The Effect of Communist propaganda

In 1980, at the Law School, in Pristina, where I was a student, they came to legalize two professors from the University of Tirana. Then, between the RSFJ and the RSP of Albania, there has been a cultural exchange agreement. Under this agreement, professors from Albania came to legalise in Pristina and Pristina [...]
The interest in hearing these words has been enormous. Our professors were careful to get us primary students into the amphitheater first and then others that often took place were not students at all.
Now, after 40 years, I can't exactly remember whether legalization material was criminology or criminalism, but that's the essence of this writing that matters a little. We learned a lot from these two professors' speech. We learned that this subject had no great difference from what we learned. After all, both educational systems have been based on methods of Soviet learning. These two professors didn't recognize many of us either. Perhaps they were more eloquent than some of our professors for a pale shade. In law studies, valuable and essential quality is speaking. Our professors were mostly on this level then. Especially Bardhil Chaushi has been brilliant and unique.
However, the topic that was legalised by professors from Tirana triggered an earthquake in the heads of many students. Explaining the subject, the professors had brought photographs of illustrations. The case involved a robbery, somewhere in a city of Albania. Two dolphins, somewhere in a bank or a company, had stolen the safe with money. Since they were amateurs, they didn't know how to open it. They had tried it by various means but in vain. Finally, he was thrown off a bridge, believing that the crash would open up. That's a try. The two dolphins in question, all the time, had carried the safe on a bicycle by night. Of course, they were caught by the police, who had forced them to repeat the act of robbing to photograph the entire action to serve as a case of study and which we now saw in the photograph.
At least half of the students looked at each other during this talk. There was a great surprise among us. Laws, in some, created distrust. That was because students, at least half, believed there was no theft of any other criminal act in Albania. There everything was fine because their socialism was perfect compared to ours. This has been the effect of a propaganda of that time coming from Albania enormously when it reached us. The laws also created divisions among us. Some thought it was a lie, while those who believed it to be true saw it for the professors who were sharing it with Albania.
Now, if this effect of this discourse were created somewhere in an isolated Kosovo village, there would be some meaning. But that was in Pristina, among future lawyers, politicians, lawyers, judges and prosecutors.
This was the (intellectual) level, at least half of the students back then.










