culture

#TiranaReads to Remember

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The Institute for Democracy, Media & Culture (IDMC) in collaboration with Konrad Adenauer Foundation and Europe House started the "TiranaReads2018" activity series. The "Literature as Place of Memory – #TiranaReads to Remember" activity was held on 22 May 2018 in the Europe House Conference room located within the Palace of Congresses. This year's #TiranaReads took as its main subject a combination of reading about and reflecting on the past. This topic was chosen to commemorate the 45th anniversary of the Spaç revolt and to urge its historical memory.

IDMC director Dr. Jonila Godole and the representative of European Union Delegation in Albania Monika Bylaite opened the activity. Dr. Godole highlighted the role of literature on transmitting human experiences and praised the interest of the young people, present in the activity. Ms. Bylaite, coming from the former communist country of Lithuania, shared a similar belief and emphasized the importance of dealing with the past.

Under the moderation of Dr. Jonila Godole and Lili Sula, the Head of the Literature Department at University of Tirana, the floor was given first to Fatbardha Saraçi, who had collected the testimonies of women who had suffered from persecution in prisons during the dictatorship. She said modestly that the three volumes of her book "Dhimbje" were not her work, but the work of those who confessed. "I chose this mission because the persistent persecution of myself and, on the other hand, I was close to those women who suffered more than me. I thought to write about this topic immediately after 1990. I thought that a novel would not be expected well, it could be thought of as a fiction; therefore I decided to transmit everything from direct interviews with all the women," said Saraçi, niece of Qazim Mulleti, collecting some of the most horrifying experiences of the notorious Tepelena camp. A piece of one of the many testimonies was read by an actor was screened to the hall.

"I advise you to read these stories, read them slowly. Do not read them to show us mercy; we do not need mercy. But we want you to understand that time better in order not to be repeated again."
Saraçi

Afterwards, Professor Lili Sulaj invited Fatos Lubonja in discussion. Sulaj said that for the new generation Lubonja is not well known for his publicity, but rather for his political opinions or attitudes. She focused on his book "Ridënimi" which Lubonja said had been based on a true story. Facing the question of why he had chosen to use the real names for the main characters, he confessed with emotions that he had to do that.

"This is the story of Xhelal Koprencka, Fadil Kokomani dhe Vangjel Lezho, who wrote a letter to the dictator and were shot because they wrote the truth. Two of them – Fadil and Vangjel – were my friends and journalists. Today, when journalists are not telling the truth, I must remember their names because it is my duty for everything they did."
Lubonja

The part that Lubonja read focused on the "testament of the days of freedom", the testament from the moment before his friends Kokomani and Lezho were shot… whose remains, along with Koprencka's remains, are still missing to this day.

Further, the activity was followed with the discussion of the book "O njeri..!" ("Oh man..!") which shares memories of imprisonment by Gëzim Peshkëpia. He explained that the title came from a living story. "For the title I took inspiration from a real person called Muço, who was blind. The words "Oh man..!", which he used address people in the prison, was touching, but filled with love, and aroused contrast to the place where we were," said Peshkëpia, who read a piece of the book and further showed the confrontation with prosecutor Siri Çarçani, who signed the execution of his father, Manush Peshkëpia.

Arlinda Çausholli, a publicist, discussed a part of her book "Çizmet e verdha" called "Krahët e lirisë dhe Rini Monajka" which features the story of a hero of the anti-Communist movement in Shkodra in 1990. She said that the book contains her thoughts on things that impressed her to move forward, like the values and importance of freedom, and she wanted to share those thoughts with others who thought like her. She urged young people to be aware of the importance of the freedom that they have today.

The director of the Institute for Studying Consequences of Communist Crime (ISKK) Agron Tufa revealed to the participants that he was writing something about the Tepelena camp, or the "extermination camp" as he called it. Tufa also spoke about the importance of testimonies of the former persecuted of the communist regime in educating the younger generation.