Part 5 - Kosovo economy &  myths of Alb heroism & anti-fascism

 

 

KOSOVO'S ECONOMY UNDER THE YUGOSLAV COMMUNIST SYSTEM

(1945-1989)

 

Sources quoted here are American scholars: Bernd Fischer, Julie Mertus (from her book: Kosovo: how Truths and Myths started a War) and Kosovar Riza Sapunxhiu: the highest ranking Yugoslav Albanian, ex-president of the SFRJ rotating presidency and ex-president of SFRJ's economy, as well as US and UK newspaper & magazine articles, Serbia Telekom’s telephone directory and other secondary sources. There are also statements made by German WWII Generals: Fitzhun and Schmidthuber. In addition to the book, Albanian Identities: Myth and History, Mertus' book, Kosovo: how Myths and Truths started a War.

 

The position taken here is that Communist Yugoslavia was a Croat/Slovene group-strategy that enlisted the help of Albanian and Bosnian Muslims as well as disloyal and opportunistic Serbs, from its founding in 1945 until the Anti-Bureaucratic Revolution of 1989 that saw Milosevic purge the League of Communists of Serbia and Montenegro of such members. In this section, we will address the ludicrous claims by Albanian nationalists that Communist Yugoslavia ever oppressed Albanians, either during Tito's lifetime or any time afterwards.

 

We jump to post-1960 Kosovo and consult American scholar Julie Mertus:

 

...while the number of Serbs in Kosovo with jobs (26% of the total employed) was 12% higher than their share of the population. On the other hand, because more Serbs were seeking jobs, the Serbs share of the UNEMPLOYED in Kosovo was consistently higher relative to their share of he population. In sum, the economic situation in Kosovo was bad for everyone.

 

            Julie Mertus

            Kosovo: How Myths and Truths Started a War

            Page: 27

http://www.oocities.org/CapitolHill/Lobby/7681/faqe_mertus_27.jpg

 

One of the major complaints of Kosovo Albanians is that they were economically 'oppressed' within the Yugoslav economic system, while the Serbs allegedly had all the power. While one would expect that such claims by Albanian nationalists would awaken them to how badly Albanians had treated Serbs within the Ottoman power structure - it does not. The Albanian historical memory is deliberately conditioned by Albanian Muslim elites to be selective (see: Perpjekja 3). The evidence cited will show that Albanians were not only NOT oppressed within the Yugoslav Communist system - they were the oppressors.

 

It is necessary to consult Albanian experts in order to understand how the Kosovo economy really functioned and who really suffered from whatever forces shaped it and what those forces were:

 

The highest-ranking Kosovar economist, Riza Sapunxhiu, who in 1981 was vice-president of the economy, contends that any criticism of the state economy in 1981 was unwarranted. "We were doing everything we could" he says. "People were impatient."        

 

            Julie Mertus

            Kosovo: How Myths and Truths Started a War

            Page: 27

http://www.oocities.org/CapitolHill/Lobby/7681/faqe_mertus_27.jpg

 

Not only is Mr. Sapunxhiu a Kosovo Albanian and president of the SFRJ economy: he was also president of SFRJ for a year when he served on Yugoslavia's rotating presidency in the 1980s. Sapunxhiu's colleague, Dragomir Vojnic elaborates:

 

Vojnic attributes much of the developmental difficulties between the regions to a historical inheritance that could not easily disappear. The people who lived in Kosovo looked for a target for their frustrations.

 

            Julie Mertus

            Kosovo: How Myths and Truths Started a War

            Page: 27

http://www.oocities.org/CapitolHill/Lobby/7681/faqe_mertus_27.jpg

 

In other words, Kosovo was poorer than any part of Yugoslavia because it was the longest under Ottoman rule. This is something that the Muslim Kosovo Albanians were directly responsible for because of their complicity and support of the Ottoman system and their earlier resistance to secular Serbian education (see: section 1 above). Kosovo remained poor in spite of earlier Serb efforts to modernize the backward Albanian population.

