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Mother Teresa's Saintly Spirit Remembered, in a Truly Balkan Way
nytimes.com ^ | August 6, 2003 | IAN FISHER

Posted on 08/06/2003 8:29:17 PM PDT by Destro

Saintly Spirit Remembered, in a Truly Balkan Way

By IAN FISHER

The statue of Mother Teresa in Skopje, Macedonia. The ethnic free-for-all surrounding her tells much about the Balkans. Questions are being raised about whether her father was Albanian, and whether she was fluent in the language.

SKOPJE, Macedonia, Aug. 1 — Mother Teresa will soon become a saint. But this celebration of the divine in a human being has turned out to be as good a moment as any to fight about all the worldly things that usually get fought about in the Balkans: namely, religion, ethnicity and history.

The conflict centers on an attempt, so far unsuccessful, to donate a statue of Mother Teresa to the city of Rome. It is a simple enough dispute on one level, but on another it reflects the enduring strains that have made it so hard to stitch together Balkan societies.

The tale begins with a solitary fact that no one, mercifuly, disputes: Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu, who became the world's most famous Roman Catholic missionary, universally known as Mother Teresa, was born in August 1910 here in Skopje. (As for the exact date, some say she was born on Aug. 26, others Aug. 27.)

The city was then an especially mixed corner of the Ottoman Empire, home to Turks, Greeks, Serbs, Bulgarians, Macedonians, Gypsies, Jews, Vlachs and Albanians, which is what Mother Teresa always said she was.

After Mother Teresa's death in 1997, one of Macedonia's most famous artists, Tome Serafimovski, fashioned a nine-foot bronze statue of her that now stands in downtown Skopje. As the Vatican moved to make her a saint, Mr. Serafimovski decided to donate a copy to Rome. Its delivery was to coincide with her expected beatification, the last step before sainthood, in October.

The intention, he said, was pure: "Mother Teresa was well known all over the world," he said. "She is from our city. She is a Nobel Prize winner."

But then last month, an Albanian newspaper here, Fakti, carried a sensational scoop: the statue, it reported from Italy, was to have an inscription identifying her as "a Macedonian daughter."

Albanian leaders were outraged. This was an attempt, they said, by the Macedonians to claim Mother Teresa as one of their own. The inscription, one Albanian political party charged, "undermines the Albanian national identity and represents usurpation of Mother Teresa's origin."

Ethnic Albanians make up perhaps a quarter, though some say a third or more, of Macedonia's two million people. (No one knows for certain and, like much else, it is argued over bitterly.)

The largest national group here are often considered Slavs. But many Macedonians contend hotly that they are in fact not Slavs, but descended from ancient Macedonians like Alexander the Great. Whatever their descent, they fought a brief war with ethnic Albanians in 2001.

Mother Teresa has now emerged as yet another strain in this larger national tug of war.

What complicates matters further is that Mother Teresa was Roman Catholic, while most Albanians are Muslim, and this has opened a crack for speculation about Mother Teresa's actual ethnic roots.

Jasmina Mironski, a prominent Macedonian journalist who has written two books on Mother Teresa, says there is no doubt that Mother Teresa's own mother, Dranafila Bernaj, was ethnic Albanian. But as far as her father, Nikola Bojaxhiu, goes, "He is the tricky combination."

She says the "u" that ends his name made him more likely a Vlach, a non-Slavic Orthodox people also called Walachians. Plus, she said, Mother Teresa "didn't speak Albanian, that's for sure; she only knew five words of Albanian."

Moreover, her brother's name was Lazar, the name of Serbia's most famous prince. "It's very Serbian, to be frank," she said.

This is heresy to Albanians, who say they have been repeatedly persecuted by Serbs.

The debate has leached out from Macedonia to intellectuals in Albania proper, who in July wrote in anger to the mayor of Rome urging him to resist the effort "to usurp the figure and deeds of Mother Teresa," as well as to Internet chat rooms read by Macedonians around the world.

"Mother Teresa was a Vlach from Macedonia," one Macedonian writer posted smugly on a Web site. "Never a Shiptar," a derogatory term for Albanians.

All sides say, naturally, that their only interest is to see Mother Teresa's life celebrated, but with the maximum truth possible.

"The whole world knows the pope is Polish," said Sulejman Rushiti, vice president of the Democratic Party of Albanians. "And if someone would say he was some other nationality, the Poles would be offended."

With the argument still raging, Risto Penov, the mayor of Skopje, who is overseeing the donation of the statue, noted that no one ever said Mother Teresa was Macedonian, just perhaps not 100 percent Albanian (Mr. Penov, who is Macedonian, also says she could not speak Albanian.)

Moreover, he said, there was never a plan for an inscription that mentioned a "Macedonian daughter." He said the idea is now the same as it always was, for an inscription that reads simply: "Born Skopje 26 August 1910. Died Calcutta 5 September 1997."

"Now we have a person who can put us together again — and we're dividing ourselves," he said. But the editors at Fakti insist that their report was right.

