Foreword from the book 
				Destruction 
				of Islamic Heritage in the 1998-1999 Kosovo War 
				By András Riedlmayer
				May 2014
				Since ancient 
				times, Kosovo has been a crossroads of the Balkans, where the 
				great religious and cultural currents of the Mediterranean world 
				have met and interacted with each other and with rich indigenous 
				traditions. These cultural interactions have given Kosovo a 
				remarkable legacy, including a still thriving, 600-year-old 
				European Islamic tradition, a part of its heritage that deserves 
				to be better known. The oldest Islamic sites in Kosovo are 
				linked to the memory of Sari Saltuk Baba (d. 1298), a legendary 
				Sufi master from Anatolia, who, accompanied by a group of this 
				dervishes, traveled and preached Islam in the region a century 
				before the arrival of the Ottomans. However, the first major 
				monuments of Islamic religious architecture in Kosovo are 
				connected with the establishment of Ottoman rule in Kosovo in 
				the 1400s.
				The Ottoman 
				sultans and their local officials—many among the latter being 
				natives of the region—established pious endowments (vakuf or 
				waqf) for the building of mosques, medresas (theological 
				schools), mektebs (schools for Qur’an-readers), Islamic 
				libraries, charity soup kitchens, hamams (bath-houses), tekkes 
				(dervish lodges of the Sufi lay brotherhoods), and bazaar shops, 
				whose rents supported these charitable and religious 
				institutions.
				Notable 
				Islamic monuments from the early Ottoman period in Kosovo 
				include the Mosque of Sultan Murad (built 1389-1440), in 
				Prishtina, the Mosque and hamam of Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror 
				(1461), in Prishtina, and the Bazaar Mosque (1471), in Peja—all 
				of them endowed by Ottoman emperors. The Ghazi Ali Beg Mosque 
				(1410) in Vushtrria, and the mosque and hamam of Hajji Hasan Beg 
				(1462-85), in Peja, were founded by early Ottoman governors. The 
				Llap Mosque (1470), in Prishtina, was endowed by a pious local 
				Muslim resident.
				Mosques and 
				other Islamic monuments continued to be built in Kosovo 
				throughout the period of Ottoman rule. Much of this construction 
				took place during the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, 
				by which time the majority of Kosovo’s population, including 
				most Kosovo Albanians but also many Slavs, had become Muslims. 
				Many of them rose to join the Ottoman elite as soldiers, 
				statesmen, Islamic jurists and scholars. Some attained the 
				highest posts. Between 1453 and 1912, close to 40 of the 
				individuals who held the office of grand vizier, the chief 
				minister who ruled the Ottoman Empire in the name of the sultan, 
				were ethnic Albanians.
				From the 
				sixteenth century on, the great majority of the patrons who 
				endowed mosques and other Islamic institutions in Kosovo were 
				local people, as were the builders and craftsmen who built them. 
				The styles and methods of construction of Islamic monuments in 
				Kosovo reflected local tastes and building techniques, as well 
				as broader trends in Balkan and Ottoman architecture.
				In Kosovo’s 
				mountainous west and on the Dukagjin plateau, mosques were often 
				built in the same manner and of the same materials as the kullas, 
				the traditional Albanian tower-houses of the region—the house of 
				God taking on the form of the houses of the faithful. Notable 
				examples of this regional style are the Çok Mosque (1580), near 
				Junik, and the Mosque of Deçan (1813). In many mosques and 
				tekkes (dervish lodges) in Kosovo, local craft techniques were 
				employed to good effect in elaborately carved wooden ceilings 
				and other interior decorations, as seen in the Defterdar Mosque 
				(1570) and the Kurshumli Mosque (1577) in Peja and in the tekke 
				of Sheh Islam Efendi (1881) in Gjilan.
