Sunday, October 27, 2013

Hoping to recreate the Ottoman Empire Turk Erdogan lays claim to Serbian Kosovo, saying this is Turkey!
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So they did it again – the world had brought Ottoman empire to our lands. The world powers are not even discrete concerning that an...ymore. So the Turkish PM T. R. Erdogan arrived to illegally occupied Serbian province, addressing in his speech only Albanian and ‘Bosniak’ inhabitants and completely ignoring where and to whose homeland he came. We heard from Erdogan that Kosovo is Turkey; the statement caused applauses and euphoria among Albanians, who, in a familiar and as seen before manner of celebrating the occupiers, almost orgasmicly chanted in support.

But sultan Erdogan said much more: He revealed Turkish plans for Albanians and Bosnians and their future; the Sultan didn’t forget to mention blooming roses, etc.

What mr Erdogan forgot was the fact that it was him who uninvited came to Serbian land. Furthermore, he fell into trance, so he added that him and the ministers from delegations feel at home in the land stolen both from the Christianity and Serbs.

That’s natural, since the Thief feels comortable in what’s stolen.

I observe this as a prefect litmus test which completely exposed the character of the Albanian praised freedom fighting – the Albanians fought neither for independence nor for freedom; they fought only to bring a foreign power, hoping they’d be granted the right to robb, rape and kill in return.

Since the Ottomans brought them to Balkans fromCaucasian Albania, they’ve been serving every invader, every single Reich, NWO, that appeared in the horison of the history.

Anyway, the Turkey has illegal been present for years in the province, but they never came out openly about their aspiration.

Untill last year… In the part of southern Serbia, which is under the management of KFOR (NATO forces in Kosovo i Metohija) and where the Powers illegally created another quasi (Albanian) state, the Albanian Ministry of Education, Science and Technology has formed an Audit Commission in in order to compile the report about the situation with the history books, which are more likely to be ‘adopted’ by experts from - Turkey.

One group of Turkish experts went to ‘Kosovo’ in March in order to determine whether the facts and terms in the history books which Turkish government finds offensive and thus sought to change, are corrected. Representatives of Kosovo Albanian Ministry of Education confirmed that this was done ‘in the spirit of the academic cooperation between all European countries that do not have hate in textbooks, and whose history books are pleasant to read and “friendly”. The audit committee consisted of an Albanian history professor Shkelzen Raca, Albanian geography teacher Rushdie Plana and a scientist (undefined filed science) Hisen Matos.

”Kosovo” Albanian deputy minister of education, Nehaj Mustafa then stated that Kosovo’s citizens should not be afraid that it will change the history of the Albanian people as a whole and of the Albanian people in Kosovo in particular. Because the ministry does not write history, but historians write history.”

(Oh, I am sure it will suite Albanians and those who bought them in Balkans interest, but what about Serbs, whose history is to be changed and falsified?

Another neootoman project was organized by the Ministry of Youth and Sports of Turkey, the USA and Great Britain governments – ‘Walking the Paths of our ancestors in Balkans’ summer camps project; Their thematic summer camps that have been held since summer 2011. in order to provide their future young leaders with lectures in international relations, geopolitics, history, political science, law, literature … And around 3000 students selected from across Turkey, including cadets of military academies are involved in that ‘amazing’ project called “Walking the Paths of our ancestors in the Balkans.” (?!)These camps have been organized with only one (more or less hidden) goal: to form future politicians and soldiers who will operate the parts of – I must say, almost restored – Ottoman Empire.

So let’s see what was the Ottoman rule like in Balkans from Konstantin MIhailovic of Ostrovica, a converted Serb who served in Turkish Ottoman army. Serving for 10 full years as a member of Turkish shock troops and fighting for Sultan Mehmed II, he later escaped to Hungary. Toward the end of his life, this gifted man wrote Memoirs of a Janissary, in the form of a general history of the Turks of his time.

One of the events he described was the fall of the Serbian mining town of Novo Brdo into the hands of the sultan. First, the sultan ordered all gates closed except one, through which all of the inhabitants had to pass, leaving their possessions behind.

“So they began passing through, one by one,” writes Mihailovic, “and the sultan, standing at the gate, was separating males from females … then he ordered the leaders beheaded. He saved 320 young men and 704 women … He distributed the women among his warriors, and the young men he took into the janissary corps, sending them to Anatolia. … I was there, in that city of Novo Brdo, I who write this …”

The shipping of young Christian men (and boys) to Turkish schools to become janissaries, or if talented, to be a part of the administrative apparatus, was common practice in the Ottoman Empire. It was part of the tribute the Christian “raja” had to pay to the Turks. What it actualy meant was that the hated Turks would kidnap your child and – even worse – return it, now as an Ottoman Muslim and your worse enemy!Dr. Ivo Andrich, who was born in Bosnia was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1961 for his novels about Orthodox Christian suffering. Encyclopedia Britannica (Micropedia, Edition 1986, Vol 1, Page 393, entry: Andric, Ivo) said (quote):

Andric’s work reveal his deterministic philosophy and his SENSE OF COMPASSION AND ARE WRITTEN OBJECTIVELY AND SOBERLY, in language of great beauty and purity. The Nobel Prize committee commented particularly on the “ephic force” with which he handled his material, especially in “The Bridge on the Drina”. Here is an excerpt from the above mentioned Nobel Prize book “Bridge on the Drina,” which describes how this “tax in blood” felt, as it is told and retold chilling blood of generations of surviving Orthodox Christians:

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