Friday, August 3, 2012

A serious scientist: Dr.G. Richard Jansen!

The History science is essential to all scientists. Any scientist cannot be considered completed as he cannot fulfil his researches without been highly skilled, very talented and entirely devoted in historical science. One of them is Dr.G. Richard Jansen.
As a Professor of Nutritional Sciences, Emeritus 1990…, he’s doing a great professional job.
I was really amazed with his “History of Kosovo” (Albanians and Serbs in Kosovo: An Abbreviated History - An Opening for the The Islamic Jihad in Europe)
You can find his webpage here or expression of your sympathy to the address grjan@lamar.colostate.edu would encourage him to bring new scientific facts about the history of Kosovo. Maybe peace in the region would be a serious scientific product, result of a scrupulous research of Professor Richard.
Finally, hope is emerging on the horizon.
bon-appetit-kitchen-mat-h

Monday, July 19, 2010

Re: Book on declaration of independence in Kosovo to be released in Azerbaijan

Reply to the article with the same title HERE

What I would like to state since the very beginning is that nothing is given once forever. Things change continuously aiming to improve and never should be considered static. Under such lights the International Law and the way it should be interpreted is in dynamic change (improvement).

I’m not surprised the author has a different (contrary) opinion and fear the dynamic of the change but one day these changes would take place inevitably.

Kosovo case is the most studied and the clearest way to start. By the end the International Law should serve to the Justice and support humanity. Kosovo case is a very clear case but before the author gives its opinion starting from other cases (he think are similar), he should know in depth the Kosovo case. First he should be able to list both similarities and differences. Doing that he would be more convincible giving a clearer “Studied and Independent Opinion”.

Western countries have been very involved in this case and have followed it step by step having a deep knowledge about it. As a European issue and as a part of their geospace they are very interested to establish the peace in the region. Furthermore they are present in Kosovo since the beginning and are contributing to improve furthermore the European standards in order to prepare it in EU integration process.

Under such light the Independence of Kosovo is in fact a step before the integration under the same structure where Serbia has applied to be a part.

It’s true that Kosovo case would set a precedent! Maybe the International Law would change by supporting the independence of countries, regions and nations in risk by the application of genocide and deprivation of Elementary Human Rights! That is called Law to serve to the Justice and here everyone agrees. With these changes, countries who apply Genocide and violation of Human Rights would think more seriously as it will put in discussion the integrity of their country. However, even here the Kosovo issue is different because it had earlier a substantial autonomy recognized by the Constitution of Yugoslav Federation and removed unlawfully by Milosevic's regime.

Russian state tried to prove that the Kosovo Independence would set a precedent in International Law by generating a conflict in Georgia. As everybody knows it was a total failure because those so called states have got only 4 recognitions (one of them Russian one) while Kosovo has got 69 official recognition. The Russian experiment showed in the clearest way that Western Countries where right considering Kosovo as a sui generic case, s.th. couldn’t apply in other cases and differ to them even in rapport with International Law.

Having the confidence that the western countries knows better and are actors in this case I’m confident that they have much more chances to support the Kosovo independence than their opponents. I believe that the ICJ opinion, if it will not be pro, at least would not be against Kosovo Independence.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

What rest behind Serbian "Christian alert" propaganda?!

Fundamentalism???


A lot of people have been in Kosova and this shameful propaganda is not addressed to them. Maybe because of the feeling they had from their experience or because they already know, people like Ray cannot accept this kind of "autumn falling leaves" propaganda. I'm a Roman Catholic. In rapport with Muslims, our community is minority in Kosova but this never is been a problem for us.
There is a problem of fundamentalism here or not?!
(in the picture serbian church and war criminals together)

300_Zlocinci_SPC_-_Karadzic_Mladic_Krajisnik3Unfortunately there is (see an inventory of bestial damages they did to Catholic Churches in Croatia). But there is not any risk from Kosovar Islamic fundamentalism. At least for all those Christians who aren't Serbian Orthodox. The reason is because in Albanian culture does not exist such fundamentalism and I can explain it easily. Like all other empires, Ottoman Empire applied the same strategy for its expansion "divide and conquer". One instrument was giving some privileges as an exchange for adopting Islamic religion. But let's go a bit earlier in time.

