In 1912, when the Albanians seized Shkup (Skopje) and were
about to enter Monastir (Bitolja), the Turks called a truce and granted them autonomy
uniting the vilayets of Shkodra, Janina, Kosova, and part of Monastir. As a result of this
Albanian victory, the government of the chauvinistic Young Turks Party was overthrown. The
weakness of Turkey became thus evident.
The Albanians had administered a heavy blow to the Turks
and rightly hoped for approval and sympathy, for, as Lord Goschen had rightly pointed out
back in 1880, if the Turks lost Albania, they would lose their cause in Europe. Instead,
the Albanian victory triggered the Balkan wars, the purpose of which was the annexation of
Albanian-inhabited territories that were under Turkish rule.
At that time, Montenegro had been free from Ottoman rule
for over forty years; Serbia and Greece for over eighty. These states, being independent,
had their regular armies. When attacked on all sides (by the Greeks, the Montenegrins,
and, of course, by the Serbs, who entered Kosova), the Albanians, aware of the great
danger, hastened to raise their flag and declared their neutrality.
* * *
The atrocities perpetrated by the Serbo-Montenegrins
during the Balkan wars on the Albanian population were acknowledged by the Serbian
socialist Dimitrije Tucovic (1881-1914) in his book Srbija i Albanija (published in
1946):
The bourgeois clamored for a merciless extermination and
the army executed the orders. The Albanian villages, from which the people had made a
timely flight, were burned down. There were at the same time barbaric crematoria in which
hundreds of women and children were burned alive...24
Brutalities committed by the Serbo-Montenegrins are also
described in the Carnegie report. They may be best summed up in two short paragraphs taken
from Mary Edith Durham's Twenty Years of Balkan Tangle (1920):
No Turks ever treated Armenians worse than did the two
Serb peoples treat the Albanians in the name of the Holy Orthodox Church (p.235).25
As for the Balkan Slav and his vaunted Christianity, it
seems to me all civilization should rise and restrain him from further brutality (p.238).26
It should be reiterated that the unbelievable massacres
were in no way committed as a result of a struggle between Christians and Moslems, as it
was at that time believed by Gladstone and stressed in his speeches.27
They were solely motivated by the desire to decimate the Albanian race. Not only Kosova
was coveted, but all of North Albania.
During World War I, Albania's neutrality was not respected
and mass massacres continued.
At the turn of the century, the reports of the Ohio
journalist J.A.Mac Cahan concerning the Bulgarian uprising, had shocked the West; as
known, Russia used these accounts as a pretext to march against the Turks. By contrast,
the Albanian cause did not benefit from the Carnegie report, nor by the frequent and
moving declarations of philanthropists and journalists who, like M.E. Durham, were
eyewitnesses to
mass massacres of women and children, simply because it was
not in the interest of the Great Powers to take Albania's defense.28
* * *
The well-known Swiss geographer H. Hauser, rightly pointed
out that the principle of nationality, like all other principles, cannot be applied in a
strict and equitable manner given the fact that most places constitute, with respect to
the population inhabiting them, a mosaic.29
This mosaic of nationalities was particularly striking in
the Balkans. Here, more than anywhere else, there was need for what H. Hauser suggested,
namely: good will, compromise, and a fair system of guaranties. It is an undeniable fact
that relative to Albania no appeal was ever made to compromises and good will; and no
system of guarantees was ever applied to her. The expediency of her neighbors prevailed.
No matter what the problem at stake Albania was always the loser.
In 1878, Lord Goschen and Lord Fitzmaurice had been in
favor of a large Albania comprising the Albanian-inhabited territories of the four
vilayets.30 But, at the Congress of Berlin it was decided -as already
pointed out - that territories indisputably Albanian be handed over to Montenegro and to
Serbia. Places connected with Albanian history and national pride, like Janina, Arta,
Preveza, were allotted to the Greeks, who within a relatively short period of time were to
exterminate the overwhelming Albanian population inhabiting them. No system of guarantees
was applied. Albanians, numbering hundreds of thousands were to be forcibly sent to
Turkey.
The manner in which Albanian territories were ceded to
neighboring states clearly indicates how arbitrary decisions that make history may be. And
one cannot but agree with Mircea Eliade (The Myth of the Eternal Return), who, with
respect to the theory that valorizes historical events, to which the 19th century attached
so much importance, pertinently remarked that such a theory could have been established
only by thinkers who know nothing about injustices and miseries caused by history.
Also, in 1913, those in charge of assigning to Albania her
borders gave no consideration to the very problem of her survival. The fertile pasture
lands, the regions rich in minerals and other resources, where nearly two-thirds of the
Albanian population lived, remained outside the borders assigned to her.31
As Lord Fitzsimmons rightly remarked, "Albania was to start her career as a state
mutilated from her birth". Indeed, as a nation humiliated in her pride, she had no
place among her sister nations. She was doomed to poverty, bitterness, and complete
isolation.
In regard to Kosova, a territory where Albanians displayed
their most important activities for the independence of their nation and a region which,
as some scholars contend, is the cradle of the Albanian people, the principles of
ethnicity and self determination were not observed. Nor had they been taken into account
when districts indisputably Albanian had been allotted to Montenegro and Serbia by the
Treaty of Berlin. At that time, the principle of history had been ignored as well.
* * *
When, following World War I, the Dalmatian question was
discussed, the fact that the West Adriatic coast had previously belonged to the Venetians,
Austrians, Hungarians, and - in parts - to the Turks, and that, moreover, Slav
colonization of the Coast was a relatively recent event in history (for, although the
Slavs had settled in some parts of the Coast already in the 7th century, colonization was
still going on as late as the beginning of the 20th century),32 did not
have an adverse effect relating to the claims of the South Slavs. According to M.R.
Vesnic, ...except for historical arguments... no present day consideration would authorize
Italy to spell out such pretentions. Economically, geographically, and from the point of
view of morale, these shores are inseparable from the hinterland which is Yugoslavia.33
Thus, disregarding historical considerations, Yugoslavia
was allotted territories that were vast beyond her wildest dreams: to her devolved the
beautiful Dalmatian Coast, where the Slavs had not ruled before, except for brief periods
of time (a claim contested by the Hungarians) on some portions of it; to her was ceded
Macedonia where the Serb population was insignificant and to which the Serbs had no claims
before 1885;34 to her was allotted the Vojvodina (Banat) where a certain
number of Serbs had been hospitably allowed to settle in the 16th, 17th and 18th
centuries. The newly created state of Yugoslavia also retained territories which,
regardless of the principles of ethnicity and self-determination had been previously
granted to Serbia and Montenegro by the Treaty of Berlin and forcibly annexed by them.
* * *
Yet when the Albanian borders were delimited in London in
1913, problems pertaining to economy, geography, ethnicity, morale - in short, to all
those important factors to which so much attention was to be accorded after World War I
with respect to Yugoslavia - were not taken into account. The problem of Albania's
survival as an independent state was thus completely ignored by those in charge of tracing
her frontier.
Relating to Kosova, history - that very factor which in
regard to the Dalmatian Coast was not to be considered weighty - eventually acquired such
decisive import as to make it seemingly compelling for the Great Powers to disregard
completely the principles of ethnicity and self-determination.
With respect to the principle of history, the term Stara
Srbija (Old Serbia), employed by the Slavs to designate "Kossovo", proved very
effective.
* * *
Faust, when translating the New Testament into his mother
tongue, rendered with "action" the meaning of "logos", thus writing:
"at the beginning was action".35 As prototype of modern
man, Faust did not believe in the fascination and power of the word, as traditional
doctrines do. Since then, however, sociologists and anthropologists, especially Frazer,
have pointed out the magic that not merely traditional doctrines, but also the so-called
primitive peoples attach to certain words and names, the use they make of them in myths,
and how these myths affect them. In his turn, Freud has rightly remarked that the
primitive mind is contained in all of us. We are impressed by words. Indeed, the
suggestive power emanating from some particular words and names that affect our
unconscious, especially when used in myths, surpasses action. More exactly, words may
become dynamic symbols; they automatically generate action owing to the very magic
contained in them.
In fact, Old Serbia acquired for the Serbs a magic power
similar to that contained in Illyria.
a. It was asserted that Stara Srbija was the cradle of the
Nemanjis, the Serbian kings. Special emphasis, in this regard, was laid on the Glorious
Empire of Stefan Duan.
b. Of foremost importance was considered the Battle of
1389 against the Turks on the Field of Kosova. It was somehow implied in various writings
that Czar Duan's Empire was sacrificed on that battle which was said to have been
fought by the Serbs alone to protect Europe.
c. The Serbs who wanted to prove that the
Albanian-inhabited region had formerly been ethnically Serb, underscored and proclaimed
widely what it became known as the Serbian Exodus or the Emigration of the Serbs to
Hungary. It was stressed that the Serbs, as a result of the Austro-Turkish wars of 1690
and 1735, had been obliged to evacuate the region and emigrate to Hungary under the
leadership of their bishop, Arsenije III Crnojevic. And that, subsequently, the land, once
vacant, had been colonized by the ferocious Albanians assisted by the Turks. The Albanians
inhabiting Kosova were thus considered as recent settlers who had no right to be there.
These important issues which played a paramount role in
the delimitation of the Albanian borders shall be discussed in PartII.
P a r t T w o
That the imagination is, indeed, impressed and excited by
certain names, is suggested by the fact that in 1912-1913, only Serbian theories were
taken into consideration.
The recent finds in the domain of linguistics, archeology
and history have shown that these theories, as they were formulated in the 19th century
were based on myths. But myths, on account of their suggestive power, do not die easily.
Some of them may prove extremely tenacious. Such had been, for example, the myth mentioned
before, connecting the South Slavs with the Illyrians.
* * *
It had been clearly indicated by J.E. Thunmann, back in
1774, that the Albanians alone could possibly be considered as the descendants of the
Illyrians. Their origin had been suggested even before (in a letter) by the philosopher
Leibniz.
Aside from pointing out historical data, Thunmann also
remarked that certain Illyrian names are still used by Albanians: Dasios = Dash; Dida =
Dede; Bardhylis = Bardhe, etc. A. Boue, who from 1836 to 1838 journeyed across the Balkans
accompanied by various experts, subscribed to Thunmann's theory. J.G. von Hahn exposed the
same view in his learned work Albanesische Studien (Jena, 1853) basing his research on
ethnography, history and linguistics.36
* * *
That the Albanians have been living in the coastal areas
since ancient times is evidenced by the fact that the Albanian language is greatly
influenced by Latin; not merely Balkan Latin, but also Latin in its archaic form, missing
not only in Rumanian, but sometimes even in other Romance languages. Latin also affects
the vocabulary dealing with the intellectual and spiritual domain. Scholars have explained
this influence through long-lasting relations between the Romans and the ancestors of the
Albanians. Had the latter not been living since ancient times on the Adriatic coast, these
relations would not have been possible.37
On the other hand, some Greek words in Albanian show the
sound pattern of ancient Greek, an indication that the words were transmitted in an
ancient epoch and that the Albanians must have been living in the vicinity of Greece for
the past 3 000 years.
