Berliner Boersenzeitung - Ismail Kadare: A bright light in Albania's darkest days

EUR -
AED 4.262927
AFN 72.54755
ALL 95.959794
AMD 436.717019
ANG 2.077873
AOA 1064.424836
ARS 1622.137154
AUD 1.662111
AWG 2.091995
AZN 2.004721
BAM 1.954956
BBD 2.333222
BDT 142.148604
BGN 1.984112
BHD 0.438264
BIF 3440.584323
BMD 1.160769
BND 1.482247
BOB 8.022569
BRL 6.082893
BSD 1.158415
BTN 108.54552
BWP 15.873076
BYN 3.429519
BYR 22751.0655
BZD 2.329924
CAD 1.600253
CDF 2643.647486
CHF 0.915997
CLF 0.026983
CLP 1065.422754
CNY 8.000826
CNH 8.008369
COP 4300.90321
CRC 539.750599
CUC 1.160769
CUP 30.760369
CVE 110.218819
CZK 24.429525
DJF 206.293565
DKK 7.472605
DOP 69.397934
DZD 153.768196
EGP 61.05376
ERN 17.41153
ETB 179.082352
FJD 2.600412
FKP 0.867356
GBP 0.865614
GEL 3.139818
GGP 0.867356
GHS 12.656588
GIP 0.867356
GMD 85.317477
GNF 10153.527079
GTQ 8.871283
GYD 242.442153
HKD 9.077971
HNL 30.674826
HRK 7.534082
HTG 151.893087
HUF 389.158713
IDR 19615.829382
ILS 3.619683
IMP 0.867356
INR 109.005347
IQD 1517.544552
IRR 1524118.253951
ISK 143.807703
JEP 0.867356
JMD 182.805532
JOD 0.822981
JPY 184.283367
KES 150.423575
KGS 101.507475
KHR 4648.952003
KMF 494.487173
KPW 1044.708436
KRW 1740.351532
KWD 0.355532
KYD 0.965383
KZT 559.238457
LAK 24941.227539
LBP 103744.091493
LKR 364.132726
LRD 212.58093
LSL 19.74907
LTL 3.427448
LVL 0.702138
LYD 7.385905
MAD 10.799496
MDL 20.261249
MGA 4836.806744
MKD 61.595926
MMK 2437.808692
MNT 4143.326649
MOP 9.335668
MRU 46.201652
MUR 53.929436
MVR 17.945125
MWK 2008.689157
MXN 20.558254
MYR 4.595472
MZN 74.184822
NAD 19.74907
NGN 1598.865618
NIO 42.63122
NOK 11.249717
NPR 173.665755
NZD 1.990939
OMR 0.446317
PAB 1.158405
PEN 4.006969
PGK 5.002796
PHP 69.723855
PKR 323.646095
PLN 4.269934
PYG 7558.832914
QAR 4.22443
RON 5.094378
RSD 117.432673
RUB 93.727216
RWF 1694.716928
SAR 4.354927
SBD 9.334872
SCR 15.983903
SDG 697.621937
SEK 10.794336
SGD 1.484176
SHP 0.870877
SLE 28.552994
SLL 24340.75073
SOS 661.994115
SRD 43.34301
STD 24025.56743
STN 24.489212
SVC 10.136622
SYP 128.785259
SZL 19.747386
THB 37.859641
TJS 11.115443
TMT 4.074298
TND 3.397876
TOP 2.794852
TRY 51.487403
TTD 7.870601
TWD 37.092332
TZS 2986.14584
UAH 50.87563
UGX 4338.070269
USD 1.160769
UYU 47.210219
UZS 14132.895807
VES 532.651381
VND 30586.253874
VUV 138.721223
WST 3.178418
XAF 655.65969
XAG 0.015829
XAU 0.000254
XCD 3.137035
XCG 2.087798
XDR 0.81543
XOF 655.682275
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.941074
ZAR 19.57688
ZMK 10448.311343
ZMW 21.923814
ZWL 373.767031
  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.87