300_Patrijah__u_posjeti_KaradzicuIn Middle Ages the Venetian Republic was a great power and had the control of all the European trade with Constantinople in orient. All parts of western Balkan which where part of Great Silk road, where under the influence of both of them. Some of them became partially Orthodox (Constantinople influenced) and partially remained Catholics since the  time of the genesis of Christianity (mostly venetian influenced) having a national conscience but not having a national religion. Even today we find, especially in Albania, a mosaic of different religions inside the same culture.

      From theTrumpet.com | April 2, 2008: 
      The Vatican Purposes to Evangelize Kosovo.

     "Both Kosovo and Albania have Catholic roots almost as deep as Rome itself. The Roman province of Illyria on the Balkan Peninsula was one of the first territories to which Catholicism spread. It all changed after the Ottoman conquest of the Balkans in the 14th century, however. Under the rule of the Ottoman Turks, the majority of Albanians converted to Islam...." 

Differently was the situation with new Slavic Nations. They where hardly supported from Constantinople which in the early centuries had a lot of problems with Huns. For their support they where priced with lands where they started to build their States and with Constantinople support they became powers extending they rule all over Balkan. One after other Balkan saw first the Bulgarian empire then after it's fall the Serbian empire which where extended from the north Balkan to the most part of actual Greece. A lot of Illyrian and Greek tribes where assimilated and from recent populations survived Albanians and Romanians which together with Modern Greeks represent a break in Balkan Slavic composition.

The fall of Constantinople and the Ottoman occupation found this nations in a multilateral and complex conflicts which had to do in preserving their identity, their land and their culture. Of course they used this conflicts stabilizing their rule all over Balkan. Being in threat of loosing their national identity threatened hardly by recent Slavic expansion, and under the pressure from the occupiers, many of Catholic and Orthodox ethnic population, accepted to adopt Islamic religion. Even today the religion, more than a rapport with God, is seen as an instrument to preserve national identity.  They are a lot of "modern" bloggers inspirited by their fundamentalist national churches which forget that in the modern times cannot use medieval justifications to demonize other peoples and to justify many of genocide crimes committed through the centuries.

 

If you scratch a little bit the surface of this Albanian Rich with Islamic symbols, you will find the roots of Christianity. Accusing them to be Islamic fundamentalists is a big lie. This is what Ray Robinson & Michael J. Totten felling or knowledge, doesn't accept Serbian "Christian alert" propaganda.



The truth is that Albanians didn't oppose Christianity. They didn't attack catholic churches. They're opposing the Serbian symbols which are built in the wrong place maybe the same way as the Islamic mosques.

For more about the this argument check this link.
http://www.michaeltotten.com/archives/2008/07/the-bin-ladens.php

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Observance of Law, or Global Kosovization

Re to: Interview With Zivadin Jovanovic, President of the Belgrade Forum for a World of Equals
It is not only Mr. Jovanovic who sees the interpretation of Kosova independence process as an USA final Binding. The truth is that this process has a long story and for a long time is been kept accurately and often forcibly hidden and "au dehors" of Yugoslav and international disputations. Anyway USA position is shared with that of most of western countries. Because of it's potential, USA contribute is bigger than other supporting countries in the process but this does not mean that their contribute is less important. For a long time western countries tried 'resolving' the problem by means of the method of “constructive ambiguities”, but now it is too late and things have gone in a irreversible way. The Serbia's initiative is out of date and does not compound any novelty.

Too much weight is given to ICJ as long as it is an advisory opinion without any legal consequences. Any way it still have an important weight. It would prove that Kosova issue is a "casus sui generis" and the fear from the ghost of “Kosovization” of Europe and other continents as well, is unjustified.

