Mother's confession to the three boys who were taken from Serbs on the table

Gustin, Mikel, and Fran Dusman are the three brothers who had dates of various births but who share the date of their death. On April 27th, Serbs took them home until their mother had spread her food. Their mother, who pledges that three [...]
Gustin, Mikel, and Fran Dusman are the three brothers who had dates of various births but who share the date of their death. On April 27th, Serbs took them home until their mother had spread her food.
Their mother, who hostage that the three boys went without eating the bread she had cooked for five years, did not know about their fate. After five years they were found in a mass cemetery and their remains are now laid to rest in the village of Meja, Gjakova.
In this village, which has since April 27, 1999, entered the newest history of Albanians is laid to the remains of 376 martyrs, Muslims and Christians, but all Albanians.
The mother of the Duzman brothers, Rosa, recalls with tears the day when the Serbian police kidnapped her sons and stopped returning them.
Her pain suggests that she failed to eat the bread she had cooked.
On April 27, we have nothing, we've been eating, unless we've had 7 or 8. Three of my sons called and told us after three hours we returned them. Is this sister harder than taking my boys without eating or drinking? Nana's having a life. I have eight grandchildren. One was an educator. It's barely like it's been”, she says in tears.
Dzezman relates how difficult the day it was for them to hear the news of their sons, who had been slaughtered so badly that it had been too difficult to identify themselves.
His father has gone mad and he has left himself. What did they do? He said, "Like bones," he said, "they were just so good to know clothes." The little one hadn't broken down because the Serbs had thrown him into the fridge and less had collapsed”, she relates.
Bujar Shehu and Milan Mark, one Muslim and the other Catholic, have their graves in nearby May
Meya is the place of martyrs whose family had decided to bury their loved ones together so that the Meja Memorial complex is an eternal and invincible ambush for Serbia.
To witness the unity of Albanians despite their religious affiliation and not to separate their fallen sons, Bujar, the Sehu family from Junik, had decided to let his body rest in Meya.
So Bujar's mother, Ulla Shehu, comes from Junik every year in Mej, Gjakova to honor the memory of his son's youth flower, a little short before 18 years.
The one in tears recalls the day when the Serbian army took her son, for whom it indicates that they had waited for him for six months in a row, hoping he would return.
Despite the grief of family members over the fallen of their loved ones and feelings of pride over their great works, the Jule mother shows how her husband had been unable to cope, leaving his family six months after his son's burial.
On that day, the event with the Event does not exist. Just like that. Except when they took it from me, I know. We were all terrified. We left for Gjakova, we were stopped here in Meya, wait for them, they didn't come out. We didn't find him when we returned. Six months later, we buried her”, she remembers.
Although the anniversary of the death of the martyrs is annual, family members remain excited, just as they were today.
This is what Marian Mark, brother of the martyr Milan Mark, remembers that day, who says that it is a good thing that the fallen are buried together, not separating themselves from fellow believers, Christians and Muslims.
The same as that day. It's the same situation. People killed for no fault, only because they were Albanians. The greatest fate is that, as they were killed together, Christians and Migrants, that Albanians have been killed for centuries, but have not been buried in a country”, he said.
The Serbian Army had chosen no tool or method for the elimination and execution of Albanians, taking many young men, elders, children and women hostage and massacred. Even killing families.
The Prelaj family, with 9 boys and men killed and massacred in the last war in Kosovo, had also paid off the freedom.
They were taken hostage on the morning of April 27th by the Serbian Army, never returning them.
Pal Prelaj relates how difficult that waiting period was for the fate of their most loved ones, not finding their bodies in 2003.
“in 99, this morning Serbia's forces -- Serbian police and soldiers -- have entered and committed massacres as seen. They took the boys, they got them together, they got them at the pump. Some people have been killed in homes and some where they could... Sokoli's bodies and they were found when the bodies started coming, buried here and exhumed to be sent to Batanica”, he indicated.
As if that were not enough, Albanian families still face the heavyest burden for their loved ones, not yet knowing over 1600 found.
Meja is the place where tears and grief unite to create a resistance, an invincible host for Serbia, with 376 Albanian, Muslim and Christian martyrs.












