PDA

View Full Version : Islamic Extremism in Kosovo



Ars Moriendi
08-26-2014, 12:28 AM
The Hidden Growth of Islamic Extremism in Kosovo

Written by Ida Orzechowska

http://www.neweasterneurope.eu/articles-and-commentary/1301-the-hidden-growth-of-islamic-extremism-in-kosovo

http://www.neweasterneurope.eu/images/August_2014/Kosova_independence_Vienna_17-02-2008_b.jpg


The recent arrest of 40 alleged Islamic radicals in Kosovo together with the arrest of one of the Kosovo Imams suspected of being an inspirer of jihad in the region brought serious questions about the radicalisation of Islam and terrorism in Kosovo, in the Balkans and in Europe. Even though the issue of Kosovo Albanian volunteers or mercenaries fighting alongside the anti-Bashar forces in Syria and supporting the radical leadership of the Islamic State (earlier the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria) has been present in the public debate in Kosovo for at least a year, the debate itself was rather shallow and trivial.

The constant development of Islamic influences in Kosovo remained unnoticed for a long time by most observers. But it was not invisible. The ignorance perfectly represents the power of discourse and clichés in the politics in the Balkans. Kosovo has always been perceived as a secular state with a liberal Muslim majority. Kosovo Islam was meant to be moderate. Kosovo was supposed to be the example of a Muslim state in the middle of Europe that does not struggling with religious and cultural challenges. Kosovo may have problems with trafficking, organised crime and corruption; but not Islam.

Kosovo Albanian Islam is different both from the Arab Gulf Islam, the Islam of the East Bank of the Mediterranean See and Islam in the other Balkan states. It was strongly influenced by the Yugoslav ideas and values, evolved under both socialism and cosmopolitism and is deeply mixed with the Albanian culture, a culture very different from the surrounding Slavic cultures in the region. Until the 1980s, religion in Kosovo was a private thing. Under pressure from the Slobodan Milošević regime, it transformed into a nation-building and freedom-fighting issue.

Finally after 1999, and especially after the 2008 independence, Kosovo Albanian Islam once again became private and non-political. The evolution makes the Kosovo Islam very difficult to frame and control, the changes are happening at the kitchen tables inside homes, just as – in Jeffrey Goldfarb’s words – the dismantling of the Soviet bloc was run by “the politics of small things” initiated in discussions around kitchen tables in Warsaw, Prague and Bucharest.

The growth of importance of religion in Kosovo is happening casually en passant and on a very grassroots level; and so is the social base for recruitment of potential Islam fighters. Several years ago, the holy month of Ramadan was unnoticeable in Kosovo’s capital, Pristina. Today the group of people fasting from dawn to dusk is clearly visible in the city. The usually full cafeterias and restaurants in the main boulevard, boulevard of Mother Theresa, are empty during the day, the city becomes peaceful and quite until the Iftar dinner time comes. The status of traditional Albanian national heroes like Mother Theresa or Skandenberg is now being questioned, as they were Catholics not Muslims. Unlike just a few years ago covered women and men with a beard wearing pants above his ankles is a common sight nowadays in Pristina, not to mention the conservative cities and regions such as Kaçanik or Hani i Elezit.

It’s becoming common practice to pay people in their initial phase of religiosity for regular visits to mosques, wearing a hijab or a beard. Several hundreds of euros are frequently donated to parents, or even more preferably to single mothers, for their daily expenses or education of their kids as a payoff for making the children follow the ahadith, the traditions.

As fasting and hijabs are clearly apparent, the recruitment of volunteer freedom fighters to Syria and the Islamic State remains out of sight. The recruitment and indoctrination is happening deep in the society, mostly in its lower classes and among people who are often unaware of the process they are participating in. Recent arrests show that the authorities are capable of identifying individuals who have already been actively involved in the Middle East conflicts, but they do very little in order to fight the cause of the problem. In March 2014, the Kosovo Assembly passed a draft law on the prohibition of Kosovo citizens of joining armed conflicts outside Kosovo; however the dissolution of the Parliament in May, early elections held in June and the inability of the political parties to form a new government undermine the future of the bill.

