Dardania |
Arriving into the complex from Bill
Klinton, rows of looming concrete apartment buildings surround you,
with a pedestrian causeway located between the buildings and on top
of an automotive tunnel. Beside the tunnel, you then see an
underground mall with a mosaic floor, cafes, shops, markets, and
restaurants. All of this, from the imposing buildings to the
causeway, has been built in concrete, giving the locale the image of
an urban canyon. Indeed, as can be deduced from its moderately
crumbling steps, Dardania was built by the Yugoslav government in the
“modernistic socialist mode” during the 1960s and 1970s, and it
remains an example of modernist architecture in Prishtina.
However, Dardania is more than an
example of architecture from a time gone by; it is the site of a
cohesive community. Because of the way the neighbourhood has been
built, social activity centers on the causeway located between the
apartments. Children play in the causeway's open spaces, and the
numerous cafes, each with their own atmospheres, are regularly
bustling throughout the day. During my morning coffee (locally,
makiato), I frequently see regulars coming in to socialize.
Indeed, Dardania is a very communal place, as perhaps is emphasized
by how rarely people have their coffees without being accompanied by
others.
Thus, it failed to surprise me when I
was informed that Dardania is a tight-nit community where the
residents and, perhaps cafe regulars, all know each other and
integrate new comers. I have indeed experienced this hospitality and,
I must say, I am very grateful. In anthropological and sociological
theory, this could indicate the presence of social networks with
close relational bonds. Although, since I've been here for less than
a month, there's no use in pretending to be certain.
Additionally, Dardania is also
witnessing intense spatial changes. From my window, I can see a
cluster of three buildings growing steadily towards the sky. This
leads to the question, what might happen to the community once the
complex is built? Will the influx of new staff be integrated within
the neighborhood, or will their pressure becoming overwhelming?
These are merely speculative questions
which have occupied my sometimes overly-imaginative mind over the
past couple weeks. However, they rise from the extent to which urban
changes have gripped Prishtina over the previous years. Karin Norman,
in her own recent ethnographic account, mentions how the Yugoslav
government destroyed many of the city's Ottoman areas during the
1950s in order to build new, “modern” residential and commercial
buildings, such as those in Dardania. During the 1998-1999 Kosovo
War, many of the city's Albanian residents evacuated, returning after
NATO's bombardment in 1999. Coinciding with the Albanians'
homecoming, much of the Serb and Roma populations escaped, with the
former leaving for locales such as the Gracanica enclave and Northern
Kosovo. Also during this time period, the city became home to a large
number of rural migrants, who had lost their homes as a result of the
war's violence. These changes, of urban development and armed
conflict, have been accompanied over the 15 years since by an influx
of international aid, the accompanying arrival of aid workers, and,
according to Norman, the corresponding rise in (often illegal)
housing construction and prices.
Norman's ethnographic vignettes of
Dardania, portraying nostalgia, migration, pre-war childhoods, and
Roma livelihoods, show how the practices of residents shape the
meanings, rhythms, and physical structures which make up Prishtina.
In doing so, they contribute to the ways in which Dardania takes
shape. Indeed, Dardania, as described in the paragraphs above, is a
tight-nit community that has endured, and continues to endure,
substantial changes. However, as events have also shown, the
neighbourhood is not separate from the city's changes but wrapped up
within them as a spatial location in urban life. The investigation of
spaces such as Dardania then gives us a window into how larger events
within the city shape the community and how the community molds the
city.
Works Cited:
Norman, K., 2014. Shifting experiences of places in Prishtina. Eurozine, pp.1–8. Available at: http://www.eurozine.com/pdf/2014-02-12-normank-en.pdf [Accessed March 28, 2014].
Works Cited:
Norman, K., 2014. Shifting experiences of places in Prishtina. Eurozine, pp.1–8. Available at: http://www.eurozine.com/pdf/2014-02-12-normank-en.pdf [Accessed March 28, 2014].
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