Students reach out to youth this summer in Greece April 30, 2011
Posted by Yilan in Albania, Yunanistan.Tags: Albanian immigrants, Albanians, Greece
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It’s a hopeful glimpse of light that serves as a guide out of the darkness.
This is how Jeff Walters, assistant director for campus recreation and leader of Baylor’s outdoor recreation and leadership trip to Athens, Greece, described the immersion of culture between Baylor students and Albanian immigrants. Walters will lead 10 Baylor students as they spend two weeks in July mentoring Albanian youth about leadership and self-esteem.
Walters said the plight of Albanian youth, who crossed the border into Athens after the fall of communism in their own country in the 1990s, is desperate.
“These teenagers are left with a lack of initiative because their parents’ dreams of entering a better life in Athens may not have come true,” Walters said. “There are real needs in Greece, particularly with the Albanian immigrants living there who need leadership and self-esteem. This won’t be a vacation, but a real mission trip.”
Baylor students may not travel to Greece with a hammer in hand, but they hope to build a lasting foundation of faith.
“We won’t be building anything, but we’ll be living life with these teens for two weeks,” Walters said. “These people are coming from spiritual nothingness, which is a huge contrast from Baylor students. So the dynamic between the students should be interesting.”
After fleeing from Albania in the 1990s, 500,000 immigrants live in Athens. They are often lacking in education and hope for the new life they, or their parents, were seeking.
But two Baylor graduates, Bob and Janice Newell, created a service called Porta, a cultural and spiritual center to help Albanians improve their lives.
“Last year, I spent five days in Athens meeting with the Newells and people they work with ,” Walters said. “I came away convinced Baylor students can help these wonderful people. I am just as certain our students can learn from them.”
Upon returning to America, Baylor students plan to maintain the relationships with the Albanian youth through Skype and social media.
“That will make our departure a little easier,” Walters said. “You may not be able to see your new friends face to face, but you can continue the discussions you began.”
Baylor students have been preparing to lead these cross-cultural discussions by engaging in team-building exercises and learning about life in Athens.
“I’ve been reading about servant leadership to prepare for this summer,” El Paso freshman David Campbell said. “And we’ll work on leadership skills. Above all else, we will lead by example and try to show God’s love.”
The students will receive course credit in leadership classes through the trip to Greece. He knew he wanted to participate in a mission trip, so when the call for Greece was made he answered.
“I got to go to Greece last year and I loved the people and the culture,” Campbell said. “They needed guys to lead on the trip, so I knew I wanted to go. And because this is the first time Baylor is going, we’re holding our plans loosely.”
Baylor students will meet with the Newell family to learn more about the operation of the Porta Albanian house, striving to better immigrants’ lives in Athens.
“I can’t wait to build great relationships with people there and meet the Newells,” Bloomington, Minn., sophomore Emma Steincross said. “And teach the Albanian youth about loving themselves and believing in themselves.”
Because of the continual needs of the Albanian people living in Athens, Walters said he hopes to establish this mission trip as a tradition for Baylor students.
“I’m hoping there will be conversations and God and life that are continued,” Walters said. “We can’t go in there with our gospel guns blazing because that would overwhelm the Albanians. But we plan to show them the right amount of light to help them.”
Radical Islam on rise in Balkans September 22, 2010
Posted by Yilan in Albania, Macedonia.Tags: Albanians, Balkans, Islam, Macedonia
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An online music video praising Osama bin Laden has driven home a troubling new reality: A radical brand of Islam embraced by al-Qaida and the Taliban is gaining a foothold in the Balkans.
“Oh Osama, annihilate the American army. Oh Osama, raise the Muslims’ honor,” a group of Macedonian men sing in Albanian, in video posted on YouTube last year and picked up by Macedonian media this August. “In September 2001 you conquered a power. We all pray for you.”
Although most of Macedonia’s ethnic Albanian minority are Muslims, they have generally been secular. But experts are now seeing an increasing radicalization in pockets of the country’s Islamic community, particularly after armed groups from the ethnic Albanian minority, which forms a quarter of the population of 2.1 million, fought a brief war against Macedonian government forces in 2001.
It’s a trend seen across the Balkans and has raised concerns that the region, which includes new European Union member Bulgaria, could become a breeding ground for terrorists with easy access to Western Europe. Many fear that radicalized European Muslims with EU passports could slip across borders and blend into society.
At the center of the issue is the Wahhabi sect, an austere brand of Islam most prevalent in Saudi Arabia and practiced by bin Laden and the Taliban.
