Latif remembers Shaban Polluza: The CIA document describes the drama of his uprising

The philosopher and adviser to Parliament Speaker Blerim Latifi has remembered Shaban Pollusha on the 74th anniversary of the fall. At the Polluza commemoration, Latif brings another sentence from a CIA document depicting the drama of Shaban Poluzha's uprising. That's how he remembers Shaban Pollusha: Today, on the 74th anniversary of the fall, we commemorate Shaban [...]
The philosopher and adviser to Parliament Speaker Blerim Latifi has remembered Shaban Pollusha on the 74th anniversary of the fall.
At the Polluza commemoration, Latif brings another sentence from a CIA document depicting the drama of Shaban Poluzha's uprising.
That's how he remembers Shaban Pollusha:
Today, on the 74th anniversary of the fall, we commemorate Shaban Pollusha, commander of the white plysis who, in the winter of 1945, led thousands of fighters from all over Kosovo, to the first anti-communist uprising in Southeast Europe.
After spending the years of World War II defending Kosovo's borders and the Bosnian civilian population in Novi Pazar, from the attacks by Drzaja Mihajlovic's ethnicists, Shaban Polluza returned to Drenica to protect his homeland from the terror of Tito partisans. Dozens of partisan brigades had to be mobilized for the uprising to be crushed. The whole of Drenica was burned to ashes, but her men stayed until the end. Like the 300 ancient Spartan warriors against Persian cruelty, the Grip of Thermopylae. In a secret CIA document in 1953, the drama of Shaban Pollusha's uprising is best described: the heroic Battles of the Albanian race against Slavs were repeated once again on the steep tops of the mountains covered by snow. About six hundred Albanians fell into battle, but Serbs paid him heavily with 2,500 dead!” This uprising enters the category of those revolts, which, as French great philosopher Albert Camy puts it, is guided by the idea that “is better to die on foot than to live on your knees”.












