Teodor Keko | |
Birth Date: | 2 September 1958 |
Birth Place: | Tirana, Albania |
Death Place: | Thessaloniki, Greece |
Occupation: | journalist, writer, politician |
Language: | Albanian |
Genres: | --> |
Subjects: | --> |
Notableworks: | Loja (The Game), 1990 Lajmëtarja e vdekjeve (The harbinger of deaths), 1991 |
Spouse: | Xhulieta Keko |
Partners: | --> |
Signature: | Teodor Keko (nënshkrim).svg |
Signature Size: | 100px |
Teodor Keko (September 2, 1958 – August 20, 2002) was an Albanian writer, journalist, and politician.
Keko was born in the Albanian capital, Tirana, on 2 September 1958, to cinematographer parents Endri and Xhanfise Keko. He studied at the Qemal Stafa High School, in Tirana, Albania.[1] In 1979 he started his studies for Albanian language and literature in the University of Tirana, where he graduated in 1983. During his studies he met his wife Xhulieta, who studied English language and literature and later became a primary school teacher. Her parents were diplomats and served among others in China and Algeria.[2] The couple have two sons, born in the 1980s.
Keko worked as a journalist for the literary newspaper Drita. When the Stalinist system dissolved in early 90s, Keko joined the opposition movement and the main opposition party, the Democratic Party of Albania, and was elected to Albanian parliament in March 1992. He quickly became critical of the newly elected Albanian President, Sali Berisha, whom he accused of authoritarianism. He and six others were expelled from the Democratic Party in August 1993 and, with two others who voluntarily left the party, formed the Democratic Alliance Party.[3]
Keko wrote for popular daily newspaper Koha Jonë (Our Time), strongly criticizing the first post-communist government, and later became editor of the Democratic Alliance Party newspaper Aleanca (The alliance) and of the weekly cultural and artistic magazine Aks (Axis). Together with the Albanian journalist Arben Kallamata he founded the "Independent League of Journalists". They also were involved in the foundation of the Albanian section of the Association of European Journalists. On 10 March 1994 Teodor Keko was assaulted by two men with brass knuckles outside his Tirana apartment and heavily injured. Keko blamed the then-government of being behind the attack. After Keko died in 2002 his wife and children moved to the Netherlands. In his honor a street in Tirana was renamed "Rruga Teodor Keko" (Teodor Keko Street). For several years, Keko contributed to Albanian politics, and from 1992 to 1996 he was a member of parliament, first for the Democratic Party and, from August 1993 for the Democratic Alliance Party.[4] Teodor Keko began publishing his first works in the 1980s when he became famous for his short stories.[5]
Keko died aged 43 in Thessaloniki, Greece where he was receiving treatment, shortly after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.[6]
The well-known Albanian writer, politician and diplomat Besnik Mustafaj, gave the last speech. Among other things he said:
His first major work, the novel Loja (The game), was praised. His other works include at least fifteen volumes of poetry, novels, drama, and especially short stories. The novel Lajmëtarja e vdekjeve (The harbinger of deaths), was written during the political regime change. His last work, Hollësira fatale (Fatal details), was a bestseller in Albania in 2001. The works of Teodor Keko are being translated into English by Robert Elsie.
The young Albanian director Eno Milkani based the script of his upcoming movie Shenjtorja ("The Saint") on Keko's Dymbëdhjetë shenjtorë, një profet dhe disa njerëz (Twelve saints, a prophet and some people). According to Milkani, Keko's characters are "products of a hopeless society but with a nobility that blossoms only within them who have gone through a totalitarian system."
His major works list includes:[5]
Prose
Poetry
Beside national prizes and awards (one of each was post-mortum in 2007), a street in Tirana is named after him, "Teodor Keko", since 2005. The Prestige magazine published in Thessaloniki, Greece, has established an annual prize for the short story writers named after him since 2002.[5]