Thursday, October 20, 1988
100th Cong. 2nd Sess.
SPEAKER: HON. HELEN DELICH BENTLEY OF MARYLAND IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
TEXT:
Text that appears in UPPER CASE
identifies statements or insertions which are not spoken by a Member of the
House on the floor.
[*E3561] MRS. BENTLEY. MR. SPEAKER, THE ATTENTION OF THE WORLD HAS BEEN FOCUSED UPON YUGOSLAVIA IN RECENT WEEKS. THAT TROUBLED NATION HAS SEEN ITS ETHNIC POPULATIONS VYING TO THE POINT OF OPEN VIOLENCE FOR DOMINANCE IN THEIR RESPECTIVE AREAS. ONE OF THESE AREAS IS KOSOVO, ABOUT WHICH I HAVE PREVIOUSLY ADDRESSED THIS HOUSE.
I HAVE RECEIVED A LETTER FROM THE
EPISCOPAL VICAR FOR THE SERBIAN ORTHODOX DIOCESE FOR WESTERN EUROPE, ARCHPRIEST
NICOLICH, DATED SEPTEMBER 29, 1988. IT SETS THE CURRENT PROBLEMS IN THEIR
PROPER CONTEXT AND IS DESERVING OF CLOSE ATTENTION AND SCRUTINY. FOR THAT
REASON, I INSERT THAT LETTER WITH ITS ATTACHMENTS IN THE RECORD AT THIS POINT:
SEPTEMBER 29, 1988.
DEAR MADAM, IN THE WESTERN COUNTRIES, THE PROBLEMS FACING THE SERBS OF KOSOVO HAVE NOT BEEN TREATED WITH SUFFICIENT UNDERSTANDING. IN THE PRESS-REPORTS DEALING WITH ETHNIC UNREST IN THAT PROVINCE, IT IS USUALLY STATED THAT THE SERBS ALLEGE PRESSURE BY THE ALBANIANS. MOREOVER, SERBIAN "ALLEGATIONS" ARE OFTEN PRESENTED AS "EXAGGERATED", SINCE FOREIGN JOURNALISTS NEVER HAVE AN OPPORTUNITY TO WITNESS PERSONALLY AN ACT OF ALBANIAN TERROR OVER A SERB OR OVER A GROUP OF SERBS. THE EXODUS OF SERBS FROM THE PROVINCE IS THUS EXPLAINED BY THE SERIOUSNESS OF THE ECONOMIC SITUATION AND BY HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT IN THAT PART OF YUGOSLAVIA.
I AM TAKING THE LIBERTY OF SENDING
YOU A COPY OF THE DECLARATION SIGNED BY FIVE BISHOPS OF THE SERBIAN ORTHODOX
CHURCH IN THE DIASPORA. ITS AIM IS TO BRING TO THE ATTENTION OF THE PUBLIC IN
THE WESTERN WORLD THE PLIGHT OF THE SERBS IN KOSOVO AND TO ASK THE PUBLIC TO
UNDERSTAND THAT THE SERBS HAVE BEEN SUBJECTED TO CRIMINAL SUPPRESSION AMOUNTING
TO GENOCIDE. THE EXAMPLES QUOTED BY THE BISHOPS SHOULD SHOW THAT THE EVENTS IN
KOSOVO ARE NOT SIMPLY THE RESULT OF A DEMOGRAPHIC PROCESS, SOMEWHAT ACERBATED
BY THE DIFFICULT ECONOMIC SITUATION, AS THE MAJORITY OF THE PRESS WOULD HAVE
IT. THE EXODUS OF THE SERBS FROM KOSOVO IS A HUMAN TRAGEDY WHOSE UGLY
BACKGROUND HAS BEEN TOO OFTEN MISREPRESENTED. IT IS HOPED THAT THE PUBLIC WILL
LOOK MORE CLOSELY INTO THIS PROBLEM AND THEN REALIZE THAT THE SERBS FROM KOSOVO
DESERVE SYMPATHY AND SUPPORT.
IT IS WRONG TO ASSUME, AS IT IS
GENERALLY DONE, THAT THE PROBLEM OF KOSOVO STARTED AS LATE AS 1981. A
CONSIDERATION OF THE FOLLOWING FACTS MAY ASSIST IN FORMING A CORRECT OPINION ON
THE ORIGIN OF THE PRESENT TURMOIL.