As regards Slavonic, from which the Albanians, like the
Rumanians, borrowed many words, it has in no way affected the structure of their language,
an indication that the borrowing must have taken place at a date when the Albanian
language was already formed. Moreover, its influence is dialectical and concerns
vocabulary dealing with material things rather than with spiritual matters. In Albanian,
the terminology of the church, both Catholic and Orthodox, is not Slavonic, but
overwhelmingly Latin with some Greek.38
Yet the ancestors of the Albanians did not merely inhabit
the coastal areas. As attested also by the Halstatt culture, the domain of the Illyrians
was vast; it extended to the east and to the north. Some words, still used in a few Swiss
dialects, denote an Illyrian origin. Thus, for example, in the Berner Oberland, the cow is
still called lobe as in Albanian. Noteworthy also are the Illyrian finds on the left bank
of Lake Neuchatel, connected with a culture known as La Tene culture (500 B.C. to 1 A.D.)
and the recent
discoveries in Zurich ascribed to a much older civilization.
However, North Illyria was sparsely populated. The North
Illyrian tribes eventually mixed with Celts and other invaders and little by little lost
their identity. Only Southern Illyria, more densely peopled, survived. Appian, who wrote
in the second century AD, maintained, citing the Greeks, that Illyria at that time
stretched from the Adriatic Sea to the Danube. This included the important province
Dardania, i.e., the region of Shkup (Skopje), Ni and Pritina. Ancient authors
(Pliny) used to call the Southern Illyrians "Illyrii proprie dicti". They were
divided into tribes, some of which managed to form small kingdoms. With its capital Scodra
(Shkodra, Scutari) and its main seaport Ulqin, Illyria constituted, in the 3rd century
B.C., a powerful federal state.
Fanula Papazoglu, professor of ancient history at the
University of Belgrade, who has written extensively on the Illyrians (see among others,
Les origines et la destinee de l'Etat illyrien - Illyrii proprie dicti, in Historia,
Wiesbaden, 14, 1965, Heft 2), has also devoted a long chapter to the Dardanians in her
work The Central Balkan Tribes in Pre-Roman Times...(Engl. Transl. from the
Serbo-Croatian, Amsterdam, Hakkert, 1978, 664 p.). In this latter work she indicates
that
Not one of the peoples with whom we have to deal in this
book has such a claim to the epithet "Balkan" as the Dardanians... because they
appear as the most stable and the most conservative ethnic element in the area where
everything was exposed to constant change, and also because they, with their roots in the
distant prehomeric age, and living in the frontiers of the Illyrian and the Thracian
worlds retained their individuality and, alone among the peoples of that region succeeded
in maintaining themselves as an ethnic unity even when they were militarily and
politically subjected by the Roman arms...and when at the end of the ancient world, the
Balkans were involved in far-reaching ethnic perturbations, the Dardanians, of all the
Central Balkan tribes, played the greatest part in the genesis of the new peoples who took
the
place of the old (p.131).
After pointing out that the Dardanians had founded Troy,
that Dardanelles is a name derived from them, that Dardanians were also encountered in
Italy, Prof. Papazoglu adds that when the Dardanians reappear in our sources as a
historically documented people in the central part of the Balkans, they are related to the
Illyrians. Illyrian elements have also been noted among the Dardanians in Asia Minor. This
all increases the probability of the theory that the Illyrians belonged to the oldest
Indo-European element in the Balkan Peninsula (see pp.131-134).
The Albanian scholar, Zef Mirdita, of the University of
Pritina, who, like his colleague of the University of Belgrade, has devoted much
time to the study of the Dardanians, has also arrived at the same conclusions (see among
others, Studime Dardane, Prishtine, 1980).39
The Dardanians resisted the Roman invasions as much as did
the rest of the Illyrians and after the Roman conquest were not annihilated or absorbed as
were not annihilated or absorbed the Illyrians of the coastal areas (See Mirdita, "A
propos de la romanisation des Dardaniens" St.Alb., 1972 II pp. 287-298).40
* * *
The extent of the territory inhabited by the
Illyro-Albanians at the time of the arrival of the Slavs is suggested by place name. The
well known Albanian linguist, E. Cabej, has remarked in "Die aelteren Wohnsitze der
Albaner auf der Balkanhalbinsel im Lichte der Sprache und Ortsnamen" (Atti e memorie
del VII Congresso internationale di scienze onomastiche, Firenze-Pisa 1961 I, pp.246-251)
and in various other articles that names of small localities change in the course of years
(thus many place names in present-day Albania, in Kosova and elsewhere in the Balkans are
Slav),41 but not so those of cities, mountains and rivers:42
Various toponyms prove that at least since Roman times the Albanians have between living
as well on the Adriatic and Ionian coasts as in the Western Macedonia - Kosova region,
formerly called Dardania, for many geographical names, be they of Illyrian, Ancient Greek,
or Roman origin - were transmitted with changes characteristic of Albanian phonetic rules.
Such names are, for example, Nish (Naissos), Shkupi (Scupi), Oher,Ochrid (Oricium =
Lychnos), Drisht (Drivastum), Shar (Scardus), Shkodra (Scodra), Mati (Amatia), Buna
(Barbena), Ulqin (Ulcinium), Lesh (Lissus), Tcham (Thyamis), Ishm (Ismus), Durres
(Durachium), Drin (Drillion), Zara (Zadar), Triest (Tregest), Tomor (Tomarus), Shtip
(Astibos), Shtiponje (Stoponion).
* * *
J. Cvijic described the Albanians as "the most
expansive race in the Balkans", and G. Jakic compared the expansion of the
Albanians to a "devastating river". G. Stadtmueller contended that originally
they were confined to the Mati area and to the mountains of the north.43 Yet
the Albanian scholars maintain that in the light of the data cited above it becomes
evident that far from expanding the territory of their ancestors, the Albanians have
constantly been restricted to smaller areas.
* * *
However, until very recently, there had been no
archeological finds to invest the assumption of the Illyro-Albanian continuity with firm
and concrete support.
Before World War II, there were in Albania very few
archeological discoveries connected with the Illyrians. Leon Rey, head of the French
archeological mission in Albania, expressed doubts as to the possibility of finding any
vestiges linked to prehelenic times. Prehistoric objects, numerous in Macedonia, were at
that time completely lacking in Albania (L. Rey, "Lettre d'Albanie", Revue
internationale des Etudes Bakaniques, 1937, 301-304). In L. Rey's time, among 25
excavation sites, only two were Illyrian and the finds - insignificant ones - were related
merely to the Iron age (1 000-450 B.C.).
Things have changed since then. At the present time there
are over 200 excavation sites connected with the Illyrians. In the past 25 years,
archeology has acquired in Albania considerable significance. Various meetings have taken
place in Tirana and much has been published on the subject by Albanian and foreign
scholars.
Among the numerous publications, one may mention:
a) Les Illyriens et la genese des Albanais, Tirana 1972.
b) Actes du Congres des Etudes Illyrienns (two volumes),
1974.
- a) and b) contain the acts of the two important meetings
held in Tirana in 1969 and 1972 which were attended by a considerable number of Albanian
and foreign scholars).
c) Iliria (in Albanian, with abstracts in French), first
volume published in 1971; Vol 10, 1980. Vol. 2, entirely in French, is devoted to Illyrian
cities.
d) Two Albanian academic journals, Studia Albanica, and
Studime Historike (see especially 1972, nos 2,3,4) also contain articles dealing with the
Illyrians and the Albanian genesis.44
* * *
Tumuli from the Iron Age were found in Mat (north
Albania), Dropull (south Albania), Vajze (southeast Albania) and other localities. The
archeological finds of these places chow links with the Illyrian necropolia of Glasinac in
Bosnia and of Trebnite in Macedonia. This culture, known in archeological literature
as Glasinac Culture, is encountered in a region stretching from Epirus to the Drin (Drina)
and Morava, comprising Montenegro, Kosova and Bosnia.
* * *
Other discoveries made are connected with a more ancient
epoch, the Bronze Age. On account of the unifying elements between the Bronze Age and the
Iron Age, Albanian archeologists have concluded that the Illyrians as an indigenous
population and that their ethos was formed during the Neolithic or Bronze Age - i.e.,
prior to 1 000 B.C. - and not during the Iron Age as it had been formerly assumed.
Noteworthy is the fact that inventory objects pertaining
to the Bronze Age (around 1 500 B.C.), such as the double axe, etc., leave no doubts as to
relations between Illyria and Crete, thus confirming what had previously been asserted by
F. Nopcza and M.E. Durham by reason of ethnographical data. As regards archeological
inventory, the unifying traits linking the Bronze Age to the Iron Age were also noticed
relative to finds outside the borders of present-day Albania: at Zocavi near Prijedor,
Ptuj. The Yugoslav
scholars Josip Koroec, Frane Stare and Alojz Benac,
when studying these finds, concluded - prior to the Albanian archeologists - that since
there is no cultural interruption between the two layers representing the two different
epochs, it becomes evident that one has to deal with one and the same ethnos (see A.
Stipcevic, op. cit., pp.17-18).
Considerable prehistoric agglomerations dating from the
Eneolithic Age (1 600 B.C.) were also unearthed in various locations. Albania may now
compare with any other European country considered rich in prehistoric finds.
* * *
Of special interest is the inventory connected with a more
recent age, namely, the early medieval epoch for which historical data are wanting.
Noteworthy, relating to this epoch, is the necropolis of Kalaja Dalmaces in north Albania.
Although more finds have been made recently at this
locality, the necropolis was discovered at the end of the 19th century and much had been
written about it at that time and later by well-known foreign archeologists: S. Reinach,
Th. Ippen, P. Traeger, F.Nopcza, L.M. Ugolini, L. Rey, D. Mustilli and also by A. Degrand,
French consul in Scutari, who discovered it. For the history of this necropolis see
especially Hena Spahiu, "Gjetje te vjetra nga varezza mesjetare e Kalase se
Dalmaces", (Ancient finds from the medieval necropolis of Kalaja e Dalmaces")
Iliria I, Tirana, 1971, pp. 227-260; and S. Anamali, "De la civilisation
hautemedievale albanaise", Les Illyriens et la genese des Albanais, pp. 184-187.
The finds - most of which are at the Museum St.
Germain-en-Laye - were formerly attributed to the Illyrians. Yet archeologists connected
them with the Illyrian culture of the Iron Age. At the present time, however, there is
incontrovertible evidence that the inventory objects belong to an epoch that stretches
from the 6th century to the 8th century A.D.
