Defining the Internal Enemy: Detention Camps in Early Communist Albania, 1945–1950
Pamięć i Sprawiedliwość, Bd. 36 Nr. 2 (2020), pages: 138-152
Publication date: 2020-12-31
Abstract
Albania was perhaps the only country to have more than tripled its population of Jews during the Second World War. It did so by hiding or refusing to hand them over to the occupying German forces. By the end of 1944 the Communist-led National Liberation Army gained power replacing the Germans and the former political interwar elites. Despite common knowledge, several armed and unarmed attempts were made by opposition groups to overthrow the regime from 1944 onward. Opposition came also as a response to the repressive policies that the communists conducted methodically in the early years of the regime. Repression consisted of arbitrary arrests, terrorist practices conducted by the then-formed State Security, commonly known as “Sigurimi” as well as a series of show trials against people accused of war crimes or collaboration with the enemy. Aside from these typical forms of revolutionary repression, the regime set up a series of detention facilities, in which the new above-mentioned “alien” class and enemy elements were placed. Such structures consisted of forced labour and concentration camps. This paper seeks to analyze the concentration camps, set up by 1945, in which the newly established regime placed families and relatives of those who opposed Communism. Unlike the labour camps, the concentration ones were reserved only for the elderly, females and children. They functioned from 1945 to 1950 and were born out of necessity, due to the inability to control parts of the country, and as a measure to deprive the insurgents of their social base. While in theory concentration camps functioned as a form of policing and social control, in Albania they partly functioned as hostage centers, where the family members of political prisoners or anti-Communist émigrés were placed. Despite their original function, concentration camps turned soon into death camps as their inmates begun to die of hunger, malnutrition and exposure. Such tragedy affected especially the elderly and children, who were the primary victims of such terrible conditions. The paper draws examples especially from the notorious Tepelena Camp. The site was improvised from derelict barracks, which served various occupant armies in WW2 just outside the small town. The paper tries to uncover the rationale of these detention facilities, taking in consideration both the ideological but also mere survival motives of the regime, combining even the inability of its violence apparatus to effectively deal with this population group.
Literaturhinweise
Autoriteti për Informimin mbi Dokumentet e Ish-Sigurimit të Shtetit (AIDSSH) (Authority for Information on Former State Security Documents)
Albanian Identities: Myth and History, ed. S. Schwandner-Sievers, B.J. Fischer (Indiana University Press, 2000).
Alia R., Jeta ime: Kujtime (Toena, 2012).
Amy L., “Re-Membering in Transition: The Trans-National Stakes of Violence and Denial in Post--Communist Albania” [in:] History of Communism in Europe, vol. 1: Politics of Memory in Post-Communist Europe (Bucharest: Zeta Books, 2010).
Applebaum A., Iron Curtain: The Crushing of Eastern Europe 1944–1956 (Anchor Books, 2013).
Ballinger P., “A Sea of Difference, a History of Gaps: Migrations between Italy and Albania, 1939–1992”, Comparative Studies in History and Society 2018, vol. 60.
Banac I., With Stalin against Tito (Cornell University Press, 1988).
Bethell N., Tradhëtia e madhe (Progresi, 1993).
Biberaj E., Albania and China: An unequal alliance (Tirana: AIIS, 2015).
Connelly J., Captive University: The Sovietization of East German, Czech and Polish Higher Education 1945–1956 (University of North Carolina Press, 2000).
Dervishi K., E vërteta e fshehur e një procesi: gjyqi i Koçi Xoxes, lidhjet e tij me Enver Hoxhën (Tiranë: Shtëpia Botuese 55, 2009).
Dervishi K., Kampet dhe Burgjet në Shqipërinw Komuniste (Tiranë: ISKK, 2015).
Fevziu B., Hoxha E., The Iron Fist of Albania (I.B. Tauris, 2016).
