-Caveat Lector-

The Committee for National Solidarity
Tolstojeva 34, 11000 Belgrade, YU

The Sunday Times: Culture: Art
London, May 16 1999 ART


To understand the Serbs, look at their art in Kosovo,
 says WALDEMAR JANUSZCZAK. These depictions of war
and  persecution are the focus of the country's beliefs

Serbia's art and soul


I came across a monk on the Internet last week,  broadcasting from one of
the most beautiful of all the  Serbian churches in Kosovo and Metohija - to
give the  province its full Serbian nomenclature, for a change -  from
Decani, near the Albanian border. Metohija means  "land of the churches".
Which is what Kosovo is to the  Serbs. They also call it their Sacred Land.
If you look  at a map of the religious sites in the province you will  see
immediately why. The landscape is dotted with so  many schematic crosses
that you wonder where the cities  might be fitted in. And how could our
bombs possibly  miss all these churches and monasteries and convents?

The distressed Internet monk was telling his readers,  rather elegantly I
thought, that "history in the Balkans  is like quicksand", and he was
urging fellow Serbs not  to allow this quicksand of history to suck them
down.  "If we cannot move forward now, we will suffer again,"  he warned.
Unfortunately, the broadcast was dated to the  middle of 1998. This was
just another piece of ancient  Internet junk, floating uselessly on the
Web.

As it happens, I know the monastery in Decani. I visited  it more than 20
years ago as an eager art student trying  to acquire a wider knowledge of
Byzantine art. The old  Orient Express used to go as far as Istanbul,
uniting,  in steam and bumps, the art of the West with that of the  East,
and I was able to arrange a hop-off as it passed  through Tito's
illusionistically coherent Yugoslavia.  What an important service that
bandit-attracting train  used to provide as it chugged through the Balkans
and  made ignorance more difficult.

It is fair to say, I suppose, that Byzantine art is  tough to admire. It
talks down to you like a sentencing  judge. There's an intrinsic sternness
to it. You must  enter such dark and inviolately serious churches to
encounter it. And then you must appreciate so much  repetition.
Nevertheless, tourists flock to magnificent  Ravenna happily enough; and
the delights of ancient  Istanbul are always being eagerly sampled. But the
glories of Serbian Kosovo remain significantly more  obscure. Even today -
unbelievably - they appear to us  to form a very minor piece of the Kosovo
jigsaw, but to  the Serbs they have never been that. To the Serbs they
constitute an indestructible 700-year-old proof of their  rightful
ownership of the sacred land.

The monastery of Visoki Decani was founded early in the  14th century, and
I wish I could remember it better. I  remember that it is approached along
a spectacular  wooded valley and that the outside is striped in soft
marble pinks and whites. The interior, as I recall it,  is completely
covered from floor to dome with frescoes,  executed, I read, between 1335
and 1350. These are  considered to be the greatest masterpieces of Serbian
religious art. But are they still there? Is the treasury  at Decani still
filled with those curious golden  crosses, so absurdly ornate that they
have ceased  entirely to be cross-shaped? Are the hand-painted  medieval
gospels still glistening in their dusty glass  boxes? And over the
crossing, is there still a giant  Christ looking down on you with one of
those  terrifyingly accusatory biblical stares that are a  Byzantine
speciality?

Who knows? It is an ugly irony of this dumb and ever  dumber war that, even
though art played such a critical  role in its instigation, nobody appears
to have taken  the slightest bit of interest in it since the fighting
began. Not on our side, at least.

It wasn't always so. That gaseous cultural dreamer and  professional
Frenchman, André Malraux, looking out  across the beautiful Serbian
monasteries of Kosovo, with  their dramatic clusters of grapefruit domes
and their  huge expanses of floor-to-ceiling fresco, was moved to  write:
"Culture, when it is the most precious  possession, is never the past."
God, but he was right.  Malraux died in 1976. He had been a liberal, but he
died  a Gaullist who loved the sound of his own conservatism,  and
certainly wrote too much. In most modern situations  I would rank him as
one of the century's most eminently  skippable cultural commentators. But
in his few sad  thoughts on Kosovo, published a quarter of a century ago
in one of those impressively convoluted studies of the  Slavs that are a
Gallic speciality, Malraux revealed  himself to be an excellent reader of
the Serb mind.

Being French, and of the old school, he understood  perfectly the power not
only of culture but also of  history. Today, in new Britain, it seems to me
we no  longer understand the power of either. Which is why we  have
attempted so childishly, in Tony-talk, to reduce  the complex Balkan
scenario into a simple fairy tale  about a nasty dictator leading his
people astray. It is  why we have ignored, so fully, the art of Kosovo, and
failed, so entirely, to appreciate the part it has  played in shaping these
grim unfoldings. It is why the  first battle of Kosovo of 1389 - in which
the Christian  Serbs were defeated by the Muslim Turks, ushering in 500
years of astonishingly stubborn Serbian cultural  resistance to Islam - is
written about, in the few  instances that it is written about, as if all
that it  provides is some minor proof of chronic Serbian
old-fashionedness. And it is why we have ended up  blundering so violently
into a game of space invaders in  the skies above the Balkans. Because real
history means  so little to us, we have forgotten how much it continues  to
mean to others.

