Wednesday, 1 June 2016

Explaining the Balkans Conflict to an Apologist


A Christian Apologist tries to demonstrate that atheism is a bad thing by referring to the French and Russian revolutions and also to the Balkans, thereby demonstrating a very skewed and narrow view of history. The first two examples are dealt with here and here

The example of the Balkans is interesting because it is a classic example of conflict fuelled by religious tension. The apologist appears to be unaware of the atrocities committed in the Balkans during World War II by the Ustaša regime (a blend of fascism, Roman Catholicism and Croatian nationalism) where a million Serbs, Jews, Roma, Muslims, Communists and other non-Catholics were exterminated in an attempt to convert Croatia into a pure Croatian and Roman Catholic independent country. Hence President Tito was seen as the liberator of Yugoslavia from an evil regime using Christianity as its brand.
And now, the long version...


Here’s a quote from the liberal Catholic Theologians Hans Küng and Karl-Josef Kuschel in reference to Bosnia…

"...the peace negotiations between the Orthodox Christian Serbs, the Catholic Croats and the Muslim Bosnians had collapsed again. And there is no doubt that the religions that are so involved here had neglected in the period of more than forty years since the Second World War to engage in mourning, honestly confess the crimes which had been committed by all sides in the course of the centuries, and ask one another for mutual forgiveness....I think there can be no peace among the nations without peace among the religions!"

A good case study of Balkans Religious Conflict is Kosovo, which was a province of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. The main players in its 1990s war were the government, army and militias of Yugoslavia, NATO, and the so-called Kosovo Liberation Army. The American Presbyterian Church described the situation like this…

“The main victims were the people of Kosovo who were murdered at a scale unknown in Europe since the end of World War II. These reports have become so numerous and so consistent that it is difficult not to give them credence...If, as it now appears, genocide is taking place in Kosovo, it must stop...No person in Kosovo or anywhere else should be forced to become a refugee merely because he or she belongs to one ethnic group or one religious tradition."

…and the conflict was a religious conflict at its core:



Religious identity has been present constantly in the antagonisms that have fragmented the Balkans for centuries - setting neighbor against neighbor, Muslims against Orthodox Christians, and Orthodox Christians against Western Christians.


Depending on which experts you talk to, you will hear about two conflicts now in the Balkans. In one view, the Kosovo war has historical and mythological roots in the long conflict between Ottoman Turks and southern Slavs, who are Orthodox Christians.


The other war is being fought in the air by NATO troops, who, by bombing the Serbs during the Orthodox Easter--just as the Nazis did in 1941--have played into a view held by some Serbs that NATO is a force of Western Christianity attempting to crush the Eastern Orthodox underdog.


"It really comes down to a war between Eastern and Western Christianity," said Father Alex Karloutsos, an Orthodox priest in New York.


Demographics of Religions in Kosovo

The religious alignment of the approximately 1.9 million residents of Kosovo consists of:

Muslims: 1.6  million

Serbian Orthodox: 150,000

Roma and Ashkali: These once numbered on the order of 150,000 people. However, many have been forced out of the country. Click here for a detailed account…

Roman Catholics: 60,000

There have been a series of conflicts in the 1990s as countries of the former Yugoslavia (originally established as an artificial kingdom after World War 1) fought for independence: 1990 in Slovenia; 1991 in Croatia; 1992 in Bosnia Herzegovina.  These are often described as “ethnic conflicts” but the fact is Serbs, Croats, Slovenes and Muslims in those countries share a common Slavic ethnic origin. They view themselves today as distinct peoples because of their different religious heritages.

"In the Balkans, religious identification became part of national identity, as expressed through language and the communication of the national myth. Thus, being Orthodox is part of being Serbian."  

-        Peter Black, senior historian at the United States Holocaust Museum

Unlike the rest of the former Yugoslavia, the Kosovo conflict was both ethnic and religious. Before the 1990s ethnic cleansing, 90% of the population of Kosovo were ethnic Albanians - descendants of the ancient Illyrian tribes who had occupied the area for thousands of years and who are now mainly Muslim.