				Islamic 
				religious architecture of the eighteenth and nineteenth century 
				in Kosovo was distinguished by the exuberant use of colour and 
				by the murals depicting landscapes, architecture and floral 
				motifs that covered the interior walls of mosques. This painted 
				decoration was a characteristic feature of mosques built during 
				this period, among them the Red Mosque in Peja (1744) and the 
				splendid Jashar Pasha Mosque in Prishtina (1834). Lavish mural 
				paintings were also used to decorate older mosques that were 
				renovated at this time, such as the Hadum Mosque in Gjakova 
				(built 1592-95, renovated in 1842), the Sinan Pasha Mosque in 
				Prizren (built 1615, renovated in the early 19th century), and 
				the Bazaar Mosque in Peja (built 1471, renovated by Haxhi Zeka 
				in the late 19th century). The first Balkan War (1912) brought 
				an end to the long centuries of Ottoman rule in Kosovo, which 
				was partitioned between Kingdom of Serbia and the Kingdom of 
				Montenegro. Following the end of the First World War, the two 
				kingdoms merged to form a new state, which in 1929 was renamed 
				Yugoslavia.During the 70 years that followed, not very many 
				mosques were built in Kosovo and some were destroyed or seized 
				by the authorities.
				At the end of 
				Ottoman rule in 1912, Prishtina had 18 mosques. At the end of 
				World War II in 1945, there were still 16 mosques left. The new 
				communist Yugoslav regime that took power after the war closed 
				all but five of the city’s mosques, turning them into warehouses 
				and other secular uses. As part of a socialist urban redesign of 
				the centre of Prishtina in the 1950s, three historic mosques 
				were ordered razed by the authorities, among them the Llokaç 
				Mosque (built 1551). Some of the city’s closed mosques were 
				allowed to reopen for worship during the era of political 
				liberalization in the 1970s an d early 1980s, but no new mosques 
				were built in Prishtina between 1912 and the end of the 
				twentieth century.
				Mosques and 
				other Islamic heritage sites elsewhere in Kosovo did not fare 
				significantly better during the communist period. In the centre 
				of Prizren, the historic Arasta Mosque (built 1594) was torn 
				down in 1963 to make way for a new post office and market 
				stalls; only its minaret was left standing, as a ‘civic 
				monument’. In Peja, the sixteenth-century Kurshumli Mosque was 
				closed after the end of the Second World War and turned into an 
				arms depot for the Yugoslav army. It was returned to worship 
				after a lapse of twenty years in 1965. In the post-war years, 
				the regime also suppressed Islamic religious education and 
				seized the property of the pious endowments that had sustained 
				the mosques and their activities. However, some mosques 
				continued to be built in villages, remote from the centres of 
				power. About two dozen of the mosques documented in this volume 
				were built between 1945 and 1989. Although the 1990s in Kosovo 
				were years of severe repression in most respects, communist-era 
				restrictions on the building and repair of mosques were eased 
				somewhat during this final decade of Belgrade’s rule, at least 
				outside of the major cities. Close to 20 of the mosques listed 
				in this volume were built or reconstructed in the 1990s. In some 
				cases, unfortunately, this new building activity also involved 
				damage or destruction of Islamic heritage.
				More than 
				two-thirds of the 560 active mosques in Kosovo on the eve of the 
				1998-1999 war were buildings dating from the Ottoman era. Many 
				of these were monuments of historical and architectural 
				significance. However, this part of Kosovo’s cultural and 
				religious heritage received relatively little attention from the 
				state authorities charged with the protection of monuments.
				Between 1947 
				and 1990, a total of 425 monuments and sites in Kosovo were 
				officially designated for state protection. These included 96 
				archaeological sites, 16 cemeteries, 116 secular buildings and 
				monuments, and 174 religious sites. Of the last category, 139 
				were Orthodox churches or monasteries, while only 32 Islamic 
				religious monuments had been listed for protection. Since listed 
				sites received priority in attention and in conservation funding 
				from state agencies, this meant that by the 1990s much of 
				Kosovo’s Islamic built heritage was in a dilapidated state, 
				after decades of neglect. In practice, the authorities not only 
				failed to provide the funds and expertise needed for the 
				preservation of these historic houses of worship, they allowed 
				even listed Islamic monuments to be altered or demolished 
				without intervening. The years of peacetime neglect were 
				followed by the massive wartime destruction of Kosovo’s Islamic 
				religious heritage in 1998-1999. As has been documented in this 
				book, roughly 40 percent of Kosovo’s 560 mosques were damaged or 
				destroyed during the war.