IN 1941 FASCIST ITALY AND NAZI GERMANY FORMED A "GREATER
ALBANIA" BY ANNEXING THE YUGOSLAV REGIONS OF KOSOVO AND METOHIJA TO THE
STATE OF ALBANIA. THIS WAS COMPLETELY IN THE SPIRIT OF THE POLICY OF THE FORMER
AUSTRO-HUNGARIAN WHICH, AT THE TIME OF THE COLLAPSE OF THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE, HAD
DONE ITS UTMOST TO EXPAND TOWARDS THE SOUTH-EAST OF EUROPE. AS IS WELL KNOWN,
IN THE 19TH AND EARLY 20TH CENTURY THE SERBIAN STATE HAD BEEN A SERIOUS
OBSTACLE TO THAT AMBITION. AS STATED IN THE ENCLOSED BISHOPS' DECLARATION,
BETWEEN 1941-1945, DURING THE EXISTENCE OF THE "GREATER ALBANIA",
60,000 ALBANIANS WERE SETTLED IN KOSOVO AND OVER 100,000 SERBS WERE EXPELLED.
IT IS MOST IMPORTANT TO NOTE THAT THE PROCESS OF ALBANISATION WAS ALLOWED TO
CONTINUE AFTER THE SECOND WORLD WAR. IT SEEMS THAT FOR A NUMBER OF YEARS, IN
THE POST-WAR PERIOD, THE YUGOSLAV REGIME EXPECTED THAT ALBANIA WOULD EVENTUALLY
JOIN YUGOSLAVIA. IN ANY CASE, THE AUTHORITIES OF THE SELF-GOVERNING AUTONOMOUS
PROVINCE OF KOSOVO NOT ONLY DID NOT PREVENT, BUT EVEN ENCOURAGED FURTHER INFLUX
OF ALBANIANS INTO KOSOVO. THE RESULT WAS THAT IN THE LAST FOUR DECADES 250,000
ALBANIANS MOVED INTO THE PROVINCE WHILE 200,000 SERBS AND OTHER NON-ALBANIANS
WERE FORCED TO LEAVE.
It should be born in mind that the Albanians in Kosovo cooperated fully with Mussolini and Hitler. They provided a full-fledged SS Division, the 23rd "Skander-beg", to help the Nazi war effort. In contrast to the post-war situation in Germany and in other countries where the Nazis and their collaborators were fully exposed, this simply did not happen in Kosovo. While elsewhere in the world the young generations were informed about the crimes committed, in Kosovo no steps had been taken to expose the collaborators and to call them to justice. It should not be surprising therefore that the racist demand for an ethnically pure Kosovo remained very much alive among the Albanian inhabitants of the region. It led to countless acts against humanity as the text of the Bishops' Declaration illustrates. To make situation even more complex and indeed absurd, while the perpetrators of crimes against non-Albanians in Kosovo remain unpunished, in contrast, many young Albanians are imprisoned following some of their alleged "anti-state activities". The Amnesty International is very active in defending Kosovo Albanians imprisoned for "political" reasons. However, it seems that because the attacks on Serbs and on other non-Albanians are carried out by Albanian individuals and presumably not by officials under a direct instruction by the authorities, these crimes are outside the Amnesty's interests. Yet the fact that Kosovo autonomous authorities take no steps to protect their non-Albanian citizens and unofficially condone and encourage their persecution, is ignored.
It should be remembered that the Yugoslav Constitution gives full
autonomy to the Serbian regions of Kosovo (incorporating Metohija) and
Vojvodina. The Serbian government cannot interfere in their provincial
Parliments, while both Kosovo and Vojvodina can block decisions in the
Parliament of Serbia in which they are fully represented.
The fact that the federal police
and army have been brought into Kosovo during this year has not yet made any
significant difference. Attacks on non-Albanians and on their property as well
as on their clergy and church property continue.
It must be stressed that is not
impossible for Albanians and non-Albanians in Yugoslavia to live peacefully
together. Many Albanians live and work in other parts of Yugoslavia,
particuarly in Serbia. On Sunday 25th September 1988 the BBC news-bulletin
included a report from Kosovo. A young Albanian from Kosovo was asked whether
he had any Serbian friends. He answered that he had had Serbian friends while
he was serving in the Army, but not in Kosovo.
