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Enver Hoxha biography

Enver Hoxha was born in
Gjirokaster, in the south of
Albania, on October 16,
1908; his father was a modest
employee, for many years an
emigrant in
America; his mother was a
housewife.
A great influence on the spiritual
growth of Enver Hoxha was
exercised
by his uncle Hyen Hoxha,
a man who for that period was a
definite revolutionary.
He
represented Gjirokaster
on
November 28, 1912, in the act of
proclamation of independence of
Albania, signing a document that
consecrated the will of the
Albanian people to free themselves
from the yoke of the Turkish
empire. He later also took a
hostile attitude towards the
reactionary regime of king Zog.
This played a fundamental role in
the formation of the political
ideas of Enver Hoxha.
In his city he breathed the air of
protest against a repressive
government that culminated in the
democratic revolution of 1924.
Having finished elementary school
he attended the high school of
Gjirokaster. At the age of 16 he
was already among the first
initiators and also secretary of
the Society of the Students of
Gjirokaster, which was permeated
with a democratic-revolutionary
spirit. He led the protest of
progressive students when center
was closed by the government after
a year.
He left Gjirokaster to move to
Korca, where he continued his
studies in the French high school.
Here he learned French history,
literature and philosophy. In this
city he read for the first time
the "Manifesto of the Communist
Party" given to him by a worker
named Koēi Bako. In this period he
also learned for the first time
about the October Socialist
Revolution; all that together with
the ideas of the French Revolution
which thrilled Enver Hoxha,
determined his cultural
development and his political
tendencies.
In the summer of 1930 he finished
his studies at the high school of
Korca with excellent marks; in the
same year he won a scholarship to
attend the faculty of natural
sciences at Montepellier in
France. He wanted to study
philosophy or law. Here he
attended the lessons and the
conferences of the Association of
Workers organized by the French
Communist Party.
After a year, not having much
interest in biology he left
Montepellier to go to Paris,
hoping to continue his university
studies. He took courses in the
faculty of philosophy at the
Sorbonne and, in the Marxist
environment of the French capital,
he collaborated with "Humanite",
writing some articles on the
situation in Albania. Here he had
the opportunity to study Marx's
"Capital" and Engels' "Anti-Duhring."
For these reasons in November of
1933 he was denied his scholarship
by the government of Zog.
For economic reasons and with the
help of some Albanian friends he
went to Brussels, where he found a
job in the Albanian Consulate. He
attended university courses in the
faculty of law; here he broadened
and enriched his knowledge of
Marxist-Leninist literature. Once
again he was dismissed, because
the consul discovered through
Zog's agents that his employee had
deposited in his office
revolutionary materials and books.
In that period he studied in
France and worked in Belgium, also
attending the University of
Brussels.
Being without work and without
money, he could not finish his
university studies, so Enver Hoxha
in the summer of 1936 finally
returned to Albania. He spent a
brief period of time in the city
of his birth, he made contact with
Albanian communists, and in July
of 1936 he met Alģ Kelmendi, an
Albanian communist. He had
contacts with the communist group
of Korca, which was the most solid
and organized of the movement. He
returned to Korca as a teacher in
the French high school.
On April 7, 1939, Italy occupied
Albania.
For his openly revolutionary and
anti-fascist ideas he was
dismissed. He left Korca, went to
Tirana, the Albanian capital, on
November 29, 1939. Here he worked
part-time in the government
grammar school for a short time as
a teacher, being again dismissed
because he was by now known as a
communist. With the help of some
friends he opened a small shop,
which became a cover for his
clandestine activity. He came into
contact with many members of the
varied communist groups, that of
Scutari, that of the youth of
Korca, etc. In collaboration with
the communist activists of these
groups he worked actively for the
unification of the scattered
communist movement, with the firm
intention to create a single
communist party.
On November 8, 1941, the Communist
Party of Albania was founded and
Enver Hoxha, who had a played an
important and decisive role, was
chosen one of 7 members of the
provisional Central Committee.
According to the decision of the
meeting, no one was chosen
secretary or president. Soon Enver
Hoxha showed himself as the true
leader of the party. He carried on
an intense activity for the
organization of the party in
Tirana and in the various cities
and regions of Albania.
