Who was Mother Teresa's father?

Who was Mother Teresa's father?

On Mother Teresa's sanctimonious day, it was slandered by many Western media that she was Albanian from Kosovo. But this kind of reporting is not for Serbian and Macedonian media. Indeed, it is the Slavs of Macedonia who want to adopt the Albanian daughter, and this confirms Serbian propaganda that does not want [...]

On Mother Teresa's sanctimonious day, it was slandered by many Western media that she was Albanian from Kosovo. But this kind of reporting is not for Serbian and Macedonian media.

In fact, it is the Slavs of Macedonia who want to adopt the Albanian daughter, and this also includes Serb propaganda that does not want the world to recognise for Albanian one of mankind's greatest humanists.

Macedonia's leaders said their state was made of saints, becoming they do not know that Skopje, which is today's capital of Macedonia, was part of Kosovo when Agnes Gonge Bojaxhiu was born.

Despite this, her parents also came from two other Kosovo towns -- Father Nikolla from Prizren, while mother Dranafile from Gjakova. The Macedonian side, which tries to absorb foreign stories, unable to completely deny its connection with Albanians, has tried to confuse the parents' origin, making it semi-Albanian.

Everything started from an Aurel Plasari scripture in 2003, which says Nikolla Bojaxhiu, her father, a successful and wealthy man, has been arumun after finding a document that says he has been representative of this community in Skopje.

But this statement, which confused many public opinion, is rejected by Kosovo scholar Albert Ramaj, who, based on the testimony of Lulush Lalevski, the representative of the arumuns was one named Boiagiev.

However, Mother Teresa personally stated: “With blood I am Albanian”!

And it's just this sentence that made another fuss around the world.

But what is not precisely known is that Nikolla Bojaxhi was an Albanian patriot who in 1912 was alongside fighters who freed Skopje. Even on the day of Albania's declaration of independence on November 28, 1912, he had held a meeting with many of the nation's great names, including Bajram Currin and Hasan Pristina.

We remember that Nicole Bojaxhiu died young at 45 years of age (in 1919). He was allegedly poisoned by Serbian agents.

 

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