Dusan T.Batakovic. The Kosovo Chronicles
     Published by PLATO, Beograd 1992.
     Translated to English by Dragana Vulicevic
        Table of Contents:
        INTRODUCTION by Milan St. Protic
        PART ONE: HISTORY AND IDEOLOGY
        THE KOSOVO AND METOHIA QUESTION
     Ethnic Strife and the Communist Rule
     The CPY as a section  of the Comintern and the realizer of its  concept
in dealing with the ethnic question
     The CPY's ethnic  policy  in its  struggle for power in  the civil  war
(1941-1945)
     Settling accounts with Serbia and the instrumentalization of Kosovo and
Metohia
     Centralism in Yugoslavia and  the role  of the secret  police in Kosovo
and Metohia
     Kosovo and Metohia in the transition from the centralist to the federal
model
     The  epilogue  of the  communist  solution to  the  ethnic question  in
Yugoslavia: the example of Kosovo
     Continuity and discontinuity
        KOSOVO AND METOHIA: A HISTORICAL SURVEY
     The Age of Ascent
     The Age of Tribulation
     The Age of Migrations
     The Age of Oppression
     The Age of Restoration
     The Age of Communism
        PART TWO: THEOCRACY, NATIONALISM, IMPERIALISM
        FROM THE SERBIAN REVOLUTION TO THE EASTERN CRISIS: 1804-1875
     The Serbian Insurrection and Pasha-Outlaws
     Time of Reforms in Turkey
     Pogroms in Metohia
     Population
     Political Action of Serbia
     Restoration of Religious and Cultural Life
     The Economy
        ENTERING THE SPHERE OF EUROPEAN INTEREST
     Eastern Crisis and the Serbian-Turkish Wars
     The Albanian League
     Court-Martial in Pristina
     Albanians Under the Sultan's Protection
     Activities of the Serbian Government
     Flaring of Anarchy
     Religious, Educational and Economic Conditions
     The Decline in Population
        ANARCHY AND GENOCIDE UPON THE SERBS
     Serbia's Diplomatic Actions
     Austria-Hungary and the Expansion of Anarchy
     Failure of Reforms
     Young Turk Regime
        LIBERATION OF KOSOVO AND METOHIA
     Albanian Incursions into Serbia
     In World War One
        SERBIAN GOVERNMENT AND ESSAD PASHA TOPTANI
        PART THREE: RELIGION AND CIVILISATION
        KOSOVO AND METOHIA: CLASH OF NATIONS OR CLASH OF CIVILIZATIONS
        FIGURES:
     Otoman Vilayets
     Serbia 1804-1913
     Comunist Yugoslavia: Federal Organization
     Settling of Albanian Tribes
     AUTHOR:  Dusan  T. Batakovic (born 1957)  is  one of the  distinguished
Serbian historians. He works in Historical  Institute of Serbian Academy  of
Sciences and Arts as Research  Fellow.  Among dozens of articles  on Serbian
and Balkan history, he had published several  books:  Savremenici o Kosovu i
Metohiji  1852-1912  (Contemporaries   on  Kosovo  and  Metohia  1852-1912),
Belgrade  1988;  Kolubarska  bitka  (Battle  of  Kolubara),  Belgrade  1989;
Decansko pitanje (The Decani Question), Belgrade 1989;  Kosovo i Metohija  u
srpskoj  istoriji (Kosovo and  Metohia  in  Serbian  History), Belgrade 1989
(co-author); Kosovo  i  Metohija  u srpsko-arbanaskim  odnosima (Kosovo  and
Metohia in Serbo-Albanian  Relations), Belgrade 1991; and edited Memoirs  of
Gen. P. Draskic, Belgrade 1990 and Portraits by V. Corovic, Belgrade 1990.
     This book is the collection of his articles on major topics of  history
of Kosovo and Metohia and its recent political consequences.
        Dusan T. Batakovic THE KOSOVO CHRONICLES
     Izdavac: Knjizara Plato, Beograd, Cika Ljubina 18-20
     Za izdavaca Branislav Gojkovic
     Urednik Ivan Colovic
     Recenzenti: Prof. dr Radovan Samardzic i dr Milan St. Protic
     Beograd, 1992.
     INDEX 215 THE HISTORY CARDS OF KOSOVO CHRONICLES 219 - 222
     QP- Katalogizacija u publikaciji Narodna biblioteka Srbije, Beograd
     949.711.5 BATAKOVIC, Dusan T.
     [Kosovo Chronicles] The Kosovo Chronicles / Dusan T. Batakovic; prevela
na engleski Dragana Vulicevic.
     -Beograd: Knjizara Plato, 1992 | (Beograd: Vojna stamparija).
     - 218 Str.; 20 cm.