The specific number of Kosovo Albanians fighting in Iraq and Syria is unknown, the authorities claim to have information about several dozen of them, but most analysts suggest that the number definitely exceeds 100. Until now 16 of them died in combat. The ones arrested last week are accused of supporting the Islamic State and the al-Nusra Front, and together with the arrests a significant number of weapons, explosives and electronic equipment have been confiscated. Even though these are men who constitute the vast majority of “freedom fighters”, women are sent from the Balkans to the Middle East in order to “fulfil their duty in Jihad Al-Nikah – thesex jihad”.

The recruitment process itself is rather flexible and also therefore difficult to track down. The crucial part of the process is the selection of potential candidates and identification of individuals vulnerable and susceptible to influence. Even though the economic situation in Kosovo is bad and the unemployment rate is almost 50 per cent of the whole population, and over 70 per cent among the youth, the economic promises seem not to be a decisive factor.

The bad economic situation should be regarded, rather, as an indirect factor which creates an advantageous environment for recruitment. The lack of opportunities, lack of occupation and simply an excess of free time are some of the reasons that push young people into the radicals’ arms. Another crucial reason – an identity crisis – is a more complex one. Kosovo Albanians, or Kosovars, experience trouble with defining who they are. They are not emotionally attached to the blue and yellow Kosovo flag, so they use the Albanian red flag with a silhouetted black double-headed eagle in the centre. They are Albanians but they feel distinguished from the Albanians in Albania. They fought for independence and sovereignty, but they feel their country is run by foreign embassies. Religion offers a clear identity and a sense of belonging.

There is still a strong belief in the Kosovo society that religion and state should be separated. When the Macedonian Albanians were protesting in July against the authorities in Skopje, the protests enjoyed strong support from the Kosovo Albanians, but faced a critique regarding the strong religious component of the protest, including the use of the green Muslim flags and organisation of the demonstrations in front of mosques. At the same time, terrorism has a long tradition in Kosovo and it is difficult to distinguish Islamic terrorism from the general phenomenon of terrorism in the country executed by paramilitary organisations or other politically driven groups.

The unexpectedness of the developments is personified by the self-declared commander of the ethnic Albanian fighters in the Islamic State, Lavdrim Muhaxheri, who used to work in Camp Bondsteel, the Kosovo base for the US Military, and later joined the American mission in Afghanistan. Today, he is fighting in the Middle East, streaming his call for jihad in Arabic on YouTube and posting photos of him cutting off a man’s head on Facebook.

So far, this is a phenomenon in the Kosovo society. The role of the new government and the international community in Pristina will be to not let it turn into a widespread societal process of religious radicalisation. “This land has been created by warriors and poets, and various gods,” sang Bajaga, a famous Yugoslav singer, back in 1993. There is a space in Kosovo for various gods, but there cannot be space for extremism.


-------------
Ida Orzechowska is a PhD candidate at the Institute of Political Science of the University of Wroclaw, Poland, obtaining a degree in political science. Her main research interests relate to international security, the Western Balkans and conflict studies.

Guapo
08-26-2014, 12:32 AM
Kosovo je Srbija

alb0zfinest
08-26-2014, 12:46 AM
The person who wrote the article is far too ignorant on religion in kosovo. I am in my phone right now, later i will respond to every single claim he makes.

Crn Volk
08-26-2014, 01:13 AM
NATO Air - Just Do It!

Yaroslav
08-26-2014, 01:18 AM
I think there is a huge possibility in the Balkans, especially Macedonia, Serbia, and Greece, of an Islamic insurgency. Many Bosniaks and Albanians are fighting in Iraq and Syria, and once they return they'll likely continue their fight. This will bring nationalists to power and the Balkans will burn yet again.

Crn Volk
08-26-2014, 01:22 AM
I think there is a huge possibility in the Balkans, especially Macedonia, Serbia, and Greece, of an Islamic insurgency. Many Bosniaks and Albanians are fighting in Iraq and Syria, and once they return they'll likely continue their fight. This will bring nationalists to power and the Balkans will burn yet again.



