Perhaps we continue with that moment, that period, the war situation, it is a very important moment. Significant. The Has region is a borderland, so a great number of police forces circulated there, hoping to catch our army as they crossed, so we were in great danger. The war in Kosovo started with the NATO bombings, the greatest war started, which was welcomed here because we thought it will pass quickly, we wouldn’t have problems. But unfortunately, in the third day of the bombings the troubles and various massacres began, and what happened in Krusha e Vogel[1] is a very important event. It was a Friday morning when we woke up and from here, from this area of the village, we saw across the Drini there {shows the river}, where the river Drini is, and across there is Krusha e Vogel, in the morning, we saw houses burning. But we didn’t know what was going on there, what was happening to the village, and sometime around noon, twelve o’clock, we saw a group of people who had started to walk from the village and go towards the Drini there {shows the river}. And we from our position were observing carefully, there was my brother with binoculars, the device to see closer, and we saw those women, those people, that crowd of women and children and they all had gone there {shows the river}, they had gathered before the Drini. The side of the village burned, we did not know what to do, we couldn’t communicate directly and finally I said to my brother that those women and children had absolutely no place to go, we must go and pick them up.
Since the Drini was very large, and the level had risen, it was hard to cross it with no bridge, so with my brother we decided to get the tractor, we still own it, it is bigger, taller, we started to go towards the Drini and to cross it and see what was going on there. It was a very difficult moment when I went across with the tractor, when I saw all those women and children crying, screaming, upset, terrified, they did not know where their husbands were, and it was hard. But in that moment I felt a strength I don’t know where it came from to help those people, and this is how I loaded the women and children in the trailer of the tractor, my brother escorted them to the river and the daughter of my paternal uncle with the others stayed on this side, took them into houses and sheltered them. We had to cross the Drini a few more times with the tractor because they were many, some 300400 people, women and children, so many. It was a very tough moment for us too, they were yelling and crying, they didn’t know what had happened to them and what was going on with their people, and within a period of time we managed to bring them all here {shows the house}, into our homes in the village to shelter them. Later we understood that all those men who were detained, 120 men, were massacred in Krusha e Vogel, they were murdered, and we stayed four nights and five days with those women and children in our homes. I had to give them medicines to calm them down because they were very traumatized, we had two wounded, who when crossing to the houses of the village had been hit by some pieces of grenade thrown at them…we gave them sedatives, we healed those wounds. We practically provided the food because there were lots of people, the village took it upon itself, others arrived, it was not easy, people were afraid, and frankly, it was me who took the initiative because it was risky to bring all those people here because the army could come here, and we had no defense, but the mountain was close, we couldn’t just leave them there because the police had told them to go to the Drini, and didn’t allow them to go to Prizren or Gjakova and it was and is a very heavy situation, and difficult for me personally. Emotionally, it was a very difficult moment, and also for the family, to see all those women weep, those children pleading their loved ones, it was hard to calm them down, but we succeeded with a good organization, we treated them for the four nights and five days they stayed in the village. We sheltered them all and after five days they [Serbian army] gave us the order to leave the village, to go to Albania. And along with those women and children we took the road to the border with Albania.
As a child, I had many childish moments, I remember when we used to wake up early in the morning to get ready for school, and of course while we were doing that, mother quickly prepared some food, cooked tiny cakes, they were made from dough, she made them from bread dough, baked them fast and of course she put a piece of cheese inside, and so we were ready to go to school. It is very important to mention that the road leading to school was a mountain road, and we walked together, all the friends, we reviewed our lessons, we walked all that road with great will, we used the time to learn new poems or we sang, or reviewed the lessons, imagine walking four kilometers until we saw the school! Then there are other beautiful moments as children when we celebrated the holidays, they were special days to us, we got new clothes, and had different and better food than usual. The village had and still has its own beauty even though the conditions were very hard, there were good moments. As a child, besides attending school, I used to take care of the cattle, I remember guarding the sheep, we owned sheep and it was a special joy to take the sheep and a tiny bag that my mother had prepared with freshly baked bread and cheese, and go to our beautiful meadows and fields and corral the sheep. We had beautiful moments while we guarded the sheep and played games, we didn’t have dolls or television, and other devices, so we kept improvising different games and enjoyed a nice day.
