Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Albania under siege -II
Albania under siege -II
Oct 27, 2025 8:08 AM

  Albania today:

  Today Albania is surrounded by Italy, Greece, Macedonia, Montenegro and Serbia. Almost 4 million Albanians live in the Republic of Albania. Another 2 million live in Kosova and an additional 700,000 in Macedonia. Adding up the number of people scattered in the territories, there are an estimated 6.5 million ethnic Albanians.

  One of the most startling issues in the Albanian drama of the present days has been its close association with atheism. Atheism was the official state policy since the Communist party's control in 1946. As such, atheism coupled with Albania's isolation from fellow Muslim countries has left the masses in an intellectual and religious vacuum; Islamic institutions symbolized by Madrasas (classical religious schools) and mosques have been systematically destroyed; scholars have been harassed, tortured and killed, crippling the educational system and leaving only very basic secular education as an alternative.

  Although Albania has a government and culture that has largely abandoned religion, it was not the only reason why people have stayed away from their faith. Muslims who claimed to be religiously educated may have helped in repelling people away from Islam as well. During the early 1990's when the current of democracy swept through Eastern Europe, closed government systems like that of Albania's slowly began to open up.

  Although by no means a hallmark of a pluralistic society, the process enabled some to revive Islam and its activities too.

  Many Muslims from other countries also came to propagate and preach Islam, but have not succeed fully in their effort to spread and attract people to Islam. One key reason is that visiting Muslims lacked cultural, social, political, and sociological knowledge of Albanian Muslims and the way they practiced and viewed Islam.

  Furthermore, the communist era succeed in creating a community who is unliterate regarding their religion, to the extent that many Albanians perceived as something foreign for them that which the ‘foreign‘ Muslims came to propagate, which formed another obstacle facing the process of such propagation.

  The Albanian population as a whole has not tasted the flavor of religion for decades. This is primarily because there are no primary, secondary or higher Islamic educational institutions.

  And the classic Islamic literature simply does not exist. Most of this was destroyed or heavily suppressed during the Albanian Communist era. The people who have been educated have been indoctrinated along the secularistic lines.

  And since most of these people had a fairly good education, they have been able to rise to the top of the society. Since they rule the masses, Albanians have seen a moral erosion of the social fabric of their society.

  Religion thus has seen a trickle down effect; the more educated one becomes, the easier his or her piety gets debunked. Generally speaking, only the less educated have remained religious and have kept an emotional attachment to their historical roots. In other spheres of Albanian-Islamic contacts, Albania used to have observer status in the OIC (Organization of Islamic Conference), which Albania has since abandoned. At one time an Albanian Islamic Bank was even formed in the capital Tirana.

  Other projects included building hospitals, schools, and cultural centers. However, the Albanians themselves were rather aloof about the development of relations with Islamic countries, because of some negative experience they had with some of the foreign brethren and because of a steady European influence. And while Islam falters and struggles to find its place in a predominantly Muslim society, Christianity is flourishing in Albania.

  Christian influence:

  Not only are they influential religiously, but they also are dominant in the media, politics, schools and the general state apparatus. The Pope of the Catholic Church visited Albania and founded a large church in the heart of the capital city Tirana. The churches and their organizations are very active and effective in their propagation and presentation of Christianity.

  They have established schools, hospitals, kindergardens, churches, welfare centers and seminaries. Many Christians who are native to the Balkans are well-versed in history, culture and psychology of the land. Much of the Christian community's funding come from Italy, France and other powerful and wealthy countries. Other churches also are secretly connected to Albanian criminal gangs who have a big hand in disrupting life in Albania.

  Most churches are however successful because they are well organized and display professionalism, in contrast to the Muslim counterparts. The influence of Europe in Albania, however, is not evident in the self-righteous churches but in the corruption of the soul and the society, such as prostitution, crimes including theft, kidnapping, murders, rapes and other insidious affects of modernity are more visible today than they were in the history of Albania.

  Cultural morality, the highlight of Muslim Albania, is now disintegrating completely. Ultimately, Albania is in the same predicament as the rest of the Muslim world; a state with a glorious past and an uncertain future trying to find its niche in a complex world. What compounds this situation is that while Albania is a Muslim majority state, Albania is not fully accepted by the Europeans.

