To all. To clear things up, the paragraph "Ms. Vulovic started using her
celebrity for political causes in the 1990s, protesting the rule of
strongman Slobodan Milosevic. 'I didn't want Serbia to be a pariah state,'
she said,"  is not part of the Vladika's letter and has nothing to do with
it.  If you go to the link, and to the right of the screen, you will see a
separate box with the caption underneath the photo that accompanied The
Washington Times article.  

 

Frankly, we are at a loss as to why that photo was added.  Just plain weird!
Stella .

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http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/mar/05/taking-up-for-tadic/

 

LETTER TO EDITOR: Taking up for Tadic


Thursday, March 5, 2009 

 

As someone who often denounced the repression of the late Slobodan
Milosevic, I do not minimize his responsibility for the 1999 conflict in the
Serbian province of Kosovo and Metohija. Nevertheless,
<http://www.washingtontimes.com/themes/?Theme=William+Walker> William
Walker's heaping of every foul claim human malice can concoct on Serbs
collectively, even more than on Milosevic himself, is another matter ("A
separate take from Serbia," Op-Ed, Feb. 24). 

I live in Kosovo and know firsthand what actually happened - and did not
happen - during the NATO war against my country. Mr. Walker describes the
terrorist Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) as "a tiny band" fighting
"systematic" crimes against ethnic Albanians. But there was no widespread
violence until 1996, when the KLA attacked Serbian refugees and murdered -
often in front of their families - Albanian postmen, forest workers and
other "collaborators." 

Mr. Walker asserts that Albanians were "transported in cattle cars" into
exile, but large numbers of Albanians - many of whom sheltered into the rest
of Serbia or in Serbian Orthodox churches and monasteries - fled only when
the NATO attack was imminent. Not even NATO's fevered propaganda claimed
anything like "cattle cars," which is Mr. Walker's deliberate effort to pin
a Nazi label on us Serbs. 

As for Mr. Walker's concern for Serbs in Kosovo - please spare us from such
hypocrisy! The outrages for which Mr. Walker blames Serbs exactly describe
what the KLA didto Serbs after the war. Two-thirds of my flock was
ethnically cleansed - a larger proportion than that of Albanians fleeing the
fighting. Ten years later, these refugees cannot return home safely, nor can
Serbs who remain in the province leave their enclaves without fear of
attack. So much for Mr. Walker's concern for our rights. 

Finally, Serbian President Boris Tadic and I may sometimes disagree about
how best to defend Serbia's sovereignty and territorial integrity, but we
agree that Kosovo is, and always will be, an integral and inseparable part
of our country. Mr. Walker's attacks on someone who never in any way
supported Milosevic can only be seen as further collective demonization of
all Serbs. 

VLADIKA ARTEMIJE 

Bishop of Ras and Prizren 

Gracanica, Kosovo and Metohija 

Republic of Serbia 

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WALKER:  A Separate Take From Serbia:
http://washingtontimes.com/news/2009/feb/24/a-separate-take-from-serbia/

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