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Enver Hoxha's World
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13087 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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11 / 1987 |
3,869 Words |
| Author
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Nicholas Pano Nicholas Pano is professor of history at Western Illinois
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THE ARTFUL ALBANIAN:
The Memoirs of Enver Hoxha
Jon Halliday, ed.
London: Chatto & Windus, 1986, distributed by Salem House Publishers
394 pp., $9.95
At the time of his death in April 1985, Enver Hoxha, first secretary of the Albanian Party of Labor (APL), had ruled Albania for over forty years. He was the senior communist leader with respect to tenure in office. Indeed, in April 1985 only Emperor Hirohito of Japan had served as a national leader longer than Hoxha.
Yet, despite political longevity, Hoxha remains one of the lesser-known communist chieftains. His obscurity has several causes: Except for well-publicized confrontations (with Yugoslavia in 1948, the Soviet Union in 1960-61, and the People's Republic of China in 1977-78), Albania has played a minor role in the activies of the communist world. Hoxha had his brief moments in the spotlight during the critical phases of each confrontation, but he receded into the background once the crises had run their course. Hoxha is not known to have traveled outside Albania following his bitter public denunciation of Khrushchev at the November 1960 Moscow meeting of the world communist parties. The Albanian leader's last press conference for Western journalists took place on September 16, 1946, in Paris, where he had gone to defend his country's interests at the Paris Peace Conference. In addition, Soviet, Eastern European, and Chinese media coverage of Albanian developments became exceedingly rare following their respective estrangements from
... (1946 of 24709 Characters)
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