“Wahhabism in Macedonia, the Balkans and in Europe has become more aggressive in the last 10 years,” said Jakub Selimovski, head of religious education in Macedonia’s Islamic community. He said Wahhabis were establishing a permanent presence in Macedonia where none existed before, and that “they are in Bosnia, here, Kosovo, Serbia, Croatia and lately they have appeared in Bulgaria.”
It is the first time a high-ranking official in the former Yugoslav republic’s Islamic community has agreed to speak openly about the presence and threat of radical Islam.
In Bulgaria, nearly one-sixth of the population of 7.6 million are Muslims who adhere to conventional Sunni beliefs. Ethnic peace has been maintained in the last 20 years. As elsewhere in the Balkans, however, Wahhabi incursions have led to a struggle for control of religion and Islamic community-owned property.
Large amounts of money, allegedly from Muslim organizations abroad, have been spent in Bulgaria since the mid-1990s for more than 150 new mosques and so called “teaching centers” to spread Wahhabism.
According to Bulgaria’s former chief mufti, Nedim Gendzhev, some Muslim organizations were aiming to create a “fundamentalist triangle” formed by Bosnia, Macedonia and Bulgaria’s Western Rhodope mountains. Local newspaper reports say radical Islam is being preached in different cities and villages in southern and northeastern Bulgaria.
In 2003, Bulgarian authorities shut down a number of Islamic centers on the grounds they allegedly belonged to Islamic groups financed mainly by Saudi Arabians that possibly also had links to “radical organizations” such as the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. Official statements said that the centers were shut down “to prevent terrorists getting a foothold in Bulgaria.”
However, centers where radical brands of Islam are preached continue to to crop up in the country, said political analyst Dimitar Avramov.
“Along with the three official Muslim schools, there are at least seven other which are not registered and not controlled by the state,” he said, adding that in the last 20 years some 3,000 young Muslims have graduated from these schools.
In neighboring Serbia last year, 12 Muslims — allegedly Wahhabis — from the tense southern Sandzak region were sentenced to up to 13 years in prison for planning terrorist attacks, including on the U.S. Embassy in Belgrade. The presence of radical Muslims in Sandzak, the poorest region of Serbia, is linked to the advent of mujahedeen foreign fighters who joined Bosnian Muslims in their battle against the Serbs in Bosnia’s 1992-95 independence war.
In Bosnia, the issue of Wahhabi influence is one of the most politically charged debates, with Bosnian Serbs maintaining there is a huge presence of Wahhabis in the country and Muslim Bosniaks downplaying the issue and at times claiming it does not exist.
Juan Carlos Antunez, a Spanish military specialist in religious extremism with years of experience in Bosnia, estimates there are about 3,000 people in Bosnia who have embraced this interpretation of Islam and only a small fraction of them are a potential security threat.
In a study prepared for the Sarajevo-based Center for Advanced Studies in May, Antunez argued that Bosnia’s official Islamic Community has been successful in curbing Wahhabi influence. Although it did not aggressively ostracize the Wahhabis, it strictly controls the appointments of imams in mosques and lecturers in Islamic educational institutions in the country.
Ahmet Alibasic, a lecturer at the Faculty of Islamic Studies in Sarajevo, said most Wahhabis in Bosnia refrain from criticizing the Islamic Community and were even calling for unity among Muslims.
“Their influence reached its peak in 2000, but it has since started falling and it continues to fall,” Alibasic said, adding that measures taken by Bosnian authorities after 9/11 had a significant effect as the movement began to lose power after the closure and banning of several Islamic, mostly Saudi-backed, charities which funded the movement.
In Albania, the issue is also charged. Ilir Kulla, former head of the government’s department on religious issues, insisted the Wahhabis had not caused any problems in Albania.
Kulla said hundreds of young Albanian men had been educated in universities in the Middle East, including in Saudi Arabia, and were now mosque leaders, but that there had been no attempt by Wahhabis to challenge the leadership of the country’s Muslim Community, which he insisted was still moderate.
But in Macedonia, the increasing clout of radical Islam is causing a rift in the country’s Muslim community, with a power struggle developing within the country’s official Islamic Religious Community between the moderate mainstream and the emerging Wahhabi wing.
“A destructive, radical and extremist current has appeared with an intention of taking over the lead of the Islamic religious community,” Selimovski said.
Authorities in Macedonia are reluctant to confirm any threat of radical Islam in the country. But a government official, speaking on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the topic, did acknowledge that “radical groups and their followers are being closely observed.”