     - (Biblioteka Na tragu)
     Tiraz 1000 - Registar. ISBN86-447-0006-5
     a) Kosovo i Metohija - Istorija 4986380
        INTRODUCTION
        by Milan St. Protic
     The modern history of  Serbia  is  indeed  pregnant  with controversial
questions. Probably the most  complex one  is  the history  of -- Kosovo and
Metohia.  It was  only in the last few years that several  historiographical
works on Kosovo and Metohia had  been  written and published. The pioneer in
this field which  deals with a  particularly important  segment  of Serbia's
past and present is undoubtedly the author of this book.
     This is trully  the first  serious  attempt to cover two  centuries  of
history  of  Kosovo  and  Metohia  and to  present  its  complex  historical
development in its  full.  In a series  of  articles  dealing  with  various
problems of Kosovo and  Metohia  throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, the
author  definitely  succeeded  to  make  a  complete picture  of Kosovo  and
Metohia's  troubled  history. It  seems  appropriate, therefore, to name his
book -- The Kosovo Chronicles.
     The diversity of various topics which form the collection  most clearly
shows that the author is the master of  the subject he chose to write about.
Mr. Batakovic presented himself as a mature  historian of the Balkan history
as a whole as much as the sharp analyst of one specific aspect of it.
     One cannot but  to welcome this book.  For two major reasons at  least.
First,  for  its wide-angle approach to  the problem. And  second,  for  its
attempt to avoid typical black and white stereotypes.
     Kosovo  and Metohia undoubtedly  belong  to the corpus  of  the Serbian
history. No question about  that. It was the cradle and the  center  of  the
medieval Serbian state, it was the region  won by the Serbian army  from the
Turks  in the First Balkan War (1912), it was  incorporated  in  the Serbian
state territory and thus had entered into Yugoslavia in  1918.  It was  only
after  the  victory  of  the  Communist  Revolution in  Yugoslavia  that the
question of Kosovo emerged as a  separate  problem outside  and even against
Serbia.  That was the  moment in  which the political position of Kosovo and
Metohia  moved away from  Serbia and became a  problem  of Albanian national
rights in the eyes of very many foreign and Yugoslav observers. That crucial
borderline was rightfully pointed out by the author of this volume.
     From  the standpoint  of form, this  book  represents  a collection  of
articles.  It is  comprised  of two major parts. The  first  entitled, named
History  and  Ideology, treats the problem of Kosovo and Metohia, within the
framework of the Yugoslav unified  state, during the World War Two  and  the
Communist  rule since 1945. The second  Theocracy,  Nationalism, Imperialism
deals with the different aspects of  the 19th  century history of Kosovo and
Metohia until the Yugoslav unification of Yugoslavia.
     The second part of Mr. Batakovic's book covers the period in which this
particular area belonged to  the state territory of  the Ottoman  Empire, in
which the ethnic Serbs were subjects of constant pressures and abuses by the
Ottoman administrators  and,  much more, by ethnic Albanians who, under  the
Turkish protection, conducted  a real terror  over the Serbs. The difference
between the Christian Serbs fighting for their national emancipation against
the oriental Islamic and  oppressive regime of the Ottomans. As the  Ottoman
system crumbled  within  itself, its  peripheral  provinces became  areas of
abuse  rule  of the local population.  The local Albanians, also Muslims for
the  most  part,  found  the  best way  to  suppress the  Serbs  by  putting
themselves in the service of the Turkish  authorities. The author's archival
findings clearly proved what was  really  happening  in  Kosovo and  Metohia
during the 19th century and what were the true origins of ethnic clashes  in
that particular area.
     This   part   of   Mr.  Batakovic's  volume  represents,   in  fact,  a
comprehensive  history  of  Kosovo  and Metohia  during  the  19th  century,
starting from the First Serbian Insurrection against the Turks (1804) to the
First Balkan War  (1912) when, after  the victory of  the Serbian army,  the
region  of Kosovo and Metohia  had  been  incorporated  in  the bulk  of the
Serbian state. It is  essentially a  historical analysis of complex  ethnic,
religious  and  political  relations in  the triangle  Serbs-Turks-Albanians
based on a rather deep archival and documentary research. The author managed
to trace down the  roots of these conflicts,  their nature  and development.
Parallel  to  this, he gave  the historical background for the events  which
occurred in the 20th century, when the problem of Kosovo and Metohia reached
its peak in both, crisis  and international  attention. This segment of book
should  serve as a textbook of Kosovo and Metohia's  history to everyone who
is interested in this particular field.
     Mr. Batakovic's  collection  of articles contains  several  synthetical
pieces written on the subject of  the  history  of Kosovo and  Metohia. This
region of  constant  clashes  needed  to  be defined  in  terms  of  general
categories. In an attempt to discover the real nature of those conflicts the
author searched for the answer to the  following questions: what really lays
in  the  bottom  of  centuries long  clashes  in the  history of Kosovo  and
Metohia,  is  that the conflict  of religions, nations or civilizations? One
will  find the author's answers  both  original and inspiring. Contradictory
problems need  to be thought  about. And that  is exactly what Mr. Batakovic
has done.
