717,086 views
After arriving at the top of power, Enver Hoxha would not care only to send the fascists' collaborators or even other opponents to the bullet or to prison. The situation was suitable to alienate a large number of people who knew his not-so-glorious past, who knew his exploits in Korça or Tirana, whether in France or Belgium. There should not be any negative opinion maker among the crowd-people who could damage the image and power. The figure of the man who would fill the minds of almost all the people, that he had not only founded the Albanian Communist Party, but had also led the War against fascism, should be cleansed of any kind of pollution or mud. On the other hand, the long list of those who had to remain silent, with grace, with grace, or forever, was very long, apparently in direct proportion to the insolence, sins and adventures of Enver Hoxha's youth. They were his friends of fun and parties, who knew a lot and who could talk, there were people who had not pleased and helped him on a bad day, but there were also some others whom fate had brought him to know some bitter secret of his life. From the very beginning, Enver Hoxha faces a difficult test. He had to decide on the life or death of his brother-in-law, Bahri Omari, who was accused of being a fascist collaborator because he had accepted the position of Foreign Minister, for a few months, in 1944, in a government considered quisling. Bahriu himself had faith in his brother-in-law's generosity, especially for the fact that he had been one of his biggest benefactors. He had kept her at home, in Bari, Italy and then in Tirana, he had known her to a number of the loudest politicians of the time, kept her with money, hid her when they wanted to arrest her and so on. But Enver Hoxha does not forgive him. The truths of Enver Hoxha's decision to shoot his own brother-in-law and also a large number of benefactors, classmates and fellow students who had known the dictator especially during his youth, will be revealed in the second part of the ABC/Story documentary series. of journalist Ferdinand Dervishi.