Last year, three ethnic Albanian brothers originally from Macedonia were implicated — along with a Jordanian, a Turk and a Kosovo Albanian living in the U.S. — in an alleged plot to attack the U.S. Army’s Fort Dix military base in New Jersey. No attack was ever staged on the base, which is used largely to train U.S. reservists bound for Iraq.
“Macedonia is part of the international coalition in the fight against terrorism and it cannot be excluded from the responsibility to observe and respond to any possible activity or emerging of terrorists,” Interior Ministry spokesman Ivo Kotevski told the AP.
Moderate Muslims say the Wahhabi sect now controls five mosques in Skopje even though the Islamic Religious Community has suspended the man they claim is the sect’s leader, Ramadan Ramadani, as imam of the Isa Beg mosque in Skopje, and prohibited him from organizing prayers.
But Ramadani, who has launched a petition seeking supporters to overturn the current Community leadership, rejects any accusation of radicalism, saying his opponents are scaremongering.
“They need my name to have somebody to frighten people,” Ramadani said. “I do not know any individuals or structures here that could be defined as Wahhabi. It is the attempt of political labeling and stigmatizing people who want reforms.”
Ramadani insisted that Macedonia’s Islamic community had nothing to do with the online song supporting bin Laden, and denied Macedonian media reports that it had been played in mosques there.
“Bin Laden is nothing for the Muslims in Macedonia,” Ramadani said. “He is not our hero.”
Macedonia’s DPA to continue parliamentary boycott July 25, 2010
Posted by Yilan in Human rights abuses.Tags: Albanians, DPA, Macedonia, opposition Democratic Party of Albanians
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The opposition Democratic Party of Albanians (DPA) agreed on Sunday (July 11th) to continue its parliamentary boycott launched last August. DPA leader Menduh Thaci told a central committee meeting that the ruling parties continue to pass laws that are in their own interest and acknowledged that international organisations have been urging the DPA to return for months. The party started its boycott to protest what it describes as neglecting the rights of ethnic Albanians. One of the party’s demands is to make Albanian a second official language in Macedonia.
Ambush on car of ethnic Albanians leaves 4 dead, 1 injured in southern Kosovo June 21, 2010
Posted by Yilan in Kosovo, Macedonia.Tags: Albanians, Kosovo
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Kosovo police say four people were killed and one injured when their car was ambushed in the country’s south.
Police spokesman Ismet Hashani says unidentified gunmen shot at the car early Monday in a southern area bordering Macedonia.
He says the victims are believed to be ethnic Albanians, with two coming from Kosovo and two from Macedonia. The injured person is also from Macedonia.
It is unclear if there is a link between the ambush and the recent killing of a Macedonian soldier by armed ethnic Albanian groups who were also involved in a shootout with authorities last month that left four rebels dead.
Albanian parties increasingly nervous with upcoming Census April 28, 2010
Posted by Yilan in Macedonia.Tags: Albania, Albanians, Kosovo, Macedonia, Macedonians
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The Albanian political parties in Macedonia show increasing signs of nervousness as the new census is approaching. It’s not only the parties in the opposition, it’s also DUI which is part of the ruling coalition.
The issue which has gained traction in the last couple of months has seen DUI and ND request more ethnic Albanians be employed in the State Statistical Office thinking this will contribute to the SSO counting more ‘Albanians’.
The reason for this request is that ethnic Albanians who publicly state their disloyalty towards Macedonia are afraid they would lose ministerial and other government positions as well as put the Ohrid Framework agreement in jeopardy if they fail to reach 25% of the total population.
Census experts state if the 2011 census goes smoothly, ethnic Albanians may look realistically into 16 to 17% of the total Macedonian population. The previous census was cited as fraudulent by members of Government, including the head of the SSO. In it, ethnic Albanians doubled their number from 12 to 25% within few years. The SSO head prior to his resignation gave details of ethnic Albanian villages numbering 200 people, reporting as having 1,400.
More details of fraud and its magnitude came during the last general elections when out of 2 million population, an incredible 1.82 million were registered as having the right to vote, meaning Macedonia has almost no children. This discrepancy (fraud) was noted by the EU as well.
DUI is expected to push for new general elections if VMRO doesn’t agree to come up with the magical 25%, just like the SDSM did years ago. DUI members also publicly have acknowledged, they enjoyed more being in a colaition with the SDSM because they were able to ‘run things’ without oversight.