When dealing with the question of
the future of Kosovo, some elementary principles governing human relations must
be taken into account; they are the right of any person to be allowed to live
in peace on his or her land, to be let to maintain freely the traits of his or
her national identity and to practise without fear his or her religion,
including the respect for the dead. Kosovo is the cradle of Serbain Christain
culture, the cradle of the Serbain nation. Innumerable historic monuments,
whether still standing or in ruins, speak of it.
The injustice which is being done to the Serbs of Kosovo should
shock the whole civilized world and urge its indignation.
Yours truly,
Archpriest M. Nikolich,
Episcopal Vicar.
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[From the London Times, Oct. 1,
1988]
(From Mr. Aleksa Gavrilovic)
Sir, A major disturbance in
Yugoslavia would have a destabilising effect in that [*E3562] part of Europe.
Your leading article (September 13) visualises some Western influence in
connection with economic aid, but the weakness of the federal government gives
cause for concern.
Dr. N. Grisogono expressed the
hope (September 19) that the proposals made in March, 1988, by Serbian intellectuals
for abolition of the one-party system offer hope for the future. However, the
democratisation of the country in the present situation would not easily lead
to a united and strong Yugoslavia.
The first Yugoslavia started in
1918 as a centralised state, but in 1939 Croats negotiated a considerable
measure of autonomy. Serbo-Croat relations worsened during the war due to the
atrocities of Croat Ustasi. One of the reasons for Western powers supporting
Tito was the belief that he would resolve ethnic and religious differences.
Today's reality is that such disagreements are more numerous than ever before,
the problem of Kosovo being the most acute. Had the consequences of the
creation of Great Albania by Italy and Germany in 1941-45 been tackled on time,
the Kosovo problem would have been solved, or at least contained.
The second Yugoslavia has
developed into a confederation of almost independent states which are being led
away from each other. Dessa Trevisan pointed out (report, September 12) that
according to the last census in 1981 there were only 1.2 million Yugoslavs out
of a population of 22.4 million.
However, until recently the
Yugoslav nationality was not even officially recognised. The Constitution,
which lays emphasis on separate nationalities, is having a greater effect than
the much-quoted. Partisan slogan, "fraternity and unity".
At present there are no signs of
meaningful discussions which could lead to a pro-Yugoslav atmosphere. The
Western powers' support of Tito influenced many Yugoslavs to join him. The West
still can influence Yugoslavs. Many of them listened to Western broadcasts,
particularly to the BBC. A firm British attitude in favour of a united
Yugoslavia could prove effective. Serbs are aware that other republics dislike
the fact that the federal capital is in Belgrade. Serb intellectuals gathered
mainly around the Association of Serbian Writers and Philosophical and
Sociological Societies of Serbia and acting as an (unofficial) opposition, have
suggested that parts of the federal administration could be moved out of
Belgrade. The West could offer to finance the creation of a new federal capital
in any area outside the jurisdiction of any republic, away from any large town
and religious centre.
A third, democratic Yugoslavia
which would be acceptable to all should be the aim of the present generation.
Difficulties are enormous and the people need sympathetic help to come out of
the impasse.
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- - -
In Yugoslavia, ever since the end of the Second World War and up to
the present day, persecution of the Serbian population and of their religion
continues in Kosovo and Methoija, regions of their ten centuries' old homeland.
This persecution is being administered by the Albanians, who, after the Second
World War, were given Home Rule as an ethnic minority by some of the highest
policy-makers in Yugoslavia. In this way, the pre-conditions for the
furtherance of the persecution of the Serbian population, and of the Serbian
Orthodox Church, were created.
During the war, the Albanians were the allies of Fascist Italy and
Nazi Germany. They committed untold atrocities against the Serbian population.
Mussolini, in the framework of his plan to create a "Great Albania",
transferred 60,000 people from Albania into the regions of Kosovo and Methohija
while expelling at the same time more than 100,000 Serbs from that territory.
After the war, the highest authorities in Yugoslavia did nothing to
correct that injustice. Moreover, the process of migration of Albanians from
Albania into Yugoslavia, into the regions of Kosovo and Metohija, continued.
Thus, during the last four decades, 260,000 such immigrants arrived and in
order to make room for them, the Albanians drove out, by various terrorist
methods, more than 200,000 Serbs.