Similar finds, linked to the same epoch, were made
recently in Shurdha, near Shkoder, Bukel (Mirdita), Kruje, Lesh and, not too long ago,
also in south Albania. This culture, known in archeological literature as Koman culture
(from a village near Kalaja e Dalmaces), shows striking ties with the ancient Illyrian
civilization. Despite the differences inherent to each epoch, one can easily recognize the
unifying traits: funerary rites, orientation of graves, building methods, etc. They
indicate that the Koman culture is the continuation of the ancient Illyrian civilization
and not a culture introduced by recent settlers. In certain areas, such as Tren and Maliq,
different layers show a continuity stretching from the Neolithic to the medieval epoch.
Despite ethnological and archeological data suggesting
that the Illyrian ethnos was formed on Albanian soil prior to the Iron Age, it might
perhaps still be premature to maintain a categorical stand as to problems relating to such
a distant past. Therefore, Prof. Cabej without opposing the assertion expressed by
Albanian archeologists, kept a cautious attitude in its regard. He argued, however, that
the Illyro-Albanian continuity from the Classical period to the Middle Ages, both in
present-day Albania and in Dardania, is indubitable.45
* * *
Although in Kosova there have been no systematic
excavations similar to those undertaken in Albania in the past twenty five years, the
archeological material that is available leads to the conclusion that the ethnos of
Kosova's inhabitants belonged to the Illyrian family. Burial tumuli, characteristic of the
Illyrian culture, unearthed in Albania at various localities were also found in Kosova
(near Pritina and in Lastica near Gjilan); in the district of Kukes which has
territorial links with Kosova; in the Dukagjini Plateau (Metohija), in Mjele (near
Virpazar), Montenegro, and in the region of Ochrida.
The cultural heritage in Kosova shows the same unity of
materials and building methods as in present-day Albania. These finds, which denote an
advanced urban culture, also indicate the extent of the territory occupied by the
Albanians at the time when the Slavs began to settle in the Balkans; they corroborate the
claim made by Cabey on linguistic grounds.
* * *
As reported by Constantine Porphyrogenitus (Emp. from
913-919), the Slavs Started to come to the Balkans from the Ural and the Caspian Sea
during the reign of Emperor Heraclius (610-641). They were often led by nomadic Turks.46
The region, called at that time Illyria, was inhabited by the aborigine population, the
Illyrians, the ancestors of the Albanians.
It is generally admitted that the Slavs settled in the
Danube area along the Dalmatian coast, and in Greece. But the question as to the exact
territories occupied by them has not been elucidated as yet. From various sources -
historical as well as linguistic - the conclusion may, however, be drawn that if the
greatest part of the vast Illyrian territories was by the end of the 9th century already
colonized by the Slavs, some areas were spared. These were Dardania, New Epirus, the
southern part of Prevalitania and North Epirus.47 These territories
correspond exactly to the region which before the Treaty of Berlin were inhabited by
Albanians.
The Slavs emerge as a strong population in the 10th
century. But these Slavs are Bulgarians, not Serbs. It is they who in the 11th century
named Belgrade48 the city that at present is Serbia's capital. The Slav
toponyms that replaced the Illyrian and the Roman toponyms are also in many areas
Bulgarian and not Serb.
It is now time to discuss the three issues mentioned in
Part I:
* * *
a) Practically nothing was known about the Serbs before
1136 when Tihomir, who was merely a shepherd, became Grand Zupan.
In the 12th century, according to a contemporary
chronicler, W. of Tyre, the Serbs were "an uncultured and undisciplined people
inhabiting the mountains and the forests" and who "sometimes ...
quit their mountains and forests... to ravage the
surrounding countries", (cited by W. Miller, Essays on the Latin Orient, 1921, p.
446).
The Serbs began to gain strength in the 13th century when
Stefan Simon Nemanjic - previously Zupan - started using, in 1217, the title of king.49
At that time the Serbs had already taken much land from the Albanians. In 1217, they
conquered Peja (Pec) which was to become in 1346 the see of the Serbian Patriarch. The
greater part of Kosova, however, was not yet in their power.50 It
was afterward that they got hold of it little by little. But the Serbian kingdom, within
the short span of its existence was not marked by fixity. Its precarious stability is
indicated by a striking array of capitals: Raka, Pritina, Belgrade,
Kruevac, Smederevo, Belgrade again, Prizren, Banjska, Shkup (Skopje), Prilep,
Smederovo, Kruevac again, Kragujevac.51 The names of these
short-lived capitals suggest that the Serbs invaded and conquered, but then retreated and
lost, because of some kind of opposition that they found. In this regard, it is
interesting to note an observation made by V. Cubrilovic in his rather inhumane
memorandum:52 "The Albanians are the only people during the last
millennium that managed not only to resist the nucleus of our state, but also to harm
us". This remark indicates that the Serbs were opposed by the aboriginal population.
When Stefan Duan was killed in 1355, the Serbian
Empire included not merely Kosova; it encompassed practically all of present Albania,
Greece, Bulgaria, and part of Hungary. Yet the Empire had no fixity and lasted merely nine
years. It had been built up with the help of mercenaries and it disintegrated immediately
after Duan's death because of the heterogeneous elements of which it was composed:
Vlachs, Greeks, Albanians, etc.
* * *
Considering the fact that in the 12th century the Serbs
were regarded as an uncultured and undisciplined people, that they began to gain strength
in the 13th century; that their kingdom lasted a little over 100 years, and Czar
Duan's Empire merely nine, it is reasonable to assume that during this very short
span of time the aboriginal population could not have been annihilated no matter how
difficult the living conditions might have been for them.
As for Kosova - which is incorrectly designated as the
cradle of the Nemanjic, for the Serbian nucleus did not start in Kosova, but in
Raka, i.e., north of the site of present-day Novipasar53 - the very names
of the capitals of that short-lived Serbian state suggest that Kosova was not even
abidingly its center. That state, as pointed out by many historians, does not seem to have
had any permanence or center.
Neither was Stefan Duan's Empire lost to the Turks.
When the Battle of Kosova took place, Serbia was insignificant and divided among various
petty lords. Lazar Hrebljanovic, to whose share had fallen the Kosova Plain was merely a
Knez, i.e., a prince or a simple count.54 His capital was Kruevac.
* * *
b) Some nations show restraint, shyness, or reluctance
when it comes to exalting historical events and national heroes. India, for example, a
country where thousands of myths originated, has refrained from underscoring the deeds of
her national heroes.55 Conversely, it has become the characteristic of
the Serb nation - as various scholars have observed - to glorify personages and events
associated with nationalists pride. For imaginative, sentimental, or other reasons which
shall not be examined here, the Serbs have created nationalistic myths as India has
created religious ones.56 In so doing, however, they have insisted to the
extreme upon the rights of their own nation which clash with those of other nations.
True, for instance, the Battle of Kosova, so greatly
exalted by the Serbo-Montenegrins since Karadzic's time, was an important and sad event
for the Slavs. However, when viewed objectively, one must concede that this battle, as
specialist have not failed to remark - was not fought by the Serbs alone, but by a
coalition of Balkan nations: Bulgarians, Greeks, Vlachs, and Albanians57
(including 10 000 Croats). As a consequence, these nations should be imparted the merit
due to them. Various sources suggest that the most numerous troops were the Albanian and
that they were placed in the front rows.57 Besides, the victory of the
Turks in that battle is said to have been occasioned by the treason of Lazar Brankovic,
Knez Lazar's son-in-law, who deserted to the Turks at the critical point of the battle
with a large number of Serbs.58
The important role of myths becomes evident when one
thinks that the Battle of Nikopolis on the Danube, where the army of Sigismond of Hungary
fought in 1395 against Beyazit, was just as decisive as that of Kosova, and perhaps as
important, according to some scholars, as the very capture of Constantinople by the Turks.
Yet we are heedless of its importance because of lack of myths. The Turkish victory on
this battle is also due to the Serb troops fighting on the Turkish side, Beyazid being
married to the sister of Stefan Lazarevic.59
As to the hero of Kosova Battle, widely sung by the Serbs
in the 19th century, most people will perhaps show surprise at learning that in all
likelihood he was Albanian. His name, which was not recorded in Serbian church documents -
perhaps for the simple reason that he might have been Catholic, perhaps also for other
motives - became known to us thanks to a casual traveler and through Turkish documents:
originally Copal - which is Albanian - it was Serbized, as were at that time other
Albanian names, thus becoming Kopilic. In the 18th century, Kopil, Kopilic, underwent
another modification and at present is merely known as Obilic.60
* * *
c) The Serbs did not merely make, by way of myths, the
most of Stefan Duan's short lived Empire as well as of the Kosova Battle. Their
purpose was also to prove that prior to the Turkish occupation, state and nationality
coincided and that the Albanians in Kosova were but an adventitious population having
colonized the region as a result of the Austro-Turkish Wars when the Serbs had to seek
refuge in Hungary in order to safeguard their dignity.
Thus it was, and still is, repeatedly underscored that the
Serbs who emigrated to Hungary were chiefly from the areas bordering on present-day
Albania, i.e., from the region of Prizren, Djakova and Peja (Pec); the area which the
Albanians call the Dukagjini Plateau and the Serbs Metohija.
J.G. von Hahn, who believed in the Illyro-Albanian
continuity, had no doubts, when he visited Kosova that the Albanians had been living there
since ancient times. He regarded the region of Sitnica as constituting a pure Albanian
link between Dardania and Albania.61
As for A. Boue, although the Serbian exodus, which started
to receive publicity at the beginning of the 19th century, was by the middle of that same
century accepted as an indubitable fact, he was sure, when journeying in Kosova
(1836-1838), that at the time of the Emigration the Albanians might have occupied certain
districts evacuated by the Serbs in Novipazar and in the Dukagjini Plateau, but in doing
so, they were merely recuperating their ancient territory, for, he pointed out, the
Albanians are the descendants of the Illyrians and these used to inhabit the territory
presently occupied by the South Slavs.62
In his turn C.E.N. Eliot argued that
The Turks are usually thought of as a destructive force,
and rightly; they have destroyed a great deal and constructed nothing. But in another
sense, they have proved an eminently conservative force for they have perpetuated and
conserved as if in a museum, the strange meddling which existed in South-Eastern Europe
during the last years of the Byzantine Empire (Turkey in Europe, 1965 ed., p. 16).
* * *
That some people followed the Austrian army and were
allowed to settle in Hungary is a historical fact that cannot be denied. Yet no historical
documents are available regarding the number of people who emigrated, nor the exact areas
affected by this emigration. The figure of 37 000 families,i.e., about 350 000 people,
claimed by some historians, cannot be supported by any indisputable nor plausible
evidence. This figure is, as it seems, the result of the arbitrary interpretation of the
word void mentioned in some church document.
* * *
Despite the lack of historical proof in support of the
Serbian assertion, the exodus, widely and abundantly advertised throughout the 19th
century, was unquestionably accepted even by very critical minds. The event was so
frequently mentioned and the publicity it received was such that it eventually became a
commonplace: it has been mechanically repeated by all those who in various capacities have
had to deal with the question. Newspapermen did not fail to refer to it again when
reporting on the recent events that took place in Kosova.