				The damage in 
				most cases was clearly the result of deliberate attacks directed 
				against the mosques. There is evidence of explosives planted in 
				the mosque or inside the minaret, of artillery projectiles aimed 
				at the minaret, and of mosques set ablaze. In some places, the 
				mosque was the only building in the vicinity that had been 
				singled out for attack. More often, the destruction of a mosque 
				was accompanied by the burning of the surrounding homes of the 
				local Albanian residents. The devastation of Islamic sacral 
				sites was widespread and systematic, with few areas of Kosovo 
				left untouched.
				Among the 
				worst hit was the northwestern region of Peja, where every one 
				of 49 Islamic sites was attacked in 1998 and 1999. Among the 
				sites targeted were the region’s 36 mosques (half of them dating 
				from the 15th-18th centuries), the offices, archives and library 
				of Peja’s Islamic Community Council, a historic medresa, a 
				15th-century hamam (Turkish baths), 9 schools for Qur’an readers 
				(mekteb), one dervish lodge (tekke), and several mosque 
				libraries.
				In some 
				places, those responsible for these attacks had left behind 
				their “signatures”— in the form of anti-Albanian and 
				anti-Islamic graffiti in Serbian scrawled on mosque walls, or in 
				the deliberate desecration of Islamic sacred scriptures, torn 
				apart by hand, defiled and burned. Examples of this sort could 
				be seen in the Gjyfatyn Mosque in Peja, the Mosque of Carraleva, 
				the Mosque of Livoç i Poshtëm, and the Mosque of Stanofc i 
				Poshtëm, and in a number of other mosques. Of the 218 mosques 
				and 11 tekkes in Kosovo that were destroyed or damaged during 
				the war, 22 mosques and 8 tekkes were in the most severe damage 
				categories. Among these, 13 mosques and 5 tekkes were completely 
				razed, the ruins levelled by bulldozer; 9 mosques and 3 tekkes 
				were reduced to rubble, but the ruins were not bulldozed. Among 
				examples of completely levelled Islamic houses of worship are 
				the Bazaar Mosque (built 1761-62; renewed 1878), in Vushtrria, 
				the Ibër Mosque (built 1878) in Mitrovica, the Mosque of Halil 
				Efendi in Dobërçan (1526), the Mosque of Loxha (1900), and the 
				Bektashi tekke in Gjakova (1790). More than 100 other mosques in 
				Kosovo suffered serious structural damage from explosives or 
				fires. Many of these mosques were completely burned out, their 
				roofs collapsed, the interiors open to the sky with a carpet of 
				burnt roof tiles underfoot, and only the four outer walls left 
				standing.
				An additional 
				95 mosques suffered lesser degrees of damage, ranging from shell 
				holes in the walls, through the roof or in the shaft of the 
				minaret, to vandalism, including fires set inside the mosque, 
				smashed-up interior furnishings, and the desecration of sacred 
				scriptures.
				A total of 31 
				mosques and 2 tekkes (dervish lodges) were attacked by Serb 
				forces during the first year of the war, in the spring and 
				summer of 1998. Two-thirds of these religious buildings were 
				burned down, blown up or otherwise destroyed or seriously 
				damaged. Ten of the mosques that were damaged during 1998 were 
				subjected to repeat attacks and further damage during the spring 
				of 1999.
				During the 
				second year of the war in 1999, a total of 197 mosques and 9 
				tekkes in Kosovo were damaged or destroyed by Serb forces. One 
				mosque, in the village of Jabllanica (Prizren region), had its 
				roof partly destroyed by a NATO air strike in the spring of 
				1999. Otherwise, the destruction of mosques and of other Islamic 
				heritage in Kosovo during the war was entirely attributable to 
				attacks from the ground, carried out by Serbian troops, police 
				and paramilitaries, and in some cases by Serb civilians.