Here are some facts about this situation:
Today there are 700 villages and towns where not one Serb remains,
and yet these places were formerly populated exclusively by Serbs. In the areas
which were populated by mixed nationalities, Albanians and Serbs, only 10
percent of the Serbs are still there, but the persecution continues.
Contrary to the foregoing facts, however, the western world is given
false information and outright lies are told about alleged persecutions of
Albanians by Serbs.
It is impossible to list all the crimes against the Serbian
population committed by the Albanians through the centuries. Many books have
been written about the atrocities practised during the occupation of the
Serbian territories by the Ottoman Empire. Under the pressure of the Albanians,
who adopted Islam, a considerable number of Serbs were driven out from Kosovo
and Methohija in two great migrations during the 17th and 18th centuries. It
was at that point in history that the Albanians appeared, for the first time in
greater numbers, on those territories. The same process was repeated during the
First and Second World Wars as well as in the following period when even
without a war we have been witnessing a renewed exodus of the Serbian people
from their homeland.
We are aware that we cannot enumerate all acts of terrorism of the
Albanians against the Serbain people in Kosovo and Metohija. Only the Almighty
God knows the sum-total of the suffering inflicted upon them. We are only
quoting a number of examples of different forms of pressure which have been
used to force out the Serbs, to destroy their culture and to desecrate their
sacred monuments on their territory.
In 1974 the Albanians expelled the brothers Vojin and Velimir
Soskic, together with 17 members of their family, from the village of Papracani
near Decani; having beaten them up at the well, they forced them to leave with
threats and violence. Velimir Soskic now lives in Montenegro while Vojin Soskic
settled in the village of Vrncani near Gorni Milanovac (Serbia).
In 1971 Ljubomir Vucinic was forced out of the village of Ljubovac
near Srbica in Kosovo. Another 80 Serbian families were driven out and only six
families remained there. They were all forced out by threats, barrages of
stone-throwing and the firing of guns around their houses at night.
In the same way, the whole village population was forced to leave
the village of Gornja Prekaza near Srbica. The most respected Serb, Aleksandar
Milosevic, was the last to leave the village with his large family. He is now
employed as a labourer in Belgrade. While the Serbs, were still there, the
Albanians destroyed the Christian Orthodox cemetery. It is known that in that
village since 1960, the Albanians from neighbouring villages were practising
the kind of lawlessness reminiscent of the Turkish Rule: under threat the Serbs
were obliged to surrender to them a quarter of the yield from their fields.
Milan Scepanovic from the village of Dasinovic near Decani refused to abandon
his land. On the 18th July 1971 his neighbour, an Albanian, shot Milan in the
head. The wound caused Milan to lose an eye and an ear but the assailant was
never punished. Milan Scepanovic had to leave his home even though he was a war
veteran who had been decorated for his bravery. He is now living in the village
of Jelenac, near Topola (Serbia).
When left without any males in her family Stanica Pesic of Donje
Ratiste near Decani had her house and 12 acres of land appropriated by her
Albanian neighbour. At the end of three years of long court proceedings, the
court's decision was most baffling: Stanica Pesic was to receive 150.000 Dinars
from the village council and the Albanian neighbour was to keep the house and
the land in his possession. That sum was just sufficient for Stanica to buy the
train tickets for herself and her four daughters.
On the land of the brothers Djurisic, near Decani, several Albanian
houses were built without the consent of the owners. Following that, the
Djurisic brothers were expelled from the remaining land.
The village authorities cut down three times the orchards of Mirko
and Mirka Stefanovic in the centre of Decani under the pretext that it was
necessary for the planning of the motorway. Three more houses of their
neighbours, also Serbs, were knocked down.
On the 28th of October 1982, a 12-year-old boy, Dejan Antunovic was
set upon by some Albanians who grabbed him in the street at mid-day, doused him
with petrol and set him alight. His anorak helped to save his life but he
received severe burns.
There is a long list of evil deeds, torments and crimes to which the
nuns from the Serbian monasteries in Kosovo are being subjected. In 1981, in
the monastery of the Holy Trinity in Musutiste the Albanians blinded a bull
belonging to the monastery. They rammed a rake into the stomach of a cow which
was in calf and killed her. The same year they drove nails into the testicles
of the rams belonging to the monastery; they also cut down the monastery's
forest. The Albanians of the village Grazdel waited in ambush for the nuns to
beat them up. The nuns dared not go about freely with their work on their land.
