| The Heart of Serbia THE EPISCOPE  OF LIPLJAN AND PRIOR OF DEČANI TEODOSIJE, IN AN EXCLUSIVE AUTHORIAL TEXT FOR  THE ”NATIONAL REVIEW”, ABOUT THE ATTEMPTS OF ALBANIZATION OF SERBIAN HERITAGE  IN KOSOVO AND METOHIJADefend the Truth and Identity
 Quasi-historical claims, serving as basis for the systematic attempts to rename  the Serbian heritage in Kosovo and Metohija into Albanian, are so preposterous  and vulgar that unmasking them is needless. However, it is very important to  engage all Serbian spiritual and intellectual forces to present the Serbian  cultural heritage correctly in the insufficiently informed world. The state of  Serbia, through UNESCO and other international organizations, regardless of  the status of the province and international reactions to that status, has the  obligation to ensure an appropriate institutional and safety protection of the  Serbian heritage in that area from further destructions and changes of identity
 
  In  the process of creating a new Albanian artificial state in the space of the  Serbian Province Kosovo and Metohija, for dozens of years a significant  number of Albanian historians and journalists have been working on forging the  history of this area and complete negation of the Serbian share in the  spirituality and culture of the southern Serbian Province. After the  unfortunate events in 1999, under the excuse of an alleged revenge to the  Serbs, during the previous 8 years, the Albanian extremists destroyed or  severely damaged 150 Serbian Orthodox edifices, some of them of invaluable  international significance. Since the Serbian Orthodox Church had a very  moderate political stand both during the war and after it, and since it was  against any kind of violence, regardless of what side it came from, it is  completely clear that the main cause of this systematic destruction of Serbian  heritage was related to the already existing tendencies of erasing Serbian  spiritual and cultural traces and wiping out the Serbian people from the space  where it left internationally recognized cultural and historical monuments to  the European civilization. This process actively began already after World War  II, by creating the Autonomous Province of Kosovo, when the secession ideas  intensified. In  the aggressive ”nation building” process of the Kosovo Albanians, and with the  support of quasi-historians from Tirana who dream about the establishing of a country  of all Albanians, which never existed in history, under the international  administration of the UN, toponyms are systematically changed. The Serbian  Orthodox churches are represented as ”Albanian”, even ”Illyrian”, and the Serbs  are reduced to a minority which historically arrived to the Albanian ethnic  space (the Albanians see themselves as direct successors of the Illyrians) only  to destroy and plunder an already existing civilization. The architecture of  the Nemanjić family is named Albanian-Illyrian, although such a term doesn’t  exist in art history. Even though there is not a single serious historian able  to support these fictive claims with any valid argument, they are today  regularly served to foreigners, to the Kosovo youth, to tourist agencies.
 THE  GREEK LESSON  It is  completely unacceptable for the creators of the new Albanian Kosovo, in which  the Serbs, if they would be able to survive in it at all, should become a  completely marginalized community, to have the most significant monuments of  culture and spirituality belonging to the Serbian Orthodox Church and the  Serbian nation. Hence the attempts to rename overnight what wasn’t already  destroyed in the attacks of vandalism, and turn it into ”Roman Catholic  Albanian churches”. The Serbs, as the Priština historians claim, turned those  churches during the reign of emperor Dušan into Orthodox churches and  suffocated the ”thousand years” of culture of the Albanians-Illyrians, who now  present themselves as one of the oldest Christian European nations. It is  truly needless to unmask the preposterousness of such quasi-historical claims. It  is very important to engage all Serbian spiritual and intellectual potentials  to adequately present the Serbian cultural heritage to the world, and to unmask  the destructive effect of the Kosovarization of Serbian heritage promoters. When  the polemics between Athens and Skopje regarding the name Macedonia, which  geographically and historically has a much wider meaning that the former  Yugoslav republic with this name, reached its peak, all Greek diplomatic  representations, tourist agencies, border crossings had large posters pointing  out the significance of Hellenist Macedonia for the Greek history and culture. Therefore,  it is very important to, in a similar way, scientifically, historically  documented, in written and electronic form, present the Serbian heritage to the  world in the most adequate manner, especially considering the fact that it was  de facto acknowledged during the negotiations in Vienna last year. Then the  Kosovo government, at least formally, took the obligation to respect the  identity and property of the Serbian Orthodox Church in Kosovo and Metohija.
 THE  DUTIES OF THE SERBIAN STATE  The  Serbian spiritual and cultural heritage in Kosovo and Metohija, of course,  represents a part of the general European cultural significance, and as such,  it is important not only for the Serbs and Kosovo Albanians, but for the whole  mankind. However, if Kosovo sets off down the road of unilaterally proclaiming  a quasi-state within Serbia, it is absolutely unacceptable to have this serve  as a motif to completely wipe out the Serbian spiritual and historical  existence in this area. The Serbian state, through UNESCO, international  organizations and forums, regardless of the status of the province and  international reactions to that status, has the obligation to ensure an  appropriate institutional and safety protection of the Serbian heritage in that  area from further destructions and changes of identity. In  this process and in our time, the Serbian Orthodox Church has a special role. As  an everlasting guardian of Serbian sanctities, even in Old Serbia, the Church  has always been one of the most important elements in maintaining the identity  of this, for many reasons, most important part of the Serbian spiritual and  national being.
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 Roman-Byzantine-Gothic-Albanian StyleThe  official web portal of the Kosovo Ministry of Trade and Industry (Department of  Tourism), www.visitkosova.org, on a page with the picture of the Gračanica  monastery from the XIV century, endowment of the Serbian king Milutin Nemanjić,  includes this text (in English, Shqip and Serbian):
 ”The  rich treasury of works created by Albanian architects and artists also include  architectural edifices. (…) Also belonging to these Kosovo landmarks are certain  sacral Paleochristian objects, i.e. churches, which were built and used for  liturgies and religious ceremonies of the Illyrian-Albanian population ever  since the IV century. These objects were destroyed by many barbaric invasions  and conquerors. The ruins of many of these objects can be found in different  parts of Kosovo. Furthermore, a certain number of monumental edifices, such as  monasteries, Albanian-Byzantine style churches, eclectic  Roman-Byzantine-Gothic-Albanian style churches, built during the XIV century,  on the foundations of the Paleochristian objects, managed to resist the ravages  of time. Some monumental architectural objects of the Orthodox faith from this  century are especially worthy, not only for the cultural heritage of the Kosovo  people, but because they are of universal value.”
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