Prof. A. Hadri of the University of Pritina pointed
out that the appeal to the Balkan peoples to rise against the Turks was not merely made by
the Patriarch Arsenije Crnojevic, but jointly by him and the Albanian Archbishop of Skup
(Skopje), Pjeter Bogdani. According to Hadri, there were about 20 000 rebels, Serbs and
Albanians, some of whom emigrated north of the Danube. This figure does not tally with
that claimed by the Serbs.
The historical error concerning various aspects of this
emigration and the faulty interpretation of the word void used in church documents were
already pointed out by a Serb himself - the well-known historian J. Tomic, in a passage
which, surprisingly, has not received the attention it deserves considering the fact that
it dates from 1913. It is contained in Les Albanais en Vieille-Serbie et dans le Sandjak
de Novi-bazar, Paris, Hachette, 1913.
"This retreat of the southern and south-eastern
population toward the north is known in Serbian history as the emigration of the Serbian
people to Hungary under the Patriarch Arsenije Crnojevic. This event has lead in some
instances to a few errors which for more than a century and a half, have been repeated
from one book to another. One of those errors concerns the very regions that were hit by
this emigration. If one opens at random any history book of the Serbian people one never
fails to read everywhere as if it were a firmly established fact that during this
emigration the Serbian regions of the Southwest - i.e., the regions of Prizren, Djakovo,
Ipek - were the ones that suffered the most and remained vacant. This claim is incorrect
and must be amended once and forever. Indeed, when presented in this manner the facts do
not correspond to the reality. If this historical error has persisted for so long it is
because the question has not been sufficiently studied. One has relied on notes and
chronicles written by Orthodox priests and the 'void' mentioned in them has been
identified with the ruin of the Serbian people; in reality, it refers to Orthodoxy.
It is an established fact that in the Turkish Empire the
Serbian people were equated with the Orthodox element. The Serbs were always inseparable
from the Orthodox Church; thus, their interests coalesced with those of Orthodoxy See: Dix
ans, etc.)...
During the epoch with which we are concerned, Orthodoxy in
those regions was very hardly hit. A void was created in the Orthodox Church. Never was
any Serbian region diminished by so many priests, dignitaries, and simple ministers as
that particular area at that time. Neither had ever such a conjunction of circumstances
occurred that rendered the situation of the Serbs as distressful as it was then. As a
consequence, deprived of its best defenders and supporters in the battle against Islam,
the population of Orthodox Serbia found itself more than ever subjected to the double
process of Islamization and Albanization. This population did not evacuate the territories
bordering on Albania proper; however, after being subdued, it was forced to an accelerated
Islamization and Albanization. In terms of the Serbian national idea, this process may be
equated with the disappearance of Serbian life, since it is this Islamized and Albanized
population that has produced the worst enemies of the Orthodox faith with which the
Serbian people and the national idea are identified. We have sufficient proofs confirming
the fact that the stream of the Orthodox Serb emigration did not, indeed, affect the
neighboring territories of Albnia proper and that, consequently, the way the facts were
presented by priests in their notes and chronicles does not correspond to the reality. The
decline of Serbian life in the regions of Prizren, Djakovo, and Ipek must therefore not be
interpreted as the result of an emigration, but should more readily be considered as the
subjection of the Serbian people to Islamization and Albanization which, owing to the
circumstances, had become at that time particularly intense giving rise to the gravest
violence on the part of the Moslems.
A direct proof that the Serbian land was not evacuated by
the Orthodox population is the very existence of this same population until now. Still
another proof is the steady decline of Serbian life which may be noticed starting with the
beginning of the 18th century. However, aside from this fact of foremost importance, these
events can also be confirmed by extant information dating back to that very epoch. Indeed,
as it was indicated before,63 the Orthodox Serbs of Luma declared
themselves against Austria. It goes without saying that these Serbs did not need to
emigrate and even less to flee with the Austrian troops, for their attitude gave them the
right to remain where they were. In fact, they did not move. Moreover, it is well known to
us from extant documents of that era that in this region numerous Serbs as well as
Catholic Albanians withdrew from the Austrian Army as a consequence of some unfortunate
proceedings on the part of the Duke of Hollstein. These people joined the Turks even
before the latter had driven back the invader. Those Serbs did not feel any need, either,
to flee from the Turks. Nor could they possibly place themselves under the protection of
Austria. A man sent to Ipek during the first half of January 1690 came back with a monk of
the patriarchy. Upon his return to Kutchi, this man recounted the looting of the churches
and monasteries as well as the slaughters of priests and monks by the Turks, but he did
not report any emigration of the people. On the other hand it was indeed not at all easy
for the patriarch and his suite to flee because the Austrians were followed very closely
by detachments of Turkish soldiers. As a consequence, there could, of course, be no
question of any exodus of a slowly moving crowd. After this region was again occupied by
the Turks who continued their chase, any flight became impossible for the people. If a
mass emigration had taken place, how was it then possible for the same patriarch, Arsenije
III, to work the following year, as he did with the Serbs of Brda and Montenegro in order
to organize another uprising of the people on behalf of Austria?
On the other hand, one should again stress the fact that
it was physically impossible for the people of that geographic area to emigrate en masse
because the Turks, streaming into the region behind the Austrians, already occupied the
greatest part of it even before the secret departure of the patriarch. Lastly, it was in
the middle of the winter at a time when the roads are impossible to find.
As a consequence, there was no mass emigration of Orthodox
Serbs from those regions at that time although this has been repeatedly asserted until
now. Emigration and flight took place only whenever it was possible, i.e., wherever the
Turks did not appear suddenly and the people could leave the area before their arrival.
This was the case in the Sandjak, in Kosova, Upper Morava and Serbia within its former
boundaries. These regions where the Austrians had made a longer halt were abandoned by the
Orthodox Serb population that crossed the Danube and the Save. These emigrants were joined
by a flow of people, a progressive migration, still headed for the north. As for the areas
bordering on Albania proper, only a few single individuals and those who remained in the
army as volunteers were able to flee immediately following the withdrawal of the Austrian
army. The others left to side with the Turks. This is established by three facts:
a) Among the emigrants with fairly well-known names
surrounding the patriarch there is not a single one from the region bordering on Albania
proper.
b) The absence of an ancient population in the Sandjak may
be explained solely by a migration that started out from a distant zone.
c) The traditions among the Serbs who became Moslem and
Albanian, is proof that this population is old ...64(see pp. 35-41).
* * *
The recent examination of Turkish catastral registers has
revealed that, in fact, J. Tomic was right: the area bordering on present-day Albania
could not have been evacuated. In the 16th century, the number of people inhabiting the
mountainous areas around Dukadjini Plateau (Metohija) was too insignificant. According to
Albanian scholars, even assuming - without any valid reason - that the population had
doubled in the 17th century and that all of the highlanders had departed from the
mountaineous region, their number would not have sufficed to fill the area, nor to affect
the population of Kosova-Metohija (Kosmet) had that population been previously Slav. But
Turkish catastral registers clearly indicate that in addition to being small, the
population of the mountains was also stable.65
J. Tomic argued, besides, that following the
Austro-Turkish wars, the population of the region was forcibly Albanized and Islamized.
To this claim, one may reply that:
1) The region of Prizren, Djakova, and Peja is marked by
the tribal66 system as North Albania. Aside from the fact that this system
constitutes a link between the two units, it must be borne in mind that no outside man can
belong to the tribe, least of all Albanized Serbs. Therefore Tomic's remark at the end of
the passage that "the tradition among the Serbs who became Moslem and Albanian is
proof that this population is old", does not seem to make much sense.
2) At present, there are two million Moslem Slavs, the
Bosnians. In 1974 they have inaugurated a Moslem university, which is the only one of its
kind in Europe. Since these Slavs were merely Islamized, the question, of course, arises
as to why the other Slavs were, as maintained by Tomic, Albanized in addition to being
Islamized.
3) Contrary to the Vilayet of Kosova which was 90%
Albanian, that of the Sandjak of Novipazar was, at the turn of the century, mixed. Whether
those Albanians are recent settlers in that region, as claimed by Tomic, has, to my
knowledge, not been established. Be it as it may, the fact remains that the two
populations did not mix. Although both Moslem, they kept their individuality.
4) Kosova was not Islamized in the 18th century following
the Austro-Turkish Wars. According to the Turkish registers, Kosova as a whole was already
65% Islamized back in 1520.67 In certain areas Islamization seems to have
been particularly strong; thus Prizren (which in addition to the Orthodox population also
had a Catholic minority) was 80% Moslem (see M. Ternava's article in Fjala, Prishtine,
Spring 1980); the population of Shkup (Skopje) in Macedonia, was 74% Islamized.68
It is significant that Peja's population, still mostly
Christian in 1483 (105 hearths Christian; 33 Moslem) had turned overwhelmingly Moslem
(90%) by 1582 (142 hearths Islamized, 15 Orthodox, the latter mostly with Albanian names).69
This happened at a time when the Patriarch of Peja (Pec) was granted power by the Porte
(1557) thanks to the efforts of the Serbian Grand Vizir Sokolovic whose brother - or uncle
- was
an Orthodox ecclesiastic.70
* * *
At this point it is opportune to give some consideration
to the problem of religion:
Although there have been conversions also in Bulgaria and
Cyprus, the fact, nonetheless, remains that the most significant ones occurred among the
Bosnians and the Albanians. In 1520, i.e., eighty years after Bosnia's conquest by the
Turks, Sarajevo was 100% Moslem.71
The Bosnians admit that they did not regard the Turks as
oppressors, that on the contrary, they welcomed them as liberators.72
The Albanians cannot say the same thing about themselves,
for their numerous fights against the Turks are an undeniable historical fact. The
Albanian national hero who distinguished himself in these combats was compared to Charles
Martel73 who in 732 halted the Moorish invasions at Poitiers, thus saving
western Europe from the Moslem peril.74
Voltaire asserted that if the Greek emperors had been
comparable to Skanderbeg, the Eastern Empire would have been preserved.75 The
French savant Ami Boue, drawing a parallel between the Albanian leader and Stefan
Duan, portrayed the latter as a mere conqueror but pointed out that Skanderbeg is
remembered as one of the bravest soldiers that has ever existed.76
During the 25-year span that preceded the Turkish
invasion, the Albanians were at the height of their power; as regards moral prestige, they
had plenty of it. Relating to territories, according to the Byzantine chronicler L.
