Fan Noli (1882-1965), also known as Theophan Stylian Noli,
was not only an outstanding leader of the Albanian-American community, but also
a pre-eminent and multi-talented figure of Albanian literature, culture,
religious life and politics. Noli was born in the village of Ibrik Tepe, south
of Edirne (Adrianopole) in European Turkey on 6 January 1882. His father
Stylian Noli had been a noted cantor in the Orthodox church and had instilled
in his son a love for Orthodox music and Byzantine tradition. Fan Noli attended
the Greek secondary school in Edirne, and in 1900, after a short stay in
Constantinople, settled in Athens where he managed to find occasional and
badly-paying jobs as a copyist, prompter and actor. It was with one such
itinerant theatre company touring Greek-speaking settlements in the eastern
Mediterranean that Noli first arrived in Egypt. Abandoning the company in
Alexandria, he found work from March 1903 to March 1905 as a Greek teacher and
as a church cantor in Shibîn el Khôm and from March 1905 to April 1906 in El
Faiyûm where a small Albanian colony had settled. Here he wrote a number of
articles in Greek and translated Sami Frashëri’s Shqipëria - Ç’ka qënë, ç’është
e ç’do të bëhetë? (Albanian - what was it, what is it and what will become of
it?) into Greek, works which were published at the Albanian press in Sofia. In
Egypt, Noli learned more about the traditions of Byzantine music which so
fascinated him from his teacher, the monk Nilos, and resolved to become an
Orthodox priest himself. He also came into contact with the nationalist leaders
of the Albanian community such as Spiro Dine (1846?-1922), Jani Vruho
(1863-1931) and Athanas Tashko (1863-1915) who encouraged him to emigrate to
America where he could make better use of his talents. The young Noli agreed.
In April 1906, with a second-class steamer ticket which was
paid for by Spiro Dine, Fan Noli set off via Naples for the New World and
arrived in New York on May 10. After three months in Buffalo where he worked in
a lumber mill, Noli arrived in Boston. There publisher Sotir Peci (1873-1932)
gave him a job at a minimal salary as deputy editor of the Boston newspaper
Kombi (The nation), where he worked until May 1907 and in which he published
articles and editorials under the pseudonym Ali Baba Qyteza. These were
financially and personally difficult months for Noli, who did not feel at home
in America at all and seriously considered emigrating to Bucharest. Gradually,
however, he found his roots in the Albanian community and on 6 January 1907
co-founded the Besa-Besën (The pledge) society in Boston.
In this period, Orthodox Albanians in America were growing
increasingly impatient with Greek control of the church. Tension reached its
climax in 1907 when a Greek Orthodox priest refused to officiate at the burial
of an Albanian in Hudson, Massachusetts on the grounds that, as a nationalist,
the deceased was automatically excommunicated. Noli saw his calling and
convoked a meeting of Orthodox Albanians from throughout New England at which
delegates resolved to set up an autocephalic, i.e. autonomous, Albanian
Orthodox Church with Noli as its first clergyman. On 9 February 1908 at the age
of twenty-six, Fan Noli was made a deacon in Brooklyn and on 8 March 1908
Platon, the Russian Orthodox Archbishop of New York, ordained him as an
Orthodox priest. A mere two weeks later, on 22 March 1908, the young Noli
proudly celebrated the liturgy in Albanian for the first time at the Knights of
Honor Hall in Boston. This act constituted the first step towards the official
organization and recognition of an Albanian Autocephalic Orthodox Church.
From February 1909 to July 1911, Noli edited the newspaper
Dielli (The sun), mouthpiece of the Albanian community in Boston. On 10 August
1911, he set off for Europe for four months where he held church services in
Albanian for the colonies in Kishinev, Odessa, Bucharest and Sofia. Together
with Faik bey Konitza who had arrived in the United States in 1909, he founded
the Pan-Albanian Vatra (The hearth) Federation of America on 28 April 1912,
which was soon destined to become the most powerful and significant Albanian
organization in America. Fan Noli had now become the recognized leader of the
Albanian Orthodox community and was an established writer and journalist of the
nationalist movement. In November 1912, Albania was declared independent, and
the thirty-year-old Noli, having graduated with a B.A. from Harvard University,
hurriedly returned to Europe. In March 1913, among other activities, he attended
the Albanian Congress of Trieste which was organized by his friend and rival
Faik bey Konitza.
