Gorani people
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Regions with significant populations | |
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Gora dialect , Albanian | |
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Macedonian Muslims, Pomaks and Torlaks |
The Gorani, are a group of people, who inhabit the Gora region, located between Albania, Kosovo and Macedonia. They speak the Gora dialect, which is known by many Gorani as "Našinski" (Cyrillic: Нашински). They are adherants to Islam and have a rich and varied folk culture. The Gora region is refered to as the homeland of the Gorani people. It comprises of Dragaš municipality in Kosovo, Shishtavec (Cyrillic: Шиштејец, Šištejec) municipality in Albania and the area around the Šar Mountains in Macedonia.
Etymology
The word Gora is a the traditional term for the region, it means "Mountains" or "Highlands". In the Gora dialect the "Mountain people" or "Highlanders" are known as Goranci (Cyrillic: Горанци), this is often transliterated into English simply as "Gorani" or "Gorans"
History
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Gora is the region inhabited by the Gorani, and also that which Slavic peoples (including Gorani themselves) and many Albanians use to identify the native people (Gorani). The region, Gora, is mentioned in 1348 in the edict of Serbian Emperor Stefan Dušan, along with seven other Gorani-populated villages that were subsumed by the Monastery of Saint Archangel at Prizren at that time. The area called Gora was subsequently populated by Slavs during their migration in the 6th-7th centuries. Less than a century later the Bulgars invaded and subsequently settled in the area as well.
In 1455, Gora was conquered from the Serbian Despotate by the Ottoman Turks and became a part of the Beylerbeyluk of Rumelia, or specifically, the Sanjak of Prizren. The process of natural assimilation into Ottoman society henceforth began, mostly at the end of the 16th century. And following the trend of Balkan peoples, the conversion from Orthodox Christianity through the process of Islamization was rapid, with dozens of mosques springing up across the Gora region (many have had to be rebuilt, a result of the Serb invasions of the late 19th century, which destroyed many of the area's mosques, and also the oppressive conditions in Albania during Hoxha's regime). The Gorani continue to maintain a religious hybridity of sorts — while steadfast Muslims, they observe a number of Christian traditions and holidays, with observance of certain Saint's days and their acknowledging of the Bogomil.
Because of Gora's highly isolated location in and around Albania's mountainous northern region, the difficult terrain aided the Goran in resisting first the Slavic and later the Ottoman invasions. Migrations to escape the Ottoman invasion did occur, as they did in Albania in the 14th century, when many Albanians fled to Italy, Egypt, Syria and the Ukraine. These migrations were repeated several centuries thenceforth when many Goran, hemmed in by both Yugoslav and Albanian authoritarian regimes, fled the region. Many surfaced in America, where a significant diaspora has emerged (primarily in California). Migrations from Gora during the Ottoman era resulted in two significant waves: the first towards Prizren and Sirinić, and the other towards Tetovo. The latter populated the Macedonian settlements of Dolno, Palčište and Tearce. Their descendants still populate that part of the Republic of Macedonia. Gorani colonists have migrated and populated on the eastern side of the Šar Mountains the colonies of Urvič and Jelovjane.
In the First Balkan War in 1912 the Serbian Army seized Gora. A minor part of the Gorani population migrated to the Ottoman Empire as a result. In the 1916-1918 First World War the Gora was conquered by the Central Powers and assigned to a Greater Bulgaria. After 1918 they were integrated into the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. The troubles during First World War, as well as the difficult period between 1919-20 were characterized by drought, causing famine and much poverty for the Gorans. This paradigm also incited migrations to Kosovo's larger city, Prizren and Tetovo in Republic of Macedonia. Disease and hunger in the post-communist era in Albania have caused a general downfall of the Gorani population, mostly due to in-migration out of villages for urban centers like Shkodra and Tirana.
By the decision of the League of Nations however, in 1925, the final border towards Albania was established. In it, over 15,000 Gorans remained in Albania's borders in their 9 villages: Borje, Zapod, Košarište, Novo Selo, Orgosta, Orešek, Pakiša, Crneljevo and Šištevac on demand of Fascist Italy, despite the local Gorani community's desire to remain together undivided.
In 1999 after the NATO bombing campaign on Yugoslavia, the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) took over international administration of the Serbian province of Kosovo. Their own municipality was redrawn and Dragaš established, in which now Albanians are in majority. The Gora has received migrations of Albanians from Albania, and reports of killings and mistreatment of the Gorani by Albanian paramilitaries were subsequently recorded, though never verified. In 2007 the Kosovar provisional institutions opened a school in Gora to teach the Bosnian language, which sparked minor consternation amongst the Gorani population, added by the fact that the Principal declares as an Albanian. Many Gorans refuse to send their children to school for threats of assimilation and self-initially founded home schools for their young. In 1999 and over the years altogether, over 6,500 Gorans have fled to Serbia proper along with many Serb and Romani refugees.
Sprache
The Gorani people speak a local dialect known as "Našinski" (Cyrillic: Нашински) or "Goranski" (Cyrillic: Горански). It is considered many to be an intermediary dialect between Macedonian and Serbian and is often called a Torlak dialect. While still remaining a Slavic based language their are numerous loan words in the language, the dialect has been greatly influenced by Turkisk, Arabic and Albanian.