So, the Kosovo conflict was driven by: 

-        Ethnicity: between Serbs, of Slavic origin, and ethnic Albanians who are Illyrian in origin.



-        Religion: between Serbs, who are almost entirely Serbian Orthodox Christians, and non-Serbs, who are overwhelmingly Muslim and Roman Catholic, plus a minority of ethnic Albanians who are Albanian Orthodox Christians.

 So the war in Kosovo is largely a religious conflict between: 
-        Serbs who overwhelmingly belong to the Serbian Orthodox Church, 

-        Ethnic Albanians who are mainly Muslims, and

-        A Roman Catholic minority.

 Religious composition of the former Yugoslavia (in 1999):

 Republic of Slovenia:

Population: 1.97 million;

96% Roman Catholic, 1% Muslim, 3% other.

91% Slovene; 3% Croat



Republic of Croatia:

Population: 4.67 million

77% Roman Catholic; 11% Serbian Orthodox

78% Croat,12% Serbian
 

Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina:

Population: 3.36 million

40% Muslim, 31% Serbian Orthodox, 15% Roman Catholic

40% Serbian, 38% Muslim,  22% Croat
 

Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (including Kosovo, and its refugees):

Population: 11.21 million

65% Serbian Orthodox, 19% Muslim, 4% Roman Catholic, 1% Protestant, 11% other

63% Serbian, 14% Albanian 6% Montenegrin, 4% Hungarian, 13% other


Kosovo:

Population: 1.89 million 

81% Muslims, 10% Serbian Orthodox, 9% Roman Catholics 

90% Albanians, 10% Serbs, 3% Roma (Gypsies), 1.5% Turks



Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM):

Population: 2.01 million

67% Eastern Orthodox, 30% Muslim

65% Macedonian, 22% Albanian

A brief recent history of Yugoslavia:

For hundreds of years, Yugoslavia included three faith groups: Islam, Orthodox Christianity, and Roman Catholicism.  Atrocities were committed during World War II by the Ustaša regime (a blend of fascism, Roman Catholicism and Croatian nationalism).   Up to a million Serbs, Jews, Roma, Muslims, Communists and other non-Catholics were exterminated by the state. The goal was to convert Croatia into a pure Croatian and Roman Catholic independent country. Memories of this genocide were a major cause of the recent violence.

President Tito was seen as the liberator of Yugoslavia and during his presidency after World War II, Tito angered the Serbs by granting autonomy to the province of Vojvodina and the southern province of Kosovo in 1974 and Yugoslavia started to disintegrate following his death. The country lost much of its territory and population during the 1990's as Slovenia, Croatia, Macedonia and Bosnia-Herzegovina achieved independence. By 1999, Yugoslavia consisted of only four provinces: Vojvodina, Serbia, Montenegro and Kosovo. Montenegro had a large degree of independence.

A disorganised and poorly armed militia, the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) emerged in 1991, to fight for independence from the Yugoslavian government. They were considered by the Albanians in Kosovo to be freedom fighters; the Serbs considered them to be terrorists.

The battle was not simply between the Yugoslav army and Kosovo citizens in the KLA. Yugoslav militias were also active. Many of the KLA fighters are from the adjacent country of Albania. Some believe that soldiers have come from other countries as well:

According to Catholic World News, "most of the army's strength has come from abroad - primarily from Albania, but also from Yemen and Saudi Arabia."  Another source reports that some mercenaries from Russia had joined the Serb forces.

A "contact group,"  consisting of U.S. and many European countries, brokered the Rambouillet Peace Accord for Kosovo. It was unsatisfactory to both sides:

-        The Serbs objected to giving Kosovo autonomy, and to allowing NATO troops to enter the province and maintain peace.



-        The ethnic Albanians in Kosovo objected to the accord because it did not grant them full independence.



The representatives of the KLA signed the peace accord, after considerable pressure. The government of Yugoslavia refused to sign the agreement.

