For Kosovo, history depends on which historian you ask

The newly independent state has been a central part of Serbia for most of
its existence

*       Dr Dejan Djokic 
*        <http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian> The Guardian, 
*       Tuesday March 4 2008 


 


Close 

This article appeared in  <http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian> the
Guardian on  <http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian/2008/mar/04> Tuesday
March 04 2008 on p31 of the
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian/2008/mar/04/mainsection/leadersandrep
ly> Leaders & reply section. It was last updated at 00:06 on March 04 2008. 

I agree with Noel Malcolm's rebuttal of Serb demonstrators' slogans stating
that "Kosovo is Serbia"
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/feb/26/kosovo.serbia> (Is Kosovo
Serbia? We ask a historian, G2, February 26). However, I must also express
reservations regarding some of his arguments. Malcolm does not explain that
Kosovo has only existed as a political entity in its present-day borders
since 1946, when it became an autonomous region within Serbia in the new,
communist-governed Yugoslavia. 

Prior to 1946, Kosovo had been a geographic area with no clear borders. In
fact, the 1946 autonomous region was created by a merger of two geographic
areas: Kosovo and Metohija (the original name for the autonomous region,
later province, during the socialist period, and the name the Serbian
government still insists upon). 

An Ottoman vilayet (province) called Kosovo did exist in the 19th century,
but it was an entirely different creation with different borders; there is
even less connection between that Kosovo and present-day Kosovo than between
medieval and modern Serbia, or the Byzantine empire and modern Greece, to
use Dr Malcolm's analogies. So, to claim that Serbs "ruled Kosovo for about
250 years" in the middle ages "until the final Ottoman takeover" is
disingenuous.

Although Malcolm is right in arguing that present-day Kosovo was not where
the first Serbian states emerged, he should explain that it was a central
part of medieval Serbia for most of its existence: eg Serbia's capital was
in Prizren for a while, the Serbian patriarchate (seat of the church) was
founded in Pec, and Serbia's major mining centre was in Novo Brdo - all
three in present-day Kosovo. 

Malcolm's argument that Kosovo did not become part of Serbia in 1912, but
"remained occupied territory until some time after 1918", is again
problematic: international peace treaties of London and Bucharest, which
ended the first and second Balkan wars in May and July 1913, confirmed
Serbia's new borders, which included the present-day Kosovo. This territory
would indeed be occupied during the first world war, but by Serbia's
enemies.

Malcolm is only partially right in claiming that Kosovo enjoyed a "dual
status" in socialist Yugoslavia - as both a federal unit of Yugoslavia and
as a highly autonomous province within Serbia. Kosovo was defined, both in
the Yugoslav and the Serbian constitution, as one of two autonomous
provinces of the Republic of Serbia (together with Vojvodina). The main
difference between the status of provinces and republics - such as Serbia,
Croatia and Slovenia - was precisely in the fact that the provinces had no
right to secession. Kosovo Albanians revolted against this constitutional
arrangement in 1981, a year after President Tito died and five years before
Slobodan Milosevic emerged as the leader of the Serbian communists.

All this is not to disagree with Malcolm's rejection of Serb nationalist
myths, but to point out that not all historians would agree with him either.

ยท Dr Dejan Djokic is a lecturer in history at Goldsmiths, University of
London; author of Elusive Compromise: A History of Interwar Yugoslavia; and
editor of Yugoslavism: Histories of a Failed Idea 1918-1992
 <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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