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New honour code aims to cut killings
The Scotsman ^ | 23 April 2005 | Christian Jennings in Pristina

Posted on 04/23/2005 11:23:12 AM PDT by Doctor13

KOSOVO and Albania’s centuries-old code of honour has been modernised to try to reduce the number of men killed or forced into hiding by blood feuds and vendettas.

About 5,000 people met this month at a clan gathering in northern Albania where they decided that in a case of murder, only the actual killer, rather than his extended family, can be targeted in a revenge blood feud.

The traditional Albanian code of honour is known as the "Kanun of Leke Dukagjini", after a 15th-century guide to social behaviour written by a medieval leader.

The Kanun, or code, essentially demands blood for blood and an eye for an eye, and places the responsibility for safeguarding a family’s honour, or "bese", on its male members.

Not just vendettas, but everything from land tenure, to bee-keeping to the role of women in society is covered by the Kanun, available in a coffee-table version for €35 at Dukagjini booksellers in central Pristina.

Gjelosh Palaj, an Albanian man who lost three children in revenge attacks last year, said: "The new code clearly states that no-one but the murderer should pay for the crime."

Ramush Haradinaj, Kosovo’s ethnic-Albanian former prime minister, who has pleaded not guilty to war crimes charges at the United Nations’ tribunal in the Hague, was allowed home to Kosovo last week to attend the funeral of his youngest brother, Enver, murdered in a machine-gun attack in western Kosovo.

Under the dictats of the Kanun, the Haradinaj family is now "in blood" with the killer, whoever police investigations prove him to be.

One recent estimate said that 650 families in Albania and Kosovo had been forced to go undergound because of outstanding vendettas against them.

Under the old rulings every male member of an extended family that had an outstanding blood feud against them could be legitimately targeted the moment they stepped out of their homes.

The Kanun makes ample provision for such instances in which menfolk are incapable of working the land: the women do it for them, mostly at night.

Under the old traditions of the Kanun, all male members of a family with the same name as the murderer can be targeted by the vendetta, while the family of the murderer were obliged to shelter him, thus confronting the investigating police officers with a wall of silence.

The new code says that a murderer should not be helped to hide, and that the children of families that harbour murderers will not be accepted in marriage by other families.

Women have a particularly hard time under the Kanun. Page 38 states that "a woman is known as a sack, made to endure". Any husband who "beats his wife bloody" has only to explain himself to her family.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: albania; balkans; kosovo; pristina

1 posted on 04/23/2005 11:23:13 AM PDT by Doctor13
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To: Doctor13
working the land: the women do it for them, mostly at night.

Gee whiz--if us Wisconsin farmers had had a deal like this 45 years ago, I might still be one--

2 posted on 04/23/2005 11:29:19 AM PDT by rellimpank (urbanites don' t understand the cultural deprivation of not being raised on a farm:NRABenefactor)
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To: Doctor13
they decided that in a case of murder, only the actual killer, rather than his extended family, can be targeted in a revenge blood feud.

Duh! What a concept! Regular bunch of social Einsteins.

3 posted on 04/23/2005 11:31:51 AM PDT by Maceman (Too nuanced for a bumper sticker)
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To: Doctor13
Yet another blow to cultural diversity in our world.

Albanians should know that this is just one step on the slippery slope that ends with France.
4 posted on 04/23/2005 11:34:09 AM PDT by InABunkerUnderSF (San Francisco - See It Before God Smites It.)
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To: rellimpank

Imagine what you woulda had to put up with if you even *thought* about askin for that. You might have been able to get her to do it, but I think you would be wishing you'd have more time to spend with the cows.


5 posted on 04/23/2005 11:58:47 AM PDT by GoLightly
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To: Doctor13

The Scotsman is always worth checking.

They manage to do some original reporting.


6 posted on 04/23/2005 12:03:24 PM PDT by aculeus (Ceci n'est pas une tag line.)
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To: Doctor13
When I was in the Balkans, the public affairs officer at our embassy in Tirana also doubled as the cultural exchange officer. She arranged for an American touring band to play at the theater in Shkodra in nothern Albania. The theater manager was "in blood", so had to stay inside his house where the other clan was not allowed to kill him. She had to go to his house in the hills and sit down with a sketch of the theater and make all the arrangements--a singular experience!