Nicole Farnsworth: Have you ever had any problems when you were little, or did you cause any?
Marta Prekpalaj: No, I didn’t have any quarrels, I wasn’t a problematic child, no, I can’t remember any problem, maybe if we ask my mother, no, I can’t remember. But I would like to remember in particular some good memories about my grandmother loke, this is how I called my father’s mother, she was a typical woman from Has who had had some rough years, but she was really a smart woman, she taught me everything, starting from basic things to checking our homework, even though she wasn’t really good at reading and writing because she taught herself, she was an autodidact, she learned to cook, to sew clothes because back then we used to sew them, we couldn’t buy new ones. She had a special way of sewing and tailoring clothes. Also, she always told stories they had experienced, she advised and educated me, but the overall great lesson I had from her was that she was a great humanitarian, she helped people. When people from the village needed anything, she was always the one saying that we should help each other, so she was a very dear and smart person to me. Even though she didn’t go to school, she had taught herself to write and read, she was an autodidact, and loved school, and it pains me because she died while I was in elementary school, and if she had been there to see me, it would have been amazing because I know she loved school.
Leaving Kosovo was something that regarded the whole population. And I, together with my people from my village and the people from Krusha e Vogel and this crowd, as we were sent to Albania, we passed a part of Prizren at the border and Vermica, then Kukes and I spent there, in Kukes, one night. It was a very difficult moment there, there was a large number of people with tractors, with different things, it was really very difficult. Even though maybe there we felt a little bit safer, it was difficult because many people who were there look for their loved ones, had been separated from them, there were all sorts of scenes. [this passages is repeated below].
Like the majority of the population of Kosova that was forcibly expelled, we too had to leave, almost the entire region of Has was emptied in one day. We, together with the women and children of Krusha e Vogel with the tractors with which we arrived, were told to leave our homes. Naturally those moments too were not easy and we passed a part of Vermica to Prizren and we arrived in Kukes and there was a scene there, a very difficult moment, it was difficult because there were families that had been separated and people looked for each other, there was a large number of people who did not know what to do.
However, the organization created there [in the refugee camps] began to spread us everywhere in Albania. We were fortunate to go to Durres, because we had relatives in Croatia and maybe it would not have been possible, we didn’t know how long the war would last, but those people who gave us a lift with their vehicle took us to a very comfortable place as we had lots of kids, because my family at that moment, my brothers had all small kids and with my paternal uncle we had around ten, ranging from fivesix month to sixseveneight year olds, we also had old people. So it was a problem but luckily we were sent to a camp near a church in Durres, a place where we were sheltered.
In the beginning, the camp where I went the first day had a few residents and immediately there my paternal uncle’s daughter and I, both activists, couldn’t stay with our hands folded and got involved immediately in the center where they registered refugees and where people worked, so we got in touch with some activists of German associations. There was a league of German churches, ASB, which worked there with Caritas, and I introduced myself as an activist who worked on this and that. They welcomed us and immediately we began to work with the newcomers, we took the people from where they came to the cities where they were sheltered. We began to expand the camp where we worked through Caritas and the church, they brought more tents and the camp grew, and naturally I saw it necessary to work there directly in the camp. It was a very difficult moment to work with women, I had to run all day up and down, and in the evening they were still waiting for me, every evening we were doing activities, because their trauma was hard to overcome.
I have to mention one specific case that is a story very…a woman from Drenica, Shkurte Gashi, who had arrived pregnant with two children and her husband had been killed on the road to Gjakova, he had been stopped, and she managed to come to the camp with the tide of refugees. That woman was not..she didn’t speak for two weeks, Caritas had arranged many psychologists but none of them managed to make her talk. I too, though I don’t know the work of psychologists, visited her slowly slowly at least three times a day, I brought her food and talked to the children, and didn’t ask any question because I saw that she had a way to tell me not to ask question, just stayed with her. After two weeks, that woman started talking to me, only to me, and the other psychologists who worked there said, “What did you do, what is your power?” Naturally, I was devoted to her and stayed close to her, how I worked with them? I hugged them, but did not ask questions to avoid provocations. So, it was this feeling, a power that, how shall I say, connected me with my work with women, and my experience that lasted for years. I succeeded, how shall I say, in activating that woman, in calming her and rehabilitating her, because she wanted…later she had thought of aborting her child, of not living anymore because she couldn’t imagine life without her husband and those small children.