In Australia for example, where many Lebanese Australians have gone to fight for ISIS, they are making contingencies for when/if they return. This is a real problem for any country that has citizens fighting for ISIS.

Yaroslav
08-26-2014, 01:24 AM
In Australia for example, where many Lebanese Australians have gone to fight for ISIS, they are making contingencies for when/if they return. This is a real problem for any country that has citizens fighting for ISIS.

Especially France, which has huge ISIS and Front National support bases and big problems with economy. Expect a civil war in France.

Guapo
08-26-2014, 01:26 AM
Especially France, which has huge ISIS and Front National support bases and big problems with economy. Expect a civil war in France.

in the next 10 years, yes

Yaroslav
08-26-2014, 01:30 AM
in the next 10 years, yes

I think more like 10 months.

Guapo
08-26-2014, 01:32 AM
NATO Air - Just Do It!

Lets see them try, this time it will be Putin air! just kill 'em all. Serbs have a strong allie this time around.

Crn Volk
08-26-2014, 01:37 AM
Lets see them try, this time it will be Putin air! just kill 'em all. Serbs have a strong allie this time around.

I was suggesting that it the reason for it. NATO tends to create more problems than it solves. ISIS was born in Syria fighting for Assad....how the tables have turned...

Guapo
08-26-2014, 01:44 AM
I was suggesting that it the reason for it. NATO tends to create more problems than it solves. ISIS was born in Syria fighting for Assad....how the tables have turned...

And the tables will turn even more soon.

Methmatician
08-26-2014, 03:04 AM
Many Bosniaks and Albanians are fighting in Iraq and Syria
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-cQsqv8VNz-o/Ucs2xf_ESAI/AAAAAAAANf4/42UjA4-Crqc/s1600/dozens-of-us.gif

and once they return they'll likely continue their fight. This will bring nationalists to power and the Balkans will burn yet again.
32 people voting for a single candidate can't make any impact in an election.

Methmatician
08-26-2014, 03:10 AM
In Australia for example, where many Lebanese Australians have gone to fight for ISIS, they are making contingencies for when/if they return. This is a real problem for any country that has citizens fighting for ISIS.
http://www.abc.net.au/worldtoday/content/2013/s3878265.htm

Ars Moriendi
08-28-2014, 10:47 PM
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-cQsqv8VNz-o/Ucs2xf_ESAI/AAAAAAAANf4/42UjA4-Crqc/s1600/dozens-of-us.gif

32 people voting for a single candidate can't make any impact in an election.

I think that European governments do not fear the electoral influence of jihadists, as much as they are concerned about potential attacks in their own territory once they return from the Middle East, having acquired knowledge in explosive devices or how to gun down targets. At least that's what they openly state, chances are there's much more to the fearmongering and police crackdown methods.

I remember a British-born Yemeni boasting about his new capacity to destroy buildings a week ago. He also vowed to take his skills back to Britain once the fight in Syria was done. He will possibly die long before that, but the symbol fits perfectly the pattern.

Ars Moriendi
08-29-2014, 07:45 PM
The person who wrote the article is far too ignorant on religion in kosovo. I am in my phone right now, later i will respond to every single claim he makes.

I would be interested to read your counterpoints. I didn't know this Polish professor prior to this essay, so I cannot vouch for her full objectivity. Still, her credentials seemed valid and not having a particular bias in favour or against Kosovo.

Do remember that the essay is meant to assess the changes over the course of the last couple of years, so maybe the situation has changed since then and you might not have noticed it (if you live outside Albania or Kosovo).

Looking forward to it.

Norman
08-29-2014, 10:15 PM
NATO Air - Just Do It!
You greeted me with raised middle-fingers 14 years ago.
I will not lift a single one for you.

