Casting Light on Little-Known Story of Albania Rescuing Jews From Nazis
Albanian American Civic League
By JOSEPH BERGER
Published: November 18, 2013
Albanian American Civic League
With ordinary Albanians moving Jews from hide-out to hide-out to elude
capture, Albania saved virtually all of its 200 native Jews and 400
Jewish refugees from Germany and Austria. The country also helped spirit
hundreds more over from Nazi-occupied Balkan lands.
“Albania was one of the only European countries that had more Jews at
the end of the war than at the beginning of the war,” said Michael
Berenbaum, former project director of the United States Holocaust
Memorial Museum.
A full picture of that rescue emerged only in the early 1990s after the
collapse of a particularly opaque and repressive Communist government
and was confirmed by Yad Vashem, the Holocaust research institute, in
2007. It will be retold on Dec. 8 at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in
New York, where speakers will include descendants of Albanian rescuers
and of rescued Jews.
Albania has practical reasons for wanting this story known. The country
is seeking membership in the European Union, but its chances are hobbled
by a history of ingrained corruption. At a time when Albania has
promised to clean up its government, the rescue story not only
highlights an episode of Albanian magnanimity, but also shows that
Albanians honor their promises.
The story of the rescue, said Ferit Hoxha, the Albanian ambassador to
the United Nations, shows that “although we were closed under one of the
fiercest Communist regimes, this nation’s people are noble and as able
to deliver with courage as anyone else in Europe.”
In much of Europe, the Final Solution was remarkably efficient: 90
percent of Poland’s 3.3 million Jews were killed, 88 percent of
Germany’s 240,000 Jews, 77 percent of Greece’s 70,000 Jews, with
similarly chilling tolls elsewhere.
The exceptional difference in Albania, experts on the episode say, was
rooted in a national creed called besa that obligates Albanians to
provide shelter and safe passage for anyone seeking protection,
particularly if there has been a promise to do so. Failure to act
results in a loss of honor and standing.
“It involves uncompromising protection of a guest, even at the point of
forfeiting one’s own life,” wrote Shirley Cloyes DioGuardi, an organizer
of the New York event whose husband, former Representative Joseph H.
DioGuardi, visited Albania in the early 1990s and helped unearth details
of the rescue.
Another explanation, Ms. Cloyes DioGuardi says, is that in Albania, a
Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox country until Ottoman rule led to
conversions to Islam starting in the 15th century, ethnicity has always
trumped religion, and piety is less than zealous. “We knew our enemies
wanted to use religion to divide and conquer us, but we knew we had the
same blood,” said Akim Alickaj (a-LITCH-kye), an ethnic Albanian raised
in Kosovo who owns a New York travel agency and whose father helped
rescue Jews. “Religion changes, but nation and blood can’t be changed.”
Two other countries saved most of their Jews as well. When German
occupiers ordered the deportation of Denmark’s 7,800 Jews in 1943,
neighbors, colleagues and activists, in a virtually spontaneous
outpouring of help and resistance, transported more than 7,000 Jews,
largely by fishing boat, across a channel to neutral Sweden, according
to Bo Lidegaard, editor in chief of the newspaper Politiken.
Bulgaria was allied with the Nazis and turned over 11,000 Jews from
occupied Macedonia and Thrace for deportation to death camps. But when
an order came for deportation of Bulgaria’s own Jewish citizens, members
of Parliament and church leaders pressured the government to resist,
and 48,000 Jews survived.
When the Nazis rolled into Albania in September 1943, taking the country
over from the more lenient Italian Fascists, two Jewish residents of
the city of Vlora — Rafael Jakoel and his brother-in-law — met with the
mayor there. He told them, according to Mr. Jakoel’s granddaughter,
Felicita, “As long as you are here, you don’t have to worry, but Germans
are Germans so it’s better to go to the capital.”
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