One of Albania's Communist Party leaders dies

Life has changed at the age of 91, Freedom Belisova, one of the main leaders of the Communist Party since its early creation. Freedom Belisova has been a member of the Political Bureau and the PPSH Central Committee. She was born in Belize, in the province of Mallaxastra, into a affluent local family, her daughter [...]
Life has changed at the age of 91, Freedom Belisova, one of the main leaders of the Communist Party since its early creation.
Freedom Belisova has been a member of the Political Bureau and the PPSH Central Committee. She was born in Belisovo, in the province of Malakastra, into a affluent local family, the daughter of Camber Belisova, the province's representative at the Durres Congress.
She finished her five - year elementary school in 1937 in Ballesh. In 1938 he won a scholarship to attend studies at the “Nana Queens” in the capital of the kingdom. Contacts with Communist ideas and materials were made up of her cousin Besimi, a student in the Normal of Elbasan.
She is also known as the woman who challenged the dictatorship. During 1946 and 1947, she was chairman of Albania's People's Youth (People's Youth).
Her husband's death, Nako Spiru, in 1946, led to her dismissal from her role and was sent from Tirana to Berat to teach. Following the rehabilitation of Nako Spirus, as a result of the Yugoslav-Albanian division in 1948, Belisova was also rehabilitated and became a member of Albania's Labour Party from 1948 to 1960.
He then experienced ill treatment in the exile camps as many opposers of the then system. For over four decades, Freedom Belisova and her family with her experienced the great pain of denigration and persecution, spending half their life in prison camps and exile.











