Rexhep Qosja: Are there deputies in Kosovo? Does Kosovo have a place? Until when?

Academyist Rexhep Qosja is deeply angry with the situation of the streets in Pristina. He's illustrated with photographs of two suchs with the message, whether there are Communist deputies, there are deputies in Kosovo. Read fully the Qthur response in Pristina: If you go to Pristina graves, to be at a funeral or to [...]
Academyist Rexhep Qosja is deeply angry with the situation of the streets in Pristina.
He's illustrated with photographs of two suchs with the message, whether there are Communist deputies, there are deputies in Kosovo.
Read fully the Qthur response in Pristina:
If you go to the graves of Pristina, to be at a funeral, or to put flowers in a family, relative, or friend's grave, when you get back down that road that goes down, look right and I believe you'll see something else you don't want to see.
And you'll see two belts, marked for memory.
The first is the alley at which, on the lower side, the left, is set a sign named after Albania's father, Ismail Kemal. What does that sign look like, what does it look like, what does the entire start of that street look like with the name of Ismail Kemal? Look at the picture I was doing with this post! Perhaps the sight you will see will grieve!
It's a memorial of Ismail Kemal in the square in front of the former Renaissance building of an old siege that prevents him from seeing just enough of that monument. If we stop and approach that artistic, dignified monument, you will ask yourself, " What do you want in Pristina and a Kemal Ismail and a Kemal Ismail as offended as he was at the beginning of the street leading to the grave? '
The second is the alley, two alleys below that one named in Ismail Kemal at the beginning of which, on the lower side, the left side, has been placed a sign named Mithat Frasher, son of Abdel Frasher, idealologist and senior diplomat of the Albanian National Renaissance and Prizren League. That sign, the table holder, the start of the alley by the name of Mithat Frasher, grieves even more than the street by the name of Ismail Kemal.
Mithat Frasher in the time of communism was cursed: cursed in state Albania and cursed in Kosovo! And he was cursed for being founder of the National Ball. But those who put his name in the alley a few yards before Pristina's graves and let his name on that sign, at the beginning of the alley, seem so miserable they may have forgotten: that Mithat Frasher was a politician, writer, scientific scholar, publicist, a participant in the Assembly of the Monastery, the chairman of this Congress, a member of the Commission of this Convention, who will draw up the Albanian language albafet; he was the author of a series of literary, publicistic and scientific works, author of Albanians and Slavs, was among the most prominent Albanian politicians and intellectuals of his death until the time, who would not stop writing down the Albanian Conference for the Albanian invasions of Serbia's leadership from Greece, and other Albanian conquests from Greece, and the Thacia.
Look at the pictures of two alleys where signs containing the names of Ismail Kemal and Mithat Frasher!
I guess after you see them you'll ask the question:
Why is such an insult to our history and culture allowed?
We go to Pristina graves hosted by Ismail Kemal and Mithat Frasheri and return from Pristina graves, followed by Ismail Kemal and Mithat Frasheri!
Is there a Pristina municipality? Does that municipality have deputies?
Does Kosovo have a place?
Are there deputies in Kosovo?
Do they have deputies Pristina and Kosovo who will protect Kosovo's history and Albanian history in general from counterfeiting, disfigurements, privatisations, from the various insults that are being done today by many, mainly by some parties, by the rulings and the partisans, who are also misusing national history to keep it in power as long as possible!
Until when?