During our two month stay as refugees, I was active in that camp, helping people and reconnecting them to their families. I went to Tirana once a week, through the press we could find people, I helped as I could. From the moment that the war started here, when I brought the women and children of Krusha e Vogel, until the moment when I returned I don’t think I’ve had more than fourfive hours of sleep per night. How shall I say, it was a fulltime activity, all night and day nonstop, with a will I don’t know where it came from, but I had the desire to help as many people as possible, to be close to them, to those women and children who were traumatized.
Immediately after we returned from Albania as refugees, naturally the association of Motrat Qiriazi met the activists who had been scattered all over the place. Safete and Igballe had been in Macedonia, Sanije a little bit in Montenegro and of course in Albania and we reunited and naturally started working immediately and that work was naturally very intense. We had many activities as an association of that region where we had been before, Has, but also in all other parts. I made a request that they approved to continue to work with the women of Krusha e Vogel, because before the war we had not worked with them, only during the war we did. We expanded our activities even to Krusha e Vogel. It was a period of emergency, when the association had a lot of work and a lot of projects. We had planned many projects, in the first place to help these women. It was not easy, maybe not because of lack of funds, but because they were many, very sad, very traumatized women. It was difficult for anyone to work, to want to work, because they came from other villages, however it was very difficult. Since I had been very close to them even during the war, we immediately opened the women’s center in Krusha e Vogel and started our activities for the rehabilitation of women, also providing aid through other organizations we collaborated with. We even brought numerous donors there, I cannot even count them, they did not know where to begin from.
Naturally, women’s activities began. Firstly, we visited them at homes, because they didn’t want to go out, they couldn’t come to terms with the fact that they had lost their loved ones. Then, gradually, with the center, we began activities for each age group, for girls and women, but also older women whom we did not want to leave aside. For instance, we engaged the older women with handmade craftworks, which among other activities we managed to sell abroad. This served as a way to forget their sorrow, to spend time while also earning a little something. We started with the first projects, different forprofit courses, with the women of Krusha, widows who did not have a husband. One group asked for tailoring courses, which all of them completed and they continue to work today and earn something and support their families. We also brought sewing machines and other various materials. Sometimes, we also organized collective work at the center. For example, we sewed pajamas, uniforms and curtains for the hospital, together with Kinderberg and other associations with which we cooperated. Then, a group of women and young girls requested informatics courses, I mean, they began with computers, and English courses. We also organized a culinary course in Krusha and in some other villages of Has, where women wanted to learn better, and in detail, how to cook.
But one of the biggest and most important projects for Krusha, that in the beginning people did not believe we could do it, was the driving course for women, how shall I say, the right to drive cars. When we first applied for the project, at first donors believed that it was a luxury or something, but we convinced them by proving that those women here needed to drive both tractors and cars. They need to do this to meet their family needs. So, about fifty women of Krusha e Vogel and Krusha e Madhe[2] got their driver license. Even today they use them. In Krusha, we had to think about implementing projects that were sustainable for women and would last to support their families. Later, we also provided scholarships for the children of Krusha. Through various donors,
Motrat Qiriazi provided scholarships so that children wouldn’t quit school. At the center, we organized different cultural activities and there we began gradually with children because women sometimes backed off. We then organized different programs, activities, we brought different actors. We also organized different healthrelated courses and had doctors coming, who performed checkups. For about threefour years Motrat Qiriazi, in cooperation with other local donors, provided women with a doctor once a week. Women were provided with free checkups, and there was a great number of activities, we gave huge support to the women for as long as the association existed. But, besides the work, the activities and the projects, in the period immediately after the war we had to face another problem with the women of Krusha e Vogel. We organized protests, the protests of Krusha e Vogel’s women about their missing relatives are wellknown, from Prizren to Pristina. Even today, it is not known where their remains are. It was not easy to organize these protests, to provide them with transportation buses, to take them to Pristina, to face them in Prizren. But of course, thanks to the good internal organization of the association and the profound commitment of Igballe, together, we succeeded to satisfy the women’s request to be with them even during the protests, and among all the things they needed there was the feeling that they were not alone and that someone supported them to go on with life. We tried with all our means to be as present as possible and give them financial and emotional support. Although nowadays we don’t have activities, I am still in touch with them, so I do all I can not to be disconnected from them. We also organized exchange visits with other women from all over Kosovo. We visited Prekaz, Drenica, Reçak, so that the women could talk to each other, cry over their sorrow and their common problems. These activities were very much welcomed by them and were important for them, and although for us it was a bit overwhelming, fatiguing, and engaging, we never felt tired.