SKYNET
08-29-2014, 10:23 PM
http://www.ambassador-serbia.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Kosovo-je-Srbija.jpg

Ars Moriendi
08-30-2014, 02:49 AM
http://www.ambassador-serbia.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Kosovo-je-Srbija.jpg

I'm actually wondering how long will it take the government in Belgrade to recognize the independence of Kosovo. Their chosen path is quite clearly aimed at getting enough concessions from the West in exchange for progressive political and economic advantages, including yielding territory.

Guapo
08-30-2014, 02:52 AM
You greeted me with raised middle-fingers 14 years ago.
I will not lift a single one for you.

Elaborate

alb0zfinest
08-30-2014, 03:35 AM
[CENTER]The Hidden Growth of Islamic Extremism in Kosovo

Written by Ida Orzechowska



The recent arrest of 40 alleged Islamic radicals in Kosovo together with the arrest of one of the Kosovo Imams suspected of being an inspirer of jihad in the region brought serious questions about the radicalisation of Islam and terrorism in Kosovo, in the Balkans and in Europe. Even though the issue of Kosovo Albanian volunteers or mercenaries fighting alongside the anti-Bashar forces in Syria and supporting the radical leadership of the Islamic State (earlier the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria) has been present in the public debate in Kosovo for at least a year, the debate itself was rather shallow and trivial.

I'd hardly call it shallow and trivial. This was good news for the corrupt leaders of Kosova if anything. This meant that the people would focus on the supposed big threat of extremism which is highly exaggerated, instead of focusing on the corruption of this regime. They tried to stay with this topic of "extremism" as much as possible if anything. It was even debated how the fighters going to fight in Syria should be punished.


The constant development of Islamic influences in Kosovo remained unnoticed for a long time by most observers. But it was not invisible. The ignorance perfectly represents the power of discourse and clichés in the politics in the Balkans. Kosovo has always been perceived as a secular state with a liberal Muslim majority. Kosovo Islam was meant to be moderate. Kosovo was supposed to be the example of a Muslim state in the middle of Europe that does not struggling with religious and cultural challenges. Kosovo may have problems with trafficking, organised crime and corruption; but not Islam.

A few people getting paid to go fight in Syria now makes Kosovo's secularism, not so secular? That's just ridiculous. How come so much attention is paid to these few people and not how Kosovo's institutions are set up in terms of religion. What your average Kosovar Albanian thinks of religion?. Where was Ida, when the fact that headscarves were banned in public schools and most of the people didn't care enough to respond? The fact that there are no religious schools? All these are dismissed. I understand humans are attracted to negativity, but comments by Ida sound extremely ill informed, and she seems to be coming to conclusions that small children influenced by propaganda would come to.


Kosovo Albanian Islam is different both from the Arab Gulf Islam, the Islam of the East Bank of the Mediterranean See and Islam in the other Balkan states. It was strongly influenced by the Yugoslav ideas and values, evolved under both socialism and cosmopolitism and is deeply mixed with the Albanian culture, a culture very different from the surrounding Slavic cultures in the region. Until the 1980s, religion in Kosovo was a private thing. Under pressure from the Slobodan Milošević regime, it transformed into a nation-building and freedom-fighting issue.

And again, more bold claims to attract attention without any evidence to back it up. Religion involved into the nation building? Come on. Religion had literally no effect into "nation building", That was driven by nationalism.


Finally after 1999, and especially after the 2008 independence, Kosovo Albanian Islam once again became private and non-political. The evolution makes the Kosovo Islam very difficult to frame and control, the changes are happening at the kitchen tables inside homes, just as – in Jeffrey Goldfarb’s words – the dismantling of the Soviet bloc was run by “the politics of small things” initiated in discussions around kitchen tables in Warsaw, Prague and Bucharest.