 

Albanian bureaucrats who took control of Kosovo in 1968 caused most of the problems, after Tito gave the province near republic status, after Rankovic was accused of corruption on trumped up charges.

 

...many Serbs pointed to the waste, inefficiency and incompetence of the Albanian bureaucrats who took over in the 1970s, as well as the large Albanian family structure that greatly taxed social resources.   

 

            Julie Mertus

            Kosovo: How Myths and Truths Started a War

            Page: 27

http://www.oocities.org/CapitolHill/Lobby/7681/faqe_mertus_27.jpg

 

After Tito removed Rankovic as Serbian president under trumped up charges, a policy of 'affirmative action' was instituted in Kosovo. As is usual with such policies that mask discrimination under the smokescreen of a petty euphemism: inefficiency resulted. Unqualified Albanians were promoted to posts held by qualified Serbs. This failed and worsened Kosovo's economy because the Muslim Albanians had consistently shunned secular education during the inter-war period. Few Albanians were educated. The new Albanian leadership was responsible for the problems in Kosovo from 1968 to 1989.

 

Julie Mertus gives insight into how the situation was viewed by both sides: 

 

Commentators on both sides said the situation was made worse by the exodus of experts from Kosovo, mainly Serbs and Montenegrins...

 

Serbs... contend that the experts had been forced out due to the discriminatory policies of Kosovo Albanians.

 

Albanians contend that the emigration resulted from "the loss of privileges they had enjoyed and their reluctance to accept equality with Albanians"

 

            Julie Mertus

            Kosovo: How Myths and Truths Started a War

            Page: 27

http://www.oocities.org/CapitolHill/Lobby/7681/faqe_mertus_27.jpg

 

Let us examine the Albanian POV:

 

"Albanians contend that the emigration (of Serbs from Kosovo) resulted from 'the loss of privileges they had enjoyed and their reluctance to accept equality with Albanians'"

 

The only privileges Serbs enjoyed in Rankovic-era Kosovo was nominal equality with an Albanian population that had just collaborated with Adolph Hitler (see: Perpjekja 5) and had expelled 200 000 Serbs from Kosovo which Tito did not allow to return (see: Miranda Vickers: Between Serb and Albanian), participated in a 400 year oppression of Serb and other Balkan Christians, including Albanians, during the Ottoman era and shunned attempts by Serbia at multi-cultural, secular education in the interwar period (see: section 1 above).

 

As far as Serbs contending that "the Serbian experts had been forced out due to the discriminatory policies of Kosovo Albanians," we have 30+ newspaper and magazine articles from such sources as: New York Times, The Herald-Tribune, the Sun-Times and other American and UK media pieces from the 1980s, that chronicle the ethnic cleansing and expulsion of 150 000 Serbs from Kosovo under the Kosovo Albanian leadership:

 

http://www.oocities.org/aia_skenderbeg/......

 

 

Finally, regarding Kosovo's economy: in reality Kosovo and Slovenia experienced the highest PROPORTIONAL growth compared to any republic in Yugoslavia:

 

http://www.photius.com...

 

As to allegations that Serbs will not accept equality with Albanians, one only need to examine Serbia Telekom's telephone directory and search for common Albanian last names in bigger cities like Belgrade, Novi Sad, Nis in order to see that Albanians live so freely within Serbia that they are not afraid to list their names, address and telephone numbers:

 

http://www.telekom.yu...

 

Kosovo's economy was mismanaged by unqualified Albanian authorities (installed by Tito after '68) and that these authorities pursued a policy of ethnic cleansing against the Serb population that had survived Albanian oppression in Ottoman Times and WWII. Albanian claims of "oppression" in the Yugoslav communist system and under the Serbian monarchy are baseless and are nothing more than a smokescreen for the Muslim Albanian nationalist elites to promote Serbophobia, instability and separatism in order to maintain their grip on power (also see: Perpjekja 1 & 3).

