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Authors: Lloyd Jones

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Biografi

Biografi

Lloyd Jones was born in New Zealand in 1955. His best-known works include
Mister Pip
, winner of the Commonwealth Writers' Prize and shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize,
The Book of
Fame
, winner of numerous literary awards,
Here at the End of the
World We Learn to Dance
,
Choo Woo
and
Paint Your Wife
.

Biografi
LLOYD JONES

TEXT PUBLISHING MELBOURNE AUSTRALIA

The paper in this book is manufactured only from wood grown in sustainable regrowth forests.

The Text Publishing Company
Swann House
22 William St
Melbourne Victoria 3000
Australia
www.textpublishing.com.au

Copyright © Lloyd Jones 1993

All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright above, no part of this publication shall be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.

First published in Great Britain by Andre Deutsch Limited, 1993
This edition published by The Text Publishing Company, 2008

Design by Susan Miller
Typeset by J&M Typesetters
Printed and bound in Australia by Griffin Press

National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication data:
Jones, Lloyd, 1955-
Biografi/ Lloyd Jones.
ISBN: 9781921351778 (pbk.)
Albania--History--1944-1990.
914.96504

Contents

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AFTERWORD

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I

I WAS LOOKING for Petar Shapallo but the face that had been Petar Shapallo's had vanished under a surgeon's knife. So I was left with the name which few people remembered, and a face fewer still had seen.

The shoemaker in Rruga November 17, for instance, said, ‘Yes, I know this man. We were at school together.'

And after that?

The man shrugged. ‘You asked if I knew him.'

He thought some more.

‘Petar,' he said, ‘was very good at gymnastics.'

Kindly and well disposed towards his mother, the shoemaker added.

‘He was a dentist,' I said.

‘I did not say that,' said the man.

‘I know. I'm saying it. The Petar Shapallo we are looking for was a dentist.'

‘If he was a dentist, then go to the dentists' union. As you can see, I am a shoemaker.'

The dentist had had the misfortune to have been born in the very same month as the Balkan dictator, Enver Hoxha.

A shared birthday wasn't necessary—but one can see how it might have helped in making the dentist a persuasive candidate. The moon entering the third phase, the alignment of the planets…that sort of thing. More important was the fact of Shapallo's size. He was over six feet tall, and broad across the shoulder. The dentist and the dictator had perfect matching shadows. And twin smiles designed to reassure. I had heard it said: People who saw a smile cross Enver's face were often surprised to learn that he was ordering their execution. But just as misleading was Shapallo's smile—that grin of a man caught in the rain without a coat or umbrella the moment he learned he was required to perform a special duty at the highest level.

Height, breadth and smiling lines—these are the vital ingredients. The rest the surgeon sculpted. Hairdressers and tailors worked on Shapallo to improve the resemblance. The dictator occasionally looked in on the work-in-progress. His glance moved between Shapallo and his own reflection in a hand-held mirror. Once satisfied that the reflection could not be improved, he had Shapallo's family killed—his wife and two daughters, ages eight and ten. Next to go were the surgeon, hairdressers and tailors. They were in the bus that toppled over the cliffs which spill down to Dhermi on the Adriatic Coast.

The years passed. Shapallo, as it happened, was spared the assassin's bullet and the dictator died in the mid-eighties, disabled by Parkinson's, a frail shadow of the comparatively robust Shapallo filling in for him on the podium. There was a ceremony for retired border guards at which Shapallo pinned medals to the chests of the veterans at the very same moment that the dictator lay on his deathbed. The death notice arrived several days later. The announcer's voice on Radio Tirana was solemn and grave. The grieving process thus began.

To commemorate the loss of the Great Leader an extra ‘attack day' was declared in the countryside. In Tirana people lined up to give parting kisses. They wept and threw themselves over the coffin. A woman screamed for her heart to be torn open and for Enver to be fed with her blood. This ‘correct' display of emotion was shown many times on Albanian television. Each time, a soldier with a rifle slung over his shoulder prises the woman from the coffin. The woman is led to a chair, and the line of mourners takes a step forward. On it went—until the day of entombment arrived with the rumoured sighting of the Great Leader; like the ‘Christ figure', Enver had risen from the dead.

The sightings spread out from Tirana to the countryside, along the coast: Vlorë, Himore, Borsh, Sarandë. Eyewitness reports spoke of a man with ‘film-star looks'. It was quiet for a spell; then a woman in Korcë recalled that, before she fainted, a man exactly like the Great Leader had tapped her on the shoulder and asked for water. This man, she said, had been exceptionally polite.

There were several more mountain sightings—the last one in a small village tucked at the bottom of the Coraun range, which is the peaked hat on the Karaburun peninsula separating the muddy Adriatic from the Ionian Sea.