Regarding the etiquetting the intervention of NATO as a aggression, it seems completely innapropriate as long as it was a forced humanitarian intervention to save lives and to stop the ongoing atrocities and genocide in Kosova. It stopped the Serbian military operation "horseshoe" who devastated totally Kosova and intended a deep ethnic cleansing. I'm not doing further discussion on this matter as long as it is known to all but it leaves me a bad taste because still some people who don't have any remorse of conscience for that immense disgrace they caused to Balkan peoples.

Regarding the ICJ court judgment is too early to speak but it is not honest to put pressure on it by giving prejudices. Don't forget that it was Serbia to ask it's opinion so it has not at all rights to such prejudices.

It is useless to revoke that time but it is not honest to deform the realty. I've treated this argument recently in my blog spot but they are also a lot of internet sources who prove totally the contrary. This is well known for the public too and making such shameless statement's like:

"
Now is the right time to recall the numerous judgments of German courts of law, which unambiguously confirm that, back in the 1990s, there was no organized or mass violence exerted by Serbia (the FRY) against the Albanian national minority in Kosovo and Metohija."

is a total failure and the worst way to handle the argument. Zivadin Jovanovic should NOT forget as well that the conflict had a story which ended in Kosova. God knows what would happened if the recently "horseshoe" plan would left to be proceed to the end ...

Anyway the method of “constructive ambiguities” is valuable in other issues like those of the status of Albanian minorities in Serbia and Serbian minorities in Kosova. Instead to waste time and energy with unnecessary speaks and comments, is better for all to get concerned in the mutual interest to serve to the citizens of both states. This means that it is necessary to start a new era of a positive relationship between Serbia and Kosova. Earlier understanding of this emergency better will be the outcomes for both peoples and politicians are held responsible for that.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Myths Fuel Serb Nationalism

