Kosovo's great friend no longer lives: Facts you may not have known about the Iron Rage Albright.

Former U.S. State Secretary Madeleine Albright today passed away at the age of 84, broadcasting Periscope. Albright is known as a great friend of Kosovo who during the war had done much for the people of our country. However, her support did not stop there, but she continued even after the war. Albright has said that Kosovo and [...]
Former U.S. State Secretary Madeleine Albright today passed away at the age of 84, broadcasting Periscope.
Albright is known as a great friend of Kosovo who during the war had done much for the people of our country. However, her support did not stop there, but she continued even after the war. Albright has said that Kosovo and its citizens always have in mind, regardless of what she has stressed, divides the ocean.
How many times they ask me which is my achievement as Secretary of State I am most proud of, I think it is the help I gave to the people of Kosovo. Over the past 10 years, I was proud of the steps Kosovo has taken towards greater stability, progress and integration into the Euro-Atlantic community”, Albright had said in a wish for Kosovo's 10-year-old independence.
Below, you can read some facts you may not have known about Albright already.
MADELENS DO NOT BE IS EMRI SYORIGINAL.
Marie Yana was born in Prague on May 15, 1937, by her parents Anna Spieglowa and Joseph Corbel. But the name “Maria” was not used for a long time; the various family members called Madla, Madlen, or Madlenka during her youth. When Albright started to study French, she decided she preferred the long version of her nickname: Madeleine. However, Albright never legally changed her name, and her name is officially Marie Jana.
SYWAY FAMILY CLOSES
Her father's role at the Czechoslovakia Embassy in Belgrade and deep respect for democracy question his family's safety when the Nazis invaded the country. While her parents organized her family to go to London, Albright lived with her grandmother in the country. Albright and her family left for England 10 days after the Nazis invaded the capital.
I'm not sure. IN A PHICE OF THE REFUGATIES.
In England, Albright was selected to show up in a movie for children of war refugees and given a toy as a payment for its leading role.
KT FAMILY HAMING WRITER IN CECOSLOVAKE THE man was old.
Although her family was grateful to return to their postwar native country, they did not stay there for long. A series of political omens found the Communist Party at the helm of Czechoslovakia, forcing the Albright family to leave for their safety. Albright, along with her mother and two brothers and sisters, arrived in the United States aboard the American SS on November 11, 1948.
THEIR FAMILY A NEW LIFE IN DENVER LIVING.
The family once lived in Long Island waiting to be equipped with political asylum. After Joseph's father secured a position as a professor at the University of Denver and the family settled in their new town, Albright began going to Kent Denver School and founded the international school relations club. (She was not the only secretary of state to benefit from her father's teachings on diplomacy and international affairs, years later, his student was also Condoleezza Rice.
V I T ET COLEGIA'S I SHIN PLOT MAKING WITH MAKE
Albright studied political sciences at Wellesley College and graduated with honour in 1959. In the early years of her graduation, she became a naturalized citizen (in 1957) and met with her future husband, Joseph Middle Patterson Albright, during a summer practice at Denver Post. In her book Albright, it was a tradition for women Wellesley to get married on graduation day. In addition, she waited three days after receiving her diploma to marry Joseph.
HE WAS DONONOMY WRITER IN LIVIA ABOUT V PLACE 1960
Albright changed his residence several times for Joseph's career. By 1961 the couple had already lived in Rolla, Missouri, and Chicago before moving to Long Island, where their twins, Alice and Anne, came to life. In 1962 the family moved to Georgetown, where Madeleine studied Russian and international relationships. When they returned to Long Island in 1963, Albright continued her studies at Columbia University and won a Russian certificate, one at the master in 1968 and a doctorate in 1976. Her third daughter, Katharine, was born in 1967.
PI POLITIK POLITIK RESS
Albright became more involved in politics when her family returned to D.C. in 1968. From 1976 to 1978, she served as Senator Edmund S. Muskie. And in 1978, Zbigniew Brzezinski, one of her professors from Colombia and then President Jimmy Carter's National Security Adviser, selected Madeleine as the Interconnector of Brzezinski in Congress.
DIVORY AND ANGAZINE REJAH
After her 22 - year - old marriage ended in divorce in 1982, Albright joined the Georgetown University Foreign Service School as a professor of research in International Affairs, where she learned university and postgraduate courses. She also served as director of the Women's Service programme in the Foreign Service.
RO LAW OF SEKRETAR THE STATES TAKE HISTORY
On December 5, 1996, President Bill Clinton appointed Albright as Secretary of State 64. It was unanimously confirmed by the Senate and sworn in on January 23, 1997. At the time, she was the most advanced female in American history.
E U n CARTER FROM SERB
Serbs during a book promotion in Prague have called him a fascist, hating her for the work she has done in releasing Kosovo and shelling Serbia.
The Serbian group “Serb friends in Kosovo” have entered the library and started shooting pamphlets and words in the direction of the former secretary of state.
But this iron lady did not endure much. She stood up and began screaming at them: “Get out. Get out. You are war criminals. Horrible Serbs”. /












