Serbian Orthodox Church in Kosovo

The Serbian Orthodox Church in Kosovo[lower-alpha 1] is the second largest religious denomination after Islam. It has 100,000-120,000 followers in Kosovo, predominantly made up of the Kosovo Serbs, who mostly live in the North Kosovo region and in some enclaves in the south (such as Štrpce).[1]

During 1999–2004, 140 Serbian Orthodox churches were destroyed. 30 of those were destroyed in the 2004 unrest in Kosovo, and many were destroyed in the 2008 unrest in Kosovo.

Kosovo War

Serbian Orthodox Church supported Miliošević's attempt to end the victimisation of Kosovo Serbs, but it also opposed the use of violence, which resulted in the Serbian Patriarch Pavle publicly criticizing Milosevic in 1990.[2] According to Anna Di Lellio SOC in Kosovo announced a series of strategies to cleanse the Albanian population from Kosovo in the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, prior to Kosovo War.[3]

Annotations

  1. Kosovo is the subject of a territorial dispute between the Republic of Kosovo and the Republic of Serbia. The Republic of Kosovo unilaterally declared independence on 17 February 2008, but Serbia continues to claim it as part of its own sovereign territory. The two governments began to normalise relations in 2013, as part of the 2013 Brussels Agreement. Kosovo is currently recognized as an independent state by 97 out of the 193 United Nations member states. In total, 112 UN member states recognized Kosovo at some point, of which 15 later withdrew their recognition.
gollark: It's possible that this stems partly from differences in perception of what esolangs actually is; esoteric programming language discussion place which happens to have a somewhat weird community in it versus weird community which happens to exist in something nominally for esolang discussion.
gollark: Ah, sinthÖrion.
gollark: I figure people are mostly prompted by *something* instead of just bringing it up entirely at random, and a ControversialEsolangs server would lack many of those prompts if it's purely for that.
gollark: And controversial stuff has never arisen from discussing something else?
gollark: The idea of a "ControversialEsolangs" for that probably wouldn't work well for various reasons, including the difficulty of moving active conversations, cognitive overhead of switching and lots of overhead deciding when to switch, a smaller set of people there even if they could otherwise participate interestingly, and somewhat more difficult-to-express issues like, er, selection effects.

References

  1. United States Department of State
  2. Group, International Crisis (2001). RELIGION IN KOSOVO (PDF). Pristina/Brussels: ICG Balkans Report. p. iii. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  3. Lellio, Anna Di (2006). The Case for Kosova: Passage to Independence. Anthem Press. p. 141. ISBN 978-0-85728-712-0. Retrieved 5 January 2020.


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