By Christopher Bennett, former director of The International Crisis Group in the Balkans and author of "Yugoslavia's Bloody Collapse" (New York University Press).
As Serbia challenges the might of the West, many Serbs boast that their history proves that despite the imbalance in firepower, they will never be vanquished. The trouble is that the version of the past recounted in Belgrade does not stand up to scrutiny. Serbia is not only fighting NATO, it is also at war with history.
The passion and apparent expertise with which many Serbs talk so often and at such length about their country and its heroic past conceal a depressing lack of balance and understanding. Opinions are almost invariably based on prejudice and conditioning. From the infamous 1389 battle of Kosovo to the events of this century, history and myth have been intertwined into a quasi-religious national creed. Anyone who questions the articles of faith is branded a heretic.
According to the Kosovo legend, the Serbian leader, Prince Lazar, was offered on the eve of battle a choice between a kingdom on earth or in heaven. Vowing that "It is better to die in battle than to live in shame," he chose the other world, and was duly killed the following day in what is commemorated as a glorious defeat ending the medieval Serbian empire and ushering in nearly five centuries of darkness under alien, Ottoman rule.
And indeed, a battle did take place on St. Vitus's day in 1389 in Kosovo Polje, the field of the blackbird, in which both Prince Lazar and Sultan Murat, the Ottoman leader, were killed. That much is clear. However, almost every other aspect of the battle--including the result itself--remains a mystery.
Based on the historical evidence, both the Serbian and the Ottoman armies were probably multinational forces. Indeed, it is likely that most of the Christian peoples of the Balkans, including the Albanians, contributed troops to the Serbian cause and that Serbs and Albanians fought on both sides.
Concerning the outcome, it seems that the battle was not as decisive as it has been portrayed. The result was more a draw than an Ottoman victory, since the Turkish forces subsequently withdrew from the region. The Serbian empire itself had disintegrated some 30 years earlier, though independent statehood remained for another 70 years.
Historical myths are by no means exclusive to Serbs, of course, nor are they necessarily harmful. Indeed, most societies draw strength from legends--whether Arthurian or about Washington and a cherry tree--which, if critically examined, are historically unsound. The difference with the Kosovo covenant, however, is that it has been abused to inculcate a sense of victimization in Serbs which has blinded them to the plight of other peoples in the Balkans.
The deadly Greater Serbian agenda for the late 20th century grew out of the thinking and writing of Dobrica Cosic, one of Serbia's most distinguished novelists, a writer of popular, historical epics.
Mr. Cosic had been a partisan during World War II and a friend of Tito's for more than 20 years, yet he could not come to terms with Tito's attempts to emancipate Yugoslavia's Albanians and was purged for nationalism in 1968. In his frustration after his fall from grace, Mr. Cosic developed a complex and paradoxical theory of Serb national persecution. Over two decades, this evolved into the Greater Serbian program which Slobodan Milosevic first hijacked and then pursued.
The Serb national psyche which has so revolted the world since 1991 is thus not the product of centuries of historical evolution, but has been deliberately manufactured and intensively cultivated by the Serbian media since Milosevic's arrival in power in 1987.
Myth, fantasy, half-truths and brazen lies have been packaged each night into television news. The conspiracy theory dreamed up by frustrated nationalists such as Mr. Cosic in the late 1960s, 1970s and early 1980s became the literal truth.
Every conceivable event from Serb history was dredged up and distorted to feed the persecution complex of ordinary people who, at a time of collapsing living standards, were gradually taken in by the barrage of xenophobia. The atmosphere was so heated and the campaign so all-encompassing that people lost touch with reality.
According to the new orthodoxy, Serbs were victims exploited by, and in danger from, Yugoslavia's other peoples. While they had made huge sacrifices in blood to create Yugoslavia and had been victorious in war, they had allegedly been cheated in peace and thus divided between several republics in Tito's decentralized state.
Like any conspiracy theory, there is a kernel of truth in the new Serb orthodoxy. But it is a very small kernel.
Consider, for example, relations between Serbs and Croats. While contemporary propagandists (on both sides) claim that these peoples have been at each others' throats since time immemorial, Serb-Croat rivalry is actually a 20th century phenomenon. In the 19th century, Croat nationalists, who were preoccupied with a struggle against Austrians and Hungarians, had actually been great admirers of Serbia and the keenest advocates of a Yugoslav state. And the ruling party in the Croatian parliament in 1914 which voted to go to war with Serbia was the Serb-Croat Coalition.