The growth of importance of religion in Kosovo is happening casually en passant and on a very grassroots level; and so is the social base for recruitment of potential Islam fighters. Several years ago, the holy month of Ramadan was unnoticeable in Kosovo’s capital, Pristina. Today the group of people fasting from dawn to dusk is clearly visible in the city. The usually full cafeterias and restaurants in the main boulevard, boulevard of Mother Theresa, are empty during the day, the city becomes peaceful and quite until the Iftar dinner time comes. The status of traditional Albanian national heroes like Mother Theresa or Skandenberg is now being questioned, as they were Catholics not Muslims. Unlike just a few years ago covered women and men with a beard wearing pants above his ankles is a common sight nowadays in Pristina, not to mention the conservative cities and regions such as Kaçanik or Hani i Elezit.

Now its just getting facepalm worthy. The biggest hero of Albanians being questioned since they are catholic? :laugh: when the main square of the capital of the country is dedicated to a catholic, when a new church dedicated to Mother teresa is being built right in the middle of Prishtina as I write this (not to mention 2 statues of her that already exist), despite the Albanian catholic population being less than 10%. Seriously this is just laughable.


It’s becoming common practice to pay people in their initial phase of religiosity for regular visits to mosques, wearing a hijab or a beard. Several hundreds of euros are frequently donated to parents, or even more preferably to single mothers, for their daily expenses or education of their kids as a payoff for making the children follow the ahadith, the traditions.

As fasting and hijabs are clearly apparent, the recruitment of volunteer freedom fighters to Syria and the Islamic State remains out of sight. The recruitment and indoctrination is happening deep in the society, mostly in its lower classes and among people who are often unaware of the process they are participating in. Recent arrests show that the authorities are capable of identifying individuals who have already been actively involved in the Middle East conflicts, but they do very little in order to fight the cause of the problem. In March 2014, the Kosovo Assembly passed a draft law on the prohibition of Kosovo citizens of joining armed conflicts outside Kosovo; however the dissolution of the Parliament in May, early elections held in June and the inability of the political parties to form a new government undermine the future of the bill.

The specific number of Kosovo Albanians fighting in Iraq and Syria is unknown, the authorities claim to have information about several dozen of them, but most analysts suggest that the number definitely exceeds 100. Until now 16 of them died in combat. The ones arrested last week are accused of supporting the Islamic State and the al-Nusra Front, and together with the arrests a significant number of weapons, explosives and electronic equipment have been confiscated. Even though these are men who constitute the vast majority of “freedom fighters”, women are sent from the Balkans to the Middle East in order to “fulfil their duty in Jihad Al-Nikah – thesex jihad”.

The author without realizing it is contradicting herself. If the people are supposedly more religious why is it that they have to be paid to go to the mosque :picard1:. Even if such funds existed (mind you how can that be funded when the country can't even feed itself), she provides no actual data or some sort of proof for anything. And then she claims that the Kosovo government is not doing anything, when that is the only thing they are doing to try and bragg to the public. Just recently over 40 people were arrested, who were under suspicion that they had ties to extremism. I can't even bother to respond to all of this non-sense, I will leave you with this. A Kosovar Albanian politician said I don't even know why we are muslims, and he is shortly going to be the prime minister. If the people actually cared about religion as she claims, they would not vote for such a man to become prime minister.

The recruitment process itself is rather flexible and also therefore difficult to track down. The crucial part of the process is the selection of potential candidates and identification of individuals vulnerable and susceptible to influence. Even though the economic situation in Kosovo is bad and the unemployment rate is almost 50 per cent of the whole population, and over 70 per cent among the youth, the economic promises seem not to be a decisive factor.

The bad economic situation should be regarded, rather, as an indirect factor which creates an advantageous environment for recruitment. The lack of opportunities, lack of occupation and simply an excess of free time are some of the reasons that push young people into the radicals’ arms. Another crucial reason – an identity crisis – is a more complex one. Kosovo Albanians, or Kosovars, experience trouble with defining who they are. They are not emotionally attached to the blue and yellow Kosovo flag, so they use the Albanian red flag with a silhouetted black double-headed eagle in the centre. They are Albanians but they feel distinguished from the Albanians in Albania. They fought for independence and sovereignty, but they feel their country is run by foreign embassies. Religion offers a clear identity and a sense of belonging.