     A special attention  should be paid to the article entitled "The Kosovo
And Metohia  Question  - ethnic strife and communist rule". It stands as the
pivotal piece among all  other articles in this book. It is at the same time
the most important and the most  complex attempt to analyze the situation in
Kosovo in Metohia in the last fifty years, since the communists took over in
Yugoslavia.
     This is  the  first  time  in Serbian  and Yugoslav historiography that
someone  tried  to  look  on the Kosovo and  Metohia  question  outside  the
framework of political and ideological clich s. The article of Mr. Batakovic
represents a pioneer work in a noncommunist approach to contemporary history
of Kosovo and Metohia. Trying to see the problem in  the realm  of communist
regime  and  its  policies  in Yugoslavia,  and  in Serbia specifically, the
author found a  whole new  field  of  research and  reasoning.  With  strong
foundations in his knowledge of Kosovo and Metohia's  history,  both distant
and  recent,  Mr.  Batakovic  made a successful  synthesis of Serbo-Albanian
misunderstandings  in  Kosovo  and  Metohia,   finding  a  balance   between
contemporary politics and traditional differences between ethnicities living
in  this region.  His final conclusion  that the  Titoist politics had  been
detrimental   to  the  positive  solution  of  this  serious  problem  seems
persuasive and largely acceptable.
     One should  appreciate the  courage  of  the author  to  tackle such  a
complicated question of history  and politics which touches the very essence
of the  present  day Serbia and Yugoslavia. Mr.  Batakovic's writing  should
contribute in clarifying many problems which had been heavily misinterpreted
in recent years, both in Yugoslavia  and abroad.  Escaping numerous traps of
Marxist historiography and reasoning, the author leads us on the road of new
and  modern  way of thinking about nationalism and  statehood.  By combining
historical  analysis and  archival research  with  original  synthesis,  the
author left us with  a  lot  of  vastly  unknown factography  and even  more
conclusions and assertations which inspire further work and thoughts.
     The author of  this volume  belongs  to the new  generation of  Serbian
historians.  To the generation whose  intellectual and professional maturity
presently  shows itself in full  intensity. It is a general hope  that these
young  people  will  drive Serbia  out of Marxist dogmas  not  only in their
intellectual work but also in everyday politics. The book we  have before us
is one of  those important steps in the direction of modern, non-ideological
view of our past and present.
        Milan St. Protic
        PART ONE: HISTORY AND IDEOLOGY
        THE KOSOVO AND METOHIA QUESTION
        Ethnic Strife and the Communist Rule
     In the  20th-century history of the two  southern regions of Serbia  --
Kosovo and Metohia  -- there are two periods that  are clearly  separated by
ideological  borders.  In the  first period (1912-1941),  in the Kingdom  of
Serbia  and  the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, ethnic issues were mainly dealt with
in keeping with the civic standards of inter-war Europe, notwithstanding the
suffering  endured during the war and latent political instability. Compared
to ethnic  minorities  in other  countries, the ethnic  Albanian minority in
Kosovo and Metohia, despite its open antagonism towards  the state, was  not
in  an  particularly unfavorable position.  By  Saint-Germain Treaty  (1919)
minorities on Serbian territory within borders of 1913 (including Kosovo and
Metohia), were formally excluded  from international protection  but it  was
not  particularly   used   against   interests   of   ethnic  Albanians   in
Serbia.1
     In the second period, commencing with the war (1941-1945) and concluded
after  the establishment of  communism in Yugoslavia (1945), the question of
Kosovo  and Metohia  was dealt with in  keeping with the Party  leadership's
ideological  stands  regarding  the ethnic question.  Precisely during  this
period  solutions  were  found providing  strong  impetus to the  old ethnic
conflict  between  Serbs  and Albanians, causing  deep  rifts  difficult  to
surmount  today.  Ethnic  tension  in  Kosovo  and  Metohia  thus  offers  a
paradigmatic example  of the  ability  of  the communist  rule to completely
change  the  demographic  picture  of an area by instrumentalizing  existing
ethnic differences.
     Kosovo and Metohia, and entire Yugoslavia for that  matter, depended on
the rule of the communist leadership, which cunningly  used the manipulation
of ethnic differences to consolidate and maintain power. The national policy
of the  Yugoslav communists was an ideological  and national negation of the
establishment of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, which the Serbs saw as their own
-  the heir to the  political traditions and democratic institutions  of the
Kingdom  of Serbia.  The  Serbs  posed  the  greatest  threat  for  Yugoslav
communists in number and political  affiliation:  to them,  communism  was a
foreign  ideology  viewed slightingly,  as a  vogue of  the  small-in-number
deluded  youth;  but  recognized during  the  war as the  gravest  threat to
independence and freedom. The communists regarded the Serbs as a nation with
strong   politically  constructive  traditions  and  a  pronounced  national
conscience who, spread through the length and breadth of Yugoslav territory,
had learned to conduct foreign policy on their own, without tangible foreign
support, a nation united by  a single Orthodox Church  -  the bearer  of  an
anti-Soviet mood  in the  country. The Communist Party of  Yugoslavia  (CPY)
drafted its followers among the  Serbs chiefly from  the lower social strata
(especially  patriarchal communities in Montenegro, Herzegovina, Bosnia  and
Vojna  Krajina)  unestablished  in Serbian  state and  political traditions,
people   who  in  the  name   of   idealistic  Yugoslavism  and  proletarian
internationalism rejected Serbian interests and blindly obeyed the orders of
the Titoist leadership.
