Featured Author
Sam Vaknin
by S. Vaknin
Sam
Vaknin is the author of "Malignant
Self Love - Narcissism... and "After
the Rain ".
He is a columnist in "Central Europe Review", United Press
International (UPI) and ebookweb.org and the editor of mental health and
Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory, Suite101 and
searcheurope.com. Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to
the Government of Macedonia.

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Sam Vaknin
AUTHOR BIO:
Sam Vaknin is the author of "Malignant
Self Love - Narcissism... and "After
the Rain ".
He is a columnist in "Central Europe Review", United Press
International (UPI) and ebookweb.org and the editor of mental health and
Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory, Suite101 and
searcheurope.com. Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the
Government of Macedonia.
His web site:
http://samvak.tripod.com
Sam Vaknin's "Central Europe Review" Author Archive:
http://www.ce-review.org/authorarchives/vaknin_archive/vaknin_main.html
Contact Info: palma@unet.com.mk; samvak@briefcase.com
180 articles and essays (International Affairs) by the
same author - available!
http://samvak.tripod.com/guide.html Balkan essays and
articles here: http://www.balkanlands.com
Skopje - Where Time Stood Still
By: Dr. Sam Vaknin
Frozen at an early morning hour, the stony hands of the
giant, cracked clock commemorate the horror. The earthquake that struck
Skopje in 1963 has shattered not only its Byzantine decor, has demolished
not merely the narrow passageways of its Ottoman past, has transformed not
only its Habsburgian waterfront with its baroque National Theatre. The
disastrous reconstruction, supervised by a Japanese architect, has robbed it
of its soul. It has been rendered a drab and sprawling socialist metropolis
replete with monumentally vainglorious buildings, now falling into
decrepitude and disrepair. The influx of destitute and simpleton villagers
(which more than quintupled Skopje's population) was crammed by central
planners with good intentions and avaricious nature into low-quality,
hi-rise slums in newly constructed "settlements".
Skopje is a city of extremes. Its winter is harsh in
shades of white and grey. Its summer is naked and steamy and effulgent. It
pulses throughout the year in smoke-filled, foudroyant bars and dingy
coffee-houses. Polydipsic youths in migratory skeins, eager to be noted by
their peers, young women on the hunt, ageing man keen to be preyed upon,
suburbanites in search of recognition, gold chained mobsters surrounded by
flaxen voluptuousness - the cast of the watering holes of this potholed
eruption of a city.
The trash seems never to be collected here, the streets
are perilously punctured, policemen often substitute for dysfunctional
traffic lights. The Macedonians drive like the Italians, gesture like the
Jews, dream like the Russians, are obstinate like the Serbs, desirous like
the French and hospitable like the Bedouins. It is a magical concoction,
coated in the subversive patience and the aggressive passivity of the long
oppressed. There is the wisdom of fear itself in the eyes of the 600,000
inhabitants of this landlocked, mountain-surrounded habitat. Never certain
of their future, still grappling with their identity, an air of "carpe diem"
with the most solemn religiosity of the devout. The past lives on and flows
into the present seamlessly. People recount the history of every stone,
recite the antecedents of every man. They grieve together, rejoice in common
and envy en masse. A single organism with many heads, it offers the comforts
of assimilation and solidarity and the horrors of violated privacy and
bigotry. The people of this conurbation may have left the village - but it
never let them go. They are the opsimaths of urbanism. Their rural roots are
everywhere: in the the division of the city into tight-knit, local-patriotic
"settlements". In the traditional marriages and funerals. In the scarcity of
divorces despite the desperate shortage in accommodation. In the
asphyxiating but oddly reassuring familiarity of faces, places, behaviour
and beliefs, superstitions, dreams and nightmares. Life in a distended tempo
of birth and death and in between.
Skopje has it all - wide avenues with roaring traffic, the
incommodious alleys of the Old Town, the proper castle ruins (the Kale). It
has a Turkish Bridge, recently renovated out of its quaintness. It has a
square with Art Nouveau building in sepia hues. An incongruent digital clock
atop a regal edifice displayed the minutes to the millennium - and beyond.