				The 
				destruction also encompassed the written record of Islamic 
				religious and cultural life in Kosovo. The Central Historical 
				Archives of the Islamic Community of Kosovo were burned by 
				Serbian police in June 1999, hours before the arrival of the 
				first NATO troops in Prishtina. Six of the regional archives of 
				the Islamic Community were also attacked and wholly or partially 
				destroyed, among them the archives of the Islamic Community 
				Councils in Peja, Gjakova, Gllogoc, Lipjan, Peja, Skenderaj, and 
				Suhareka.
				Kosovo’s 
				Islamic religious libraries were also singled out for 
				destruction. Notable losses include the manuscripts and old 
				books of the library of Hadum Syleiman Efendi in Gjakova, 
				founded in 1595 and burned in 1999, as well as the libraries of 
				dervish lodges in Gjakova, Mitrovica and Peja, also destroyed in 
				1999. However, the losses go far beyond this. Many old mosques 
				in Kosovo had been endowed with collections of Qur’an 
				manuscripts and Islamic religious books that were destroyed or 
				damaged in 1998-1999.
				Among the 
				historic centers of Islamic culture in Kosovo, only the city of 
				Prizren escaped largely unscathed. The only Islamic monument 
				destroyed in Prizren was a small building, part of the Medresa 
				of Ghazi Mehmed Pasha, in which the League of Prizren, a group 
				of Albanian civic leaders campaigning for autonomy within the 
				Ottoman Empire, met in 1878. The building, which housed a 
				memorial museum of the nineteenth-century Albanian national 
				revival, was destroyed by Serbian police in March 1999.
				Remarkably, 
				not a single Serb Orthodox church or monastery in Kosovo was 
				damaged or destroyed by Albanians during the 1998-1999 conflict. 
				Unfortunately that changed after the end of the war, as 
				thousands of Albanian refugees who had been forced out of Kosovo 
				during the war returned to their burned-out home towns and 
				villages. Following the end of hostilities in June 1999, dozens 
				of Serb Orthodox churches and monasteries were damaged in 
				revenge attacks. Some 40 Serb Orthodox sites were vandalized, 
				while another 40 suffered serious structural damage or were 
				destroyed completely. Many of these buildings were village 
				churches, some of them built during the previous decade. But 
				about 15 to 20 of the destroyed churches dated from the medieval 
				period. By the end of the summer of 1999, as a result of the 
				efforts of KFOR and the UN administration to restore order, and 
				in response to public appeals by Kosovo Albanian political and 
				religious leaders, attacks on Serb Orthodox religious sites 
				largely ceased.
				This book is 
				an attempt to document, to the extent possible, the Islamic 
				sacral heritage of Kosovo that was lost during the 1998-1999 
				war. As Kosovo and its people come to terms with the painful 
				memories of the recent past and work towards a common future it 
				is well to recall that, for most of Kosovo’s long history, 
				houses of worship were protected by all communities and had 
				traditionally been held immune from personal and communal 
				vendettas. The rich cultural heritage that remains in Kosovo, 
				despite the ravages of time and the destruction of war, is the 
				common patrimony of all of Kosovo’s people. It is up to them, as 
				it was up to their forefathers, to jointly value and preserve it 
				for future generations.
				
					András 
				Riedlmayer directs the Documentation Centre for Islamic 
				Architecture of the Aga Khan Program at Harvard University. In 
				1999-2001, Riedlmayer and his colleague Andrew Herscher, an 
				architect and architectural historian, conducted a post-war 
				field survey of cultural heritage in Kosovo. The results of the 
				field survey were submitted to the UN Interim Administration 
				Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) and to the UN war crimes tribunal for 
				the former Yugoslavia (ICTY). He has since testified about these 
				findings as an expert witness at the war crimes trial of former 
				Serbian president Slobodan Milošević and in several other cases 
				before the ICTY.
				
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