     The Albanians, a people whose national integration fell a whole century
behind those of the other Balkan  nations, remained  in communist Yugoslavia
against their will, but found a  common  interest with the ruling  communist
party in an anti-Serbian policy via which to achieve  their  national goals.
Time was to pass for the  backward ethnic Albanian milieu to  admit its  new
authorities  and for  the CPY  to  come to terms with representatives of the
ethnic  Albanian minority. The question of Kosovo and Metohia was thus dealt
with in the inter-relation  of three gravity centers of political forces -1.
the CPY leadership as the leading  factor  of might  in the country;  2. the
ethnic Albanian national  movement which had  evident continuity despite the
ideological affiliation of  its  bearers; 3. Serbian  communists who, though
numerically  superior in  the  army, party and  politics,  as  Yugoslavs and
internationalists consistently implemented the Titoist policy. The origin of
this relation  can  be seen in the chronological sequence of developments of
the CPY's  national  policy  under  different  political  and  international
conditions.
     1 R.  Rajovic,  Autonomija Kosova.  Politicko-pravna  studija,  Beograd
1985, pp. 100-105.
     The CPY as a section of the Comintern and the  realizer of its  concept
in dealing with the ethnic question
     There  is evident  continuity in the CPY's  policy in  dealing with the
position  of  ethnic  minorities  which  shows  that,   despite   individual
aberrations due to the position  of communist  Yugoslavia in foreign policy,
basic  political principles, outlined in party  programs  and resolutions in
the inter-war period, were consistently implemented. The CPY coordinated its
program of solutions to the ethnic question in the multi-ethnic  Kingdom  of
Yugoslavia with  the general stands of the Third International  (Comintern),
within the framework  of which it acted as a  separate section, as its  work
was prohibited in the country.
     The  Comintern was an important  lever of  Soviet  foreign policy.  The
Comintern's attitude towards the Kingdom of Yugoslavia was determined by the
Soviet policy  towards  the  "Versailles system"  of  states  created  under
imperialistic peace accords"  after World War  I,  in  which enemies of  the
Bolshevik regime -  Great  Britain  and France  -  were dominant.  The Fifth
Congress of the  Comintern  (1924)  abandoned  the  principle of  a  federal
restructuring  of  states,  created  as a  cordon  sanitaire primarily  as a
defense  against  the "proletariat  revolution" and  a struggle against  the
Soviet  Union,  with   the  explanation  that  "western  imperialists"  were
preparing an  assault on the "first country of socialism". The new political
platform's starting point was to break up the cordon  surrounding the Soviet
Union by  singling out and rendering independent the oppressed nations among
those states in the enemy  camp,  including the Kingdom of Yugoslavia  - the
right of Croatia, Slovenia and Macedonia to separation was emphasized, and a
special resolution stressed the  need to aid the movements of  the oppressed
nations  for  the  formation  of  their  independent  states  and  "for  the
liberation  of the Albanians". The  policy  of the  Yugoslav authorities had
some  effect  on  the  Comintern's  stand   towards  Yugoslavia:  the  royal
authorities  had failed  to recognize  the  new  Soviet  state and  provided
shelter to  a large  number of  Russian emigrants and White  Guard  military
units in the  20s, including the troops  of  General Vrangel,  while Russian
societies  frequently greeted their  patron,  King Aleksandar Karadjordjevic
(related  to  the  Romanov  dynasty  through  his  sister  Jelena  and   his
Montenegrin aunts), as the new Slavic tsar.
