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Protecting the Children Forced to "Walk Among Snakes"
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In the United States, mourning and debate over the horror at Newtown, Connecticut, continue. Although the number of victims was fewer, even microscopic by comparison, the massacre of 26 innocents, among them 20 young children, in a public school, is reminiscent in its calculated cruelty of the Holocaust against the Jews during the second world war. Then, also, children were struck down, and denied the potential of their lives.
The flag of the Republic of Bosnia-Hercegovina. |
The flag of the Albanian nation. |
In all these conflicts, children are the most vulnerable targets. The terrible events in Newtown, Connecticut, are unconnected with a war, or with a terrorist conspiracy such as has shaken India, especially, in recent years, or with the kind of criminal atrocities seen in Latin America. But the bloodshed in Newtown reflects the same increase in political and economic instability that, historically, has fed the rise of fascism, Communism, radical nationalism, extremist Islamic ideology, and wholesale depravity.
I do not believe much is to be gained from discussing the Newtown tragedy, or the Holocaust of the Jews, or the Balkan Wars, or Islamist terrorism in South Asia, or Latin American drug mafias, as problems involving the availability or proliferation of guns. Guns follow the will to mass violence, which is heightened by social insecurity. The global financial crisis has spread from one country to another, and ordinary people look at a future they cannot predict or comprehend. Individuals with flawed characters, psychotic illnesses, and susceptibility to religious and political fanaticism, as well as corruption and wickedness, will strike out homicidally.
What counts is security for children, from the depredations of evil-doers. However this is accomplished, if must be the primary concern of all who love humanity and care for its posterity.
Reflecting on the similarity between the fate of slain children in Newtown, in the Holocaust, and in the Balkan Wars, during my current travels, I was moved by consideration of the role of Albanians in shielding local and refugee Jews from German military occupiers in the small Balkan country, almost 70 years ago. Albania stands out as a land where no Jews were handed over to the Nazis, thanks to the efforts of Catholics, Sufi and conventional Sunni Muslims, and Orthodox Christians. It was long believed, on the basis of Yugoslav figures, that while several thousand Jews were protected in Albania itself, 210 were seized and deported from Kosova in 1944. I republished this figure in my 2005 "Islamic survey of Balkan Jewish history," Sarajevo Rose.
Albania suffered under the Communist oppression of dictator Enver Hoxha, who ruled from 1944 until his death in 1985. One of the most extreme Stalinist tyrants, Hoxha suppressed religion and in 1967 he declared Albania the world's first atheist state. As in many post-Communist countries, however, the government archives have recently been opened. A new edition of an authoritative study, Hebrenjte në Shqipëri: Prania dhe shpëtimi (Jews in Albania: Presence And Rescue), by the historian Shaban Sinani, was issued in Tirana, the Albanian capital, in 2009. In its pages, Sinani notes that 2,265 Jews were protected in Albania during the German domination of 1943-44, as confirmed by Israeli researchers. But Sinani reproduces German transport documentation from the 1944 raid, showing that only 35 Jews were deported to concentration camps from Kosova. Remarkably, two Muslim women married to Jews, Emine Hilmi and Farie Hilmi, were in the list of the doomed.
Within the walls of the fortress of Berat, Albania, 2012. |
The Jewish children given refuge in Albania went on to realize the promise invoked by U.S. president Barack Obama in his eulogy for the victims of Newtown: "They will suffer sickness and setbacks and broken hearts and disappointments, and we learn that our most important job is to give them what they need to become self-reliant and capable and resilient, ready to face the world without fear."
Shkodër, seen from its 4th c. CE Rozafa castle, 2001. Photograph Via Wikimedia Commons. |
Robert Schwartz, 1932-2003. |
Many Albanians have asked me if I am related to Robert Schwartz, an honor I cannot claim, although our paths have paralleled in some respects. Schwartz died in 2003, and had written a poem titled "For My Gravestone," in which he said, "Of all his biggest loves/Of all his strongest loves/Only one was never in vain:/That for the Albanian language." I feel his presence as a mentor, as a brother, as a parent, as a distant relative I never had.
Robert Schwartz, sheltered from Hitler's demonic accomplices, later avoided the annihilation inflicted on most of the Shkodër Catholic intellectuals and numerous independent-minded writers by the Hoxha dictatorship. One of Schwartz's greatest friends was another translator, Amik Kasoruho, who did not escape, as a child, the Communist terror imposed on his country. Kasoruho, born in Albania the same year as Schwartz in Sarajevo, met the Jewish luminary-to-be in the Tirana high school in 1944, when both were 12.
Amik Kasoruho. |
But Kasoruho's father was executed in 1951, with 22 more Albanians deemed threatening to the Communist regime, and Kasoruho, as the son of an "unperson," in the immortal coinage of George Orwell, was expelled from college and jailed. After he was released from prison in 1956, Kasoruho was exiled to the Albanian town of Kavaja until 1962, when he and his family were deported to a small village. Forced to work as a laborer in agriculture and construction, he was kept there until 1990, when Albanian Communism began to disintegrate. .
According to Kasoruho, Robert Schwartz survived under Hoxha by his modesty and his refusal to attempt, as some Albanian authors did, satisfaction of the demands of the Communist order. Instead, he was happy to serve as a translator. As Kasoruho has recalled, Schwartz "closed himself in his own universe, unknown to most people, which he guarded jealously, and which he built without extended his hand in begging for anything." Schwartz resided with his wife and son in a one-bedroom apartment with a kitchen, had five heart bypass operations, lived thanks to a pace-maker, and had to climb four flights of stairs to reach his roof. This was in the year 2003 when, at the end of his life, he was made an honorary citizen of Tirana. In 1995 he was awarded the Cross of Merit by the German Federal Republic.
In another of his poems, written in 1991, with the definitive collapse of Albanian Communism, Robert Schwartz defined the environment he was forced to endure. It is titled, "Farewell Verses for a Young Friend," and is dedicated to Kasoruho. There Schwartz wrote, "They shattered our dreams, they killed them./We could not walk among snakes."
A poem from the next year, 1992, memorializes the siege of Sarajevo. It is headed, "They Killed My Sarajevo!" and begins, "They killed my Sarajevo,/The city where I was born,/the eternally loving town/where the East embraced the West/and the churches stood by the mosques/together with the synagogues…"
CIP Executive Director Stephen Sulejman Schwartz Recites Fatiha at the Temporary Grave of Bosnian President Alija Izetbegović, Sarajevo, 2004. Photograph by Joshua Mensch. |
The children murdered in Newtown, in fascist and Communist concentration camps, in Sarajevo and similarly-wounded cities – forced to, in Robert Schwartz's words, "walk among snakes" – are one. The children saved from these abominations are one. And we who must act to save them must act as one. I am as one with Robert Schwartz, a man I never knew. That is our sole option, for our own moral self-defense.
The flag of Shkodër. |
One Hundred Years of Albanian Independence. |
We Are One. |
[Author's Note: This text draws on materials in the short book Nje Kalvados Me Robert Shvarcin (A Shot of Calvados With Schwartz), by Amik Kasoruho and Roland Tasho, Onufri Publishing House, Tirana, Albania, 2007.]
[CIP Note: This text was reprinted in a slightly edited version in the Albanian-American semi-weekly Illyria and is accessible as a .pdf at http://www.islamicpluralism.org/documents/2201.pdf.]
Related Topics: Albanian Muslims, Balkan Muslims, Bosnian Muslims, European Muslims, Muslim-Christian Relations, Muslim-Jewish Relations, Terrorism receive the latest by email: subscribe to the free center for islamic pluralism mailing list
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