This is what peace looks like - Kosovo 2.0

This is what peace looks like

K2.0's latest zine

In one of the Albanian dictionaries, “peace” is defined as a state of being without worries. For those who experience war and oppression, peace becomes a dream and a vision driving their struggle for liberation. It often turns into the ultimate goal, with the belief that peace will make everything fall into place.

However, peace demands a lot of effort. War may end peace, but the end of war doesn’t always bring peace.

The authors of this zine argue that, whether through telling their own stories or sharing the stories of others, the end of a war does not free people from worry. Peace, often exalted as the desired state, can feel disturbing, bitter and exhausting.

Survivors of war may live and die without ever finding peace of mind or soul — without anyone to listen to their memories and pain, or a way to bring about justice.

This zine speaks to these people and listens to them. This is what peace looks like to them.

The memory of the train

By Vlora Konushevci

Unveiling the myth of the 1389 Battle of Kosovo

By Vesa Maxhuni

The alternative archive

By Besian Beha

Belongings that were lost during the war

By Aurela Kadriu

An alternative dictionary of post-war terms in the Albanian language

By Qerim Ondozi

Can language bring Albanian and Serbian communities together?

By Fisnik Minci

The war persists even after the war

By Uridije Lajci

In good times and in bad

By Rexhep Maloku

‘Our emotions are natural, but they're also flexible’

By Catriona O’Sullivan

Surviving a massacre

By Dafina Halili