Prizren, Kosovo and Metohija, September 2, 2024
eparhija-prizren.com
An archaeological-art festival in Kosovo and Metohija sparked controversy this year with an opening display that included the burning of crosses.
Ulpiana Fest, near Gračanica, is in its second year. The organizer describe the festival: “Ulpiana Fest brings the experience of the ancient and cultural period, combining it with contemporary art. It is a journey that helps us better understand our roots, offering a new perspective that strengthens our connection to our heritage and cultural identity.”
However, this year the festival began with what the Diocese of Raška and Prizren calls a “neopagan performance” featuring an “unprecedented and dishonorable act [that] represents a grave insult to all Christians.”
Read the diocese’s full statement:
The Raška-Prizren Diocese has expressed deep concern over the disturbing news that this year’s Ulpiana Festival, held in the archaeological park of the ancient Roman city of Ulpiana near Gračanica, began with a neopagan performance in which three large crosses were set on fire.
This unprecedented and dishonorable act represents a grave insult to all Christians, particularly to our community in the predominantly Serbian municipality of Gračanica, where this archaeological site is located. The burning of crosses evokes memories of the horrific times of pagan persecutions of Christians, as well as the systematic destruction of Serbian Orthodox sanctuaries in Kosovo and Metohija in recent times. During the wave of vandal attacks by Kosovo Albanian extremists, dozens of churches were destroyed and burned, with crosses being set on fire and demolished. Crosses were also desecrated and broken at many Christian cemeteries. The burning of crosses near Gračanica Monastery is not only an affront to the Christian faith but also a direct threat.
This tasteless and deeply vandalistic act has no connection to the heritage of Justinian’s Ulpiana—Justinian Secunda—where remnants of an early Christian basilica and baptistery can still be seen, erected on the very site where Saints Florus and Laurus, the first Christian martyrs of this region, suffered and were crucified.
In the predominantly Muslim-inhabited territory of Kosovo and Metohija, such public desecration of the most sacred Christian symbol under the guise of perverse art shows astonishing irresponsibility on the part of those who organized this event and raises serious doubts about their ability to care for the ancient Christian heritage.
The legacy of ancient Ulpiana continues to be upheld by the nearby Gračanica Monastery, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, which for 700 years has stood close to ancient Ulpiana site as a testament to the Christian faith.
Follow OrthoChristian on Twitter, Vkontakte, Telegram, WhatsApp, MeWe, and Gab!