In July 1913 Fan Noli visited Albania for the first time,
and there, on 10 March 1914, he held the country’s first Orthodox church
service in Albanian in the presence of Prince Wilhelm zu Wied who had arrived
in Durrës only three days earlier aboard an Austro-Hungarian vessel. In August
of 1914 Noli was in Vienna for a time, but as the clouds of war darkened, he
returned in May 1915 to the United States. From 21 December 1915 to 6 July 1916
he was again editor-in-chief of the Boston Dielli (The sun), now a daily
newspaper. In July 1917 he once more became president of the Vatra federation
which, in view of the chaotic situation and political vacuum in Albania, now
regarded itself as a sort of Albanian government in exile. In September 1918
Noli founded the English-language monthly Adriatic Review which was financed by
the federation to spread information about Albania and its cause. Noli edited
the journal for the first six months and was succeeded in 1919 by Constantine
Chekrezi (1892-1959). With Vatra funds collected under Noli’s direction,
Albanian-American delegates were sent to Paris, London and Washington to
promote international recognition of Albanian independence. On 24 March 1918,
Noli was appointed administrator of the Albanian Orthodox Church in the United
States and in early July of that year attended a conference on oppressed
peoples in Mount Vernon, Virginia, where he met President Woodrow Wilson
(1856-1924), champion of minority rights in Europe. On 27 July 1919, Noli was
appointed Bishop of the Albanian Orthodox Church in America, now finally an
independent diocese. In the following year, in view of his growing stature as a
political and religious leader of the Albanian community and as a talented
writer, orator and political commentator, it was only fitting that he be
selected to head an Albanian delegation to the League of Nations in Geneva
where he was successful in having Albania admitted on 17 December 1920. Noli
rightly regarded Albania’s admission to the League of Nations as his greatest political
achievement. Membership in that body gave Albania worldwide recognition for the
first time and was in retrospect no doubt more important than Ismail Qemal bey
Vlora’s declaration of independence in 1912. In a commentary on 23 July 1924,
the Manchester Guardian described Fan Noli as a "man who would have been
remarkable in any country. An accomplished diplomat, an expert in international
politics, a skilful debater, from the outset he made a deep impression in
Geneva. He knocked down his Balkan opponents in a masterly fashion, but always
with a broad smile. He is a man of vast culture who has read everything worth
reading in English and French." Noli’s success at the League of Nations
established him as the leading figure in Albanian political life. From Geneva,
he returned to Albania and from 1921 to 1922 represented the Vatra Federation
in the Albanian parliament there. In 1922, he was appointed foreign minister in
the government of Xhafer bey Ypi (1880-1940) but resigned several months later.
On 21 November 1923, Noli was consecrated Bishop of Korça and Metropolitan of
Durrës. He was now both head of the Orthodox Church in Albania and leader of a
liberal political party, the main opposition to the conservative forces of
Ahmet Zogu (1895-1961), who were supported primarily by the feudal landowners
and the middle class. On 23 February 1924 an attempt was made in parliament on
the life of Ahmet Zogu and two months later, on 22 April 1924, nationalist
figure and deputy Avni Rustemi (1895-1924) was assassinated, allegedly by
Zogist forces. At Rustemi’s funeral, Fan Noli gave a fiery oration which
provoked the liberal opposition into such a fury that Zogu was obliged to flee
to Yugoslavia in the so-called June Revolution.
On 17 July 1924, Fan Noli was officially proclaimed prime
minister and shortly afterwards Regent of Albania. For six months, he led a
democratic government which tried desperately to cope with the catastrophic
economic and political problems facing the young Albanian state. His twenty-point
programme for the modernization and democratization of Albania, including
agrarian reform, proved however to be too rash and too idealistic for a
backward country with no parliamentary traditions. In a letter to an English
friend, he was later to note the reasons for his failure: "By insisting on
the agrarian reforms I aroused the wrath of the landed aristocracy; by failing
to carry them out I lost the support of the peasant masses." With the
overthrow of his government by Zogist forces on Christmas Eve 1924, Noli left
Albania for good and spent several months in Italy at the invitation of Benito
Mussolini (1883-1945). When the Duce finally reached agreement with Zogu on oil
concessions in Albania, Noli and his followers were given to understand that
their presence in Italy was no longer desired. Noli subsequently spent several
years in northern Europe, primarily in Germany and Austria. In November 1927 he
visited Russia as a Balkan delegate to a congress of ‘Friends of the Soviet
Union’ marking the tenth anniversary of the October Revolution, and in 1930,
having obtained a six-month visa, he returned to the United States. Back in
Boston, Noli founded the weekly periodical Republika (The republic), the name
of which alone was in open defiance of Ahmet Zogu who on 1 September 1928 had
proclaimed himself Zog I, King of the Albanians. Republika was also published
in opposition to Dielli (The sun), now under the control of Faik Konitza who
had come to terms with King Zog and become Albanian minister plenipotentiary in
Washington. After six months, Noli was forced to return to Europe when his visa
expired and his Republika was taken over by Anastas Tashko until it ceased
publication in 1932. With the help of his followers, he was able to return from
Germany to the United States in 1932 and was granted permanent resident status.
