Albania is at risk and we are living in difficult times.

Most of Albania considers this Government to be legitimate.

I tried to visit Albania but I couldn't find it on the map.

As a Doctor, I'm often asked: why can't we see more pictures of Albania?

It struck me that Albania was the sort of place that might keep a man from yawning.

Albanians are a nation of freedom fighters who know something about living under oppression.

They are Nietzsche's over-men, these primitive Albanians - something between kings and tigers.

I thought for a long time about leaving Albania, but at the same time to play a role in its life.

[Getting the truth in the New York Post has been as] difficult as finding a good hamburger in Albania.

Albania has to demonstrate that it is willing to be a reliable partner in the international community.

They are strewn with the wreckage of dead Empires - past Powers - only the Albanian "goes on for ever."

Like, back in Albania, all my cousins sing, they play the drums, they play guitar, it's like... a thing!

Whether players are from Albania or Yugoslavia is not important. What's important is to be a team on the pitch.

My experiences there truly defined who I am to this day as far as my humanitarian work because I was a refugee in Albania.

Albania does not feel alone. It is part of the Partnership for Peace structures in NATO, and it will do what it can within that.

I have a diplomatic passport for India, diplomatic passport for Albania. I have Vatican passport and to America, I can go any time.

Albania is going through a deep crisis because it lacks the rule of law, an independent judiciary, and freedom of the media. I don't think if we stop protesting the problem is solved.

I am among those who firmly believe that a round of golf should not take more than three and a half hours, four at most. Anything longer than that is not a round of golf, it's life in Albania.

Cash-strapped cities in nations from Argentina to Albania have begun to turn over their municipal water systems to Big Water, often under lease arrangements that can continue in force for decades.

It is well known that in the Communist countries, and especially in my own, Albania, readers were often called upon to demonstrate their vigilance by detecting and denouncing the 'errors' of authors.

Kosovo is too close to Europe. It is not only close to Albania, it is close to Greece, Italy, Germany and Switzerland, where there are still many Kosovo refugees. Spontaneous reactions could multiply.

Albania is located sixty miles across the Adriatic Sea from Italy. It borders Montenegro and Kosovo to the north, Macedonia to the east, and Greece to the south. If you know nothing about 'the Land of the Eagles,' relax. You're not alone.

If I manage to write something that I consider good and valuable in a particular place, that spot automatically has a special aura for me. In Albania, there are two cities where I have written the majority of my work: Gjirokaster, my home city, and Tirana.

I believe that the capital of the Republic of Albania is a suitable venue for discussing the dialogue among religions and civilizations, notably in the countries of South East Europe, because we are well familiar with this country's track record of religious tolerance.

Albania, Macedonia and Greece have managed to create a good partnership in the south of the Continent and are making progress in blocking the spread of the conflict. But any spillover could destroy this European-oriented partnership and create problems for the European Union countries themselves.

The founding father of Albanian literature is the nineteenth-century writer Naim Frasheri. Without having the greatness of Dante or Shakespeare, he is nonetheless the founder, the emblematic character. He wrote long epic poems, as well as lyrical poetry, to awaken the national consciousness of Albania.

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