Fischer B.J., Shqipëria gjatë Luftës 1939–1945 (Tiranë: Çabej, 2000).
Frashëri K., Historia e lëvizjes së majtë në Shqipëri dhe e themelimit të PKSH-së (1878–1941) (Tiranë: Ilar, 2006).
Gritt van der L., “Political Transitions and Institutional Change: The Cases of Romania and the Soviet Zone of Germany, 1944–1948”, Comparativ. Zeitschrift für Globalgeschichte und Vergleichende Gesellschaftsforschung 2014, vol. 24.
Hoxha Ç., Krimet e Komunistëve gjatë Luftës, 1941–1945 (Dokumente) (Tiranë: ISKK, 2014).
Këlliçi K., Danaj E., “Promoting equality, perpetuating inequality: Gender Propaganda in Communist Albania”, History of Communism in Europe 2016, no. 7.
Krisafi L., Shqipëria dhe Jugosllavia 1945–1948. Mitet, faktet dhe dyshimet (Naimi, 2017).
Mëhilli E., From Stalin to Mao: Albania and the Socialist World (Cornell University Press, 2018).
Meksi S., “Papërshtatshmëria e paradigmës totalitare në përpjekjen për të shpjeguar natyrën dhe dinamikën e regjimit stalinist shqiptar në vitet 1960–1965”, Conference Paper, Qasje Shkencore
dhe Kulturore për Totalitarizmin: Rasti i Shqipërisë, Tirana, 27–28 X 2017.
Meta B., Krasniqi A., Bello H., Indoktrinimi Komunist Përmes Kulturës, Letërsisë dhe Artit: Dokumenta Arkivore, vol. 1 (Tiranë: A.S.A & Konrad Adenauer Stiftung, 2018).
Murati V., “Dëshmitari i mbijetuar, Lek Previzi: Enveri do na çonte në Siberi, çfarë ndodhi në kampin e Tepelenës”, Gazeta Mapo 3 IV 2018.
Murdock C.E., “A Gulag in the Erzgebirge? Forced Labor, Political Legitimacy, and Eastern German Uranium Mining in the Early Cold War, 1946–1949”, Central European History December 2015, no. 47.
Pepa P., Dosja e Diktaturës (Tiranë: ISKK, 2017).
Pllumi Z., Rrno përme tregue (Hylli i Dritës, 2001).
Progni L., “Si u vranë në kampin famëkeq të Tepelenës 33 fëmijë brenda një nate”, Panorama 30 IX 2017.
Rees E.A., “Introduction: The Sovietization of Eastern Europe” [in:] The Sovietization of Eastern Europe: New Perspectives on the Postwar Period, ed. B. Apor, P. Apor, E.A. Rees (New Academia Publishing, 2008).
Sufaj F., Historia e burgjeve të Shqipërisë (Tiranë: Albin, 2000).
Sufaj F., Sotaj M., “Jeta në kampet e punës së detyruar parë nga vështrimi i raporteve zyrtare” [in:] Të Mohuar nga Regjimi (Tiranë: AIDSSH, 2020).
The Balkans in the Cold War, ed. S. Rajak, K.E. Botsiou, E. Karamouzi, E. Hatzivassiliou (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017).
Todorov T., Voices from the Gulag: Life and Death in Communist Bulgaria, trans. R. Zaretsky (University Park, PA: Penn State Press: 1999).
Woodcock S., Cela E., “Postmemory and Women’s Displacement in Socialist Albania: Historical Methodologies as Response” [in:] Women’s Narratives and the Postmemory of Displacement in Central and Eastern Europe, ed. S. Mitroiu (Palgrave, 2018).
Woodcock S., Life is War (Hammeron Press, 2016).
Lizenz
Copyright (c) 2023 Pamięć i Sprawiedliwość
Dieses Werk steht unter der Lizenz Creative Commons Namensnennung - Nicht-kommerziell - Keine Bearbeitungen 4.0 International.