NATO bombing campaign

NATO attacked Yugoslavia with air power in an attempt to force the Yugoslav government to accept the agreement. By early 1999 NATO’s objective became the independence for Kosovo. Widespread assaults, ethnic cleansing, rapes and murders of ethnic Albanian civilians by the Serbian army and militia, which had started long before NATO bombing began, accelerated. Hundreds of thousands were forced to flee the province to prevent being exterminated. It became impossible for the Muslim population of Kosovo to accept any form of future association with the Yugoslavian government. Full independence was the only feasible ultimate option.

Following centuries of tradition in the area, the Government of Yugoslavia proposed a cease fire to during the Eastern Orthodox Easter celebration. A complete cessation was rejected by NATO. This decision had a profound psychological and spiritual impact on the Serbians. "...by bombing the Serbs during the Orthodox Easter--just as the Nazis did in 1941-- [NATO]... played into a view held by some Serbs that NATO is a force of Western Christianity attempting to crush the Eastern Orthodox underdog." As Father Alex Karloutsos, an Orthodox priest in New York, said: "It really comes down to a war between Eastern and Western Christianity."

NATO was ultimately successful in 1999 in reaching an agreement with the Yugoslav government to:

-        Withdraw its Serb troops, militias, police and secret police;

-        Allow a NATO-led peacekeeping force to enter Kosovo and

-        To allow the ethnic Albanians to return to their homeland.

This seems to have induced many among the small minority of Serbian residents in Kosovo to leave the province, out of fear for their lives.

The Serbian link with Kosovo

There is great, largely untapped, mineral wealth in Kosovo. But that is not the main motivation for the present conflict. Kosovo is "the crucible in which Serb nationalism was forged in a famous battle fought more than 600 years ago...its memory has been kept alive by Serb nationalists down the centuries." (see reference 3). Kosovo is akin to a “holy land.” Many historic Serbian Orthodox Christian churches and monasteries are located there. Kosovo is valued by the Serbs much as Jerusalem is by the Palestinians and Jews.

The Rev. Blastko Taraklis explains: "a Serbian Orthodox priest in Mission Viejo who keeps in close touch with the monks and nuns at the ancient Decani monastery in Kosovo" said "We cannot give up Kosovo, because it is the Serbian Jerusalem. The birthright of the Serbian Orthodox Church is in Kosovo and must remain there as part of Serbia."

Carl Raschke, a religious studies professor from the University of Denver, commented:

"Kosovo is the detonator for all the passions, paranoia, fears and fight-to-the-death romanticism that has been a force in the Serb consciousness for centuries." The Serbs looked upon the 1999 conflict over Kosovo as "a kind of final battle for their national identity...The Serbs are likely to let the country be destroyed before they give it up."

Following the occupation of Kosovo by NATO and a small number of Russian peacekeepers, popular opposition to the Milosevic regime in Serbia became organised and the CIA became involved in de-stabilizing the government of Yugoslavia. The regime was ultimately overthrown.

Did the Serbs commit genocide?

Civilian populations were increasingly being targeted during the civil wars. However, atrocities must match certain specific criteria before they are considered genocide. The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide defines genocide as:

"... certain acts committed with the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group as such. The proscribed acts include killings, causing serious bodily or mental harm, imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group, forcibly transferring its children to another group, or deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its destruction in whole or in part."  



Ethnic cleansing in Bosnia during the mid 1990s started as mass expulsions of civilians. It escalated to include internment in concentration camps, mass executions, rapes, etc. There was a clear policy by the Serbs "to exterminate Muslim Bosnians as a group..."

Their actions were generally considered to be genocide. There is a general consensus that widespread atrocities were also committed by the Muslims and the Croats (largely Roman Catholic). But the level of their war crimes did not reach genocidal proportions.

There have been allegations that the Serbs were also engaged in genocide in Kosovo before and during the NATO bombing. Media correspondents and human rights investigators conducted large-scale interviews of Kosovar refugees. The data collected show that the Geneva Conventions concerning civilians had been ignored and that extremely serious war crimes were perpetrated by the Yugoslavian army, police and militias. There appeared to be a consensus among human rights investigators that genocide had been committed by the Yugoslavian government against the ethnic Albanians in Kosovo. This belief was confirmed as the NATO forces occupied Kosovo. Mass graves were located and were systematically examined by forensic specialists. Ethnic Albanians came out of hiding with horrendous stories to tell. In excess of 11,000 murders were reported to authorities.

