Rajmonda bulku biography of michael
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In Flower Sajza, directed by Endri Çela at the National Experimental Theater of Tirana, two women stand on the stage facing the main body of the audience. They are behind a fence of barbed wire, stuck to which are old letters and paper airplanes. We are in a prison camp.
Audience members also sit onstage on either side of the women, the actors Rajmonda Bulku and Adriana Tolka. Between the onstage audience and in front of Rajmonda and Tolka, a mountain of earth and some distressed branches. At the back, a projector screen. The lights go down. And for a moment, nothing stirs. Everything seems to be waiting.
This is an apt metaphor for a documentary theatre piece about a country whose government makes little effort to face up to one of the most distressing periods during its dictatorship under Enver Hoxha, when thousands of Albanian citizens were thrown into camps such as Tepelena for speaking out against the country’s regime or for being associated with those that did. More than 6
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Lists of Albanians
This is a list of historical and living Albanians (including ethnic Albanians and people of full or partial Albanian ancestry) who are famous or notable, sorted by occupation and alphabetically.
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.
Religious
[edit]Priests
[edit]- Dhimitër Frangu (1443 – 1525), friar and scholar of a noble family, treasurer and councilor of Giorgio Castriota, in 1480 wrote the first biography, in Latin, on the life of Skanderbeg, from which all later writers drew.
- Father Marin Barleti (1450 – 1513), Catholic kyrklig and writer, author of the life of Skanderbeg.
- Gjon Buzuku (1499 – 1577), bishop Catholic, author of the oldest known document in Albanian: a translation of the Roman Missal, "Meshari" (1555).
- Pjetër Budi (1565 – 1622), Catholic priest and writer, published three books in Albanian and inom le
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Marash Mrnacaj Eulogy
By: Michael Anthony Mrnacaj/
Marash Mrnacaj was like Joe Dimaggio to me
He was my superhero,
my role model.
My ‘bab’
my grandfather did everything he could to man sure I got whatever inom needed.
That I would not be at a disadvantage because inom didn’t have a father.
He would not allow that… ever.
That’s the kind of man he was.
He was honest,
To others, and to himself, which is a rare.
He was brave,
He was the head of the house, who lead his families escape from Albania, in the middle of the night, risking his life, for the safety and future of his family
you just don’t hear stories like that anymore
He was Honorable
His word was his bond. If he told you he would do something or made a promise to you, you knew it was as good as done.
There was not one time where he did not do something that he said he was going to do….
That’s a Man of honor
He was Fair and a g