Geert Lovink on Fri, 26 Mar 1999 17:12:48 +0100 (CET) |
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Syndicate: Kosovo monk (fwd) |
From: "Kevin Dowling" <kdowling@enterprise.net> KEVIN DOWLING 323 Eachelhurst Road, Walmley, Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands B76 1DS Phone: 0121 240 3531 : Fax: 0121 351 7648 Mobile: 0410 401 890 : e-mail: kdowling@enterprise.net sava 1 As bombs fall on Kosovo, a medieval monastery has become the last source of independent news from the devastated region. While its monks hold nighttime vigils in the ancient church at Decani, close to the Albanian border south of Pec, Father Sava Jajic toils over a computer in a library built 663 years ago, before the invention of printing. The bearded 33-year-old Serbian Orthodox monk sends out a daily stream of e-mail messages to 300 journalists, politicians and diplomats around the world describing how his corner of paradise has suddenly become a new circle of hell. With the expulsion of foreign journalists, the closure of the country's only independent radio station and the imposition of censorship on domestic news, Father Sava's has become the lone voice crying out to be heard from the wilderness that is Kosovo today. The monastery at Decani has been on the Balkan front line for centuries. Its crypt contains the bones of Christian knights who routed the Turks at the historic battle of Kosovo in 1389. Today, the monastery's tranquil grounds look out across a wasteland of burned homes and looted shops. Last May, as Serb military and Albanian rebel forces fought beneath the walls, Father Sava's brothers threw open the monastery's doors to refugees from both communities. While the rest of his bretheren tried to drown out the noise of automatic weapons with their chanting, Sava turned to the Internet to plead with opinion-formers world-wide to give peace a chance. Yesty Thursday the man they call "the cybermonk" sent an anguished e-mail to all his correspondents. "As you have probably all heard NATO has started air strikes against Yugoslavia. "Our monastery and my brotherhood are safe so far although the monastery has been flooded with Serb refugees who had been expelled by KLA from their homes during the previous months. "With great regret I must admit that this attack will have very serious counter effects on the peace process in Kosovo. "We are constantly receiving news from the ground. Despite the official promises by the Western governments that the attacks will be launched against military targets only several civilian areas have already been hit by cruise missiles including the village of Gracanica where one of the most sacred Serb Orthodox monastery is situated. "We do not know anything about our sisters in Devic where the new KLA attacks were reported tonight. "Among the civilian victims there are several Krajina refugees in Kursumlija according to the latest reports from radio. "We make a strong protest against these barbarous attacks which will not only stop the humanitarian crisis but will make the humanitarian catastrophe much worse in which the civilian population will suffer the most. " Twenty-four hours before the bombing began, Sava sent out an e-mail message on behalf of the Holy Synod for the Serbian Orthodox Church. "The way of non-violence and cooperation is the only God-blessed way which corresponds to human and heavenly moral laws and experiences," it said. "We remind the responsible leaders of the international community that the evils in Kosovo cannot be righted by an even greater and more immoral evil: bombing of a small, but honorable European nation." "Slobodan Milosevic is playing a wicked game with the emotions of Serbs in Kosovo," reads one of his earlier messages. "In 21st century Europe there is no place for ethnically cleansed territories, terror or crimes. The Holy Scripture teaches us that one cannot love God without first loving one's neighbor." Sava predicts that unless a peaceful compromise can be reached, the small minority of Serbs in Kosovo will pay with their lives for the Belgrade regime's crimes. The heavily-bearded monk rests after his day's routine work before rising at around 1 a.m. to pray - and take advantage of the best connections while he surfs the Net. Father Sava, compiles a daily digest of stories about the conflict from a wide variety of sources and fires them off to his mailing list of influentials. Most days he sends a personal message, too - relying on a network of contacts throughout the Kosovo region. "It's nice to live in a medieval setting," says this thoroughly modern monk. "But that does not mean we are prepared to accept a medieval mentality. "The Internet enables me to speak from the pulpit of my keyboard. Now I'm on a war footing -- this is not a normal routine." Serbian Information Minister Aleksandar Vucic has added Internet offences to a draconian new law governing information which was passed in October. Vucic has decreed that Web publications which commit "verbal or opinion deceit" would be fined $10,000 to $80,000. Father Sava laughs at this law. Recently an article headlined "What's next, Milosevic?" in the magazine "Evropljannin" (European) was banned. Within hours, the monk had picked it up and sent it off to all his readers. Milosevic may grind his teeth - but, so farm, he has not dared move against the Serbian Orthodox Church and Father Sava. Ends 26 March 1999 Sava's address is http://www.egroups.com/list/kosovo/