Religious comments about the war in Kosovo:

Christians were divided over how to resolve the conflict. Some Evangelicals, Protestants and Roman Catholics supported the bombing as the only way to eventually bring peace. Many Orthodox Christian leaders supported the Serbian Orthodox church in asking for a cease fire. Many faith groups concentrated on the plight of the refugees, and did not take an active position on the war itself. During 1999...

-        Pax Christi is a Roman Catholic peace movement. Its Italian branch called for international action in Kosovo. "A temporary solution of one or two decades, would provide the immediate opportunity for increased economic cooperation with and political integration into the international community. It would enable the parties to build common ground for a final solution."  (see reference 15)



-        A number of Roman Catholic, Serbian Orthodox, and Muslim religious leaders met in Vienna in an attempt to forge a united stance against violence. Father Leonid Kishovsky was an Orthodox priest from New York who was present at the meeting. He reported "It was a very tense and challenging conversation that nearly broke down. But they did manage to walk through this very painful dialogue and came up with a common statement to step away from...violence and seek a democratic solution." (see reference 20)



-        The Albanian Encouragement Project (a group of about 70 foreign Evangelical Protestant agencies working with the local Albanian Evangelical Alliance) stated that the immediate solution was to bring NATO ground troops into Kosovo. They felt that the long range solution is more difficult. "We can set up borders, we can guard borders with UN troops and maintain a semblance of peace, but until hearts change and ethnic hatred ceases there is no long-term solution."   (See reference 14)



-        Charles Colson, head of the Prison Fellowship ministry in the U.S. criticised NATO's refusal to agree to a cease-fire requested by the Serb President, Slobodan Milosevic during the Orthodox Christian Easter. "NATO's actions show how completely tone-deaf Western governing elites have become on the subject of religion -- or at least Christianity." Colson contrasted the Kosovo situation with that of the 1998 decision to cease bombing in Iraq during Ramadan.



-        The Commission of the Orthodox Church predicted that further escalation of the war may have "unforeseeable, terrible consequences." They noted that both Evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders in Germany have supported the bombing in Kosovo.



-        Archbishop Spyridon, primate of the Greek Orthodox church in America said: "The further escalation of this conflict can only serve to exacerbate the human tragedy of violence, displacement and the inevitable hatreds that will be spawned by the forces of death and destruction."



-        The World Council of Churches, the Conference of European Churches, the Lutheran World Federation and the World Alliance of Reformed Churches called on Christians and Christian Churches to observe an international day of prayer for peace and reconciliation in the Balkans. These four groups had the opportunity to make a major positive contribution to religious tolerance by involving other than Protestant Christian groups in this day of prayer. Unfortunately, they decided to not involve the three main religious groups that are at least partly responsible for the terror and crisis in the Balkans: the Serbian Orthodox Church, Roman Catholic Church, and Islam.



-        Yugoslav President Slobodon Milosevic and four others were indicted for war crimes by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY). This is the first time a sitting head of state had been formally accused of crimes against humanity.



-        An agreement was reached between NATO and Yugoslav military leaders. The bombing was suspended. This lead to the replacement of Yugoslav forces from Kosovo with international peacekeepers and the return of ethnic Albanian refugees. Two consequences of this were the departure into Serbia of many of the Serbs who had been living in Kosovo, and an unknown number of ethnic Albainian hostages taken by Yugoslav forces from Kosovo to Serbia.



-        CNN reported that there were about "860,000 refugees" who had fled Kosovo. "The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees has estimated that at least 350,000 houses in Kosovo have been seriously damaged. The U.N. Children's Fund reported massive damage inflicted on hospitals, clinics and schools, and that doctors, nurses and teachers are in severely short supply."



-        Leaders of the Serbian Orthodox Church asked for the resignation of President Slobodan Milosevic and his government, as a means to find a new President and government that is acceptable to the world community.