Dragging his hand across his nose, the artist, Mr. Serafimovski, said he had had it "up to here" with all the bickering. No statue will be donated, he said, until the issue is resolved. He opposes anything even hinting that Mother Teresa was Macedonian (even if he himself believes the father was Vlach).

At Mother Teresa's own order in Skopje, yet another view seemed to prevail about this woman who left Skopje at the age of 18. An Italian nun who declined to be identified said Mother Teresa unquestionably spoke Albanian, among other languages, but felt the strongest affinity with another part of the world entirely. "Most of her life, she spent in Calcutta," she declared. "She felt more Indian than any other citizenship."


TOPICS: Catholic; Current Events; History
KEYWORDS: albanians; balkans; campaignfinance; catholicism; motherteresa
My history studies were not a total waste..

The largest national group here are often considered Slavs. But many Macedonians contend hotly that they are in fact not Slavs, but descended from ancient Macedonians like Alexander the Great. Whatever their descent Whatever is correct. Whatever their descent, they are not the Macedonians of Greece and adopted the name as a way to solidify their nationalist claims.

What complicates matters further is that Mother Teresa was Roman Catholic, while most Albanians are Muslim, and this has opened a crack for speculation about Mother Teresa's actual ethnic roots. Moreover, her brother's name was Lazar, the name of Serbia's most famous prince. "It's very Serbian, to be frank," she said. - This is often forgotten, but the Albanians were Orthodox Christians (with a healthy mix of Latin Catholics) when they fought along side the Serbs under Lazar as allies against the Muslim Turks. To the Albanians who remained Christian, Lazar's name was still honored. There is no mystery here why her brother's name would carry on the name Lazar.

"Mother Teresa was a Vlach from Macedonia," one Macedonian writer posted smugly on a Web site. "Never a Shiptar," a derogatory term for Albanians. Shiptar is what Albanians call themselves in their own language it is not an insult (unless used in the way the Nazi's used the term "Jew") but the claim that Mother Teresa is "Macedonian" is typical of the irrational nationalist claims the pseudo-Macedonians use against the Greeks, Serbs or Bulgarians (whom they most closely resemble as a people).

Currently the "Macedonian Orthodox Church" is not in communion with the rest of Orthodoxy and is considered a schismatic church ever since the communists founded the church as a way to weaken the influence of the Serbian Patriarchite.

1 posted on 08/06/2003 8:29:17 PM PDT by Destro
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To: *balkans
bump
2 posted on 08/06/2003 8:29:41 PM PDT by Destro (Know your enemy! Help fight Islamic terrorisim by visiting www.johnathangaltfilms.com)
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To: Destro
I don't know the history of this area, but why are the Albanians now predominantly Muslim? Did they lose the war against the Muslim Turks?
3 posted on 08/06/2003 11:12:45 PM PDT by Canticle_of_Deborah
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To: Destro
I give it 8 posts before the wackos come out of the woodwork, smearing Mother Teresa.
4 posted on 08/07/2003 5:40:39 AM PDT by Conservative til I die (They say anti-Catholicism is the thinking man's anti-Semitism; that's an insult to thinking men)
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To: Canticle_of_Deborah; Destro
I met an Albanian Catholic who is now a graduate student in the U.S. There are hardly any Catholics left in the country, because of the vile persecutions of the Communists in Albania, who declared the country "the first atheistic state" in the second half of the 20th century.
5 posted on 08/07/2003 7:10:10 AM PDT by Pyro7480 (+ Vive Jesus! (Live Jesus!) +)
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To: Canticle_of_Deborah
It is a shame you don't. It is one of the most important episodes in Christian European history.
6 posted on 08/07/2003 10:11:05 AM PDT by Destro (Know your enemy! Help fight Islamic terrorisim by visiting www.johnathangaltfilms.com)
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To: Pyro7480
That partly answers my question. Thanks.
7 posted on 08/07/2003 10:48:53 AM PDT by Canticle_of_Deborah
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To: Canticle_of_Deborah
I just looked up the figures. There are more Catholics in Albania than I though. There are 493,000 Catholics, about 13% of the population.
8 posted on 08/07/2003 10:52:00 AM PDT by Pyro7480 (+ Vive Jesus! (Live Jesus!) +)
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To: Destro
Mother Teresa
9 posted on 08/07/2003 10:59:54 AM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: Canticle_of_Deborah
If you know the history of Islam, you'll know that there were tremendous benefits for conquered people within the Ottoman Empire to convert to Islam. Christians were considered second-class citizens and had a lower legal status than those of their Mohammedan neighbors.

Balkan Muslims are the descendents of collaborators and traitors. They outnumber Christians in their areas because they thrived under the Ottomans while the Christians suffered.

10 posted on 08/08/2003 1:44:02 PM PDT by FormerLib
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To: FormerLib
Thanks for the history.
11 posted on 08/08/2003 2:44:16 PM PDT by Canticle_of_Deborah (Keep the Kennedys out of California politics)
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