     The  CPY, and the  Comintern, advocated the  stand  that  the  state of
Serbs, Croats  and  Slovenes  was  an  unnatural  creation which  cannot  be
regarded as a homogeneous national state (comprising three tribes which make
up a  nation) with a few  ethnic minorities, but a state  wherein the ruling
class  of one (Serbian) nation  was oppressing the other nations. The thesis
on  a Greater  Serbian bourgeoisie and Greater Serbian hegemony owed much to
the theses of the Austro-Hungarian public opinion prior to and during  World
War I, whereby  the Greater Serbian threat posed  a chief  obstacle  to  the
stabilization of political  conditions in the Balkans. Similar stands,  only
with a more pronounced ideological component, can be found in the  works  of
Austro-Marxists whence such stereotypes were taken and  constructed into the
views  of  the Third International  regarding  the  ethnic  question in  the
Balkans.1
     The  policy  to  break up  Kingdom  of  Yugoslavia  culminated  in  the
decisions  of  the CPY's  Fourth Congress,  held  in Dresden  in  1928.  The
statement that about one-third of the Albanian nation had remained under the
rule of the  Greater  Serbian bourgeoisie, which  was  implementing the same
oppressive regime" against it as in Macedonia, was supplemented by the stand
that its liberation and unification with Albania  can be achieved only  in a
joint  struggle with the CPY.  With regard to this, support was  extended to
the  Kosovo Committee, an organization of  ethnic Albanians from Kosovo  and
Metohia who, aided by the Albanian government and Mussolini, raided Yugoslav
territory  with  the  aim of winning the annexation  of  Kosovo, Metohia and
western  Macedonia  to  Albania. Tens  of thousands  of Serbian colonists  -
chiefly volunteers in  World War  I  and indigent families from  Montenegro,
Vojna Krajina and Dalmatia,  were  sealed by the party press as  servants of
the Greater Serbian policy,  although  the  land they  were allotted was not
taken  from ethnic  Albanians. Similar  stands  were reitered at  the Fourth
National Conference of the CPY held in Ljubljana in 1934, which stressed the
assessment that  the Yugoslav  kingdom  was  nothing  but the "occupation of
Croatia,   Dalmatia,    Slovenia,    Montenegro,   Macedonia,   Kosovo   and
Bosnia-Herzegovina  by Serbian  troops" and that  it was  thus imperative to
execute  the  "persecution  of  Serbian  Chetniks  from  Croatia,  Dalmatia,
Slovenia,  Vojvodina, Bosnia, Montenegro,  Macedonia and Kosovo". Renouncing
these  regions  any Serbian character at all, the  CPY believed  that  these
provinces should be organized as separate federal units within the  frame of
a future communist Yugoslavia. The stand to break up Yugoslavia  was changed
in  1935,  when  the Comintern established  a new course  of struggle of the
"national  front" against  the  danger looming from Nazism  and  Fascism  in
Europe.2  The  CPY  abandoned its decision on  the annexation  of
Kosovo and Metohia to Albania in 1940,  at the Fifth National  Conference in
Zagreb, at a time when Albania had been under Italian occupation for a year,
but  even then,  the  "colonialist methods of the  Serbian bourgeoisie" were
condemned and  the  need for the  creation of a separate republic of  Kosovo
emphasized -  "the ethnic problem can be resolved  by  the forming of a free
labor-peasant  republic  of Kosovo  after  the  Greater  Serbian fascist and
imperialist  regime   is  overthrown".3   By  demonizing  Serbian
domination in  Yugoslavia, Yugoslav communists distinguished  less and  less
the bourgeoisie from the people - thus the idea to form a separate party for
Serbia  was abandoned,  although party organizations for  the other Yugoslav
provinces were formed.  Maintaining  such a  stand, the  CPY  received  Nazi
Germany's attack on Yugoslavia in April, 1941.
     1  K. Cavoski, KPJ i kosovsko pitanje,  in: Kosovo i Metohija u srpskoj
istoriji, Beograd 1988,  pp.  361-381.  Cf documents  in:  Istorijski  arhiv
Komunisticke  partije  Jugoslavije,   Beograd  1949,   vol.  I-II,   passim;
Komunisticka internacionala, Gornji Milanovac 1982, vol. VIII, passim.
     2 K, Cavoski, op. cit., pp. 365-369.
     3 V. Djuretic, Kosovo i Metohija u Jugoslaviji, in: Kosovo i Metohija u
srpskoj istoriji, p. 321
     The  CPY's ethnic policy  in its struggle for power  in  the civil  war
(1941-1945)
     The Kosovo and Metohia question was raised again when the flames of war
spread  on  April  6,1941,  throughout Yugoslavia: its  army  was forced  to
unconditional capitulation  11  days later and its territory  divided  among
Hitler's allies.  Owing to their  loyalty to old  allies  France  and  Great
Britain, and for  fomenting a putsch  on March 27, 1941 (thereby practically
canceling  any agreement with  the Axis powers), the Serbs  were punished as
the Third Reich's chief enemy  in the Balkans  by a division of the  Serbian
territories: most  of Kosovo  along  with  Metohia,  western  Macedonia  and
fringing areas of Montenegro were allotted to  Albania, which had been under
Italian occupation for two years. Bulgaria was given a small part of Kosovo,
while its northern parts entered  the composition of Serbia  where a  German
protectorate  was  established.  Under a decree by King  Vittorio Emmanuele,
dated  August 12,  1941, Greater Albania was founded. An  Albanian voluntary
militia numbering 5,000 men - Vulnetari - was set  up in  Kosovo and Metohia
to assist  the Italian forces  in  maintaining order, but  which carried out
surprise attacks on the Serbian population on its own.