Chalcocondiles, the land of Gjon Castriota, Skanderbeg's father, extended between the
kingdom of Sandalj, king of Bosnia, and Epirus.77 N. Iorga mentions a
document from the archives of Venice, dating from 1413 which calls Gjon Castriota
"dominum partium Bosniae";78 this presupposes that the
territories northeast of Shkodra (Scutari) were under Castriota's sway.79 Also,
in 1420, Gjon Castriota granted to the inhabitants of Ragusa the privilege to exercise
trade in his territories until Prizren,80 an indication that this latter
town was under Gjon Castriota's rule. Besides, according to Ami Boue (who points out that
between the Greeks and the Albanians the differences are very slight), the Albanians
inhabiting Greece were so excited about Skanderbeg's deeds that in 1454, they would have
easily subdued the two despots, Demetrios and Thomas, and Greece would have come under
their sway.81
It becomes evident that under these circumstances the
Turks would not have been welcomed by them. In fact, the Albanians who fled to Italy
following the Turkish invasion of their land were very numerous. They are said to have
made up one-fourth of the nation's population.82
When thinking of these facts and considering that the
fights of the Albanians against the Turks constitute a glorious episode in the history of
the Albanian nation, the question, of course, arises as to why so many of these firm
opponents of the Ottomans gave up Christianity.
There is no doubt that in the Balkans the Turks used
pressure at times, especially perhaps in regard to the Albanians because they resisted
them longer than other Balkan nations, but also on account of their links with the Pope,
i,.e., with the West, which were suspect to the Porte. On general, however, the Turks
strike as having been extremely tolerant in matters of religion. In fact, various data
lead to the assumption that practically all conversions were in a way, voluntary. At the
present time, it seems therefore simplistic to think that "after the Battle of Kosova
whole populations were butchered or compelled to adopt Islam.83 Neither may
those who remained Christian be regarded as angels and martyrs, nor should those who
embraced Islam be depicted as opportunists.
The religious problem is, as are most problems, more
complicated than it seems at first sight. Up to now, scholars have not been able to study
it properly on account of insufficient documents. Therefore, in many respects, there have
been conjectures of a controversial order rather than definite conclusions drawn from
objective historical evidence. The conversions of the Bosnians, for example, have often
been attributed to the eagerness of the Bosnian nobles to secure their feudal rights. Yet
the Bosnians themselves consider their acceptance of Islam as a means to preserve their
identity for they do not identify themselves with the Serbs.84
As far as the Albanians are concerned, since they provided
Turkey with numerous energetic and most able statesmen and reformers, various scholars,
contending that they had a privileged position in the Turkish Empire, have imputed these
conversions to utilitarian motives, such as the desire to have access to high positions,85
if not simply to avoid taxes.
As regards Islamization, the role played by the Balkan
Churches has received very little attention although the pressure wielded by these
churches against one another has often been stressed with respect to other matters. It is
in connection to these churches that this problem shall be considered in this essay. * * *
The corruption of the Greek church has already been
pointed out by different scholars.
In this regard, a passage from Sir C.N.E. Eliot's Turkey
in Europe (first published in 1900) is illuminating:
"There was a strong party for the reelection of
Jeremias, who, finding that the Porte refused to accept his candidature, offered 40 000
ducats if his brother Nicephorus could be elected. Metrophanes, by unheard of efforts,
collected a like sum and laid it at the Sultan's feet. "The man is worthy of his
office", said his Majesty; "let him alone". In 1620, the Grand Vizier
demanded from Timotheus 100 000 ducats, on the ground that he had named 300 Metropolitans
during his 10 years tenure of office. Cyrillus Lucaris, the successor of Timotheus, was
deposed by the Jesuits and their party for 40 000 ducats and reinstated for 180 000 more.
"Naturally, these enormous sums did not come from the
pockets of the Patriarch. As the Turks treated him, so he treated his own subordinates.
The tribute of the Patriarchate was paid from the money received from consecrating
bishops, the bishop paid his money from consecrating priests, who in their turn found the
wherewithal by insisting on payments from their flocks for the performance of the simplest
religious rite. The visitations of Metropolitans were dreaded almost as much as those of
Pashas, and the whole fabric of the Church seemed converted into a vast mechanism of
extorting money from the unhappy Christians for the most shameful purposes" (pp.
246-347 - 1965 ed.).
Not only ecclesiastical, but also educational matters were
in the hands of the Greeks. "Their object was to Hellenise the Christian races of the
Ottoman Empire, which meant that those unfortunate populations had to submit to a double
yoke: Turkish and Greek".86 Eliot also adds that under these conditions,
"It is hardly surprising to find that this dark period was characterized by numerous
conversions" (op. cit., p. 50).
These conversions become, indeed, understandable when one
thinks that the non-Greek populations had to pay huge sums to keep in Constantinople a
patriarch whose aim was to prevent the development of their own cultures and to suppress
their own languages. In fact, according to Turkish catastral registers, at the beginning
of the 16th century, Gjirokastra's and Vlora's populations were overwhelmingly Christian
(53 hearths Moslem as against 12 257 hearths Christian for the former city; 1 200 Moslem
against 14 304 Christian for the latter).87
At the beginning of the 20th century, the Christian population of these two cities had
dwindled; they were overwhelmingly Moslem.
C.and B. Jelavich have remarked that the Greeks who had
high positions in the Turkish Empire88 used their authority to oppress the
rights of other nations in the Balkans, especially those of the Serbs.
Also, when examining the Bosnian problem, C. and B.
Jelavich have pertinently indicated that the Bosnians, situated as they are, between
Orthodox Serbia and Catholic Croatia, found themselves torn by disputes between the two
churches and they were compelled first to have recourse to the Bogomil heresy and after
the Turkish conquest to embrace Islam.89
These two remarks by C. and B. Jelavich are relevant. The
first about the Greeks in regard to other nations may apply also to the Serbs with respect
to the Albanians. When reflecting on the second remark pertaining to the conversions of
the Bosnians, who first turned Bogomil, then Moslem in order to keep their identity, the
question arises as to what were the Albanians before embracing Islam.
Of late, the Albanian scholar Dhimiter S. Shuteriqi has
expressed the opinion that the Albanians also, like the Bosnians, might have been Bogomil.90
There are, however, no extant documents to support this conjecture with incontrovertible
evidence.
It is assumed that Skanderbeg was Catholic on account of
his close connections with four different popes. Yet, one of his brothers, Reposh, was a
monk in an Orthodox monastery as were other north Albanians. These data do not simplify
the religious problem as regards the Albanians.
* * *
The Albanians, we are told, were under the jurisdiction of
Rome until 731 when Leo the Isaurian placed Illyricum under the Patriarchate of
Constantinople (K. Jirecek, Geschichte der Serben, p. 47). However, as pointed out by N.
Iorga, Illyricum had received its first missionaries from Rome quite early,91
which meant that it adhered to Western civilization. The Albanians, on account of the
geographical position of their country and for various other reasons, found themselves
obliged, in the course of years, to vacillate between the two churches. Yet they managed
to keep alive their Western background. Perhaps they never severed completely their ties
with Rome. According to A. Cabej, of all the Balkan nations - including even Rumania -
Albania sided more with the West than with the East. It is also interesting to indicate
that the Albanians who settled in Italy following the Turkish invasion, many of whom still
use the
eastern rite, were never required to sign any document
proclaiming their union with the Vatican as is the case with other Eastern communities.
Nor did they abjure Orthodoxy. This presupposes that their links with Rome had never been
broken.92
The Serbs, evangelized many centuries after the Albanians,
did not receive their missionaries from Rome. In Stefan Duan's Code of Laws, there
are indications that those who had links with Rome were persecuted.
According to Law no. 6, "The ecclesiastical authority
must strive to convert such (i.e., Catholics) to the true faith. If such a one will not be
converted..., he shall be punished by death. The Orthodox Tsar must eradicate all heresy
from his state. The property of all such as refuse conversions shall be confiscated...
Heretical churches will be consecrated and open to priests of Orthodox faith".
According to Law no. 8, "If a Latin priest be found
trying to convert a Christian to the Latin faith, he shall be punished by death".
According to Law no. 10, "If a heretic be found
dwelling with the Christian he shall be marked on the face and expelled. Any sheltering
him be treated the same way".93
It is evident that under such rigid laws it must not have
been easy for the Kosovars to keep their ties with Rome. In fact, the recent examination
of Turkish catastral registers has revealed that in the 15th and 16th centuries many
Albanians in Kosova were Orthodox.94
It goes without saying that the Albanians were not
persecuted merely on religious grounds. In fact, in 1332, Father Brocardus (Gulielmus
Adae, a French Dominican, Archbishop of Antebari) remarked that "The Albanoi are
oppressed under the intolerable and very hard servitude of the most hateful and abominable
lordship of the Slavs because they are overburdened with taxes, their clergy is lowered
and humbled, their bishops and abbots often imprisoned, their monastery and priests lost
and destroyed, their nobles deprived of their possessions".95
These persecutions against the Catholic Albanians
continued during the Turkish occupation.
The Yugoslav scholar Jovan Radonic (Rimska Kurija i
Juznoslavenske zemlje XVI-XIX veka, Beograd 1950,pp. 269, 473, 511-512) has revealed that
the Patriarch of Peja had the authorization of the Porte to place the Catholics under his
jurisdiction, threatening to impale the Albanians who would dare to address themselves to
the Pope.
In 1664, Andre Bogdani, Archbishop of Shkup (Skopje),
informed his congregation in Rome that the Albanians were more persecuted by the Orthodox
Church than by the Turks (see Mark Krasniqi "Les Albanais dans l'oevre d'un diplomate
russe", "Gjurme e Gjurmine, Prishtine, 1979, pp. 291-391).
The question of religion is, indeed, closely related to
that dealing with national identity.
Being evangelized by Roman missionaries, the Albanians did
not have a national church of their own similar to that of the Slavs. Pressed by the
Greeks in the south and by the Slavs elsewhere their conversion to Islam seems to have
been a means to preserve their national identity.
* * *
The conversions have been detrimental to the Albanians in
more than one way: during Ottoman rule, they had to serve as mercenaries in the Turkish
army. Sent to far away countries, they were decimated in wars or succumbed to climates to
which they were not used while the other nations of the Balkans cultivated their land and
grew in population.
In the 19th century, their desperate efforts to shake off
Ottoman rule were ignored by the West and whereas the other Balkan nations were not merely
allowed but also aided to constitute themselves as states, the Albanians, the oldest
nation in the Balkans, were denied the right to do so.
It is because of their conversions that they lost the
greatest part of their territories to neighboring states for Gladstone favored the
Christians whom he considered as the allies of the Western Powers whilst he regarded
Moslems as inferior; civilization being - according to him - equated with Christianity.
Religion was also taken as a pretext for plans made by
neighboring states to transplant to Turkey the Albanians who as a result of peace treatise
had remained in the territories ceded by the Great Powers to neighboring states.
The Albanian scholar and diplomat, F. Konitza, pointed out
that the Albanians are fully aware that the conversions are cause of many of their
grievances and misfortunes while remaining at the same time perfectly conscious that if
they had remained Christians, they would have been absorbed by their neighbors. Konitza
implies thereby that between the two alternatives, the Albanians had no choice.
