Politics and Religion: The Public Relations Challenge for All Albanians
by Hon. Joseph J. DioGuardi
President, Albanian American Civic League
Where does one begin when trying to deal with such universal and controversial
issues as politics and religion? As an American, I have been taught that
you cannot mix politics and religion. Our U.S. Constitution bears directly
on this with its “establishment” clause, which prevents our government from
establishing or endorsing any particular religion, church, or faith. This
is conventionally referred to as the Constitutional separation of church and
state. Yet many issues have arisen, even in
The public mixing of church and state is abhorrent to most Americans,
and herein lies the public image challenge for the Albanian people, who have
not, until the Albanian American Civic League started in 1989, used western-style
lobbying and public relations to counteract Serbian and Greek government and
Orthodox church propaganda against them as socalled
“radical Muslims” and “KLA terrorists” tied to certain “Al Qaeda cells” in
Albania, Kosova, Macedonia, and Montenegro. All Albanians know these
are big lies being used for political reasons by the Serbs to get back Kosova
and by the Greeks to control the political and economic outcomes in
But what do the American people know and believe about the Albanian
people? And, what do key countries in
people living side by side in the Balkans, but unfairly
divided before, during, and after World War I into six different political
jurisdictions to keep Albanians subservient to Slavs and Greeks? Serbs and
Greeks, in particular, continue to wage a “holy war” against the Albanian
people as the socalled successors to the Ottoman Turks who occupied the
Balkans, including
We are, I believe, at a major turning point in the history of the Albanian
people. The key issue now is whether the political, economic, and social
life for all Albanians in the Balkans will get better or worse. Will Kosova
become independent of the UN administration and completely free from
political and economic equality and social justice
there? Will
agreement with the UCPMB in the
Do we wait for God or some other force to make things right for the Albanian people?
Do we just say “God willing” or “Inshallah” and
sit around and do nothing while the traditional adversaries of the Albanian
people, basically
What we did in New York City at the Sheraton Hotel on May 15, what we did with Jewish and Christian religious leaders in New York on May 16, and what we did with religious and political leaders in Washington from May 17 to May 20 was both historic and effective. Basically we accepted the public relations challenge of the Serbs and the Greeks, and their supporters, by actively responding to their publicly proclaimed (since World War II, at least) myths about the Albanian people. By joining with Jewish and
other political and religious leaders on the fifteenth anniversary of the Civic League, coinciding with the sixtieth anniversary of our Jewish brothers and sisters being freed from the Nazi death camps in 1945, we sent a strong message to all Americans that Albanians are a very tolerant people who saved all Jews already living in Albania and surrounding Albanian lands during World War II, as well as all Jews who were fortunate to escape from Western European countries, and from Serbia and Greece, into Albanian lands in Kosova, Macedonia, and Montenegro. And, by bringing Bishop Sopi, Fr. Lush Gjergi, and Fr. Shan Zefi to be with us and to speak at the Sheraton dinner and testify on May 18 before the full House International Relations Committee in Washington,
cochaired by Congressional leaders on both sides of the political aisle, Chairman Henry
Hyde and Congressman Tom Lantos, we sent a strong signal that Albanians share,
harmoniously, three major religions—Islam, Catholicism, and Orthodox Christianity.
This is not the image that
For those of you who could not attend our historic fifteen anniversary dinner, “A Salute to Albanian Tolerance, Resistance, and Hope: Remembering Besa and the
Holocaust,” we honored three great Jewish Americans—Harvey Sarner, who wrote Rescue in Albania (the story of Albanians risking their lives to save Jews in World War II, which was handed out to everyone who attended), Norman Gershman, the fine arts
photographer who made two trips to Albania and one to Kosova over the past year to photograph and record the Albanian families who saved Jews, and Mike Fishman, the president of Service Employees International Union, Local 32BJ, for empowering thousands of Albanians in the New York Metropolitan area with jobs and benefits. Our keynote speaker was Congressman Tom Lantos, a Jewish American who himself escaped the Nazi death camps and who introduced the first Congressional Resolution for Kosova’s independence in 1992 and in many Congresses since then. Also speaking at the dinner were House International Relations Committee Chairman Henry Hyde and former Chairman Ben Gilman (another great Jewish American) who has championed Albanian human rights and independence of Kosova with me and Shirley for over twenty years now.
