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Gjergj Fishta

Azem Shkreli
Born(1938-02-10)February 10, 1938
Peja, Yugoslavia
(now Kosovo)
DiedMay 27, 1997(1997-05-27) (aged 59)
Pristina, Republic of Serbia, FR Yugoslavia
(now Kosovo)
OccupationPoet, literary critic
LanguageAlbanian
NationalityYugoslavian
Alma materUniversity of Pristina
Notable worksThe White Caravan 1961
I Know a Word of Stone 1969

Azem Shkreli (Albanian pronunciation: [a'ʒɛm 'ʃkɾɛli]; 10 February 1938 – 27 May 1997) was an Albanian writer, poet, director and producer.[1] He was head of the Kosovo Writers' Association, president of the Association of Writers of Yugoslavia, manager of the National Theatre of Kosovo (then People`s Provincial Theatre) in Pristina and founder and manager of Kosovafilm, a film production, distribution and screening company.[2]

Biography

Azem Shkreli was born on February 10, 1938, in the village of Shkrel of Peja, Kingdom of Yugoslavia (now Kosovo). He lost his mother when he was two years old, and was brought up by his grandmother, who also died when he was a young boy. He went to elementary school in his hometown, and in Pristina, he attended high school and graduated in 1961, and then went to the Faculty of Philosophy of the University of Pristina, to study in the Department of Albanian Language and Literature Studies, from which he graduated in 1965. As a student, he began writing for the daily newspaper Rilindja and served as head of the Kosovo Writers' Association. He worked as director of the National Theatre of Kosovo (then People's Provincial Theatre) from 1960 to 1975 and in 1975 he became founder and director of Kosovafilm, a film production, distribution and screening company – a post he held until he was expelled by the new Serb administration in 1991.[3]

He was the president of the Association of Writers of Yugoslavia between 1982 and 1983.[4]

The poet was deeply concerned with the fate of Kosova, dedicating himself wholeheartedly to the struggle for his people’s fundamental human rights and liberation. During the 1990s, he spent some time in Germany, where his wife received medical treatment unavailable in Kosova. Despite this, he chose not to remain abroad with his family, instead returning to Prishtina to live alone. This was a painful choice for him, yet one he felt compelled to make out of a sense of duty and commitment. When invited to stay for three months at Villa Waldberta in Bavaria in 1993, he grew restless and left after only six weeks.

...For four nights I have endured a stone, Kosova, dripping away...

— Azem Shkreli, from the poem Villa Waldberta

Shkreli worked tirelessly, never losing sight of the ultimate goal: freedom and independence for his fellow Kosovo Albanians.

On May 25, 1997, he passed away at the Prishtina airport, just moments after stepping onto his homeland’s soil following a visit to Germany.

Works

He published these works in poetry Bulzat (1960), Angels of the streets (1963), I know a stone vial (1969), From the bible of silence (1975), Baptism of the word (1981), Night of the parrots (1990), Rainy lyrics (1994), Birds and stones (1997). In prose: The white caravan (1961), Eve's eyes (1975), The Albanian wall, Seven from at, as well as the dramas: Fosilet (1968), Varri i cyqes (1983), etc. His poems have been translated into many foreign languages.[5]

References

  1. ^ "Robert Elsie and Janice Mathie-Heck - Azem Shkreli. Blood of the quill". Archived from the original on 2009-07-22.
  2. ^ "Kosovo". SeeCinema. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
  3. ^ "The PIP (Project for Innovative Poetry) Blog: Azem Shkreli". The PIP. 14 March 2013. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
  4. ^ "Скупштина савеза књижевника". Borba. 17 December 1982. p. 9. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
  5. ^ "24 years since the death of Azem Shkreli". Retrieved 2025-05-23.

Azem Shkreli at IMDb

Preceded by President of the Association of Writers of Yugoslavia
1982-1983
Succeeded by