And then there is World War II. For Serbs, this conflict is the ultimate proof that they have a near monopoly on suffering and can therefore do no wrong. After all, they will tell you that they fought together with the Allies against the Nazis and suffered great casualties. But is this really an accurate picture of what actually happened?
To a large extent World War II in Yugoslavia was several civil wars that had little to do with the world war raging outside the country. All groups, with the exception of the Slovenes, fought against Serbs, though not in unison, while extreme nationalists on all sides were able to indulge their wildest fantasies.
The backbone of Tito's partisan army initially consisted largely of Serbs escaping Ustasa atrocities in Croatia and Bosnia, but not of Serbs from Serbia proper. Apart from an immediate uprising in 1941, which was savagely put down, Serbia remained more or less quiet until close to the end of the war. Hitler installed a Quisling leader, Gen. Milan Nedic, who was loyal to the Nazis. In the absence of fighting, Nedic was able to wipe out Serbia's Jewish community under German supervision, more efficiently than the Ustasas could wipe out the Jews of Croatia and Bosnia. Attempts by Serb propagandists to claim a special affinity between Serbs and Jews in the 1990s so disgusted a Jewish American doctor, Philip Cohen, that he wrote "Serbia's Secret War: Propaganda and the Deceit of History."
The issue of war dead also merits a book. The official number of Yugoslavs who died fighting against the Axis powers was 1.7 million. The figure was only a rough calculation arrived at immediately after the war for reparations and propaganda purposes. Tito aimed both to maximize war compensation from Germany and to demonstrate to the world the scale of Yugoslavia's heroism and suffering.
During the 1980s, independent research into the question by two men, Bogoljub Kocovic, a Serb, and Vladimir Zerjavic, a Croat, produced very similar results. Both investigations were based on computer analysis of census returns and demographic indices. According to Mr. Kocovic, whose figures are marginally higher than those of Mr. Zerjavic, a total of about 1,014,000, or 6.4 per cent of Yugoslavia's 1941 population, died during or in the immediate aftermath of World War II on all sides.
In absolute terms, Serbs were the biggest losers with 487,000 dead--the rest, in declining order, were Croats (207,000), Muslim Slavs (86,000), Jews (60,000) and Montenegrins (50,000)--while Jews were the greatest proportional losers, with 77.9% of it pre-war population exterminated--the rest in declining order were Gypsies (31.4%), Montenegrins (10.4%), Serbs (6.9%) and Muslim Slavs (6.7%).
The figures are shocking, but mercifully well below the official number. That said, they do not necessarily reflect the horror of the war when viewed from the perspective of those Serbs who were on the receiving end of the Ustasas' brutality in the Independent State of Croatia, where one in six of the pre-war population died, and perhaps that is why Serb nationalists are so determined to inflate them.
Given the extent and the chaos of Yugoslavia's own civil wars, Germany never needed to commit large numbers of troops. Yugoslavia's contribution to the overall Allied effort has been greatly exaggerated, first by the victors themselves and more recently by statesmen wishing to justify a policy of non-intervention in the present conflict.
The only time when significant numbers of German troops were in Yugoslavia was during the initial 12-day invasion in 1941 and in 1944 when units stationed in Greece retreated across the country. Otherwise, Germany relied on its allies, the Italians, Hungarians and Bulgarians, and on local collaborators to keep Yugoslavia under control. The fighting itself took place largely in Bosnia.
No matter what aspect of Serbian history one cares to examine, the official version emanating from Belgrade appears to be at odds with the facts. What is especially depressing is that not so long ago, before Milosevic's emergence, Serbia was, in many way, the most liberal and progressive of Yugoslavia's republics. The Serbian media were remarkably open by the standards of Eastern Europe and political opposition was tolerated, if not encouraged.
Looking back further in Serbian history it is possible to interpret many events in a very different manner and even to highlight periods of enlightenment and cooperation between Serb and non-Serb. Whatever the results of the NATO campaign, Serbia's future may ultimately depend above all on its war with its own history.
--From The Wall Street Journal Europe-- Tuesday,April 20, 1999
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Wednesday, December 9, 2009