It has been violated by American commerce in the form of three McDonald
restaurants which the locals proceeded cheerfully to transform into snug
affairs. Stolid Greek supermarkets do not seem to disrupt the inveterate
tranquility of neighbourhood small grocers and their coruscant congeries of
variegated fruits and vegetables, spilling to the pavement.
In winter, the light in Skopje is diaphanous and lambent.
In summer, tis strong and all-pervasive. Like some coquettish woman, the
city changes mantles of orange autumn leaves and the green foliage of
summer. Its pure white heart of snow often is hardened into grey and
traitorous sleet. It is a fickle mistress, now pouring rain, now drizzle,
now simmering sun. The snowy mountain caps watch patiently her vicissitudes.
Her inhabitants drive out to ski on slopes, to bathe in lakes, to climb to
sacred sites. It gives them nothing but congestion and foul atmosphere and
yet they love her dearly. The Macedonian is the peripatetic patriot -
forever shuttling between his residence abroad and his true and only home.
Between him and his land is an incestuous relationship, a love affair
unbroken, a covenant handed down the generations. Landscapes of infancy
imprinted that provoke an almost Pavolvian reaction of return.
Skopje has known many molesters. It has been traversed by
every major army in European history and then by some. Occupying a vital
crossroad, it is a layer cake of cultures and ethnicities. To the
Macedonians, the future is always portentous, ringing with the ominousness
of the past. The tension is great and palpable, a pressure cooker close to
bursting. The river Vardar divides increasingly Albanian neighbourhoods (Butel,
Cair, Shuto Orizari) from Macedonian (non-Muslim) ones. Albanians have also
moved from the villages in the periphery encircling Skopje into hitherto
"Macedonian" neighbourhoods (like Karpos and the Centre). The Romas have
their own ghetto called "Shutka" (in Shuto Orizari), rumoured to be the
biggest such community in Europe. The city has been also "invaded" (as its
Macedonian citizens experience it) by Bosnian Muslims. Gradually, as
friction mounts, segregation increases. Macedonians move out of apartment
blocks and neighbourhoods populated by Albanians. This inner migration bodes
ill for future integration. There is no inter-marriage to speak of,
educational facilities are ethnically-pure and the conflict in Kosovo with
its attendant "Great Albania" rumblings has only exacerbated a stressed and
anxious history.
It is here, above ground, that the next earthquake awaits,
along the inter-ethnic fault lines. Strained to the point of snapping by a
KFOR-induced culture shock, by the vituperative animosity between the
coalition and opposition parties, by European-record unemployment and
poverty (Albania is the poorest, by official measures) - the scene is set
for an eruption. Peaceful by long and harsh conditioning, the Macedonians
withdraw and nurture a siege mentality. The city is boisterous, its natives
felicitously facetious, its commerce flourishing. It is transmogrified by
Greek and Bulgarian investors into a Balkan business hub. But under this
shimmering facade, a great furnace of resentment and frustration spews out
the venom of intolerance. One impolitic move, one unkind remark, one wrong
motion - and it will boil over to the detriment of one and all.
Dame Rebecca West was here, in Skopje (Skoplje, as she
spells it) about 60 years ago. She wrote: "This (Macedonian) woman (in the
Orthodox church) had suffered more than most other human beings, she and her
forebears. A competent observer of this countryside has said that every
single person born in it before the Great War (and quite a number who were
born after it) has faced the prospect of violent death at least once in his
or her life. She had been born during the calamitous end of Turkish
maladministration, with its cycles of insurrection and massacre and its
social chaos. If her own village had not been murdered, she had, certainly,
heard of many that had and had never had any guarantee that hers would not
some day share the same fate... and there was always extreme poverty. She
had had far less of anything, of personal possessions, of security, of care
in childbirth than any Western woman can imagine. But she had two
possessions that any Western woman might envy. She had strength, the
terrible stony strength of Macedonia; she was begotten and born of stocks
who could mock all bullets save those which went through the heart, who
could outlive the winters when they were driven into the mountains, who
could survive malaria and plague, who could reach old age on a diet of bread
and paprika. And cupped in her destitution as in the hollow of a boulder
there are the last drops of the Byzantine tradition."
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