The last sighting, and one that lent credence to all the others, had come from a German embassy official in the aftermath of the rush on the foreign embassies in Tirana. In June 1990 the regime casually announced that passports could as of now be obtained from the Ministry, the extraordinary implication being that everyone was now free to travel. The controls along Embassy Row were relaxed. At first no one wished to appear too eager. Second or third in line was okay, but to head a line was risky. Along Embassy Row people began to gather. For the time being everything was orderly. But then the rumour spread beyond Tirana that the embassies were taking people in, and the dribs and drabs grew to a torrent of new arrivals. All through the night and the following day the crowd built. People arrived by train, by bus, by cart; they walked in from outlying villages. They were a crowd now and as such a powerful new voice emerged. Graffiti appeared on the stone walls comparing Hoxha with Hitler. Outside the embassies the crowd chanted the new words: ‘Freedom. Democracy'. The police fired shots in the air. They tried to shout the crowds down with the use of megaphones.

It was during the second night that Shapallo managed to climb over the iron fence into the grounds of the German embassy. A good number of fellow travellers were already huddled under blankets and Shapallo was able to wriggle down in a bed of gravel.

He came to at first light with a boot in his ribs. Then something hard—a fist or paling—struck his forehead. A woman screamed in his face: ‘Murderer!' He was barely awake to the fact that he was being kicked, shoved and punched back to the iron railing. Word passed among the crowds camped along Embassy Row that the ghost of the late dictator had come back to haunt and burden with guilt those seeking to leave. There was a terrible commotion. Soldiers fired shots in the air to try to break up the crowd. Shapallo was pinned to the fence inside, and those on the outside waiting to get into the embassy reached through the fence to rip his clothing. It was left to embassy officials to haul the concussed dentist to safety inside the building. A doctor was sent for—and an earlobe was sewn back on and several cuts stitched above Shapallo's right eye. Two ribs had been broken and a plug of hair ripped out from his left temple.

2

THE STORY SHAPALLO told Gert Munz, the consulate chargé d'affaires, resulted in a few paragraphs published in the West. It told of a dentist with memories as Petar Shapallo being obliged to travel behind darkened windows, to present himself on balconies to the cheering masses on May Day; and once, when the leader dreamed of an airplane crash, the dentist had been obliged to take the leader's place on a helicopter flight from Vlorë to the then Russian naval base nearby.

Shapallo had been given new shoes, new clothes, books. He was told to favour his left leg when walking. In the event of an unscheduled encounter with the public he was told to reminisce about his childhood. He should begin by staring off into the distance and recite, ‘When I was a boy…'

Shapallo was the perfect shadow. He lost weight when the Great Leader dieted; together their hairlines receded, and when the Great Leader sprained an ankle, Shapallo limped. On film, Shapallo is the slow-moving shadow turning to wave to the crowd; there, he pauses from his stride to take a bouquet of flowers from a small girl. Here, he strikes a serious pose. He tilts back his chin and clasps his hands behind his back: but, on film, is he thinking as an emperor or as a dentist?

That first night in the embassy the concussed dentist awakes in darkness. He sits up in bed and wonders where he is—what are these mattresses made of? His hands touch his chin, his eyes, his cheeks—but inevitably locate the profile of the late and disgraced leader.

A staff member found him the next day, draped over the bathtub, the mirror and bathroom walls splattered with blood and, in the handbasin, the knife which Shapallo had taken to the Emperor's face.

Shapallo has lost the tip of his nose. Down the centre of his forehead he has made a deep cut. It was Munz's impression that the dentist had tried to peel back the skin. Twice Shapallo had plunged the knife deep into the cheekbone beneath his left eye but he'd lost consciousness before the tip of the knife was able to locate the eye socket.

In Tirana the Party leaders are dismayed. They shake their heads, like disappointed parents. They speak out against this senseless vandalising of life and property. In soft voices they say, ‘Look at this. And that. Over there…Why?'

The buses have been set on fire. The windows in the buses and trains are smashed. The huge greenhouses in the countryside lie in tatters. Shattered glass gathers in the schoolyards.

At the city zoo the tracks of a children's train wind in and out of the charred remains of animals spit-roasted over open fires. Behind locked bars the lions have shrivelled up under mounds of skin and fur, hunger's sleep. Vagrants have succeeded, though, in forcing their way inside the monkey cages, and chimp bones lie in small blackened piles in the chestnut groves of the zoo park.

The bird cages are also empty. And the two big soft eyes gazing up from a pile of chestnut leaves belong to the bony head of a seal. The animal has been dragged a couple of hundred metres from its rockery and filleted. The last surviving animal in the zoo is a languorous rhino. I watch the zookeeper feed it hay on the end of a pitchfork. He looks up, aware suddenly that he has company. The zookeeper sees me and draws a finger across his throat.

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