http://uk.news.yahoo.com/rtrs/20080211/tpl-uk-serbia-kosovo-gorani-43a8d4f.html

Exodus threatens Kosovo's mountain Gorani
By Matt Robinson Reuters - Monday, February 11 02:28 pm

BROD, Serbia (Reuters) - The man introduced himself as the village
historian, reaching into his jacket and producing a notebook scrawled with
figures for Kosovo's Gorani population.

The figures showed a drastic decline since 1991, when Yugoslavia began
tearing itself apart.

"We're slowly dying out," whispered a man sitting next to him in Cafe Nuno.

The village of Brod sits 1,500 metres up in the Sharr mountains at the
southern tip of Kosovo, the breakaway province expected to declare
independence from Serbia this weekend.

Its residents are Gorani, an ethnic minority that shares the Islamic faith
of Kosovo's two million Albanians, but the Slav identity and language of its
Serb former rulers.

Albanians are suspicious of their Serb affiliation. And the Gorani lost
their natural protector when NATO wrested control of Kosovo from Serbia to
halt the killing and expulsion of Albanians by Serb forces in a two-year
counter-insurgency war.

Around two-thirds of the 18,000 Gorani that lived in Kosovo before the war
have already left for neighbouring countries, driven out by the poverty and
unemployment that scars the region.

Those who stayed feel marginalised, determined to teach their children
Serbian but unable to understand the Albanian language of Kosovo's new
authorities.

AN ORPHAN COMMUNITY

"Independent, or dependent, it doesn't matter," said a man who identified
himself as Bajram. "We have no work. We don't know what to do. We live in
complete uncertainty, and our room for manoeuvre is getting smaller."

Sitting in his attic cafe, Husen Sutrak agreed. "People don't care who's
going to declare what. People just need to survive," he said. "No state has
ever given me anything. No one ever came to offer me help."

In the cafes of Brod, men play bridge and watch Serbia versus Russia in
Davis Cup tennis. The harsh climate drives the rest indoors and only
children run around the cobbled streets.

The lack of a mobile phone signal or transmission from Kosovo's public
broadcaster adds to the sense of isolation.

More than 1,500 people lived in Brod in 1991. Now there are just over 800.
Through the window of Sutrak's cafe, the Turkish flag flies from the mosque
and "Bosnia" is written on walls.

No longer a real part of Serbia, some Gorani identify themselves as Bosnian,
due to their shared Slav Muslim identity. Others look to Turkey, the Ottoman
Turks having brought Islam to the Balkans during its 500-year rule over the
region.

"I'm not Albanian, I'm not Serb," said Sutrak's brother, who asked not to be
named. "We're like a child without parents," he said. "When a child is
without parents, he turns to whoever offers salvation."



 


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