Berisha: Sad and outside of every Albanian tradition to be debated until Adam Demach was still not buried

Anton Berisha, deputy foreign affairs minister from the AAK ranks, has named it sad and outside any Albanian ethics and tradition, yesterday's debate on nonparticipation of LDK officials at the Adem Demaci event funeral. According to him, Albanians always took pride in ancient traditions that were based on respect, yet he [...]
According to him, Albanians always took pride in ancient traditions that were based on respect, however, he says that after the war in Kosovo the process of deAlbanianisation had begun, writes Periscope.
Berisha recalls that even in the worst cases of blood feuding, he was in order and respected and the mortor ritual.
Full text:
What made us proud of the Albanians, even in contact with the Western world, was Albanian traditions that we spicate over the centuries had respect for.
Even in the heavy to tragic phenomenon of blood feuding there was order, standards that were precisely respected, including mortar ritual.
In the post-time period, which is the period of the greatest freedom within the nation, when more than ever we could express the Albanian, all the good parts of it, we unfortunately started the process of deAlbanianisation and dehumanisation that could have fatal consequences for our fate.
The debate on an Albanian figure, Ademi Demacin, which has internationalised Albanian issues until the Sakharov Award: For the European Parliament's free thought, by the time the mortor ritual was current and his body had not yet ceased for the final residence, it is a sad, out of the Albanian ethics and tradition.
This indulgence to open the subject, for which there will be years and centuries is a frightening indication of where we are.
No wonder I repeated, that another Sakharov Prize winner, Dr. Ibrahim Rugova, although we've lived and acted with him, that part was alive and couldn't understand or respect, and that another part didn't even understand or learn from him Albanian ethical standards and tradition.