The Albanians forcibly removed building material from the yard of the
monastery. Nuns Vera and Angelina were viciously beaten. Albanian youths beat
up nun Stanka and attacked and attempted to rape nun Heruvima, aged 50.
In the same monastery, in 1982, a Roman Catholic nun from Croatia
came to stay with the nuns as their guest. She wanted to see the ancient altar
screen and some ancient holy books preserved in the convent. One day, while
returning to the monastery from a visit to two of her acquaintances, also
Catholic nuns, she was stopped by three young Albanians who raped her, beat her
up and robbed her. She obtained a medical certificate from a Ugandan doctor, Dr.
Sirijaza, who was practising there. However, no action was taken against the
thugs who were from the village of Rakovac. The police chief inspector there
declared that, in his opinion "the rape of a nun is not a rape at
all". He merely took the gold chain and [*E3563] cross which the thugs had
taken from the nun and returned them to her.
In the ancient city of Prizren, renowned for its numerous churches
and remains of a long and brilliant Christian tradition, Milorad Sredic,
student of the Prizren College of Theology, was stabbed twice by some Albanians
who wanted to stop him from entering the College. Another Serbain student was
beaten up while walking with other students through the town. Bishop Pavle of
Raska-Prizren was three times attacked and beaten in the street.
In 1982, the Albanians set fire to the building of the Patriarchate
in PEC. The old living quarters were burnt down and part of the old library and
treasury room also suffered. The authorities failed (refused) to send the
fire-brigade. For eight hours the nuns had to fight on their own, not only the
fire but also the arsonists themselves.
It is not possible to enumerate all the sufferings inflicted upon
Paraskeva, the Abbess of the monastery of Devic. Mother Paraskeva has only one
arm; the Albanians broke that arm so she can no longer make the sign of the
cross. They are continuously ravaging the monastic estate, threatening the nuns
on killing their cattle.
On the 3rd June 1982, in the village of Samodreza near Vucitrn, an
Albanian killed Danilo Milincic, aged 22. Three Albanian youths drove his
cattle away, knocked Danilo down and spread him on the ground. Then their
father Mujo Ferat, who had moved in from Albania only in 1972, knelt on
Danilo's stomach and shot him through the heart. Danica, Danilo's mother, tried
in vain to shield her son with her own body. On the same spot, ten years
earlier, the Albanians had killed Danilo's father, Slavoljub and twenty years
before, exactly in the same spot they killed Danilo's grandfather, also called
Danilo.
The church of Samodreza was desecrated many times. It is a
well-known Serbian shrine: according to tradition, it was to that church that
Prince Lazar brought the Serbian army to Holy Communion on the eve of the
battle against the Turks in Kosovo in 1389; it was there that after the battle,
the body of the hero-warrior Milos Obilic was laid to rest. The priest from
Vucitrn cannot attend the church in Samodreza not even in the daytime. Until 15
years ago 200 Serbian families lived in this area and much greater numbers
lived their in the past. Nowadays there remain only six of them and these are
all households of elderly people. As recently as August 1988 the frescoes of
the church in Samodreza were damaged by the Albanians. Graves were dug out and
bones scattered around the church yard.
Countless cemeteries in Serbian villages and towns in Kosovo and
Metohija are being continuously demolished.
At the end of July 1982 in the village of Mece near Djakovica,
Miodrag Saric was killed in his own back yard at the thirtieth attempt on his
life. He left a widow and four children who could bear witness to the crimes
against their family committed by the Albanians and most of all by the local
Chief of Police, Djerdjo Bibljekaj and his Deputy, Causi. The Albanians
appropriated Saric's land of 17 acres, poisoned the well in the yard and even
the dog that guarded the well. They killed their last horse with a chain. Two
months after the murder of Miodrag Saric, the Albanians shot his eldest son,
Aleksander. The younger son, Mitar aged 14, was struck on the head by a stone
thrown by a Albanian in the middle of the street in Djakovica, causing
grievious bodily harm. The Saric family now lives with the assistance of the
Church and people of good-will who collect for them. They are the last
remaining Serbian family in that part of the country. They have nowhere else to
go.
At the University of Pristina, in 1971, Serbian students were beaten
up during an escalation of the Albanian nationalism; a recurrence of the
incident took place on the 2nd April 1981.