BENEDICT XVI PRAISES THE SPIRITUAL RENEWAL OF ALBANIA

VATICAN CITY, 4 DEC 2009 (VIS) - The Holy Father today received in audience His Beatitude Anastas, archbishop of Tirana, Durres and All Albania, who was accompanied by other representatives of the Autocephalous Orthodox Church of Albania.
"As is well known", said the Pope in his English-language address to the group, "Illyricum received the Gospel in apostolic times. Since then, Christ's saving message has borne fruit in your country down to our own day. As the very earliest writings of your culture bear witness, through the survival of an ancient Latin baptismal formula along with a Byzantine hymn about the Lord's Resurrection, the faith of our Christian forefathers left wonderful and indelible traces in the first lines of the history, literature and arts of your people.
"Yet", he added, "the most impressive witness is surely always found in life itself. During the latter half of the past century, Christians in Albania, both Orthodox and Catholic, kept the faith alive there in spite of an extremely repressive and hostile atheistic regime; and, as is well known, many Christians paid cruelly for that faith with their lives".
The Holy Father went on: "The fall of that regime has happily given way to the reconstruction of the Catholic and Orthodox communities in Albania". In this context he praised the archbishop's missionary activity, "particularly in the reconstruction of places of worship, the formation of the clergy and the catechetical work now being done, a movement of renewal which Your Beatitude has rightly described as 'Ngjallja' (Resurrection).
"Since it acquired its freedom, the Orthodox Church of Albania has been able to participate fruitfully in the international theological dialogue between Catholics and Orthodox. Your commitment in this regard happily mirrors the fraternal relations between Catholics and Orthodox in your country and offers inspiration to the entire Albanian people, demonstrating how it is possible for fellow Christians to live in harmony.
"In this light, we would do well to emphasise the elements of faith which our Churches share: a common profession of the Nicene-Constantinopolitan creed; a common Baptism for the remission of sins and for incorporation into Christ and the Church; the legacy of the first ecumenical councils; the real if imperfect communion which we already share, and the common desire and collaborative efforts to build upon what already exists".
Benedict XVI then went on to mention two initiatives currently underway in Albania: the establishment of the Inter-confessional Biblical Society and the creation of the Committee for Inter-religious Relations, describing them as " timely efforts to promote mutual understanding and tangible co-operation, not only between Catholics and Orthodox, but also among Christians, Muslims and Bektashi".
Closing his remarks the Pope expressed his joy at the "spiritual renewal" of the Albanian people, and gave assurances to Archbishop Anastas that the Catholic Church "will do all she can to offer a common witness of brotherhood and peace, and to pursue with you a renewed commitment to the unity of our Churches".
AC/ALBANIA/ANASTASVIS 091204 (500)
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Saturday, December 5, 2009

Re: Serbia/Kosovo At ICJ

To: Mr. Charles Crawford

Dear Charles,

The projections of two lines in a plan can be parallel but this does not mean those lines are forcibly parallel. From the beginning I know very well you have gotten the rest of my following comment. You know better than me in what kind of fallacy this “parallelism” can be classified. I’m not going to discuss your experience which seems ( I fill really bad but I have to admit that) I’m paying more respect than you do… .

First of all, everybody may know very well (I’m sure you do), that things didn’t happened in a beautiful day after the “town councils” morning cafĂ©, where they were discussing the previous night dreams. The story has a history where the time is its crucial component.

First of all the citizens of your down road town have their elected representatives in their Westminster. The citizens of my “town” as well already had their elected representatives in their “westminster” but that was illegally and forcibly dismissed by an OTHER “westminster”. Moreover, after this new state (of occupation), citizens of my “Town” never accept to adhere in the Serbian “westminster” even if they would to, there wasn’t any empty chair for them. It is logic, they where foreigner in Serbia. But not in Kosova where they elected democratically their institutions. I’m sure the citizens of your down road town would have act the same way as us.

Now the Empire felled down and each “King” gets his own throne.

A King in UK is called King and he can reign there only if his majesty calls himself King and not Tsar. Same way, a king in MY “Town” is called Mbret, and he can reign here only if his majesty calls himself Mbret and not Krail. Again your parallel with Tsar Putin is an intentional fallacy. I don’t believe an experienced diplomat like You, unintentionally can do such “Mistakes”.

Simple people can “play” football without a ball, but you can’t. You should get sustainable arguments to publish and a role to play.  If you honestly want to be friendly with Serbs, you should help them to address Serbian minority in Kosova, in their own institutions and not to sacrifice them to get for Serbia as much concessions as possible.

Is not the first time Serbia is loosing their chances. At least I can count many of them from Rambouillet conference. The Serbian minority in North Kosova has lost a lot of time until now. They can get a lot from the constitutional deformation coming from the application of Ahtisaari peace plan. One day things will go in balance and this will be one other lost chance for your friends.

One day, Kosova will be a part of EU. To realize that, Kosova has to meet EU standards including the rights respect for Serb minority. A visionary diplomat should be dismantled from passion and should use his influence and expertise in the future interest, and I sincerely believe “You will have the ball to play football”.

Best Regards
Alban

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