The incredible story of Madeleine Albright: He changed three religions, so he knew he was Jewish until he was old.

Even former American Secretary of State from 1997 until 2001, Madeleine Albright has come to Kosovo where she has received a September, which we hope will not resemble any other politician in Kosovo. She was born Mary Jana Corbelova of a Czech Jewish family. Together [...]
Even former American Secretary of State from 1997 until 2001, Madeleine Albright has come to Kosovo where she has received a September, which we hope will not resemble any other politician in Kosovo.
She was born Mary Jana Corbelova of a Czech Jewish family.
She and her family had emigrated to the United States in 1948 from former Czechoslovakia. Her father, diplomat Joseph Corbel, placed his family in Denver, so Marie Jana became an American citizen in 1957 or at the age of 20.
It became known to the Kosovo public in wartime, using a highly harsh rhetoric to the Milosevic regime. She was accused of speeches promoting hatred against the Serbian nation, writes Periscopi.
In 2012, while at a forum in Czechia promoting a book, it was attacked by a group of activists from the Czech organisation “Pratele Srbu Na Kosovu”. She was filmed saying “Serbing, get out! ” Activists of this organisation had been showing several photographs of Serb victims in the 1999 Kosovo war.
Czech director Vaclav Dvorak had reported Albright to the police, saying the former US secretary of state was spreading ethnic hatred and showing disrespect for war victims.
Albright had married Joseph Middle Patterson in 1959. She has three girls with her. He was divorced by his husband in 1982, even though he continues to bear his last name.
She was born a Jew, grew up Catholic, and later became part of the Episcopal Church.
When The Washington Post reported on Albright's Jewish background after she had become a secretary of state in 1997, Albright had said that she was surprised. Neither did she herself know that she had been Jewish until she was 59 years old. Three of her grandparents in Czechoslovakia were killed during the Holocaust. /Periscope