He was the principle inspirer of
the political life of the party,
which consisted in organizing the
armed struggle by means of a
united front of all forces,
independent of their political and
ideological orientation. In
September of 1942 at the
Conference of Pesa the National
Front of Liberation was formed.
Condemned to death in absentia by
a fascist tribunal, Enver Hoxha
lived and worked illegally in
Tirana and in the various regions
of the country.
In March of 1943 the first
National Conference of the C.P.A.
elected him formally as General
Secretary of the Party, a position
that he held until his death. He
founded the Army of National
Liberation which, in the spring of
1944 had about 70 thousand men.

The role of Enver Hoxha as a
political and military figure was
very important and perhaps
fundamental. The role that Enver
Hoxha played in the organization
of the new political system was
also fundamental. Aware of the
fact that Albania in the post-war
period could no longer be a feudal
dominion of the bourgeoisie, nor a
colony of the imperialist powers,
Enver Hoxha in the party inspired
the creation of embryos of the new
political power: the National
Councils of Liberation.
In May of 1944 the Anti-Fascist
Congress of Permet chose Enver
Hoxha as president of the National
Anti-Fascist Committee of
Liberation, which was at that
epoch the only legislative organ
of the Albanian State, with the
attributes of a provisional
government, and Commander-in-Chief
of the Army. After 4 months, in
view of the coming liberation of
the country, the Committee was
transformed into a Provisional
Democratic Government and Enver
Hoxha became the first head of
government of the new Albania.
After liberation, which was the
exclusive achievement of the Army
of Albanian Liberation itself,
Enver Hoxha began a new phase in
the fight for Albania to rise
again on the path of socialism. In
March of 1946 the Constituent
Assembly, chosen in the elections
of December 1945, proclaimed
Albania a Peoples Republic and
nominated Enver Hoxha as Prime
Minister, the office that he held
until 1954.
In August of that same year Enver
Hoxha participated in the Peace
Conference in Paris as head of the
Albanian delegation, defending
brilliantly the right of his
people to be considered a member
of the anti-fascist coalition,
opposing the territorial claims of
Greece.
The period of 1947-1948 was marked
by the firm and determined
attitude of Enver Hoxha to prevent
the realization of the intentions
of Tito: to transform Albania into
a Yugoslav republic. The distrust
of Enver Hoxha towards the
Yugoslav leaders and towards Tito
had its origin during the war and
developed in the post-war period.
As the relationships between the
two states grew, so did Enver
Hoxha's doubts about Yugoslavia's
real policies. These doubts were
fed by the way in which the
economic relationships between the
two countries were conducted, and
by the ever stronger tendency of
Yugoslavia to make Albania into a
satellite state. Above all, the
national problem, with the lack of
self-determination for Kosova
promised by Tito but never
realized, fed Enver Hoxha's doubts
about the Yugoslav leaders.
The 1950s were years of the first,
most difficult steps for Albania
towards economic, social and
cultural development. To appraise
correctly and objectively this
experience of almost fifty years,
to comprehend the vastness of the
political, economic, social and
cultural transformation that was
realized, one must take into
account the enormous backwardness
that Albania had inherited from
the past.
A country with a completely
agricultural economy, with a
primitive agriculture marked by
feudal economic relationships,
almost totally lacking in
industry, with a very low level of
education: 80-85% of the
population was illiterate; a life
expectancy that did not reach 40
years; this was Albania before the
war. To all that must be added the
human casualties, 28 thousand
fallen out of 800 thousand
inhabitants and the destruction of
the war.
Enver Hoxha as leader of the
C.P.A. and as head of government
played an important role in what
was revealed as a still bloodier
struggle than the war, for the
revival of Albania.
The politics of the Party of Labor
- called that after the first
congress of November, 1948 - had
three fundamental orientations:
industrialization, the development
of agriculture through the
formation of cooperatives, and a
program for the development of
education and culture. Enver Hoxha
was the inspirer and author of the
work that was carried out in those
years, as leader of the Party of
Labor. With great sacrifices, with
enormous popular enthusiasm and
also with aid of the socialist
countries - the Soviet Union in
the 1950s and for a certain period
afterwards also China - Albania
was transformed into a advanced
country, very far from the level
inherited from the past, and this
was already an excellent progress.