  And while Europe may never accept Albania fully, the Albanian leadership desperately avoids contact with the Islamic world. It is a bewildering paradox. This paradox is reflected in the individual Albanian, who in his attempts of modernization gives up his or her historical heritage. But what is a human being without their heritage? Albania and its sister state Kosova are surrounded by enemies, but if they are at peace with each other and with themselves, it will be much harder for its warrior neighbors to harass them.

  The Ottoman Empire after all lived for 600 years even after the repeated assaults of the Crusaders. Muslims ruled Spain for 700 years in the midst of Western Europe. Albania similarly can live Islamically in the heart of Europe. The Kosova dilemma is not just a dilemma for the Albanians, it is the question of our day for the Muslims in our time.

  In the medieval era, when the Mongols sacked Baghdad and destroyed civilization, a few Muslims stood up and threw the Mongols back on their heels. The Mongols eventually converted to Islam, led Muslim lives and contributed positively to the experience of the Muslim nation. Albania is under a Mongolian invasion all over again with surrounding Christians.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Israel's false narrative on land swaps
  When Israeli opposition leader and Labour Party chairman Isaac Herzog published a plan for kick-starting the peace process last month, one of his stated goals was to "save the settlement blocs" - areas of the West Bank where Israel has built clusters of settlements, including larger towns.   Settlement blocs are...
Afghan refugees return home amid Pakistan crackdown
  Torkham is a maze of chain-link fences and razor wire. Stern-faced Pakistani guards, their rifles loaded and at the ready, watch on as Afghan visitors quietly circumnavigate the multiple checks of their papers at the main border crossing between the two South Asian countries.   Nearby, a group of about two...
Gaza: Israel's war drums are getting louder
  On Friday, a senior member of Hamas's military wing, Mazen Faqha, was assassinated in the Gaza Strip by armed gunmen. It was an assassination tactic not seen in Gaza for at least a decade.   Faqha was a leading member of Hamas' al-Qassam Brigades in the West Bank. In 2003, he...
How Israel denies rights to Palestinian prisoners
  In a photograph widely shared on social media this month, Kifah Quzmar, a final-year business student at Birzeit University near Ramallah, wears a red-and-white keffiyeh and a somewhat defiant look.   The difference between the 28-year-old and tens of other Palestinian students and youth arrested in recent weeks is perhaps that...
Syria's Tabqa Dam: a strategic prize
  Syria's vital Tabqa Dam, the country's biggest, has become a major part of a Kurdish-Arab assault to cut off ISIL stronghold of Raqa.   Located in Raqa province, the dam is built on the 2,800-kilometre-long (more than 1,700-mile-long) Euphrates River, which flows from Turkey through northern Syria and east into Iraq....
How the US destroyed Iraq: On Mosul's civilian deaths
  In October 2016, ISIL strategists and commanders were fully aware of the sheer number of Iraqi armed forces that were moving in to encircle Mosul.   The operation to retake Iraq's second-largest city was officially launched last October, and in January its eastern half was declared "fully liberated". Mosul is ISIL's...
Gaza doctor seeks justice in Israeli court
  The walls of Izzeldin Abuelaish's office at the University of Toronto are covered in photographs, but one, in particular, stands out.   Three of his daughters, Bessan, Mayar and Aya, sit on a beach in the Gaza Strip. The tide is out, and the girls - aged 13, 15 and 20...
Displaced people of Syria's "beehive" villages dream of return
  In Aleppo's Jibreen shelter, home to refugees who have been unable or unwilling to return to their houses or flee further afield, the inhabitants of Qalayah, one of the villages from that area, swear they will one day recover their land.   "We raised sheep and had land. We sold everything...
Syria gas attack: 'We found bodies all over the floor'
  Survivors of a suspected chemical attack in Syria's Idlib province and aid workers on the scene say they are still in shock and struggling to recover from the distressing event of the attack.   "It's just indescribable," Othman al-Khani, local activist and witness said. "We saw people suffocating while their lungs...
UN says 2016 ‘worst year’ for Syrian children
  Child deaths increased 20 percent in civil war-torn Syria in 2016, making it the “worst year” since 2014, according to the United Nation’s children agency Monday.   UNICEF said in a statement that at least 652 children were killed in Syria in 2016 -- 255 of them in or near schools....
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved