Albanian Church honors its martyrs: stories of gruesome deaths
Thursday, October 27, 2016
"Long live Christ the King, long live Albania. We forgive those who kill us."
By Mónica Zorita de la Morena
NEW YORK—During 40 years of communist rule in Albania—which in 1967 declared
itself the first completely atheist country in the world—praying, making the sign
of the cross, wearing a crucifix around one’s neck or any other evidence of
being a believer in God were treated as crimes.
Churches,
mosques and other places of worship were used as shopping centers, sports halls
or theaters. That too was the fate of the cathedral of Shkodër, which was
turned into a sports arena. But on Nov. 5, 2016, the cathedral will be the
place where 38 Albanian martyrs will be beatified.
“Before they
were tortured and executed by firing squad, they all said: ‘Long live Christ
the King, long live Albania. We forgive those who kill us’,” Bishop Massafra of
Shkodër told international Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need. Among
the martyrs were a number of bishops, priest and ordinary faithful, including
one woman, María Tuci.

María was a
teacher and she was condemned to die for the crime of reminding students of the
presence of Christ. Her death was excruciating, after she had already been arrested
and tortured countless times. She was finally put in a sack along with a cat. The torturers repeatedly hit the cat with a
stick and their victim later died of the injuries inflicted by the terrified
animal.
Father Lazer
Shantoja was tortured so severely in the environs of Tirana that his own mother
begged that he be shot to death to finally put an end to his suffering.
Ndre Zadeja was
the first to be executed by firing squad; he was the first martyr of the
Albanian communist dictatorship that finally collapsed in 1991. He died in
Shkoder.
Bishop Massafra,
who serves as president of the Albanian bishops’ conference, said that all who
were murdered in that city were forced to walk along a particular route that
ended at the cemetery wall. There they were “tortured, spat upon, and finally
executed by shooting.” The route led them past the cathedral. “This was done on
purpose. It was to remind them that they were suffering because of their love
for Christ,” the bishop said.
“The
beatification ceremony will be a joyous festival. Thousands of Albanians all
over the world will be following” the proceedings, Bishop Massafra said. “This
small, but great Church has given the world Church countless martyrs,” he
added. The martyrs’ beatification process was begun in 2002 and was completed
in 2010. Pope Francis signed a decree that authorized the beatification to take
place on Nov. 5.
Muslims, who
account for some 70 percent of the population of Albania, were not spared
either. Thousands of people lived in concentration camps or languished in prisons
because they believed in God “or in Allah,” the bishop said.
There have been
notable survivors of the reign of terror, including Father Ernest Simoni, who
spent 28 years in a labor camp and whom Pope Francis has just made a cardinal.
Then there is Sister Marije Kaleta. Both met the Pope during his recent visit
to the country, leaving the Pontiff visibly moved. Bishop Massafra spoke of
them as ranking among the “secret consolers of the other prisoners.” Father
Simoni was able to secretly say Mass during his years of captivity.
The Albanian flag
|