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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/books/item_id/2032403-On-The-Write-Path/day/6-1-2021
Rated: 13+ · Book · Travel · #2032403
ON THE WRITE PATH: travel journal for Around-the-World in 2015, 16, 18.
For there are many paths.

Visitor's Center of Woolaroc in Oklahoma, Osage Nation. Tribute to Native America.



A tlog. A travel blog. A keeping-track of my trials, er.. travels.

February 26, 2015 until ... June 18,2015.
January 12, 2016 until February 15, 2016.
November 13 to 30 2018 ... 2019,

2020: Taiwain.

I went nowhere in 2021.

2022: Portugal, Thailand.

Will include: Hawai'i, Japan, Australia, South Africa, Untied Arab Emirates, Portugal, Norway, Ireland and... (2015) ... Norway and Estonia (2016), México (2018), Taiwan, Balkans, Baltics, Turkey, Costa Rica, Nicaragua.

Vi får se. *Delight*

"Where I have traveled, stayed and visited. Over 181 places.
Yellow cheer from sarah

June 1, 2021 at 5:00pm
June 1, 2021 at 5:00pm
#1011108
Any trip to the Balkans is fraught with confronting an uneasy history. And one of the controversies concerns Mother Teresa.

In 2017 I visited Kosovo, Albania and Makedonia. It's impossible to move among Albanians and not be aware of Mother Teresa. But let's go back in history to Roman times. Even then Christianity was a potent part of the regional culture.

It began in Ulpiana, a Roman crossroads on the Illyrian plains rebuilt by Emperor Justinian (most likely an Illyrian) after the earthquake of 518.

Ulpiana, Roman city ruins, outside of Prishtina, 17.shtator.2017. Rebuilt after quake 518

[photo of basilica, baptistry and me]

https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1812766338757982&set=a.1672757769425507

Christian Illyria was already established in present day Kosovo near Prishtina. The church ruins lay under Serbian cornfields for centuries, some still do, but the Illyrians weren't Slavs. Slavs came later and may have mixed with Illyrian peoples. But who cares you might say?

The Albanians, the Greeks, the Bulgarians...

Because of their arguing even the new cathedral (2017) in Prishtina was opposed by some.

Devotional altar in the Cathedral of Saint Mother Teresa in Pristina, Kosovo, 2017.

[bas relief of Mother Teresa inside the sacristy]

https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1738525219515428&set=a.1672757769425507

Nënë Tereza did not establish peace in her homeland. Her mission lay elsewhere. She went to Ireland at age 18 to learn English and then India her adopted land.

Her life began in 1910 in a house in Skopje, now in Makedonia where Anjezë Gonxhe Bojaxhiu was born to Albanian parents. The house stood until 1963 when Skopje was leveled by an earthquake. The spot is outlined on the pavement.

Nearby they constructed a memorial house and chapel.

September, 2017 photo taken in Skopje, Makedonia.

[Memorial House and Chapel]

Memorial House of Mother Teresa, Скопје, 28. септември.2017 (also a chapel)

[another view]

https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1731865290181421&set=a.1691460280888589
https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1731862930181657&set=a.1691460280888589

Everyone writes about the missions and spiritual side of Mother Teresa but it's impossible to visit regions where there are Albanians and not know about her. She has become a cultural icon as well. The airport of Tirana, Albania (TIA) is called Aeroporti Ndërkombëtar i Tiranës Nënë Tereza. The main pedestrian mall in Prishtina, Kosovo bears her name and has a statue of her.

Statue in Mall Nene Tereza that bears her name, Prishtina, Kosovo, 2017.

[Mall Nënë Tereza statue]

https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1639241332777151&set=a.1672757769425507

And you won't miss seeing her to the left as you approach the sanctuary in St. Stephens Cathedral in Shkodra, Albania either.

St. Stephens Catholic Cathedral, Shkodër, Albania, Note Mother Teresa on left. 2017

https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1726100607424556&set=a.1691519717549312

Because most Albanians are Muslim, not everyone was eager to embrace her. Because she was Catholic this was a problem among Orthodox Serbians. So much for spirituality...

The entire region is still deeply divided into tribes which believe fighting over religion for the last 500 years is appropriate... except perhaps for the more peaceful Bosniaks, and Montenegrins. Then there's the Albanian concept of besa (a pledge of honor).

For instance, during World War II under German occupation, Albanians rescued and hid over 2000 Jews from Nazi persecution, motivated in part by the cultural institution of besa that emphasizes aiding and protecting people in moments of need.

Most assuredly, Mother Teresa grew up with this spiritual concept of honor and providing sanctuary.

So, it's sad that the legacy of Mother Teresa cannot bring the Balkans together spiritually like Josip Broz Tito did politically. Without a spiritual underpinning that too did not last.

© Copyright 2021 Kåre Enga [178.96] (29.qershor.2021)


~490 words

For
FORUM
The Christian Writing Contest  (E)
Featured in Schnujo's CONTEST CHALLENGE for June 2021!
#1376214 by ruwth


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