Alabanians burned down the forest adjacent to the house belonging to
Dusan Bijelic from the village of Gornji Ratis. He was set upon at home when
Albanians broke down the doors and smashed in the windows and took away the
chickens the bee-hives and all the money that was in the house.
Milan Vlahovic and Batric Perovic, from the village of Pozar, fared
in the same way; their children were beaten up inside the house and the
haystacks were set on fire.
Hundreds more examples could be given. Bratimir Toskovic of Pristina
had a "Molotov Cocktail" twice thrown in over his balcony and through
the window of his home.
In the village of Dolac, near Klina, the Babic brothers were first
stabbed with knives, then, as they were returning from the fields, some
Albanians ambushed them. First they dug a spade into Bogosav Babic's ribs and
split open his skull with an ax; his brother, Bozidar, was killed on the spot
and the third brother Bogoljub, although wounded, managed to escape into the
village.
Seventy wounds were counted on his body. Despite the injuries which
Bogosav sustained, he survived. Sometime later Bogolujb too was killed. The
Babic brothers have been the prize-winner in agriculture in Kosovo so the
Albanians hacked down their vine-yards and orchards, destroying them
completely. The one remaining brother Bogosav Babic is still being subjected to
attacks and his house was raided by Albanian militia-men as well.
A 15-year-old girl from the Rajic family was raped, according to the
testimony of Bogosav Babic. In Dolac and its neighbourhood alone, 15 Serbian
girls were raped by Albanians in the course of 8 months.
In a nearby village, in broad daylight, from their open gate,
Albanians shot Milan Petrovic, a high-school pupil as he was returning from
school. He was wounded in the hip, but as the bullet was of the
"Dum-Dum" type, Milan remained permanently crippled in both legs. In
Klina, a 70-year-old woman was raped. The press did not reveal her name in
order to protect the family's honour.
On the 1st May 1985 Djordje Martinovic, aged 50, was impaled in his
own field, just outside the village of Gnjilane. The Albanains first stunned
him drove a wedge through his anus and then pushed a beer bottle up through the
colon to the stomach and rib-cage. This is reminiscent of the punishment meted
out to the Serbs by the Turks in earlier times. Djordje Martinovic survived but
the attackers have not been brought to justice.
The daughter of Milosav Lazic of Batusa village near Pristina, was
raped. This 14-year-old girl was dragged away in broad daylight by Albanians in
front of the school in Donje Dobrevo village.
The 7-year-old daughter of M. Rancic, originally from the Batusa
village, was raped. The family was living in great poverty in Pristina, next to
the hospital, in a toolshed which was left there after completion of the
building. The girl described her most frightful ordeal on television but the
public soon forgot about it under the onslaught of new assaults and rapes which
followed within the next days.
In the village of Palez, near Vitina, 14 Serbian girls from 11
Serbian families were raped by Albanians in one year.
In PEC, in 1983, Albanians set fire to the studio of the artist
Radoslav Miketic.
At the end of June 1986, the whole Serbian village of Batusa fled
from the village to seek refuge in front of the unabated terror. Batusa had
been a Serbian village for centuries. Among the refugees were children, old
people and the dying. Serbian families from other villages joined them. Their
attempt to save their lives was thwarted by the local Militia who pillaged the
belongings which the refugees were carrying, and beat them up. The refugees
were told that they could move away, but only one by one. They were not allowed
to leave in groups as that would have constituted a political provocation.
The persecution of our people and our church continues. In August
1988 Mother Tatiana, the Abbess of the 14th century monastery of Gracanica was
twice attacked and assaulted.
We must emphasise that the Serbian and other non-Albanian population
in the Kosovo and Metohija regions are not protected by law. Albanians
committing crimes against them have not been prosecuted nor punished. We,
Bishops of the Serbian Orthodox Church, will condem any misdeeds by the Serbs
against the Albanians, should they happen. At the same time we do appeal to the
civilised world to show more understanding for the real suffering of our people
and to show concern for their endangered church and tradition in Kosovo and
Metohija.
Serbian Orthodox Bishops:
Dr. Firmilijan: Diocese of Midwestern America.
Lavrentije: Diocese of Western Europe.
Hristofor: Diocese of Eastern America.
Georgije: Diocese of Canada.
Longin: Diocese of Australia and New Zealand.