Other speakers included New York’s senior U.S. Senator Charles Schumer, New York State Senator Jeff Klein, Rabbi Joseph Potasnik (the head of the New York Board of Rabbis), Rabbi Arthur Schneier (Appeal of Conscience Movement), Bishop Mark Sopi, Frs. Lush Gjergji and Shan Zefi, Fr. Pjeter Popaj, Kosova Minister Ardian Gjini, and Albanian Professors Petrit Zorba and Apostol Kotani (the Albanian–Israeli Friendship Association). Governor Pataki and New York State Senator Nick Spano sent their official greetings from Albany in the form of a New York Senate Resolution supporting the independence of Kosova, which was passed on May 10, 2005, and signed by the
Governor in time for our anniversary dinner. (It
is presented in full in our dinner journal.) Albanian Orthodox Bishop Nikon,
Boston Orthodox Church Chancellor Fr. Arthur Liolin, and Cardinal Edward Egan of
blessings to us that evening. So this was not just a celebration, it was the first “canon blast” across the bow of the Serbian and Greek propaganda machines that the public relations battle for the image and future of the Albanian people is now joined.
The second canon volley fired by our Civic League and its delegation
from Kosova and
Synagogue offices and with Cardinal Edward Egan at his residence. It was very
important to meet with Rabbi Schneier, an internationally
respected leader for human rights, social justice, and peace, and we are deeply
grateful to our good friend Ben Gilman for facilitating this meeting. (Rabbi
Schneier had just returned from a trip to
The meeting with Cardinal Egan at his residence behind St. Patrick’s
Cathedral in
The third shot across the bow of the Serbian propaganda machine and their “Orthodox lobby” in Washington were our meetings with Congressmen Lantos, Hyde, and Rohrabacher, and the full House International Relations Committee hearing on Kosova on May 18, to which the Bush administration sent the third highest ranking State Department official, Ambassador Nicholas Burns, to deal with the failing U.S. policy for Kosova and the Balkans. It was obvious to all at the beginning of the fully packed
hearing room that this was going to be an important hearing on Kosova’s final status.
The day before the hearing, a major article appeared in The Washington Post, entitled
“Bush Has Plan to Act on the Status of Kosovo.” After not being able to convince Hyde
and Lantos to postpone or cancel the hearing, the
Bush administration decided that it was time to act and try to stop the political
and economic conditions in Kosova from deteriorating
any further. This was a big win for our lobbying efforts, since the Civic
League has been saying, since the end of the NATO bombing campaign against
Serbia in 1999, that the United States, and not Europe or the UN, has the
power and should h
The fourth round of our public relations campaign against Serbian lies and propaganda took place in Maryland and Washington, where our delegation led by Bishop Sopi met with Cardinal McCarrick, leader of the Catholic Archdiocese in Baltimore (see photos), Archbishop Montalvo, who is the Papal Nuncio representing Pope Benedict XVI and the Vatican in Washington (see photo), and with the leaders of the U.S. Catholic Conference of Bishops and Catholic Relief Services. This phase ended on a high note in Washington on the morning of May 20, where, with the help of former Congressmen Ben Gilman and Lee Hamilton, we were able to position Ardian Gjini, Kosova’s Minister of Environment and Spatial Planning, and AACL Balkan Affairs Adviser Shirley Cloyes to give speeches about Kosova at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington (see photo). I spoke briefly at this forum as well, ending my comments by thanking the Center, on behalf of all Albanians, for the crucial role that President Woodrow Wilson played in saving the State of Albania from total political and geographic annihilation at the end of World War I.
Finally, on May 20, Shirley and I headed to
this fact if Pjeter’s, or anyone’s untimely death for that matter, is to mean anything for us.
I ended by saying that I believed that Pjeter was now with Mother Teresa in heaven, and
Page 6/DioGuardi
that we should all pray to him and to Mother Teresa to give us the peace, wisdom, and courage we need to help our family, our friends, and the Albanian nation.
I began this article by affirming the separation of church and state.
I end this article by affirming the presence of God in everything that we
do and that we must take time to listen to God’s voice in all of us. This
is obviously a personal, not a political, statement, as it should be. I believe
that I have heard God’s voice in the Albanian people, Christian and Muslim,
especially when my father, speaking Albanian to his youngest sister, met the
Albanians of Kosova by accident in 1985 during my
first year as a Congressman, and then again in 1993 when I met Shirley, again
by accident. I know now, more than ever, that I must continue to act, as
well as pray, for the Albanian people, especially those seeking freedom for
Kosova now from their Serbian oppressors in
May 30, 2005