The Gazimestan monument was designed by
Aleksandar Deroko and built in 1953 on the order of the
Serbian communist government. The monument connected the "fighting tradition" of the Serbian people with the modern-day victory of the communist revolution. It is designed in the form of a medieval tower. The inside bears inscriptions with excerpts from folk poetry about the Battle of Kosovo. Its design prompted a debate on architectural style: modernist critics, represented by the writer Živorad Stojković, saw it as incompatible with the times and reminiscent of the architectural style favored under the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. Later, the
Kosovo curse, which was recorded by the 19th-century folklorist
Vuk Karadžić and which curses any Serb who does not fight at Kosovo, was also included in Cyrillic letters on the monument. Nowadays, the monument is under constant guard by police and is surrounded by a high fence. It has been claimed that the monument was deliberately targeted for bombing and damaged during the
NATO bombing of Yugoslavia; however, an investigation by academics
András Riedlmayer and Andrew Herscher published in 2001 found that any damage observed "was not consistent with anything that could have been caused by an aerial attack." The staircase inside of the monument was reportedly damaged by an explosive after the Kosovo War. Gazimestan na Vidovdan 2009. godine.JPG|Vidovdan 2009 Monumenti memorial i Gazimestanit.jpg|Vidovdan 2013 Gazimestan2.jpg|
Kosovo curse ==Stone==