We’ve got time:
Peacebuilding through the arts in
Kosovo and Serbia
Vana
Filipovski, peaceagency.org
...
November 5th, 2019
From whichever
side one observes them,
Kosovo-Serbia relations seem like a
never-ending story. While social and
political clashes in recent years
have hampered any attempted
compromise, some small, but very
valuable programmes seem to prove
the opposite. This article will shed
light on “Serbia and Kosovo:
Intercultural Icebreakers,” a
programme that uses arts to improve
tensions between the two sides. This
initiative has proven to be highly
effective to foster positive
perceptions and to contribute to
reconciliation and peacebuilding.
Intercultural
Icebreakers was established by the
Helsinki Committee for Human Rights
in Serbia to support the
implementation of the Belgrade –
Pristina agreement as well as to
ensure quality media coverage of
Kosovo-Serbia reconciliation efforts
and the normalization processes. The
project used a peacebuilding method
called “contact work,” which created
a space for youth from opposing
sides to interact in person. The
Committee chose up to 10 young
artists or cultural workers from
Serbia and up to 10 from Kosovo from
an open call for applications. The
selection process included questions
about personal information,
opinions, and reasons for interest.
Intercultural
Icebreakers had two phases – a study
tour and project development. In the
first phase, two groups first
gathered in Belgrade where they
attended seminars, visited cultural
sites and met with professionals
working in the arts. After five
days, the group traveled to Kosovo
where they participated in the same
activities in Pristina and Prizren.
To ensure communication between the
two national groups, each
participant was paired with a
participant of the opposite
nationality for the duration of the
study tour. At the end of the trip,
each pair could decide to develop
the final project together or
separately. In the second phase of
the programme, the participants
either as a large group, pairs, or
individually developed arts and
cultural projects.
In 2017, the final
project was an exhibition called “10
do 12, we’ve got time!” which
included a mixture of photography,
film, poetry among other artistic
installations. The organizers of the
exhibition explained the purpose of
the project when they said the
following:
“We, as
members of the younger generations
[…] want to state that we have got
the time to get to know each other
better – and more importantly – to
live and work in peace, never
forgetting the past, but with a
strong dedication to building a
brighter future for all.”
As one of the
participants of the programme, I was
involved in the “10 do 12, we’ve got
time” show. My Kosovar partner and I
used photography to show points of
similarities in Kosovar and Serbian
architecture. We called it “Common
Sensing.”
We decided to find
neutral things these two places have
in common. We chose buildings.
Through their differences, we wanted
to emphasize their similarities in
color, shape or symbol: a realistic
picture of the current situation in
Kosovo and Serbia, where through
architectural images, the art and
culture of the cities emerge. How
far or close they are from each
other, the common ones, or even the
separate ones, may appear in an
ideal way through these images.
Buildings are part of visual
perception, which, at the very end,
is a conscious act of choice. We can
choose what we want to see. We chose
to see similarities between Kosovo
and Serbia. To others we wanted to
ask, what do you choose?
The programme
itself was not just for personal
cultural enrichment, but it also
succeeded in promoting mutual
understanding between the two
parties. Results of the survey
conducted two years after the
exhibition showed that most of the
participants had indeed changed
their initial view about their
neighbors. Even those whose view did
not change entirely felt that their
perspective “got better in quality,
more detailed perception of what is
going on, and how people actually
live/think/act.” When asked how
relevant these types of projects
are, however, all of the
participants answered “very
important.” In addition, all of them
would recommend participation in
this project.
The positive and
significant impact of the programme
stems from the possibility for
participants to break down
stereotypes about “the other” in
person. Some feedback by
participants from both Kosovo and
Serbia support this view:
“After I met
so many great people from Belgrade
with a big heart, and positive
energy, who showed us that they are
also human beings and think like we
do. We had the same energy and need
to work together in a group, to move
forward, and create amazing things
together.”
“I felt so
welcome. I never had prejudices but
there was a bit of feeling that I
should remain cautious. But when I
arrived everyone seemed and behaved
so friendly with me, trying to
welcome me in the best way. I was
even offered a coffee by a complete
stranger on the street and I have
many memories that were made just in
a few days. I wish I could have
visited there even before.”
Furthermore, this
programme opened new paths of
communication between youth in
Kosovo and Serbia, giving them the
chance to create another narrative
within their communities, and hence
a different reality.
“First just in
the entry of Belgrade while going to
the hotel, we people from Kosovo saw
a really bad word on a billboard in
front of the Parliament Building,
which didn’t make us feel so good
and safe. And then we continued with
the thought that our political
relations aren’t so good, and they
try to plant negative energy on the
people from Belgrade. Then we
arrived at the hotel, later we met
with the group of the workshop,
where the journey has just started.
And good things were in the way… and
I’m really glad I’ve met these
people.”
On the question
“has the perception of Belgrade
changed after this project?”, the
same participant said: “I showed to
my family, friends, all about this
workshop or journey as I call it,
and explained to them in details
everything, how we collaborate, what
we did together, how we had so much
fun together, learned so many things
from each other, and how we created
a good work in the end, an
exhibition.”
Lastly and most
importantly, this programme slowly
but effectively creates a generation
of different kinds of thinkers. With
more open-minded solutions at their
hands, these young people have an
alternative of constructing better
relationships with neighboring
countries:
“I was telling
the story of my trip to all the
people asking me about where I’m
from, which is almost everyone I
happen to meet. They loved it, and
could feel my excitement.”
“I continued
to be involved in the project and
expanded my circle of people and
values. I would definitely use the
practice of visiting both Belgrade
and Pristina because for most of us
it was the first time we visited
those cities and that had a huge
effect.”
Every year,
another group of 20 young people
participate in the programme. By
2030, these groups will hopefully
have an even larger impact and there
will be more creative proposals for
enhancing cultural and political
relations as well as more
willingness to make positive
changes:
“I confirmed
the age-old saying that nothing is
truly what it seems, which I would
expand to the following: What you
think you know is only a fragment of
the whole picture.”
In conclusion, all
of the above-mentioned factors are
crucial steps for reconciliation.
Art-based processes and common
cultural experiences can be
effective tools in raising awareness
and rebuilding relationships. What
they share is the importance of an
emotional component, which is
essential not just for
reconciliation, but for the whole
process of peacebuilding. Throughout
the process of artistic creation and
personal experience a link is formed
between rational and emotional. This
link is how we become aware of the
ways we perceive and also of the
possibility to change the meaning of
that perception. Therefore, in the
process of reconciliation, art can
be helpful in terms of making both
sides of the conflict aware of each
other and, from there, creating
common ground for mutual
understanding.
Can we imagine a
world where decision-makers propose
artistic cooperation between parties
in conflict to support their
interstate relations? Can art and
culture become essential tools for
positive change in post-conflict
societies? Maybe it is time to
re-imagine international relations
and start thinking about
alternative, more creative
solutions.
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