
A Move Toward Christianity Stirs in a Muslim Land
Christian converts in Kosovo, where the vast majority of people are Muslim, hope to revive a pre-Islamic past they see as a key to their European identity.
By Andrew Higgins and Fatjona Mejdini
Christian converts in Kosovo, where the vast majority of people are Muslim, hope to revive a pre-Islamic past they see as a key to their European identity.
By Andrew Higgins and Fatjona Mejdini
She was the first U.S. ambassador to a newly independent Balkans nation and recently oversaw the transfer of cooperating Guantánamo prisoners to third countries.
By Carol Rosenberg
High temperatures and higher mountains were no match for our author and her companion as they biked the Trans Dinarica, a new cycling route that winds through eight countries in the remote Dinaric Alps.
By Sophie Stuber
The officer, Juan Perez, faces up to 364 days in jail for assault. The victim, who later killed himself in Kosovo, had been throwing water at passers-by.
By Lola Fadulu
NATO’s intervention against Serbia’s campaign against Kosovo set the tiny country up for independence.
By Albin Kurti
After a childhood marked by war and exile, Petrit Halilaj has become one of his generation’s great talents.
By Jason Farago
Petrit Halilaj of Kosovo began drawing as a refugee child in the Balkans during a violent decade and invented a calligraphic world of memory.
By Holland Cotter
She helped people fleeing conflicts in Vietnam, China, Kosovo and elsewhere around the world, and established the Washington office of the International Rescue Committee.
By Adam Nossiter
More than a decade ago, before running for president, Donald Trump expressed interest in developing the same site in Belgrade that his son-in-law now plans to invest $500 million in rebuilding.
By Eric Lipton, Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan
Lee, of South Korea, will transform the facade; Petrit Halilaj of Kosovo, the Roof Garden; and Tong Yang-Tze, the Great Hall with calligraphy.
By Zachary Small
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