Gračanica, Kosovo

Gračanica
Town and municipality
Albanian: Graçanicë / Graçanica
Serbian: Грачаница / Gračanica

Gračanica

Location in Kosovo

Coordinates: 42°36′N 21°12′E / 42.600°N 21.200°E / 42.600; 21.200Coordinates: 42°36′N 21°12′E / 42.600°N 21.200°E / 42.600; 21.200
Country Kosovo
District District of Pristina
Established 29 December 2009[1]
Government
  Mayor Vladeta Kostić
Area
  Total 131.25 km2 (50.68 sq mi)
Elevation 588 m (1,929 ft)
Population (2014)
  Total 11,720
  Density 89/km2 (230/sq mi)
  Town 4,500
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
Postal code 10000
Website kk.rks-gov.net/gracanice

Gračanica (Albanian: Graçanicë, Serbian Cyrillic: Грачаница) is a town and municipality in central Kosovo.[lower-alpha 1] It is centered on the Gračanica monastery, ten kilometers east of Pristina. The 1999 Kosovo War and its aftermath transformed Gračanica from a sleepy village into an administrative center serving the needs of the 75,000 Kosovo Serbs living south of the Ibar River. After the 2013 Brussels Agreement the municipality became part of the Community of Serb Municipalities in Kosovo.

Geography

The settlement is situated in the spacious valley of the Gračanka river, by the river, on the exit of the gorge between the hill of Veletina (874m) and sloping hill of Glasnovik on the south, and hill of Steževac (794m) on the northeast.[2]

History

Pope Benedict IX mentioned the village as Grazaniza in a letter from 1303.[3] It was mentioned in King Stefan Milutin's founding charter of the Gračanica monastery (1321).[4] In the 15th century the settlement was a notable commercial centre.[5] Until the 17th century it had a notable Ragusan community.[5] It seems that the settlement was abandoned in 1689 during the Austrian penetration into Kosovo and Metohija in the Great Turkish War.[2] In 1901, it had 60 houses, all Serb, with 400 inhabitants.[6]

On 6 June, 2000, a grenade was thrown at a crowd of ethnic Serbs waiting for a bus in the town square, injuring three people, which was followed by some civil unrest.[7] On 15 March 2004 a Serb teenager was killed in a drive-by shooting in the village of Čaglavica (partly in Gračanica).[8] This event led to the 2004 unrest in Kosovo. In the aftermath of the unrest, another Serb teenager was killed in a drive-by shooting on June 5, 2004.[9][10] In 2016, a bomb was thrown at the porch of a Serb house in Donja Gušterica.[11]

Municipality

The municipality of Gračanica was established in 2008 by the Government of the Republic of Kosovo, out of parts of the municipalities of Lipljan, Kosovo Polje and Pristina.[12] Although the new municipality is primarily inhabited by Serbs, this move is not recognized by the Serbian government which does not recognize the Republic of Kosovo and its administrative changes.[13] According to the administration of the Republic of Kosovo, the name of the municipality in Albanian is Graçanicë (an Albanian transliteration).

The first municipal elections were held on 15 November 2009.[14] The government of Serbia asked Serbs not to participate in the elections[14] which it does not recognize, but many of them did. Serb Bojan Stojanović was elected Mayor.[15] Town of Gračanica is also temporary seat of the administration of Serbia-recognized City of Pristina. The Serbia-sponsored local elections were held on 11 May 2008. Those elections were boycotted by the Albanians who consider Kosovo independent from Serbia, so only Serbs participated. Radovan Ničić was elected Mayor.

After the 2013 Brussels Agreement between the governments of Kosovo and Serbia, Serbia recognised the municipalities and the Republic's governance of the territory, and agreed to create an association of Serb-majority municipalities, which will operate within the Kosovo legal framework.

Population

The village of Gračanica is said to contain approximately 11,006 inhabitants, many of whom are Serb refugees driven out of Pristina.[16] Differing estimates exist for the enclave as a whole, ranging from 13,000[17] to 11,006 inhabitants in the 15 villages that make up the enclave,[18] and down from 120,000 in 1999.[18] The enclave has a roughly ten-kilometer radius in which Serbs enjoy freedom of movement and attempt to organize a meaningful life for themselves.[16]

Ethnic composition of the municipality, as of 2010:[19]

Infrastructure and position

Gračanica has been a Serb enclave since the end of the 1999 Kosovo War, and is the largest and most secure Serbian enclave in central Kosovo. It runs along the Skopje-Pristina road, and unites several neighboring Serbian villages. The enclave, which contains rich farmland and is strategically located in the center of Kosovo, on major roads and near Pristina, has been seen as a potential threat by some Albanian nationalists, who view it as "a den of Serbian intrigue".[20]

Gračanica has an elementary school, several small stores, an open-air market and a police station that employs ethnic Albanians and international police officers, who notably do not speak the Serbian language. The health care center is located in the central part of the town, next to the UNMIK headquarters. An elementary school was reconstructed after the 1999 war.[20] In December 2008, the Serbian government built a €90,000 post office in Gračanica and promised further investments.

Settlements in the municipality

  • Lepina
  • Livade
  • Preoce
  • Skulanevo
  • Sušica
  • Suvi Do
  • Radevo
  • Ugljare

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 Brussels Agreement. Kosovo has received recognition as an independent state from 110 out of 193 United Nations member states.

References

  1. "(Serbian) Opština Gračanica / Komuna e Gracanices".
  2. 1 2 Urošević 1990, p. 189.
  3. Ivan Marković (1904). Slaveni i pape: Preveo [s talijanskoga]. Tisak Dioničke tiskare.
  4. Slobodan Mileusnić (1998). Medieval monasteries of Serbia. Pravoslavna reč. p. 54.
  5. 1 2 Stamenković 2002, p. 455.
  6. Pregled geografske literature o Balkanskom poluostrvu za ...: Revue de la littérature géographique de la péninsule Balkanique. Državna štamparija kraljevine Srbije. 1901.
  7. "Civil unrest in Gračanica".
  8. "U Čaglavici pucano na srpskog mladića iz automobila u pokretu". B92. Beta. 15 March 2004. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  9. http://www.b92.net/info/vesti/index.php?yyyy=2004&mm=06&dd=05&nav_id=142643. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  10. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/3780165.stm. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  11. "Општина Грачаница осуђује бацање бомбе на кућу породице Лазић".
  12. Zakon br. o3/L – 041 O ADMINISTRATIVNIM GRANICAMA OPŠTINA (Law on administrative boundaries of municipalities), 20 February 2008 (Serbian)
  13. Law on Territorial Organization and Local Self-Government, Parliament of Serbia (Serbian)
  14. 1 2 Nova Srpska Politička Misao: Грачаница: Срби да бојкотују изборе које организују косовске институције, 29 October 2009 (Serbian)
  15. B92: Gračanica: Protest zbog izbora, 27 November 2009 (Serbian)
  16. 1 2 B92 – Many B92 looks at life in K. Serb enclaves, Oct. 13, 2008
  17. B92 – Russian aid distributed to Kosovo Serbs, 7 May 2008
  18. 1 2 UmnikOnline – Many Kosovo Serbs see elections as last hope for a better life, Nov. 13, 2001
  19. http://www.opstina-gracanica.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=137&Itemid=56
  20. 1 2 Balkan Analysis – Kosovo: The Deadly Game Continues, 6/7/2004

Sources

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