Sunday, 12 February 2012



Life Returns to St Nicholas Church in Kosovo's Capital



Text by Shega A'Mula for Balkan Insight   

26 February 2010 | Pristina’s St Nicholas Church is not as easily spotted as the city’s many lofty minarets, but continues to survive, despite its discrete location and the substantial fall in the city’s Orthodox population.

Located in the Tauk baqe neighbourhood, the top of the bell tower is the only facet visible from busy Nazim Gafurri Street, which leads to Germia Park.

Although subject to incredible damage during the March riots that swept Kosovo in 2004, the centuries old Church has a completely peaceful track-record, and now a future founded upon cultural cooperation.

On Saturday, St Nicholas Church held its first liturgy since March 2004 following the completion of reparations at the end of last year, which were carried out by an ethnic Albanian team of contractors.

However, Albanian contribution in restoring the church was not welcomed by everyone in the Orthodox community, Ranjil Nojkic, keeper of the church told Balkan Insight. According to Nojkic, St Nicholas was initially not given Diocese permission to hold church liturgies after its restoration in 2009, because "those that burned it had no right to rebuild it".

To Nojkic’s and many other Kosovo Serb’s joy, the appointment of Bishop Atanasije as Orthodox church leader of Kosovo in late 2009 led to a change in position and immediate consent to begin liturgy at St Nicholas.

This decision makes St Nicholas the only functioning Orthodox Church in the city, as Christ the Savior, located beside the national library, remains unfinished.

On Saturday, Bishop Atanasije and other clergymen from the region held liturgy at the Church to mark the feast of St Theodore, and were joined by around 250 Kosovo Serbs. International representatives from the Greek, US and UK offices in Prishtina attended the service, which was also followed by major media stations visiting from Belgrade.

At first glance, the church does not seem to possess any antiquities which suggest a venerable historical past. The exterior noticeably has had a fresh coat of paint, extensive roof reparation, and new doors and windows.

Inside, bright-white plaster covers most of the walls, and all icons and religious symbols are visibly new.

Floors are covered in new marble tiles, and wooden railings leading to the second level are seemingly recent installments.

However, Nojkic says that the church’s initial construction can be traced back to the seventeenth century.

The church was heralded for its wooden icons, made by painters from the city of Debar, current-day Macedonia, in the eighteenth century, elaborate wall frescos completed in the eighteenth century, and a very rare silver cross brought to the Church from Belgrade in the nineteenth century.

March rioters set fire to the church in 2004, damaging all of its distinct pieces. The only reminders of its history are the remaining sections of the hand-painted fresco that, when analysed closely, illustrate images of the Orthodox Churche’s values and history.

Unfortunately, even the remaining frescos will have to be completely repainted, said Nojkic, because of the extent of the damage.

A tender is expected to be released soon in order to commission the project.

The bell within the tower, one of two other structures of the church located in the enclosed grounds, also had to be replaced and only rang for the first time since March 2004 in November 2009, after reconstruction was completed.

The second structure in the grounds is the parish home, located near the entrance of the Church, which is occupied by Nojkic in the evenings.

Other tasks at hand at St Nicholas Church include the appointing of a parish priest, in order to hold weekly liturgies for Prishtina and the surrounding area.

Nojkic said the decision would be made soon, and that Kosovo Serbs were eager to begin service at the church.

The renovation of St. Nicholas church was funded from the European Commission in 2007, and specifically covered the cost of roof reconstruction and the restoration of the choir gallery, the paraklis, the baptismal chamber and the parish home.

If you would like to visit the church, Ranjil Nojkic is happy to show you around when he is in attendance, most evenings from 5pm.

This article is courtesy of Balkan Insight, the online publication of the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network, which contains analytical reports, in-depth analyses and investigations and news items from throughout the region covering major challenges of the political, social and economic transition in the Balkans.

Read more about Kosovo on BalkanTravellers.com
 

Epicure


Turkey
Izmir Gourmet: Food is in the Air

Food is literally everywhere in Izmir.

The first stop a traveller would usually make, is Passaport – the vivid promenade along the seaside, which has turned into a landmark with its black and white pavement.
Full Story



Curiosity Chest


Romania
Electric Candle Is Fine, Online Blessing - Not

Sound blasters and electric candles, that are switched on by dropping a coin, have long infested Christian churches around the world. Yet virtual prayers and blessings remain controversial practice to religious communities. Lately the dispute surfaced in the Balkans.
Full Story



Useful Reads


Greece
In Sfakia: Passing Time in the Wilds of Crete (2008) | By Peter Trudgill

Crete has long been acknowledged as one of the most singular and unique parts of Greece. Its people keep a fierce hold on their traditions, customs and history. Practically a country of its own, this vast island looms over all others in Greece. Nevertheless, as In Sfakia author Peter Trudgill aptly notes in his preface, “some parts of Crete are more special than others, and Sfakia, on the remote south coast, is certainly one of those.” Full Story




Music


Macedonia
Macedonia: Esma Redžepova's Passion for Humanity

"A Gypsy from the city of Skopje", as she calls herself, Esma Redžepova has more than 40 years of singing and humanitarian efforts under her belt. Full Story