I spent a lot of time in the Albanian populated areas and have never been treated so hospitably & courteously in my life--but I was also never more concentrated on minding my behavior to ensure I did not give occasion for offense!

7 posted on 04/23/2005 12:09:09 PM PDT by mark502inf
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To: InABunkerUnderSF
Honor killings by Muslims go on right here in the States. There was a case where the father killed his daughter because she had taken a job in a fast-food place.

Does anyone remember that one? There were others also, and remember that happend right here!

Even if the daughter or sister is raped, it is blamed on the girl so she is the one who is punished.

8 posted on 04/23/2005 12:12:34 PM PDT by Doctor13
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To: InABunkerUnderSF
Honor killings by Muslims go on right here in the States. There was a case where the father killed his daughter because she had taken a job in a fast-food place.

Does anyone remember that one? There were others also, and remember that happend right here!

Even if the daughter or sister is raped, it is blamed on the girl so she is the one who is punished.

9 posted on 04/23/2005 12:12:42 PM PDT by Doctor13
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To: Doctor13
Reading this, aren't you all delighted that we went to war in the Balkans?

I mean, it's lovely that we bombed the descendents of the men who rescued our downed WWII pilots, on behalf of Muslim whackos who are nationally obsessed with honor killings, who yearn for us to go back to the 7th century, and finally convert or kill our kids!

Good thing we helped out those Ethnic Albanians! I felt so American when we did that!

10 posted on 04/23/2005 12:32:11 PM PDT by gaijin
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To: Doctor13
This article was actually about Albanian vendetta customs, not honor killings of women as they are practiced in the rest of the Muslim world.

At a certain level Islam was from its very beginnings a misogynistic reaction to Christianity's acceptance of women.

Most Middle Eastern religions viewed women with contempt. Even pre-Christian era Temple Judaism regarded women as unclean and required them to sit apart from men at Temple. When Christianity came along with it's reverence for the Virgin Mary and numerous early female saints and martyrs one of the reasons for its popularity as a faith was its inclusion of women.

Islam arose as part of the iconoclast movement that encouraged the breaking of icons, generally paintings of Christ or the Virgin. Islam which asserts that women have half the value of men was a hit with certain, perhaps less secure and maybe less straight element of Middle Eastern society.

What is a mystery to me is why any woman would voluntarily convert to Islam. Yet in western countries many do - most of the comfortable, middle class "liberals".
11 posted on 04/23/2005 1:06:16 PM PDT by InABunkerUnderSF (San Francisco - See It Before God Smites It.)
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To: Doctor13
"...where they decided that in a case of murder, only the actual killer, rather than his extended family, can be targeted in a revenge blood feud."

"The Kanun, or code, essentially demands blood for blood and an eye for an eye, and places the responsibility for safeguarding a family’s honour, or "bese", on its male members."

No this is nothing to do with "an eye for an eye" quite the opposite this scripture limits revenge to like for like. You cannot go around killing extended family members as the "Kanum" recommended. Looks like they are now catching up with the Old Testament in limiting culpability to just the killer.

12 posted on 04/23/2005 1:24:13 PM PDT by protest1
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To: Doctor13
Honor killings by Muslims

The Albanian code of Lek Dukagjini is not the same; in fact it expressly prohibits the killing of females (although a husband beating his wife is no problem!) There is no such thing as honor killings of females--the females have no "honor" in the code so an injury or insult to one clan can only be recompensed with the blood from another male. That is why when a clan is "in blood", the females work the fields and do the shopping and so on--there is no danger to them. Edith Durham in her books about Albania describes how females walked untouched thru the middle of firefights between opposing clans.

Of historical interest, Duke John (Dukagjini), who reputedly wrote the code, was a Christian Albanian who fought alongside Skanderbeg--the Albanian national hero--against the Ottomans. His domain was in the remote northern Albanian mountains, to include portions of what is now Kosovo. The code was intended to instill some law in areas where there was none.