According to the last 1991 Yugoslav census, 54.8% of the inhabitants of the Gora municipality said that they spoke the Gorani language.[1] Some Goranis define their language as Macedonian, similar to the dialects spoken in Northwest Macedonia.
Media and Literature
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Gorani scholar Nazif Dokle compiled the first Našinski–Albanian dictionary (with 43,000 words and phrases) in 2007, sponsored and printed by the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences.[2] In 2008 a Macedonian language newspaper, Гороцвет (Gorocvet) was started.[3]
Population
The Gorani population numbered some 16,000, in the Gora administrative division, according to the 1991 census. Gorani leaders today estimate that fewer than 10,000 are left in Gora, where large in-migrations to Albania's capital, Tirana, have occurred. Most Goran state that the unstable situation and the economic issue drives them to leave Kosovo. There is also some mention of threats and discrimination.[4] The UN administration in Kosovo, UNMIK, has redrawn internal boundaries in the province in such a way that a Gorani-majority municipality no longer exists. The Gora was combined with the neighboring Albanian-populated region of Opolje (some 20,000 people) into a new subdivision named Dragaš, which again has an Albanian majority.
Settlements
Below is a list of the traditional Gorani settlements in the Šar Mountains region. In parenthesis the Našinski names in Cyrillic.
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Gorani diaspora
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The Gora is an underdeveloped region and for almost two centuries, its male inhabitants would go off to more distant regions in order to find work. Due to this, a true Gorani diaspora has come to life with many living in parts of Central Serbia (particularly Belgrade: 3,340), Vojvodina (606), the Republic of Macedonia (particularly the Western parts); Bosnia and Herzegovina, Italy, Greece and Turkey; and following escape from communist Albania and socialist Yugoslavia in the late-1940s, the United States (particularly New York and Los Angeles).
Culture & Religion
Like many Balkan peoples prior to the invasion of the Romans and the forced conversions to Christianity, the existence of many pantheistic sects and worship of the sun god existed. Following the conversion to the Eastern Orthodox Christian faith, the Goran embraced Islam under the Ottoman Empire and remain today exclusive followers of the Islamic faith. However, the Goran still tangentially observe some Orthodox traditions (Slava) such as Saint George's Day (Djurdjevdan).
Traditional Goran folk music includes a two-beat dance called "kolo" ('circle'), which is a circle dance focused on the foot movements: it always starts on the right foot and moves in an anti-clockwise direction. Kolo is usually accompanied by instrumental music made often with a Zurle or Kaval and Tapan or Davul, kolos are less frequently accompanied by singing as they are in neighboring ethnic groups such as the Albanians and Serbians.
Notable Gorani
- Fahrudin Jusufi, football player
- Miralem Sulejmani, football player
- Harun Hasani, academician
See also
Notes and references
Notes:
a. | ^ Template:Kosovo-note |
References:
- ^ Goran speech by dr. Radivoje Mladenovic Template:Sr icon
- ^ Dokle, Nazif. Reçnik Goransko (Nashinski) - Albanski, Sofia 2007, Peçatnica Naukini akademiji "Prof. Marin Drinov", s. 5, 11, 19 (Nazif Dokle. Goranian (Nashinski) - Albanian Dictionary, Sofia 2007, Published by Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, p. 5, 11, 19)
- ^ [1]
- ^ Template:PDFlink, UNHCR Kosovo, June 2004
- Нексхат Ибрахими, Първи контакти на исляма с Балканските нации
- Хюсеин Мехмед. Помаците и торбешите в Мизия, Тракия и Македония., С., 2007.
External links
- RadioGora.net "the original Gorani radio"
- NGlove.net "Gorani portal and social network"
- NezavisnaGora.com "Gorani web portal"
- Goranci.info "Gorani portals info - english version"
- Mp3Gora
- RadioGora
- Shishtavec
- Gora Cafe
- Website of Gorani people, self identifying as Bulgarian
- GORA-BROD, "link expired"
- Project Rastko - Gora, E-library of culture and tradition of Gora and Gorani people
- Gorani (Nasencite) Template:Bg icon
- A Travel among Goranis Template:Bs icon, "link expired"
- Gorani Fear Losing Identity, Adrian Kelmendi, Institute for War and Peace Reporting, 21 February 2001
- The minorities within the minority, The Economist, 2 November 2006
Video clips
- Clip of the Gorani film Ofčarče
- Photo presentation with traditional Gorani music
- Another photo presentation of Gorani villages with traditional music PART I
- PART II "Setnja kroz goranske sela"
- Naša Gora — A beautiful photo presentation
- "Snimak iz Brodska Svadba 2007. Ekiba Onlinebrod prestava sa svoje snimci" — A Gorani wedding in Brod
- Articles needing cleanup from June 2009
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- Wikipedia pages needing cleanup from June 2009
- Ethnic groups in Kosovo
- Ethnic groups in Serbia
- Ethnic groups in the Republic of Macedonia
- Ethnic groups in Albania
- Muslim communities
- Slavs
- Islam in Europe
- Islam in the Republic of Macedonia
- Geography of Kosovo