     Ethnic  Albanians in  Kosovo and Metohia, who were declared by  Italian
and  communist propagandas as victims of Greater Serbian hegemony, received,
besides  the right  to hoist  their own flag,  the  right to open schools in
their mother tongue. The patriarchal and  tribal ethnic Albanian  society in
Metohia  and  Kosovo,  accustomed  to  extreme  subordination  and  absolute
submission to the local land holders, received the new order wholeheartedly.
The destruction of the Yugoslav state,  which they never  took as their own,
was  received  with  vindictive  ardor.  In  the  first  few  months  of the
occupation, some ten thousand colonist houses were burned in night raids and
their owners and families expelled. Colonist estates were ploughed afresh in
order that every trace of Serbian presence be eradicated and in the event of
their  return,  to  render  difficult the  recognition of their estates. The
destruction of colonist  villages  according to  a  plan  was to  help  show
international  commissions after the war, when  new borders would  be drawn,
that  Serbs  never  lived  there.  An  ethnic Albanian  leader  from Kosovo,
Ferat-bey Draga, said that the "time  has come to  exterminate the Serbs ...
there will be no Serbs under the  Kosovo sun".1 Orthodox churches
were burnt and destroyed  and graveyards desecrated. Ethnic Albanians sought
to eradicate every trace of Serbian presence in these areas. During the war,
some 100,000 colonists and indigenous  Serbs fled for Serbia and  Montenegro
ahead  of Albanian terror, and some  10,000 were  killed.2  Along
with this,  under  a  plan  of the Italian government,  adopted  before  the
occupation  of Yugoslavia,  began an extensive  settlement of Albanians from
Albania  on the estates of the  expelled colonists.  Their number is roughly
estimated at  80,000-100,000;  the  first postwar  estimate put it at  about
75,000.3
     The insurrection against the  occupier in mid-May,  1941, was raised by
Serbian  officers  under  the  command  of  Colonel  Draza  Mihailovic,  who
organized  the  Chetnik  (guerrilla)  movement  throughout  Yugoslavia:  his
troops, organized throughout the country,  were proclaimed by the government
in  exile the Yugoslav  army in  the homeland,  and  he was made general and
minister  of war. Two  weeks after Hitler's  assault  on  the Soviet  Union,
Yugoslav  communists  stirred up  an uprising at Moscow's call, which, under
the  mask of a  people's  liberation struggle, was in fact a movement for  a
revolutionary  shift  of   power.  After  initial  talks  with  Mihailovic's
Chetniks, Tito's Partisans set out on a long and bloody civil  war. Although
there  were  several  collaborationist regimes in  the  country  with strong
military formations, the  Partisans - the military force of the CPY, saw the
Chetniks  as  their  arch-enemy  who  incorporated  the state  and political
continuity of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
     In the civil  war that ensued,  Kosovo and Metohia assumed  a secondary
role.  The Chetnik movement,  organized into two  Kosovo corps  (about 1,500
men),  operated  in mountainous regions  on  the  outskirts  of  Kosovo  and
Metohia.  Cooperation  between  the  occupational  Italian  forces  and  the
Albanian  voluntary  gendarmery  left  no  room for their stronger  military
engagement and protection  of the  Serbian  population. The persecuted Serbs
sought  refuge  in occupied Serbia, where they  were  received  first by the
commissariat administration and then a  special refugees  commissariat under
the regime of General Milan Nedic.4
     Metohia, which was settled by primarily Montenegrin colonists, had many
followers  of the  CPY,  though  at the outbreak of the war  its  membership
comprised a mere 270, including some two dozen ethnic Albanians. Even though
the  CPY  condemned in  numerous declarations prior to  the war the  Greater
Serbian policy  of the bourgeoisie and called  during the war on the  ethnic
Albanian population to rise together with the colonists and Serbian  natives
for the creation of a "new, justice society", the response was negligible. A
party leader, Ali Shukria, tried in 1941 to justify  this reaction by saying
that  the mere  name Yugoslavia provoked  unanimous  indignation  among  the
ethnic Albanians. Clashes between Partisan and Chetnik formations on the one
hand  and  the  ethnic Albanian  gendarmery on the other  showed that ethnic
Albanians saw in both of them only Serbs, their age-old enemies.5
     The number of ethnic Albanians mustered in partisan units in Kosovo and
Metohia was  extremely  low, numbering only several dozen. Individual  units
were named after  prominent ethnic Albanian  communists (Zeinel  Aidmi, Emin
Duraku), and then after distinguished  leaders  of the secessionist movement
against Serbia and Yugoslavia  (Bairam Cum); agitations among the population
constantly stressed that after the war, the ethnic Albanians would win their
rights,  labeling the prewar  policy  as  fascist  and maleficent.  However,
winning over  ethnic  Albanians for  the  restoration of Yugoslavia under  a
communist  leadership was  slow, since among the  ethnic Albanian members of
the  CPY  most  had  hoped  that  Kosovo and  Metohia would  remain  in  the
composition of Albania after the war.