Then there was a project that does not exist anymore, it worked only for three years; it was our initiative, for women to secure a factory job from the Germans, who came up with the funding. We offered that possibility, but later there were some problems and it could not continue. It worked just for three years, with our possibilities, then we secure some farming jobs thanks a cooperation with the UNHCR [United Nations High Commission for Refugees]. Even today there are still different activities of other associations that benefited many women at that time, many projects in Krusha e Vogel.
After the war, not just Krusha e Vogel, Has too, remained marginalized. We had cases in Lugishte too, we have women and young orphans there too. In Lugishte, also in many other villages, we reopened the libraries that were burnt during the war. And we reopened them in Gjonaj, Lugishte, Romajë, but most importantly we reopened a center for children together with the association in Lugishte and together with ASB from Germany. There was a center for children, supplied with all the equipment needed for the orphans to spend the day there with two instructors who were trained by the association Motrat Qiriazi. It was a beautiful period, during which the center continued working with little money, something like a preschool or kindergarten that was never there before, and we developed many good activities for children. How shall I say, we tried to support all age groups, to help them.
Now, it is more important to mention one activity and one action which were important for Has. Earlier, when I was talking, I mentioned that all the roads in Has were unpaved, they were dusty, too difficult to pass. There were very few means of transport, only one bus in all Has. We went there with tractors, cars, walking, and people were connected, the residents, independently from the village, we too were involved personally, especially in that small organization council to realize the biggest project, to pave the road to Has. This road that connected Has with the municipalities of Prizren and Gjakova, was something like 36 km, and the Government of Kosovo had no budget, did not have a budget at all. Of course UNMIK [United Nations Interim Mission in Kosovo] was present too, but we lobbied for some months the municipalities of Prizren and Pristina, the Minister of Transportation, together of course with Pristina, where we went and obtained the support of Safete Rogova, who was with us in the delegation, some activists from Has and I, who tried to find ways to pave the road as soon as possible, because there was the problem of people who had started to relocate. There were no living conditions, houses in many villages were burnt, no roads, no water, so we took the initiative together with the villagers, to find resources to start the project. There was a possibility through the Ministry of Transport to secure some funding, so that the road could be asphalted. Thus together with four other activists from Has, we went together to Croatia. We got organized together with all the people working in bakeries and collected 600,000 euro. It was something impossible. Even the donors could not believe that there would be such good will, that people could organize such project and of course collect the funds that we took to the bank. These funds we donated to the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Transportation and within a very short time they began to pave the road, the road that completely changed today’s life in Has. For its residents, today this region is totally different. We do not have to talk about schooling, the problem with education is solved. Women and men go to school normally, to high schools, university, etc. It is truly a big change, a distinct pleasure when I see these things, all the commitment that we cannot describe. I am together with my friends, I have never been alone.
A really important moment was one during 2006, when we were honored with an award from the Peace Foundation in Geneva, which awards women who have contributed to change in rural places. I have been lucky to have been among the women from Europe, only three of us, I was the third, the other two from Italy and France. For me that occasion was really important, something that it is difficult to describe. It was very emotional when I understood that naturally the Network, the Women’s Network, nominated me, proposed me, as an activist who contributed and brought change. The award presentation was held in Pristina, on an occasion where people from Has were numerous, many from Pristina too, all the representatives, all of my friends, and all of my colleagues and it was a moment when all my work and my involvement were recognized. Although when we worked and during our work as activists, we never thought whether we would be awarded or not, we have done humanitarian work, have volunteered in all fields, helped people. So, to help women, we helped families. In Has we have brought change in all aspects of our society.
[1] The massacre of Krusha e Vogel of March 26, 1999 is documented in many news reports but also in the Human Rights Watch report, Under Orders (2001). All the men of the village were killed, many of their bodies never to be found.
[2] More than ninety men were killed in the massacre of Krusha e Madhe on March 27, 1999. This massacre is documented in the Human Rights Watch report, Under Orders, 2001.