At the Vatican it went to waste, in an interview for Serbs it says “to Christian”: Why Haradinaj rejects Muslim identity?

Ramush Haradinaj is one of the rare leaders of our political scene that has openly attacked the Muslim identity of Kosovo Albanians, writes Periscopi. He has only tried to stress the national identity of Albanians by denying that Muslim, religion which over 95 percent of Albanians have declared. In one [...]
Ramush Haradinaj is one of the rare leaders of our political scene that has openly attacked the Muslim identity of Kosovo Albanians, writes Periscopi.
He has only tried to stress the national identity of Albanians by denying that Muslim, religion which over 95 percent of Albanians have declared.
In a strange statement, in “Columbia University”, on November 23, 2013, he had said “I don't know why I'm Muslim. I've never been to the mosque, nor to pray, nor to anything else. ”
Earlier, he had mentioned the same thing that he had mentioned in the Happy TV interview, saying that his “family, with generations, had been Catholic”. In his interview with Serbian television, he even mentioned his predecessor's last name, which says it was “Gjoka”.
Yesterday, the prime minister paid a visit to the Vatican, where he met with Cardinal Parrol, where he demanded that the Holy Father finally recognise the independence of the Republic of Kosovo. The Vatican has never hesitated to meet with the top officials of our state, but, in fact, has never recognised the Republic of Kosovo because of its ties to the Serbian Orthodox Church. That is not yet expected.
But where does this rejection of Mr. Haradinaj? Such attitudes could make Kosovo Muslims feel unrepresented in domestic institutions that make up the overwhelming majority as the country's/Periscopi religious community











