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Enver Hoxha (1908-1985)
Enver HOXHA
(born Oct. 16, 1908, Gjirokaster, Alb.--d. April 11, 1985,
Tirane), the first communist chief of state of Albania. As that
country's ruler for 40 years after World War II, he forced its
transformation from a semifeudal relic of the Ottoman Empire
into an industrialized economy with the most tightly controlled
society in Europe. Hoxha, the son of a Muslim cloth merchant,
studied at the French lycŚe at Kor¨‘ and reportedly also at the
American Technical School in Tiran‘. In 1930 he went on a state
scholarship to the University of Montpellier, France, and then
from 1934 to 1936 he was a secretary at the Albanian consulate
general in Brussels and studied law at the university there.
Returning to Albania in 1936, he became a teacher at his old
school in KorcŌ. In 1939, when Italy invaded Albania, Hoxha was
dismissed from his teaching post for refusing to join the newly
formed Albanian Fascist Party, and he opened a retail tobacco
store at Tiran‘, which became headquarters for a communist cell.
After Germany invaded Yugoslavia in 1941, Yugoslav communists
helped Hoxha found the Albanian Communist Party (afterward
called the Party of Labour). Hoxha became first secretary of the
party's Central Committee and political commissar of the
communist-dominated Army of National Liberation. He was prime
minister of Albania from its liberation in 1944 until 1954,
simultaneously holding the ministry of foreign affairs from 1946
to 1953. As first secretary of the Party of Labour's Central
Committee, he retained effective control of the government until
his death. Albania's economy was revolutionized under Hoxha's
long rule. Farmland was confiscated from wealthy landowners and
gathered into collective farms that eventually enabled Albania
to become almost completely self-sufficient in food crops.
Industry, which had previously been almost nonexistent, received
huge amounts of investment, so that by the 1980s it had grown to
contribute more than half of the gross national product.
Electricity was brought to every rural district, epidemics of
disease were stamped out, and illiteracy became a thing of the
past. In order to enforce his radical program, however, Hoxha
resorted to brutal Stalinist tactics. His government imprisoned,
executed, or exiled thousands of landowners, rural clan leaders,
Muslim and Christian clerics, peasants who resisted
collectivization, and disloyal party officials. Private property
was confiscated by the state; all churches, mosques, and other
religious institutions were closed; and all cultural and
intellectual endeavours were put at the service of socialism and
the state. As ardent a nationalist as he was a communist, Hoxha
excoriated any communist state that threatened his power or the
sovereignty of Albania. In 1948 he broke relations with
Yugoslavia and formed an alliance with the Soviet Union. After
the death of the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, for whom Hoxha
held a lifelong admiration, his relations with Nikita Khrushchev
deteriorated until Hoxha broke with him completely in 1961. He
then forged close ties with China, breaking with that country in
turn in 1978 after the death of Mao Zedong and China's
rapprochement with the West. From then on, Hoxha spurned all the
world's major powers, declaring that Albania would become a
model socialist republic on its own. In order to ensure the
succession of a younger generation of leaders, Hoxha in 1981
ordered the execution of several leading party and
government officials. |