 

 

 

POSTSCRIPT: THE MYTH OF ALBANIAN BRAVERY

 

In this section we will analyze the reports of WWII German generals who occupied Kosovo and relied on the Albanian population for political support and troops:

 

SS General Josef Fitzhun, charged with the creation of a regular army for the puppet regime of Rexhep Mitrovica blamed his failure on the Albanian officer corps,   which he complained was not only worthless but filled with pederasts (homosexual pedophiles)

 

Bernd J Fischer

            Perceptions and Reality in 20th Century Albanian Military Prowess

            Page: 140        

 

Quoted from:

Albanian Identities: Myth and History

Edited by: Stephanie Schwandner-Sievers & Bernd J. Fischer

http://www.oocities.org/CapitolHill/Lobby/7681/faqe_140.jpg

 

 

To show that Fitzhun's experience was not an isolated incident, we turn to another source:

 

General August Schmidthuber commander of the SS Skenderbeg Division, explained his failure by suggesting that the legend of Albanian military heroics was just a saga and that he personally could chase them all around the world with light grenade-launcher.

           

Bernd J Fischer

            Perceptions and Reality in 20th Century Albanian Military Prowess

            Page: 140        

 

Quoted from:

Albanian Identities: Myth and History

Edited by: Stephanie Schwandner-Sievers & Bernd J. Fischer

http://www.oocities.org/aia_skenderbeg/faqe_140.jpg

 

Schmidthuber's humorous assertion that he could 'chase them all around the wold with light grenade-launcher' was proven true when the Yugoslav army chased the KLA out of Kosovo with little effort. In the absence of Nazi Germany, the new Albanian Nazis (KLA) turned to liberal-fascist America, which has exterminated 30 000 000 American children since abortion was introduced in the 1970s (see: Buchanan Death of the West) and killed 2 000 000 Japanese, Vietnamese, Iraqis and Afghan men, women and children and supported dozens of murderous, dictatorial 3rd world regimes - all within the last 60 years since WWII.

 

Similarly, in those contemporary Albanian settings in which violence is understood as a legitimate tool to enforce the coherence (in others it is simply public ostracism) the myth of besa with its central value of ‘faithfulness’ was used to swear in recruits for the KLA; the early KLA became infamous for killing its own ‘traitors’ as well as Serb policemen and journalists expressing critical opinions were under threat.

           

            Stephanie Schwandner-Sievers:

            Capacities of Myth in Albania

 

Quoted from:

Albanian Identities: Myth and History

Edited by: Stephanie Schwandner-Sievers & Bernd J. Fischer

Page: 18

http://www.oocities.org/CapitolHill/Lobby/7681/faqe_18.jpg

 

 

 

THE MYTH OF

ALBANIAN ‘RESISTANCE’ TO NAZISM

 

Hitler, for example considered Albania to be the last wild corner of Europe and the Albanians as a vital warrior mountain race - a perception which seems to combine NAZI racial theory with the fanciful novels of Karl May (…) It was in fact an important element in explaining Nazi Germany’s rather benign occupation policy in Albania during WWII.

 

Bernd J Fischer

            Perceptions and Reality in 20th Century Albanian Military Prowess

            Page: 134

 

Quoted from:

Albanian Identities: Myth and History

Edited by: Stephanie Schwandner-Sievers & Bernd J. Fischer

http://www.oocities.org/CapitolHill/Lobby/7681/faqe_134.jpg

 

Below we learn from Fischer that the Balli Kombetar did in fact collaborate with the Hitler and the Nazis. Not only them but so did the Zogists and most of the Albanian chieftains, which implicated most of the Albanians people as Nazi collaborators.

 

One of the keys to explaining Germany’s relative success was its policy of seducing and then corrupting all of the non-communist elements of the resistance, including the nationalist Balli Kombetar, the Zogists and many of the independent chieftains.

 

Bernd J Fischer

            Perceptions and Reality in 20th Century Albanian Military Prowess

            Page: 139, 140

 

Quoted from:

Albanian Identities: Myth and History

Edited by: Stephanie Schwandner-Sievers & Bernd J. Fischer

http://www.oocities.org/aia_skenderbeg/faqe_139.jpg

http://www.oocities.org/aia_skenderbeg/faqe_140.jpg