Big industrial complexes, thermo
and hydroelectric power plants
were built, swamps, embankments
and rivers were reclaimed,
entirely new cities were built
from nothing. A very widespread
system of elementary and middle
schools were developed that
assured the education of all
children; the whole country was
electrified. Enver Hoxha knew very
well that Albania was not heaven
on earth, that it was still very
far from the more advanced
countries of Europe.
The last fifty years were marked
by increasing differences with the
Soviet leaders.
The Party of Labor of Albania and
Enver Hoxha personally had many
reservations about the new course
officially applied by Khrushchev
after the XXth Congress of the
C.P.S.U. For Enver Hoxha there was
not only the question of Stalin,
but above all the policy toward
the U.S.A. and world imperialism,
and still more the hegemonic
tendencies of the new U.S.S.R,
towards the socialist countries.
Enver Hoxha, in the contacts he
had with Khrushchev, presented his
reservations on different
occasions: in Moscow in December
of 1956, April 1957, January 1960,
and also in Tirana in May of 1959.
Upon his arrival at the Conference
of the 81 Fraternal Parties held
in Moscow on November 16, 1960,
Enver Hoxha in a courageous speech
made public his reservations and
his accusations regarding the new
Soviet course. This act also
marked the official break between
Albania and the U.S.S.R. From that
moment Enver Hoxha, supported for
a brief period of time by the
Chinese, become the unique heroic
fighter against modern
revisionism.
For all his life he defended the
theory and the principles in which
he believed, Marxism-Leninism. He
rejected every deviation from the
revolutionary spirit of this
theory. Yugoslav, Soviet, Chinese,
Eurocommunist, all were for him
the Trojan horse in the
international communist and
workers movement. Enver Hoxha
wanted to defend the victories of
the socialism in Albania and the
very independence of the country.
In the 1970s, new fronts of
struggle were opened, all those
inside the Party and the State who
were against socialism were
unmasked.
Enver Hoxha suffered a heart
attack in 1973, and although he
was able to recover fairly well,
he could no longer devote the
maximum of his being to this new
struggle. In fact, from that
moment on the activity of Enver
Hoxha in the Party and he in the
State tended more and more to
decrease. There began on the part
of the enemies infiltrated into
the Party and the State the work
of methodical, systematic
destruction of all that had been
realized on the road to socialism
in Albania.
From the end of the 1970s and the
beginning of the 1980s Enver Hoxha
began a period of intense
theoretical activity. All his
experience, all his life, from an
activist to a communist leader, is
contained in the various volumes
he has written. Among these are:
Yugoslav
"Self-Administration" - A
Capitalist Theory and Practice
(1978)
Imperialism and the Revolution
(1978)
Reflections on China (1979)
With Stalin (1979)
Eurocommunism is Anti-Communism
(1980)
The Khrushchevites (1980)
The Anglo-American Threat to
Albania (1982)
The Titoists (1982)
Reflections on the Middle East
(1984)
Laying the Foundations of the New
Albania (1984)
Two Friendly Peoples (1985)
The Superpowers (1985)
This is only a part of his intense
theoretical activity by which
Enver Hoxha has enriched the
universal fund of the experience
of the theory to which he devoted
all his life, Marxism-Leninism.
In the 1980s Enver Hoxha's state
of health worsened, he suffered
from diabetes and in 1983 he was
stricken with a cerebral ischemia,
and again in 1984.
On April 9, 1985, he suffered a
cardiac arrest; the doctors were
able to revive his heart, but he
was deprived of consciousness. On
April 11, 1985, Enver Hoxha died.
His death was felt by the
people as a great loss. There was
nationally a sincere and heartfelt
grief. The Albanian people loved
and adored him. Enver Hoxha in his
period of activity of fifty years
had given the Albanian people
freedom and national dignity, he
had brought his people from the
darkness of the feudalism towards
a society, which, although not
ideal, was more just and more
advanced. He had given his people
an ideal for which it was worthy
to fight, to sacrifice, oneself,
to live for. Enver Hoxha succeeded
in giving to his people all that
they do not have any more. He gave
the world Marxist-Leninist
movement the clarity of the
development of the class struggle,
from the October Revolution until
today.
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