    -0.04%

  • BCC

    1.6900

    73.57

    +2.3%

  • RIO

    0.9300

    86.77

    +1.07%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    82.33

    +0.33%

  • CMSD

    -0.1100

    22.63

    -0.49%

  • BTI

    -0.1600

    57.76

    -0.28%

  • BCE

    0.0700

    25.83

    +0.27%

  • AZN

    1.7100

    185.78

    +0.92%

  • GSK

    0.9600

    52.95

    +1.81%

  • JRI

    0.1800

    11.86

    +1.52%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2800

    15.69

    -1.78%

  • BP

    1.2200

    44.79

    +2.72%

  • RELX

    -1.3500

    32.46

    -4.16%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    14.66

    +1.23%

Ismail Kadare: A bright light in Albania's darkest days
Ismail Kadare: A bright light in Albania's darkest days / Photo: Gent SHKULLAKU - AFP/File

Ismail Kadare: A bright light in Albania's darkest days

Novelist Ismail Kadare -- who has died aged 88 -- used his pen as a stealth weapon to survive Albania's paranoid communist dictator Enver Hoxha.

Text size:

His sophisticated storytelling -- often likened to that of George Orwell or Franz Kafka -- used metaphor and irony to reveal the nature of tyranny under Hoxha, who ruled Albania from 1946 until his death in 1985.

"Dark times bring unpleasant but beautiful surprises," Kadare told AFP.

"Literature has often produced magnificent works in the dark ages as if it were seeking to remedy the misfortune inflicted on people," he said.

He was often tipped to win a Nobel prize for his towering body of work which delved into his country's myths and history to dissect the mechanisms of totalitarianism.

Kadare's novels, essays and poems have been translated into more than 40 languages, making him the Balkans' best-known modern novelist.

The prolific writer broke ranks with isolated Albania's communists and fled to Paris a few months before the government collapsed in the early 1990s.

He wrote about his disillusionment in his book "The Albanian Spring -- The Anatomy of Tyranny".

- Demanded his death -

Born in Gjirokaster in southern Albania on January 28, 1936, Kadare was inspired by Shakespeare's "Macbeth" as a child and counted the playwright, as well as Dante and Cervantes, among his heroes.

Ironically, the dictator Hoxha hailed for the same mountain town.

Kadare studied languages and literature in Tirana before attending the Gorky Institute of World Literature in Moscow.

After returning to Albania in 1960, he initially won acclaim as a poet before publishing his first novel "The General of the Dead Army" in 1963, a tragicomic tale that was later translated into dozens of other languages.

His second novel, "The Monster", about townspeople who live in a permanent state of anxiety and paranoia after a wooden Trojan horse appears outside the town, was banned.

His 1977 novel "The Great Winter", though somewhat favourable towards the regime, angered Hoxha devotees who deemed it insufficiently laudatory and demanded the "bourgeois" writer's execution.

Yet while some writers and other artists were imprisoned -- or even killed -- by the government, Kadare was spared.

Hoxha's widow Nexhmije said in her memoirs that the Albanian leader, who prided himself on a fondness for literature, saved the internationally acclaimed author several times.

Archives from the Hoxha era show that Kadare was often close to being arrested, and after his poem "Red Pashas" was published in 1975 he was banished to a remote village for more than a year.

Kadare, for his part, denied any special relationship with the dictator.

"Against whom was Enver Hoxha protecting me? Against Enver Hoxha," Kadare told AFP in 2016 of the brutal, all-powerful ruler.

- 'Writers don't have to bow' -

Academics have often pondered whether Kadare was a darling of Hoxha or a brave author risking prison and death?

"Both are true," suggested French publisher Francois Maspero, who raised the question in his book "Balkans-Transit".

Writing such work under a government in which a single word could turn against its author "requires, above all, determination and courage", Maspero wrote.

"My work obeyed only the laws of literature, it obeyed no other law," Kadare said.

In 2005 he won the inaugural Man Booker International Prize for his body of work. He was described by chief judge John Carey as "a universal writer in a tradition of storytelling that goes back to Homer".

The father of two reflected on his native Balkans in "Elegy for Kosovo" published in 2000, a year after NATO went to war against Belgrade to end Serbian repression in the predominantly ethnic Albanian province.

Speaking to AFP in 2019, Kadare said he enjoys seeing his name "mentioned among the candidates" for the Nobel, even if the topic "embarrasses" him.

"I am not modest because, in principle, I am against modesty," he said.

"During the totalitarian regime, modesty was a call to submission. Writers don't have to bow their heads."

burs-rob-bme/ljv/gd/fg

(B.Hartmann--BBZ)