Zenel Hajdini | |
Birth Date: | 24 May 1910 |
Birth Place: | Medveđa, Yugoslavia |
Death Place: | Medveđa, Gazdare, Yugoslavia |
Allegiance: | LANÇ |
Rank: | Partisan |
Battles: | World War II in Yugoslavia
|
Zenel Hajdini was an Albanian partisan. He was born on May 24, 1910, in Tupalla, Medveđa.
Zenel Hajdini, was born on Tupalla, near Medveđa, on 24 May 1910 [1] [2] and was killed in Gazdare, near Medveđa, on March 7, 1942. He was participant in the National Liberation War and was one of National Heroes of World War II.He was raised in the village Tupalla, near Medveđa.[3] He attended first two grades of primary school in the Bay of Sijarines and the other two in Medveđa. Due to his poor financial status, he could not continue his education, so he worked in the municipality of Medveđa as a municipal registration office. Although he managed to find a job, his desire for further education did not go away. After two years, he went to Skopje and entered the Madrasa which had a religious character but in which several foreign languages were taught and where empirical subjects occupied a very important place. He received his first lessons at the so-called school "at the Mosque of Siarina". There he completed eight years of high school. After graduating from the Madrasa, he enrolled at the Faculty of Mathematical and Natural Sciences in Belgrade and then enrolled at the Faculty of Philosophy in Skopje, where he remained until the beginning of the war. During the continuation of the second year of studies in Belgrade, the well-known demonstrations of March broke out, where Hajdini took an active part.
As a student, he participated in the work of the National Antifascist Student Liberation Movement. He became a member of the Communist Party in 1941. After the April war and the invasion of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, Hajdini stopped his studies and came to the village of Tupalla. He started with the clandestine work in preparing the uprising.In August 1941, he joined the partisans and joined the "Kukavica" partisan unit.[4] In the autumn of the same year, a group of fighters from "Kukavica" was assigned to go to Jablanica and form a new detachment there. He took part in the battle of Kukavica, in the battle of Upper Jablania, in the fighting of Kremen, during the capture of Leskovac, Vucja, Labana and other battles in this part of the Southeast in the triangle of Toplica. After the start of the war, Hajdini had returned to his homeland to continue his activity as a member of the staff for the Medvedja region. He was also a member of the Jablanica Party Headquarters. He was killed on March 7, 1942, in Gazdinski Rid, near Medvedja, fighting the Chetnik and the Bulgarians.[5]
Zenel Hajdini did not agree that Albanians should remain uneducated and thus be dominated intellectually by their Serb compatriots. He had preferred his way of schooling to other compatriots such as Idriz Ajeti (a well-known academic who made an extraordinary contribution in the field of Albanian language), Zeqir Bajrami (university professor and one of the first authors of the book of geography in the Albanian language) etc., who attended classes at the Madrasa of Skopje several generations later.Zenel Hajdini several times had meetings with intellectuals from Kosovo such as Rashid Deda (martyr) from Prizren and others, from whom he had asked to supply him with some primers that they would receive in Albania. This desire, like many others, remained unfulfilled.[6]
Zenel left behind many grandchildren who today live in Priština and in the diaspora (France, Germany, US, England). One significant descendant is Hashim Hajdini (son of Zeneli-Hajvaz's brother) who stood out in the Kosovo war.[7] Hashim fought in Kosovo Polje against Serbian police and paramilitary forces who had attacked his home with combat machinery. According to witnesses, more than ten Serbian police and paramilitaries were killed here, while besides Hashim, his two parents Hajvazi and Gjyla also died here. The monument of Hashim Hajdini is located in front of the municipal assembly of Kosovo Polje. Zenel Hajdini was buried in his native village in Tupalla, where even today his work is commemorated by the locals and the students of the primary school that bears his name every March 7.