     In the Communist Party  of Albania (CPA), which was formed from various
factions on February 8, 1941, under the supervision of Yugoslav  instructors
(Miladin Popovic and Dusan  Mugosa),  were numerous  followers  of a Greater
Albania  under  communist  rule. Albanian communist leader  Enver Hoxha  had
taken the first step towards an accord for the creation of a Greater Albania
after the war with  a short-lasting  agreement reached on  August 2,1943, in
the village of Mukaj with  representatives  of  the Balli  Kombetar, a  very
active organization  in  Kosovo.6  Miladin Popovic held a similar
stand, proposing  that  ethnic Albanians  from  Kosovo and Metohia be placed
under the command of the  Chief Staff of Albania and that Metohia come under
the organization  of  the CPA.7 Such  aspirations attained  their
fullest expression in a declaration issued on January 2, 1944 in the village
of Bunaj (Bujan), in a conference attended  by 49 political  representatives
of the ethnic Albanian and  Yugoslav partisan units  (43 ethnic Albanians, 1
Moslem and 7 Serbs present):
     "Kosovo and Metohia is  an  area mostly inhabited  by ethnic Albanians,
who have always wished to become united with Albania. We, therefore, feel it
our duty to point to the road that is to be followed  by the ethnic Albanian
people in the realization  of their  wishes. The only way for the Kosovo and
Metohia ethnic Albanians to unite with Albania is  through a common struggle
with the other peoples of Yugoslavia against the invader and his lackeys. It
is the only way of  winning freedom, when all the peoples, including  ethnic
Albanians,  will  be  able  to   make   their  options  with  a   right   to
self-determination,  including  secession.  The  guarantee  for  it  is  the
National  Liberation Army  of Yugoslavia and the National Liberation Army of
Albania, with which it is closely linked."8
     The  decisions  reached  in  Bunaj,  under which the  name  Metohia was
replaced  by  an  Albanian  term  Rrafshe  Dukadjini,  were  contrary  to  a
declaration by a grand  communist assembly  held  in Jajce in late November,
1943  AVNOJ (the National  Antifascist  Liberation  Council of  Yugoslavia -
NALCY)  at which it was  decided that a new, communist Yugoslavia, headed by
Tito as partisan marshal, be established on a federal principle whereby "all
peoples ... will  be fully free and equal", and the ethnic groups guaranteed
all the rights of an ethnic minority.9 In his instructions to the
communist leaders  in Kosovo  and  Montenegro,  Tito  rejected the decisions
reached in Bunaj,  believing that  they raised issues which  should be dealt
with after the war: he  realized only  too well that his movement would have
lost many followers if he had upheld the demands of the ethnic Albanians, as
he  had proclaimed  in  principle the restoration  of  Yugoslavia within its
prewar  borders.  In  conditions when  the  war  was  not  yet over  and the
establishment of a communist system uncertain, the decision not to touch the
borders of Yugoslavia was the only possible solution.
     The  hostility  of ethnic Albanians  towards Yugoslav partisans did not
wane,  despite efforts  by  party activists to win over fresh adherents. The
membership  of  the  ethnic  Albanian  Balli  Kombetar  increased and  their
national solidarity proved to be stronger  than ideological divisions. After
the capitulation of Italy, the German  occupational  authorities  encouraged
aspirations towards the creation of an ethnic Albania, thus on September 19,
1943, the Second Albanian League was founded on the model of its predecessor
-  the  First Albanian  League (1878), advocating fiercer  clashes  with the
Serbs in Kosovo  and Metohia, and a separate SS-Division Scenderbey was  set
up from the local Albanian forces.
     A delegate  of the partisan Supreme Command, Svetozar Vukmanovic Tempo,
sent  in  1943  to  reorganize  the partisan  units  in Kosovo, Metohia  and
Macedonia,  informed of  "powerful  chauvinist  hatred  between  the  ethnic
Albanians  and  Serbs  ... The extent  of the Albanian  chauvinist animosity
towards the Serbs is evident from the fact that one of our [partisan] units,
comprising ethnic Albanians,  was surrounded by 2,000 armed ethnic  Albanian
peasants, and after several hours of fighting the latter recognized that the
unit comprised ethnic Albanians. They dispersed, leaving the Italians in the
lurch".10 Fresh partisan  units, set up in September  and October
1943, operated  outside Kosovo and Metohia, with  not more than  800  men in
five  battalions. The unit was reorganized  in the summer and fall  of 1944,
but the number of ethnic Albanians remained the same.