-        By October 1999, 76 Serbian Orthodox shrines and churches had been destroyed or desecrated in Kosovo.  

In 2000, Milosevic suffered an electoral defeat . His regime was overthrown and a year later he was arrested and transported to The Hague to be tried as a war criminal.

In 2004, three Serbian children drowned accidentally in Kosovo. A false rumour spread that they had been chased into a river by four Albanian children.  In spite of a statement from the U.N. Mission that no Albanians were involved, tens of thousands of Albanians attacked Serbs and Serbian Orthodox churches and monasteries. There are strong indications that the attack was carefully planned in advance. Fourteen religious structures were totally destroyed; some dated back to the 12th century. The National Review described it as "Kristallnacht in Kosovo"

In 2005 Slobodan Milosevic had a heart attack and dies in prison. The Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC) wrote that "....it is now more than ever crucial that the international community bring other indicted war criminals to justice in order to bring about a much-needed process of truth and reconciliation....The European Union has given the Serbian government until April to hand over Ratko Mladic, military leader of the Bosnian Serbs during the 1992-95 war, who is accused of genocide, crimes against humanity and other war crimes for the siege of Sarajevo and the massacre of thousands of Muslim men and boys around Srebrenica in July 1995. The Bosnian Serbs' wartime political leader, Radovan Karadic, also has yet to surrender to the Hague tribunal. Both men have been fugitives for more than 10 years. Capturing and trying Mladic and Karadic should be an immediate priority of the international community in order to deliver long overdue justice that is crucial in order to begin the heal the scars faced by those who witnessed the Balkan genocide firsthand."

The situation as of early 2006:

In 2006 Kosovo had been under United Nations administration since 1999, when NATO drove out Yugoslav troops. The United National Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) reported…

"Independence and autonomy are among options that have been mentioned for the province, where Albanians outnumber Serbs and others by 9 to 1. Serbia rejects independence. Kosovo’s Serbs have been boycotting the province’s provisional institutions."

"UN Special Envoy Martti Ahtisaari confirmed that another meeting on decentralization would be held in the Austrian capital on 17 March, focusing on local financing and inter-municipal cooperation and relationships, adding that he was using 'a bottom-up approach,' in other words starting the process by dealing with practical and 'status-neutral' issues."

“Apart from decentralization, we will run parallel discussions on cultural and religious heritage, minority rights and economy'”, he said.

Kosovo in 2006 was a province of Serbia. However, with the area occupied by NATO peacekeepers, and administered by the United Nations, the term "province" is almost meaningless. There is strong support among the Muslim majority for complete independence.

"British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said that Kosovo's movement towards independence is 'almost inevitable,' and said Serbia may have to accept that reality."

However, the Serbian Orthodox minority generally refuses to acknowledge independence as an option. Withdrawal of NATO troops, political independence for Kosovo, and long-term peace and stability may well take decades to accomplish.

Kosovo declares independence:

In 2008 Kosovo's parliament gave unanimous approval to a unilateral declaration of independence. Prime Minister Hashim Thaci declared Kosovo to be "proud, independent and free."  He described it also as "democratic, secular and multi-cultural." Serbia has instructed Serbs in Kosovo to reject succession, and has enacted countermeasures against the new state. The U.S., Canada, and most European countries are expected to recognize Kosovo's independence.

Russia opposed the development, probably for two reasons: it might motivate independence-minded movements in Russia to demand independence, plus Russia and Serbia are linked by a common Orthodox Christian faith.

Iran has announced its opposition, perhaps because Kosovo is a predominately Muslim state that intends to be secular.

Serbian Orthodox Bishop Artemije, head of the Serbian Orthodox Church in Kosovo called for violence. He said:

"Serbia should buy state-of-the-art weapons from Russia and other countries and call on Russia to send volunteers and establish a military presence in Serbia."

Kosovo Today

Kosovo is still a disputed territory. Serbia continues to claim it as a “province” but refuses to recognise it as a state. It is one of only two Muslim-majority territories on the European mainland (the other being Albania) and it continues to suffer significant poverty after the past conflicts.

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