Toronto Star

Eyes on Canada, stuck in Albania

- LLAZAR SEMINI

One Afghan teacher calls Albania a “paradise” while a former Afghan government official cannot get enough of “the freedom” that exists in the tiny Western Balkan country where they were evacuated to after the Taliban took over their homeland.

Others are more pensive. An Afghan woman who mentored orphan girls deplores the end of her project and the fate of former students and women under new Taliban rulers, while a businessma­n misses his company back home.

All of them are in limbo, waiting for a visa to the United States at the Kolaveri tourist resort on Golem Beach, 50 kilometres west of the Albanian capital, Tirana. And all share a common dream: to go from the U.S. to Canada, where they hope to build a better future.

The resort shelters 571 Afghan evacuees plucked from their “fearsome and chaotic” country, as Fareidoon Hakimi, who has become the community’s leader, described Afghanista­n.

A group of 125 Afghans, including judges, cyclists, journalist­s, TV presenters, human rights activists, family members of Afghan diplomats, artists, law enforcemen­t officers and scientists landed in Albania on Oct. 13, assisted by IsrAID, an Israeli aid organizati­on.

Albania has sheltered up to 2,000 Afghan evacuees, all housed in hotels and resorts. They are supposed to stay there for a year or so until U.S. authoritie­s finish processing their special immigratio­n visas.

“The Albania country in the world — Its soil is like paradise,” was part of a poem that 61-year-old poet and teacher Sadiq Zarei wrote and recited to visiting Associated Press journalist­s. “They saved shama’il and all of us,” it ends, referring to a collection of sacred tales about the life of the Islamic prophet Muhammad compiled by a ninth-century scholar.

Hakimi said everyone at the resort could now pray in peace there or go to a nearby mosque, especially on Fridays. Albania’s 2.8 million people are predominan­tly Muslim, living in harmony with Orthodox and Catholic communitie­s.

Hakimi, a 36-year-old former public administra­tion adviser at a province near Kabul, spoke for hours about the saga of how they fled Afghanista­n. “People never expected this to happen suddenly,” he said of the U.S. troop withdrawal from Afghanista­n.

Along with his wife, his two sons, 2 and 5, and his mother, Hakimi reached Kunduz in northern Afghanista­n, where they tried to cross into Tajikistan. There were about 125 people like him whom the Taliban tried to stop. After many days, they went to the Mazar-i-Sharif airport, flew to Tajikistan and had to wait for three days inside the terminal until Albania offered them visas and IsrAID chartered a plane.

At the resort, Hakimi and 17 other section leaders are working nonstop to supply food, entertainm­ent, psychologi­cal support and other basic needs for the relocated community. He and others enjoy the freedom they have been given and praised the warmth of the Albanian staff.

“We would hardly pass this difficult moment without their openhearte­d welcome,” said Hakimi.

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 ?? FRANC ZHURDA PHOTOS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Above, Afghan women at a resort in Golem, Albania, where hundreds of Afghans live after being evacuated this year. Afghan poet Sadiq Zarei, right, is among the refugees at the resort.
FRANC ZHURDA PHOTOS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Above, Afghan women at a resort in Golem, Albania, where hundreds of Afghans live after being evacuated this year. Afghan poet Sadiq Zarei, right, is among the refugees at the resort.

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