13 posted on 04/23/2005 1:24:35 PM PDT by mark502inf
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To: Doctor13
Honor killings by Muslims

The Albanian code of Lek Dukagjini is not the same; in fact it expressly prohibits the killing of females (although a husband beating his wife is no problem!) There is no such thing as honor killings of females--the females have no "honor" in the code so an injury or insult to one clan can only be recompensed with the blood from another male. That is why when a clan is "in blood", the females work the fields and do the shopping and so on--there is no danger to them. Edith Durham in her books about Albania describes how females walked untouched thru the middle of firefights between opposing clans.

Of historical interest, Duke John (Dukagjini), who reputedly wrote the code, was a Christian Albanian who fought alongside Skanderbeg--the Albanian national hero--against the Ottomans. His domain was in the remote northern Albanian mountains, to include portions of what is now Kosovo. The code was intended to instill some law in areas where there was none.

14 posted on 04/23/2005 1:26:55 PM PDT by mark502inf
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To: protest1
Your scripture yes, my scripture yes. Don't forget we are talking about a 16th century Muslim code of ethics (or lack there of).

There is a reason why some countries become prosperous and free and others remain primitive backwaters.

A small island nation with few resources that had broken away from its church and was held in contempt by much of Europe had little to recommend it in the late 16th century other than a code of laws that ensured civil peace peace and domestic justice. Yet it prospered while larger nations with greater resources floundered. Albania had the Kanun and rules for vendetta and England had a legal system based on the civil justice and the rule of law.

As an EU citizen you are probably going to have to pay to drag Albania into the 21st century. Sorry.
15 posted on 04/23/2005 1:37:59 PM PDT by InABunkerUnderSF (San Francisco - See It Before God Smites It.)
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To: InABunkerUnderSF
a 16th century Muslim code of ethics

To set the historical record straight, Dukagjini--the author of the code--was Christian, a Catholic who was one of the leaders in the Albanian resistance against the Ottoman invasion.

16 posted on 04/23/2005 2:37:41 PM PDT by mark502inf
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To: mark502inf
Sorry hadn't realized that.

Thought the Ottomans had come into the Balkans earlier.
17 posted on 04/23/2005 3:30:28 PM PDT by InABunkerUnderSF (San Francisco - See It Before God Smites It.)
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To: InABunkerUnderSF
Thought the Ottomans had come into the Balkans earlier.

They had, but the Albanians under their national hero Skanderbeg and in that tough terrain held out well into the 15th Century. Lek Dukagjini was a contemporary of Skanderbeg's who brought his forces to fight alongside Skanderbeg. Skanderbeg also had the advantage of the Adriatic coastline so the Venetians with the prodding of the Pope could support him.

The 1389 Battle of Kosovo Polje is probably the most famous Balkans battle against the Ottomans, but there is an intriguing historical "what if" in the lesser known second battle of Kosovo in 1448. A large army of Hungarians, Serbs and Germans under the Romanian Hunyadi confronted an Ottoman army in Kosovo once again. Skanderbeg with five years experience in fighting the Ottomans was enroute to help, but encountered the remnants of Hunyadi's routed army only 20 miles from the battlefield. "If" they had linked up earlier, they would have had a decisive advantage over the Ottomans and history may have turned out differently. Instead, by the end of the century, the entire Balkans area was under the control of the Turks.

18 posted on 04/23/2005 6:06:34 PM PDT by mark502inf
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To: InABunkerUnderSF
Thought the Ottomans had come into the Balkans earlier.

They had, but the Albanians under their national hero Skanderbeg and in that tough terrain held out well into the 15th Century. Lek Dukagjini was a contemporary of Skanderbeg's who brought his forces to fight alongside Skanderbeg. Skanderbeg also had the advantage of the Adriatic coastline so the Venetians with the prodding of the Pope could support him.

The 1389 Battle of Kosovo Polje is probably the most famous Balkans battle against the Ottomans, but there is an intriguing historical "what if" in the lesser known second battle of Kosovo in 1448. A large army of Hungarians, Serbs and Germans under the Romanian Hunyadi confronted an Ottoman army in Kosovo once again. Skanderbeg with five years experience in fighting the Ottomans was enroute to help, but encountered the remnants of Hunyadi's routed army only 20 miles from the battlefield. "If" they had linked up earlier, they would have had a decisive advantage over the Ottomans and history may have turned out differently. Instead, by the end of the century, the entire Balkans area was under the control of the Turks.

19 posted on 04/23/2005 6:06:42 PM PDT by mark502inf
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