And please do not deny that our appreciation of history  has shrunk into
dumbness. This year was the 350th  anniversary of the beheading of Charles
I. All year long  I have been staggered by the so-what? responses this
anniversary has encouraged in New Britain. The Queen's  Gallery put on a
half-hearted display of royal  portraits. A show of Stuart prints popped up
at the  British Museum. And that's it. A nation that found its  rightful
monarch guilty of crimes against the state,  then somehow found the black
determination to try him  and behead him, can no longer be bothered to
remember  why. It couldn't happen in Serbia, believe me. In fact,  I do not
think it could have happened anywhere east of  Dover. Yet, over here, the
national memory of the  execution of a king has been discarded as easily as
last  year's flares.

I have been remembering Malraux a lot recently, as I sit  here worrying
about what has happened to the great  storehouses of Byzantine art that are
the Serbian  monasteries of Kosovo and Metohija, about the fate of  which I
have been unable to find a single informed word  among the millions of
others that have been pouring out  of reporters and opinion-formers since
our bombing  began.

That extraordinary three-in-one church, The patriarchate  of Pec, for six
centuries the headquarters of the  Serbian Orthodox faith, set in another
spectacular  gorge, close to Decani, close to Albania - is it still
intact? During those 500 years of Muslim rule by the  Turks, Pec and the
other monasteries of the Sacred Land  provided an obvious and reliable
focus for Serb  nationalist dreams.

And what about Gracinica? A strange church, as I  remember it, with too
many domes crowded above too small  a nave, located a few miles outside
Pristina, and  started in 1313. The Turks burnt it down a few decades
later. So the Serbs rebuilt it. Burnt down and rebuilt,  burnt down and
rebuilt - the famous ecclesiastical sites  of Kosovo kept the Serbian
embers glowing, for century  after century, with remarkable success.

So. When the Bosnians converted to Islam, the Serbs  didn't. When the
Albanians converted to Islam, the Serbs  didn't. For 500 years they
believed themselves to be  fighting a Christian jihad on behalf of the
civilised  West against the invading eastern Muslims. When the  Turks were
finally expelled, in the false dawn that  preceded the Great War, in came
the Bulgarians. And the  Austrians. And the Italians. Then the Nazis. Even
more  clearly than my people, the Poles, the Serbs have had to  define
themselves through their opposition to their  neighbours. And their
churches, packed to the rafters  with so much stern and rousing and ancient
religious  propaganda, have been the chief artistic focus of that
opposition.

So. When the Croats sided with Hitler, the Serbs didn't.  When the
Albanians sided with Hitler, the Serbs didn't.  Until, finally, in about
1960, under the wonky tarpaulin  of Tito's communism, the Muslim population
of Kosovo,  swollen by wholesale illegal immigration from the  mightily
poor and pseudo-Maoist Albania, and fattened by  the strict Muslim
forbidding of birth control, finally  overtook and outnumbered the
indigenous Serb population.  And 40 years of recent history began the
process of  attempting to outweigh 700 years of historic struggle.
Monasteries had stones thrown through their windows  (many had already been
converted into mosques). Graves  were desecrated. Churches were torched. It
is to the  defence of those churches that the Serbs clearly  believed they
were rushing when they invaded, so  brutally and quickly, Kosovo and
Metohija.

The coverage of the Kosovo conflict has, time after  time, struck me with
its high-tech ignorance of these  powerful lo-tech causes. Not a word is
ever uttered  about the great church art of Serbia. Not enough has  been
devoted to the deep historical roots of the war. A  few brief references
have been made to the historic  Battle of Kosovo of 1389, but not with any
deep ambition  to take it seriously. Not a line, that I have read, has
been quoted from the marvellous cycle of epic Kosovo  poems with which the
Serbs, "a nation of bards", have  been indoctrinating their children, from
birth, since  the victory of the Turks. I suppose, in new Britain, you
feel like something of a berk reciting the famous curse  of Stefan Musich:

If any Serb, or man of Serbian birth,
Or any man of  Serbian kith or kin,
If any such a man comes not with  me
To battle on the field of Kosovo -
Never shall he know a son or daughter.
Whatsoever he may touch shall wither:
Vineyard, field of wheat - his sweat and labour
Fruitless, and his generation barren!



www.srpska-mreza.com/mlad
History of the battle 600 years ago, plus  cultural/religious heritage of
the region



Secretary General
Mrs. Jela Jovanovic
Art  historian

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