He withdrew from political life and henceforth resumed his duties as head of
the Albanian Autocephalic Orthodox Church. In December 1933, Noli fell
seriously ill and was unable to pay for the medical treatment he so desperately
needed until he received a gift of 3,000 gold franks from Albania, which was
ironically enough from his archenemy Ahmet Zogu. This gesture, as intended, led
to a certain reconciliation between Noli and Zogu and pacified Noli’s now often
tenuous relations with Faik Konitza. In 1935, he returned to one of his earlier
passions - music - and, at the age of fifty-three, registered at the New
England Conservatory of Music in Boston, from which he graduated in 1938 with a
Bachelor of Music. On 12 April 1937, Noli’s great dream of an Albanian national
church was fulfilled when the Patriarch of Constantinople officially recognized
the Albanian Autocephalic Orthodox Church. Not satisfied with ecclesiastical
duties alone, Noli turned to post-graduate studies at Boston University,
finishing a doctorate there in 1945 with a dissertation on Scanderbeg. In the
early years following the Second World War, Noli maintained reasonably good
relations with the new communist regime in Tirana and used his influence to try
to persuade the American government to recognize the latter. His reputation as
the ‘red bishop’ indeed caused a good deal of enmity and polarization in emigré
circles in America. In 1953, at the age of seventy-one, Fan Noli was presented
with the sum of $20,000 from the Vatra Federation, with which he bought a house
in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where he died on 13 March 1965 at the age of
eighty-three.
Politics and religion were not the only fields in which Fan
Noli made a name for himself. He was also a dramatist, poet, historian,
musicologist and in particular an excellent translator who made a significant
contribution to the development of the Albanian literary language.
Noli’s first literary work was a three-act drama entitled
Israilitë dhe Filistinë, Boston 1907 (Israelites and Philistines). This
forty-eight page tragedy written in 1902 is based on the Book of Judges 13-16
in the Old Testament, the famous story of Samson and Delilah. Published at a
time when Albanian theatre was in its infancy, it is one of the rare Albanian
plays of the period not gushing with sentimentality before reaching a
superficial melodramatic conclusion. Such were the tastes of the period,
however, and Noli’s play found little favour with the public. Not only was the
subject matter too distant and philosophical, but his language was too archaic
or dialectal for the public to enjoy.
On his ordainment as an Orthodox priest and his celebration
of the first Orthodox liturgy in Albanian in 1908, Noli recognized the need for
liturgical texts in Albanian and set about translating Orthodox rituals and
liturgies, which were published in two volumes: Librë e shërbesave të shënta të
kishës orthodoxe, Boston 1909 (Book of holy services of the Orthodox Church), and
the 315-page Libre é te krémtevé te medha te kishes orthodoxe, Boston 1911
(Book of great ceremonies of the Orthodox Church). Other religious translations
followed, in an elegant and solemn language befitting such venerable Byzantine
traditions. Noli indeed considered these translations to be his most rewarding
achievement.
Fan Noli’s most popular work today is a scholarly history of
the life and times of the Albanian national hero Scanderbeg. A 285-page
Albanian version was published as Historia e Skënderbeut (Gjerq Kastriotit),
mbretit të Shqipërisë 1412-1468, Boston 1921 (The history of Scanderbeg (George
Castrioti), king of Albania 1412-1468), and an English version, the fruits of
his doctoral dissertation at Boston University in 1945, as George Castrioti
Scanderbeg (1405-1468), New York 1947. Another scholarly work in English which
mirrors both his fascination with great figures of the past (Jesus, Julius
Caesar, Scanderbeg and Napoleon) and his love of music is the 117-page
Beethoven and the French revolution, New York 1947.
Noli has not been forgotten as a poet though his powerful
declamatory verse is far from prolific. It was collected in a volume with the
simple title Albumi, Boston 1948 (The album), which he published on the
occasion of his forty years of residence in the United States. Albumi contains
primarily political verse reflecting his abiding nationalist aspirations and
the social and political passions of the twenties and thirties.
Fan Noli’s main contribution to Albanian literature, however,
was as a stylist, as seen especially in his translations. Together with Faik
bey Konitza, Noli may indeed be regarded as one of the greatest stylists in the
Tosk dialect of the Albanian language. His experience as an actor and orator,
and his familiarity with other great languages of culture, Greek, English and
French in particular, enabled him to develop Albanian into a language of
refinement and flowing elegance. Noli translated poetry of various
nineteenth-century European and American authors, and most often managed, with
the ear of the musician he was, to reflect the style, taste and rhythmical
nuances of the originals.
Though he wrote comparatively little in the way of
literature per se, Fan Noli remains nonetheless a literary giant. He was instrumental
in helping the Albanian language reach its full literary and creative
potential.
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