     A large-scale revolt of the Balli Kombetar followers and Albanian units
mustered into partisan formations (November-December, 1944), which broke out
after  the retreat of the  German  troops and the establishment of communist
rule  (the liberation  of  Kosovo  was  assisted  at Tito's  request by  two
brigades of  ethnic Albanian partisans) was  thus not unexpected. The revolt
was  crushed  when additional troops were brought in,  and military rule was
set  up in Kosovo and Metohia from February  to May, 1945.  A leading ethnic
Albanian communist from Kosovo maintained contact  with  the outlaws. He was
soon  discovered, but  A. Rankovic,  Tito's  closest  associate at the time,
assessed  that his execution  would  stir  up  a  fresh revolt,  thus he was
appointed   minister   in  the  Serbian   governament.11  Initial
concessions heralding a lenient attitude  towards ethnic Albanians in Kosovo
and  Metohia   were  made   immediately   after  the  new  authorities  were
established: the settlement of at  least 75,000 colonists  from  Albania was
tacitly  legalized, and a special decree  issued on March 16,  1945, forbade
about 60,000 Serbs  settled in the  inter-war period from returning to their
estates.12
     The conflict between the  CPY and the  ethnic Albanians during  the war
was of ideological and state character. The  CPY could not allow the fascist
forces  in Kosovo to create  a Greater Albania  and thus  disrupt the  state
integrality of  the  newly established  communist  Yugoslavia.  Most  ethnic
Albanians continued to support the  Balli Kombetar and  its solution  to the
ethnic  question.  Albanian communists  on  both  sides had hoped  that  the
triumph of communism would bring quicker unification to all Albanians into a
single  state; thus communist Yugoslavia was regarded as the continuation of
the Kingdom.
     1  H.  Bajrami,  Izvestaj  Konstantina Plavsica  Tasi Dinicu,  ministru
unutrasnjih poslova u  Nedicevoj  vladi oktobra 1943, o kosovsko-mitrovackom
srezu, Godisnjak arhiva Kosova XIV-XV (1978-1979), p. 313
     2  S.  Milosevic,  Izbeglice  i  preseljenici na  teritoriji  okupirane
Jugoslavije 1941-1945, Beograd 1981, p.56-104.
     3 V. Djuretic, op. cit., p. 323-325
     4  Documents  published in R. V.  Petrovic, Zavera protiv Srba, Beograd
1990, pp. 137-175, 353-358.
     5  Dj.  Slijepcevic,  Srpsko-arbanaski odnosi kroz vekove  sa  posebnim
osvrtom na novije vreme, Himelstir 19832, pp. 307-336, 3437-455.
     6 The  agreement  with the CPA was  short-lived and  the Balli Kombetar
(set up  in 1942)  entered  into cooperation  with  the  German occupational
forces after the capitulation of Italy (1943)
     7   Zbornik  dokumenata   i  podataka  o   narodnooslobodilackom   ratu
jugoslovenskih naroda, vol. VII, t. 1, Belgrade 1952, pp. 338-339.
     8  A. N.  Dragnich  and  S.  Todorovich,  The Saga of Kosovo.  Focus on
Serbian-Albanian Relations, Boulder Colorado 1984, pp. 143.
     9 Prvo i drugo zasedanje AVNOJ-a, Beograd 1953, pp. 227-228.
     10 Zbornik dokumenata, vol. X, t. 2, p. 153.
     11 S. Djakovic, Sukobi na Kosovu, Beograd 1986, pp. 227-228.
     12 V. Djuretic, op. cit. p.
     Settling accounts with Serbia and the instrumentalization of Kosovo and
Metohia
     However, the ethnic Albanians, both nationalists and communists, failed
to properly assess the CPY's intentions. The question of Kosovo  and Metohia
was an important point of support in the CPY's plan to square  accounts with
Serbia. The squaring of accounts, outlined  in party programs,  could  start
only  with the achievement  of  full  communist domination. Serbia's conduct
during the war provided additional strength to the party's stands: a country
with  bourgeois  traditions  and  small  peasant  landholders,   devoted  to
politically constructive institutions and  the dynasty, leaned  towards  the
Chetnik movement  of  Draza Mihailovic. After failing in Serbia in 1941, the
small-in-number  communists transferred  the  weight  of their operations to
Bosnia, Herzegovina,  Montenegro  and  the  Military Frontier  (Krajina)  in
Croatia, where the entire Serbian population rose against large-scale terror
wrought  by the  Ustashas (the  authorities of  fascist Croatia).  Cunningly
manipulating  the indigent Serbian hilly  population  who, void of developed
state and political traditions, cherished a devotion  to the cult of "mother
Russia"  and patriarchal egalitarianism, the communists managed - by calling
on the  authority of Moscow  - to win over  many of them who  had fallen  in
numerous Chetnik formations after the capitulation of Italy.
     The communists won the  bloody civil war, in which ethnic and religious
divisions were the chief instigators of massacres, owing to crucial aid from
the  Soviet troops which,  in agreement with Tito, crossed  over to Yugoslav
territory in the fall of 1944, and  helped bring the communists to power and
defeat the Yugoslav army  in  the homeland - the Chetnik  movement of  Dr