* * *
Giving further consideration to the Turkish registers
pertaining to Kosova - which to this date may be regarded as the most reliable source of
information relating to religion and ethnicity - the Albanian scholars have pointed out
that in the light of the various data contained in these registers, the conclusion must be
drawn that many Albanians had become Orthodox and were in the process of being Slavized.
One may notice, for example, that many of them had added Slavic suffixes to their Albanian
names. Thus, one encounters names such as Gjon Leshovich, Mark Bushatovich, Gjin
Progonovich (Albanian names except for the suffix). Sometimes even the first names are
Slavic: Radoslav, Jovan, Bogdan, Radislav, Bozhidar, Petko, etc. There are cases when both
names are purely Slavic as to make it impossible to tell that one has to deal with
Albanians were it not for certain remarks added to them such as 'son of Gjin', 'son of
Tanush', 'son of Arben', (which are indisputably Albanian names) or simply Arbanas, i.e.,
Albanian. Sometimes, the only indication as to the ethnos is the village which has an
Albanian name or the section of the city marked 'Albanian'.96
These names have not failed to become the subject of a
controversy. In fact, the Albanians consider as Albanian, despite their Slavic names, all
those for whom some indication was found as to their Albanian ethnicity.
The Yugoslav scholars did not observe the same guideline.
A. Handzic,97 for example, who has published various foreign
documents attesting that the Albanians were present in Kosova prior to the 17th century
and who was also the first to point out that many of the individuals who had Slavic names
were in reality Albanians on account of the indications mentioned above, when it came to
statistics, he listed as "Slavs" all those who had Slavic names regardless of
other data. Therefore the conclusion he reached was that in the 15th century, the
Albanians, although present everywhere in Kosova, did not constitute the majority of the
population. Conversely, the Albanian scholars maintain that the population was
overwhelmingly Albanian, because of the fact that Slavic names - given the political
situation - may not be considered as a criterion of ethnicity without taking into account
other data.
Be as it may, the fact remains that in the 15th century,
according to the registers, the Albanians were, contrary to the opinion that had prevailed
until recently, everywhere present in Kosova.
* * *
With regard to the Turkish registers relative to Peja, the
Albanian scholars content that, if the population of that city had been Slav, the numerous
conversions at the very epoch when the patriarch was granted power by the Porte, would be
unfounded and incomprehensible. These scholars regard the conversions as a clear
indication that Peja's population was Albanian; they maintain, furthermore, that these
conversions were, for their co-nationals, a means to keep their national identity.98
That the Albanians in Kosova are an aboriginal population
is attested by the very Serbian Chrysobulls of the 13th and the 14th centuries. On the
other hand, Turkish chroniclers mention Albanian uprisings in Kosova in the 15th century.99
The archives of Dubrovnik also testify for the same epoch. As for 17th century, important
are, among others, the writings of the Turkish chronicle Evlija Celebi which clearly
indicate that prior to the Austro-Turkish Wars the Albanian population was overwhelmingly
present in Western Macedonia, in Montenegro and in the Vilayet of Kosova (E. Celebi,
Putopis, Sarajevo, 1973, pp. 136-137). Mention should also be made, for the same epoch, of
pastoral reports - that of the Papal Envoy, Pietro Massarechi (Mazreku, born in Prizren
who succeeded M. Bizzi) dating from 1623 specifies that at that time, the population of
Prizren was made up of 12 000 Moslem Albanians, 200 Catholic Albanians and 600 Serbs and
that the population of Shkup (Skopje) was also mainly Albanian.100 Likewise,
the Austrian documents pertaining to the Austro-Turkish Wars give evidence that the
Austrian army was continuously in touch with an Albanian population. These documents refer
to Prizren as the Capital of Albania and to Pjeter Bogdani, Archbishop od Shkup, as
Archbishop of Albania.101 Various incidents linked to the
Austro-Turkish Wars, as related by T. Ippen (in Novibazar und Kossovo,(das Alte Rascien)
eine Studie, Vienna, 1892), who used Austrian War documents - as did J. Tomic - make it
obvious that in Kosova the Austrian army had to deal with an Albanian population.
The fact that Shkup (Skopje) had an Albanian Archbishop,
implies that that city had an Albanian population. Also, it is well known that among those
who followed the Austrian army was an Albanian tribe, the Kelmendi (Clementi), from the
region of Ni, which suggests that the area was inhabited by Albanians.
* * *
The recent study of catastral registers has not only
indicated that in the 15th century the Albanians were overwhelmingly present in Kosova and
Western Macedonia; it has also shown that they were not merely shepherds, as they were
often said to have been, but held all kind of positions and practiced professions which
are not normally characteristic of a nomadic population. That study has also revealed that
in contrast to the Albanians who were sedentary, the Serbs appear as a nomadic population.102
Objective research has therefore established that what has
been called Old Serbia, a term suggesting Serbian tradition and permanence, is in reality
a region inhabited ab antiquo by Albanians which was only for a period of time under Serb
rule.
* * *
It is undeniable fact that until recently (but especially
so during the Middle Ages) state and nationality seldom coincided. The desire to invade
and conquer is, indeed, a characteristic of many peoples and races. England was invaded by
the Normans and ruled by them; the Arabs held sway in Spain from 756 to 1492; Calais was
for two centuries under the domination of the British; Poland stayed for a long time
divided between Russia, Germany and Austria. Needless to say that many more examples may
be cited. There are places that remained, in fact, for centuries under the nominal rule of
various invaders, alien to the population inhabiting them. The South Slavs, who were
themselves, as a race and as a nation, under the domination of Turkey, Hungary, and
Austria, should be in a better position than most people to feel and admit that in the
past state and nationality were very seldom identical and that the transient power over
something does not give claim to a permanent possession.
Indeed, temporary conquerors do not normally use the
adjective "old" to describe territories which they once held under their sway.
The French do not find it appropriate to call "Old France" territories once
occupied by the short-lived Napoleon's Empire. Nor do the Turks name "Old
Turkey" the Balkans where they ruled for over five centuries. The Bulgarians do not
refer to Belgrade as "Old Bulgaria", despite the fact that that city belonged to
them from the 9th century until the 11th; neither is this city called "Old
Hungary" although Belgrade, which was Serbia's capital only briefly in the 12th
century, fell under Hungarian control before being captured by the Turks in 1521. As for
Ragusa, recently Dubrovnik, it was founded in the 7th century by the Romans and the
Illyrians fleeing the incursions of the Slavs. Later, it fell under the rule of Byzantium,
then under that of Venice, and finally of Hungary. The Turks held it from 1526 until 1806.
Only since 1918 do the Slavs have control of it.
* * *
The term "Old Serbia", which, like all
expression that are well chosen, has a tremendous suggestive power, was employed for the
first time by Vuk Karadzic at the beginning of the 19th century. Yet Karadzic applied it
practically to the whole Balkan peninsula. "Old Serbia" at that time was
synonymous with what was also called "Great Serbia". But the chances to annex
Bulgaria and Thessaly waned. The term was thus no longer applied to those regions and at
present nobody considers these places any longer as "Old Serbia". Curiously on
John Bugarsky's map, published in Belgrade in 1845, there is one area marked "Old
Serbia or Present-day Albania". It is the region of Bielopolje separating Montenegro
from Serbia - a clear indication that the term was used to designate various areas
depending on the possibilities regarding territorial claims offered by political
circumstances. Thus the limits traced by Prof. Cvijic for "Old Serbia" in 1909
differed considerably from those used by the same scholar in 1911. Since there was nobody
to protect Albania's rights, the term was eventually used to designate merely the region
that at present is identified with Kosova-Metohija (Kosmet). As for the Albanians, they
call "Old Serbia", Serbia before 1878.
* * *
According to Theodor Ippen, if the term "Old
Serbia" should be used at all, it should apply solely to that district which is
situated between Ibar and Sitnica, whose southern border is the river Lab, i.e., to the
area once called "Old Rascia" (Rascia = Serbia) whose capital was Ras located
north of present Novipazar. Ippen remarks that this region too used to be Albanian (even
the name Ras, he points out, goes back to an Albanian etymology), but it was there that
the Southern Slavs formed their first nucleus in the 12th century under Nemanjic; it
should in no way be applied to the territory of Kossovo:
The use of the expression 'Old Serbia' would be, if
applied to a limited territory, after all justified, in as much as here (in Raka)
the old Serbian state, which in its early stage may be identified with Rascia, originated.
But he term 'Old Serbia' is used by chauvinistic Serbs to designate regions, such as
Prizren, Gjakova, Ipek on the one hand and, on the other, Iskup, which geographically and
ethnographically belong to Albania and Macedonia. 'Old Serbia' is therefore applied, for
political purposes, to regions which ethnically speaking were never Serb (Ippen, op.cit.,
p.4).103
* * *
In the sight of these facts, the Albanians maintain that
the principle of history invoked by the Serbs in support to territorial claims, is not
based on any solid facts.
Serbian Churches in Kosova
It is an undeniable fact that people feel the need to
build whatever they establish themselves. It is therefore normal that when they move away,
they leave monuments behind. Suffice it to mention in this regard the famous mosques of
Spain where the Arabs ruled for more than seven centuries. Some nations inherit monuments
found by them in conquered territories. Thus Istanbul contains, aside from Hagia Sophia,
many other Byzantine churches. These Christian places of worship stand amidst a Moslem
population. Their fate is - mutatis mutandis - comparable to the Moslem monuments of
Spain.
Similar to other nations, the Yugoslavs inherited from
those who had previously ruled over the territories presently inhabited by them, various
monuments associated with different civilizations that flourished in those areas
throughout the centuries - for instance, on the Dalmatian coast, works of art built by the
Romans and the Venetians add charm to the beautiful coast attracting a great number of
tourists.104 These monuments are well preserved by the Yugoslavs. Conversely,
the Serbo-Montenegrins thought it appropriate to destroy practically all Turkish works of
art. The beautiful 17th century mosque of Podgorica, recently Titograd, was thus
demolished despite the loud protests of the Bosnians. In Belgrade and its surroundings
alone over 260 mosques, some of which were of undeniable artistic value, were razed.105
The Serbs have also demolished or damaged Albanian Catholic Churches.106
It is evident that places of worship as well as works of
art represent the very spirit of a nation; to destroy them is tantamount to ruining the
nation itself. The urge to conquer is more often than not accompanied by the need to
annihilate the very spirit of the enemy. In this regard, it is perhaps not inappropriate
to point out that the Greeks, who in 1766 eliminated the autocephalous Church of Peja and
the following year, the Bulgarian Church of Ochrida, also destroyed Serbian manuscripts
and monuments. In 1825, the Metropolitan Ilarion is said to have burned publicly all the
Slavonic books in the old library of Trnovo Patriarchate.107
One could also point out the fact that during the Balkan
Wars, the Bulgarian army, responsible for many other destructions, turned into a stable
the monastery of Gracanica, damaging the frescoes on the walls.108
Many Catholic churches were damaged or demolished by the
Serbs.