There is still a strong belief in the Kosovo society that religion and state should be separated. When the Macedonian Albanians were protesting in July against the authorities in Skopje, the protests enjoyed strong support from the Kosovo Albanians, but faced a critique regarding the strong religious component of the protest, including the use of the green Muslim flags and organisation of the demonstrations in front of mosques. At the same time, terrorism has a long tradition in Kosovo and it is difficult to distinguish Islamic terrorism from the general phenomenon of terrorism in the country executed by paramilitary organisations or other politically driven groups.

The unexpectedness of the developments is personified by the self-declared commander of the ethnic Albanian fighters in the Islamic State, Lavdrim Muhaxheri, who used to work in Camp Bondsteel, the Kosovo base for the US Military, and later joined the American mission in Afghanistan. Today, he is fighting in the Middle East, streaming his call for jihad in Arabic on YouTube and posting photos of him cutting off a man’s head on Facebook.

So far, this is a phenomenon in the Kosovo society. The role of the new government and the international community in Pristina will be to not let it turn into a widespread societal process of religious radicalisation. “This land has been created by warriors and poets, and various gods,” sang Bajaga, a famous Yugoslav singer, back in 1993. There is a space in Kosovo for various gods, but there cannot be space for extremism.


-------------
Ida Orzechowska is a PhD candidate at the Institute of Political Science of the University of Wroclaw, Poland, obtaining a degree in political science. Her main research interests relate to international security, the Western Balkans and conflict studies.

Ars Moriendi
08-30-2014, 04:46 PM
Good counterpoints. Thank you for taking the time to share what you know.
After reading your critiques I can see now the flaws in the original paper, specially regarding public policy.

Still, I have to ask though, would you say that her idea that the average population is becoming more religious (fasting more during Ramadan or traditional Muslim clothing becoming more prevalent) is completely false, or actually has some basis?

alb0zfinest
08-30-2014, 05:25 PM
Good counterpoints. Thank you for taking the time to share what you know.
After reading your critiques I can see now the flaws in the original paper, specially regarding public policy.

Still, I have to ask though, would you say that her idea that the average population is becoming more religious (fasting more during Ramadan or traditional Muslim clothing becoming more prevalent) is completely false, or actually has some basis?

I wouldn't say the average population is becoming more religious, I will say though that those who were already semi-religious before, are becoming more religious.

Ars Moriendi
08-30-2014, 05:34 PM
I wouldn't say the average population is becoming more religious, I will say though that those who were already semi-religious before, are becoming more religious.

I understand.
An Iranian friend of mine once told me that according to her own estimates, 30% of the Iranian population is religious while the remaining 70% are largely uninterested and only nominally Muslim.

According to your own guess, what distribution can one find in Kosovo?

alb0zfinest
08-30-2014, 07:12 PM
I understand.
An Iranian friend of mine once told me that according to her own estimates, 30% of the Iranian population is religious while the remaining 70% are largely uninterested and only nominally Muslim.

According to your own guess, what distribution can one find in Kosovo?


The group of Kosovars that are actually deists, who declare themselves as muslim or catholic only because that is what their parents were. (10%)
The group of Kosovars that are muslims but are not in the least bit religious. They will intermarry with people of other religion as long as they are Albanian, they drink, don't know anything about islam, don't pray etc etc. (60%)
The group of Kosovar muslims that are a bit more religious than the above. They may celebrate eid, perhaps pray once in a while, still drink, they put their ethnicity before their religion, but may not be so fond of the idea of marrying someone from a different religion. Over all only slightly more religious than the group above. (20%)
The group of Kosovar muslims that may not know much about islam, but will fast, will go to the mosque not so often, but definitely more often then the group above, will not intermarry with someone from a different religion. (7%)
The most religious of all Kosovars. Will have read the quran, may believe in some sort of Islamic brotherhood, will fast during ramadan, will try to teach their children about Islam at an early age etc etc. It is those of this group that are the ones fighting in Syria, and Iraq. (3%)

Arsenium DeLight
11-02-2014, 07:22 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hoXztEOM3NY