In the light of these facts, one appreciates more fully
the attitude of the Albanians with regard to Serbian places of worship situated in a
region where the population is overwhelmingly Albanian and Moslem. But before giving any
details a few words about these churches become compelling.
In the region bordering on present-day Albania, there are
three important monasteries (restored at high cost between the two World Wars):
1) The Patriarchate of Peja, built in the 13th century and
aggrandized in the 14th. Its religious importance is well known, but from the point of
view of architecture it is not important.
2) The monastery of Decani, built in 1325-1335. Its
architect was Vita of Cattaro, a Catholic brother. It is the most beautiful of the three
monasteries.
3) The Church of Devica in Drenica, built by the Despot
Georg Brankovic, mentioned in documents only in 1578. From the point of view of
architecture, this church is less important than the two others.
All three of them are situated in isolated areas.
According to A. Slijepcevic, these monasteries were not so much intended to be places of
worship; rather, they constituted landmarks either in conquered territories or away from
from state rule. In the latter case, they were like attempts to "rapprochments".109
Medieval Serbian documents clearly indicate that the
villages surrounding the Serbian monasteries were inhabited by Albanians, who contributed
to their maintenance.110
It is now time to point out that these places of worship
would have been destroyed in the course of years had it not been for the Albanians. It is
to them that they owe their existence. For centuries, the guardians of these churches -
the vojvods, as they are called - have always been Moslem Albanians, elected by the
neighboring villages of these churches. There were times when the Albanians experienced
bitter and inimical feelings in regard to the Serbs, especially following the Berlin
Congress, when tens of thousands of their co-nationals inhabiting the regions ceded to
Serbia and Montenegro were brutally driven out of their homes and forced to leave the
region. There were also times, especially at the turn of the century, when the Albanians,
disobeying the Turks, held sway in those territories, where they constituted over 90% of
the population. It was thus in their power to reduce to ashes those places of worship. But
they did not do so despite the fact that they were fighting the Serbs. This surprising
attitude is due to the Albanian Code of Laws (the Code of Laws of Lek Dukagjini, rightly
regarded as the bible of the North Albania), which penalizes those who do not show respect
for churches even if they are not their own. Numerous were the vojvods killed while
defending one or the other of these monasteries. Orthodox priests sent to their families
letters of praise and gratitude.111
Considering these facts, Serb propaganda that depicts the
Albanians as vandals who damage Serbian churches seems both mean-spirited and undignified,
especially when one thinks that even poets have put their talents to the service of a
defaming propaganda by describing the Albanians as destroyers. In this regard, mention
should be made of a widely advertised poem by the well-known Serb poet, Rakic, where an
Albanian is described as having damaged the eyes of one of the frescoes at Gracanica112
representing Simonida.113 Since there is irrefutable proof that this act
was not committed by any Albanian and owing to the fact that Rakic - who at the turn of
the century was consul of the Kingdom of Serbia in Pritina - must have been fully
aware of the truth, his poem is more than objectionable.114
Regarding these churches, those who cause damage are Serb
school children, who put their signature wherever they can. Mark Krasniqi in one of his
two illuminating essays devoted to these churches has even reproduced the signature of the
Serbian Consul in Monastir, which he found in Gracanica. Using the Cyrillic alphabet, the
Consul had written clearly and in a conspicuous place: "D.Bodi, Srpski Konsul u
Bitolju, 1893".115
A leap shall now be made into the present time to point
out that the unjust attitude of the Serbs has not changed.
On March 16, 1981, a fire broke out at the convent of the
sisters at Peja, a fairly recent construction without architectural value. Although the
convent is at a good distance from the patriarchate, which was in no way touched by fire,
the casualty was presented to the press in such a manner as to suggest that the
patriarchate itself had suffered damages. Accused were the Albanian
"irredentists".
As a result of a court investigation, Judge Hoti, a
Kosovar, declared that the casualty was due to inadequate electrical installation.
Although damages had been minimal, the Fedral Government allotted for the restoration of
the convent sums that were surprisingly high. The case, however, seemed closed. It has
been reopened of late.
It is understandable that, hurt in their pride, the
Albanians have come to view these churches, which they have so magnanimously defended, as
symbols of injustice.
Part Three
Kosova Between The Two World Wars
At the outbreak of World War I, the illiteracy of the
Serbs was over 83%.116 However, the South Slavs, who had been under
Austrian rule and subsequently served in the administration of the newly created state of
Yugoslavia, enabled Serbia to progress between the two wars. As for the Albanians who
remained under Slav rule, the period that began in 1913 and ended in 1941 was one of
regression and mourning. Progress was completely denied to them. The few Albanian schools
that had finally been permitted by Turkey shortly before the outbreak of the Balkan Wars,
were closed by the Yugoslav Government. No education in the Albanian language was
tolerated. Unprecedented pressures of all kinds were wielded on the impoverished
population. New settlers - non-Albanians - were established in the region. Under a
so-called Agrarian Reform, the Albanians were deprived of their land and compelled to cede
it to the Serbo-Mongtenegrins, who little by little set out to colonize the whole area.
The man responsible for this colonization, which was not performed in a very humane
manner, was Djordje Kristic, the head of the agrarian commission that had its headquarters
in Shkup (Skopje). In his book The Colonization of South Serbia, published in Sarajevo in
1928, he tells how rapidly the ethnic composition was changing in a region which before
1913 "did not have a single Serbian inhabitant".117
Yet soon, the Yugoslavs decided upon means even more cruel
in order to eradicate Albanian element faster and more efficiently. It was thus resolved
that tens of thousands should be removed to Turkey or to the State of Albania.
There was some concern that obstacles of international
import might arise, but in a memorandum to the Royal Government on March 7, 1937, Dr. Vaso
Cubrilovic had this to say:
At a time when Germany can expel tens of thousands of Jews
and Russia can shift tens of millions of people from one point of the continent to
another, the shifting of few hundred thousand Albanians will not lead to the outbreak of a
World War.
The Albanians intended to be expatriated were not to be
allowed compensation for their loss of property.
The means that were to be used for this removal are
explicitly mentioned by V. Cubrilovic. Below are picked at random and transcribed some
recommendations contained in his memorandum:
...agitators to advocate the removal by describing the
beauties of the new territories in Turkey; refusal to recognize the old land deeds;
ruthless collection of taxes; threats; withdrawal of permits to exercise a profession;
dismissal from state, private and communal office; destruction of cemeteries;
ill-treatment of clergy. Conflicts between Albanians and Montenegrins should be prepared
and encouraged and should be either presented as conflicts between clans or attributed to
economical reasons. These will be bloodily suppressed with the most efficacious means. In
the colonization process, the role of the police should be of foremost importance; settles
should be mostly Montenegrins because they are arrogant and merciless and would drive the
Albanians away with their behavior; from the ethnic standpoint, the Macedonians will unite
with us only when they enjoy true ethnic support from the Serbian motherland, which they
have lacked to this day; this they will achieve only through the destruction of the
Albanian block. Settlement should begin in villages, then in towns.118
The plan to begin colonization first in villages was based
on previous experience and had worked out well; namely, along the Dalmatian coast. In
fact, Austria, thinking that the Italians, on account of their advanced culture, were more
of a threat to them than the Slavs, had allowed and encouraged Slav settlements in the
rural areas. As a result, Fiume and Triest, whose population had remained Italian,
eventually looked like islands immersed in the rural Slavic population surrounding them.
Despite the strong opposition of the Kosovars to the plan
for their settlement in Turkey, the agreement with the Turkish government was made.
Yugoslavia was prevented from carrying out the plan because of the outbreak of World War
II.119
+ + + + + +
Kosova During World War II
As a result of Yugoslavia' capitulation in 1941, Kosova -
except for some districts ceded to Bulgaria - was annexed to Albania. It was a great
relief for the Kosovars to be able to breathe freely after so many years of humiliation,
and unspeakable misery. Albanian schools were founded everywhere, books and newspapers
started being published and an Albanian radio station was established.
The joy was, however, short-lived, for Albania was at that
time engaged in anti-fascist guerilla war and the inhabitants of Kosova joined them in
their struggle for freedom. There were several political parties in Albania during the
war. As time went on, however, the non-communist parties received less and less support
from the West; as a result, the Communist Party eventually grew stronger owing to the ties
existing between the communists in Albania, Greece, Yugoslavia and Bulgaria.
The Montenegrin writer, Mark Miljan (1833-1901) who,
having lived a long time among the Albanians subsequently wrote about them, pointed out
their qualities and their shortcomings. He remarked, among other things, that they are
quick-tempered but that they would never betray anyone even if it were in their own
interest to do so. Trust, he asserted, characterizes them and it is thus quite easy to
take advantage of them.
This trait of their personality is reflected in their
attitude toward the Yugoslavs during the war years. The communist Albanians were convinced
that the spirit of the Yugoslav communists was totally opposed to that of the former Royal
Government of Yugoslavia. They saw in Communism true brotherhood among men and sincerely
believed that the miseries of the Kosovars were a thing of the past since they were due
solely to the greed of a selfish bourgeois society. Thus, the Communist Albanians helped
the Yugoslavs in a selfless manner. The Kosovars, erasing from their minds the atrocious
memories of their great sufferings, formed various guerilla bands and fought side by side
with the people of the nation which had been toward them most cruel and unjust. Here is
what E. Hoxha said with respect to Kosova.
Our aim is to continue the joint struggle (i.e., the
resistance movements in Albania, Yugoslavia and Greece) and to forget the past, because we
are fighting our common enemy; at the conclusion of the struggle we who have fought
shoulder to shoulder with the greatest understanding will settle any misunderstandings.
The national liberation movement has the task of making the Kosova people conscious of
their aspirations... We must see that the people of Kosova decide for themselves which
side to join, Albania or Yugoslavia, and to oppose the Yugoslav regime which would attempt
to oppress them.120
+ + + + + +
Kosova After World War II
It was agreed that the Albanians of Yugoslavia should be
able to chose their destiny with the right to self determination, including secession.121
The Kosovars had fought the Nazis and the Fascists hoping that Kosova would become one
with the motherland only to realize that the Yugoslavs did not intend to keep their
promise. Bitter and resentful, they rose in protest. But their uprising was bloodily
suppressed. Thousands of Albanians were placed in a concentration camp near Pritina
where they endured unspeakable tortures.
In 1945, when the province of Kosova was officially
restored to Yugoslavia by the force of arms, the principle of self-determination was not
applied. Kosova was not even annexed with the status of a republic; it was attached to
Serbia, first as a "Region" and then as an "Autonomous Province". Yet
the question for the Yugoslavs was again how to deal with the Kosovars, since it was no
longer possible to do away with them. In order to destroy any hopes that the Kosovars
might have to join the rest of their countrymen, Serbia's ambition had always been the
partition of Albania between Yugoslavia and Greece. The Serbian Nobel prize winner, Ivo
Andric, who admitted this view, expressed his thoughts in a memoir addressed to the
Government of the kingdom of Yugoslavia in January 1939. In his opinion it was the only
way to solve the problems pertaining to the Kosovars.
Communist Yugoslavia thought of doing better: she strived
to annex the whole of Albania. Her efforts were thwarted.
As for the Kosovars, they found themselves in a very
difficult plight because of the partition of the territory inhabited by them into three
republics: Serbia, Montenegro and Macedonia. Thus, for example, Shkup (Skopje = Uskup),
once the capital of the Vilayet of Kosova, was ceded to the Republic of Macedonia. The
splitting was done in an arbitrary way, most detrimental to the interests of the Albanian
population, for if the Albanians were granted some rights in the recently created
Autonomous Province of Kosova, these rights were denied to the other Albanians inhabiting
the Republics of Macedonia and Montenegro.
As regards education, the Albanian schools that had been
opened during World War II were not closed. However, they deteriorated rapidly for lack of
financial governmental support. Little by little, the teaching of the Albanian language,
as well as courses in Albanian history were not tolerated. Although the Albanian
population is larger than that of Macedonia, Macedonian is an official language in the
SFRY, whereas the Albanian language has no status.
Also, the Albanians started to be harassed by the secret
police and to be subjected to discriminations that manifested themselves in all aspects of
life. Colonization by Serbs and Montenegrins resumed again, whereas reports were released
that the Slavs were leaving the area. Thousands were imprisoned, especially intellectuals.
Those who were arrested were not allowed lawyers and were sentenced to several years in
jail, where they had to endure the most painful and humiliating tortures. Over 200 000
Kosovars were forced to emigrate.122
* * *
Recently, there has been much talk about the alleged
growth of the Kosovars. The ignorance of many journalists concerning an area where not too
long ago the Slav population did not exceed 15% is reflected in many of their remarks. One
of them wrote that "the birth rate of the Albanians in Kosova is so high that the
Albanians will soon outnumber the Serbs". According to Steven Erlager (Globe, June
18, 1981, p.3) the birthrate of the Kosovars is 26 per 1000 (sic), whereas other Yugoslavs
average only 3 per 1000 (sic). He adds that on account of this prodigious birthrate, the
Kosovars have become in Yugoslavia a butt of jokes.
Yet figures speak for themselves: After World War I, the
Albanians in Yugoslavia were almost as numerous as those within the borders assigned to
the state of Albania. At present, according to statistics, the SAR had, as of ten years
ago, nearly three million inhabitants, whereas the Albanians in Yugoslavia
are, at present, according to 1981 statistics, a little over one million and a half.
Considering the alleged high birthrate, the question, of course, arises as to why the
number of the Albanians does not match their birthrate.
Noteworthy also is the fact that in 1840, the Serbian
state had less than 900 000 inhabitants; Montenegro numbered merely 80000. At that time
the Albanians were over 1 600 000. At the present time Serbia's population is more than
three times larger than Albania's.123
* * *
In 1966, the Yugoslav Communist Party was shaken by
disturbing events that took place within the party. As a result, Tito suddenly realized
that the rights and the interests of the Kosovars had been neglected and that there had
been arbitrary and impermissible actions taken against them. Although the whole truth was
not disclosed, the plight of the Kosovars was - albeit partially - openly admitted.
Responsible for the crimes, Tito argued, were Rankovic and his agents.
As a result of several uprisings in Kosova, the Yugoslav
constitution was revised and in 1969, the Kosovars, notwithstanding the fact that they
were not allowed to form their own republic, were allegedly granted full equality with the
other ethnic groups.
The Institute for Albanology was then reopened and in 1970
even an Albanian University was founded in Pritina. The Albanians displayed great
energy, new magazines and journals started being published and considerable research was
undertaken. Despite the fact that professors were very poorly paid, as compared to those
teaching outside Kosova, the University of Pritina grew so fast that within a very
short period of time it became the third largest university
in Yugoslavia. As of April 1981, it had over 35 000 students.
The situation in Kosova seemed greatly improved. In
reality, it had changed only on the surface. The Serbian conservative circles were working
hard underground to repress progress as regards education and culture. In the
mid-seventies courses in Albanian language, history and literature were reduced and
sometimes abolished in elementary and high schools.
On other hand, Yugoslav police had been continuously
arresting Kosovars much before the mass demonstrations of March 1981.
Among the Kosovars in Yugoslav prisons are some very
promising writers and poets. A Kosovar poet who had been living abroad for 15 years was
arrested and imprisoned when he went back to visit his native town. After months in jail,
he was freed thanks to the intervention of the League of Writers and because the German
and the Austrian press took his defense. A prisoner much bewailed by all Albanians is the
brilliant writer, Adam Demaci. His novel Serpents of Blood, published in 1958 was an
overnight success. Demaci, 48 years old, is almost blind. He has been incarcerated for 20
years. Presently, he is in a prison 500 miles far away from his family.
* * *
Of great concern became also the problem dealing with
economy. In articles published abroad, Kosova is described as poor. The Yugoslavs call
attention to the alleged resentment of richer republics to the financial contributions
they are obliged to make to the fund for the development of backward provinces and
republics. This claim is granted credibility. Elizabeth pond, staff correspondent of the
Christian Science Monitor wrote from Belgrade that the local press and television reports
emphasize the ingratitude of the Kosovars for all the money and efforts the more developed
parts of Yugoslavia have lavished in trying to modernize Kosova. As a result, those who
are unfamiliar with the question may conceive admiration and even pity for the charitable
attitude of the Yugoslav government with respect to the Kosovars. However, the Autonomous
Province of Kossovo is one of Yugoslavia's richest region, perhaps the richest, in mineral
as well as other resources. In fact, the Albanians argue that if the region had not been
so rich, the Serbian legends originating in the 18th and 19th centuries would not have
been created. The exploitation of Kosova's mines by the Serbs, the billions of kilowatts
generated from its thermal power stations, and the selling of Kosova's meat and wheat on
European markets bring millions to Yugoslavia. The poverty of the Kosovars is due to the
fact that only the most exploitative investments are made in the region.
* * *
In The Burden of the Balkans, 1905, M.E. Durham quotes an
Albanian newspaper saying: "The Slavs are a brave people; they may have all sorts of
other qualities too. That is not the question. Our hatred does not extend to individuals,
not even to national groups, but to the spirit of aggression..." (p.56). Also, Justin
Godard of the Carnegie Commission who witnessed the ill-treatment of the Albanians by the
Serbs praised the Albanians for not blaming the Serbian people, but merely "La Serbie
officielle", adding that all nations in their relations with one another should be
able to make this distinction between the people and the government (op.cit., p. 234).
The Albanians in the People's Republic of Albania seem to
have maintained toward the South Slavs an attitude reminiscent of that spirit pointed out
by M.E. Durham and J. Godart. In an article published in Albania (Paris, 1981), the
Albanian novelist, I. Kadare, remarks that the Albanian people, although perfectly
conscious of the inequalities, have chosen not to react in a chauvinistic way in regard to
the chauvinism of the Serbs, i.e., not to use eel against evil, but to maintain an
attitude of restrain characteristic of the Albanian spirit.
Yet whereas the Government of Albania, in an effort to
maintain good relations with Yugoslavia, has kept purposely in the background illuminating
personalities, both national and foreign (such as for example, Father Gjergj Fishta, the
greatest of all Albanian poets, and M.E. Durham), on account of the unfriendly sentiments
toward the Serbs exposed in their works, the Yugoslavs have not made gesture of a similar
order toward the Albanians. Of late, various new books have been published in Yugoslavia,
which - mutatis mutandis - are not different from those that were published by the Serbs
at the turn of the century. In this regard mention should be made especially of a novel,
Zatocnici, in which its author, Mihailo Lalic, uses a language that is most insulting to
the Albanians, calling them 'garbage', and using on their behalf various disgraceful
epithets. Far from being criticized, Lalic received, instead, recognition and praise. He
is the recipient of a national award. The purpose of all these writings is, of course, to
humiliate the Albanians and not let them take pride in their identity.
In the light of all these facts, there is no doubt that
the Kosovars were harassed. When thinking of the demonstrations that took place in Kosova
in 1981 and calling to mind the brutality of the police and the means used on an unarmed
population demonstrating in a peaceful manner, one feels particularly disturbed by some of
the recommendations contained in V. Cubrilovic's memorandum, such as "conflicts
should be prepared and encouraged...attributed to economic reasons" and then
"bloodily suppressed with the most efficacious means...the role of the police should
be of foremost importance". The Macedonians should enjoy "ethnic
support...through the destruction of the Albanian block".
The parallel between the recommendations and the recent
events in Kosova is, indeed striking. The Albanians maintain that the details worked out
in 1939 are still finding their application at the present time: the Kosovars seem to have
been provoked by design. After the bloody suppression of their demonstrations and killing
of thousands of their co-nationals, the Kosovars are now being deprived, bit by bit, of
that relative freedom granted to them by Tito in 1968.
This time the target of the repression has been the
Kosovar intelligentsia: writers, poets, students, and especially professors of the
University of Pritina, who by their intensive research in Albanology have revealed
the true facts of history in the light of which it has become evident that the Albanians
are not an adventitious population in Kosova but indeed have their roots there.
* * *
F. Piy Margall proposed back in 1876 the principle of
Federation as a solution to the nationalities problem, expressing the opinion that
national minorities included in a foreign state would eventually accept willingly what
they would have instinctively rejected, provided they are granted equality of rights and
conditions.
Under the SFRY (Socialist Fefederal Republic Yugoslavia)
government, the Kosovars have been treated as harshly as they were under the government of
the Kingdoms of Serbia and Yugoslavia, despite the fact that the principle of nationality
is supposed to constitute its basis.
Very little has been written about the Kosovars, their
fate may be described by what a statesman is supposed to have said with respect to
oppressed population, "The death of a person is a tragedy; deaths of thousands of
people are merely a matter of statistics".
Our comment:
The Berlin Congress in 1878, committed an incalculable
blunder, by "empowering the thief to guard the bank". It allowed Serbia to
massacre Albanians and destroy their land. As if the Balkan wars were not sufficient, the
Serbs started the First World War; the Second World War was the child of the First War.
After the abominable savagery in Bosnia, the Serbs are slaughtering the Albanians in
Kosova again. The permanent peace in Balkans can be secured only, if the Berlin's blunder
is reversed: Serbia must be returned to its pre-Berlin Congress borders, i.e., into its
real historical and national Serbia of Belgrade Pashalic.
Note: The above
material can be FREELY distributed.
In fact, it is expressly encouraged by
Dr. Juka. |