Nikollë Bojaxhiu

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Nikollë Bojaxhiu
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Born c. 1874
Prizren, Kosovo Vilayet, Ottoman Empire
Died c. 1919
Skopje, Kingdom of Yugoslavia
Occupation Businessman
Spouse(s) Dranafile Bernai
Children Aga
Lazar
Anjezë

Nikollë Bojaxhiu was an Albanian businessman, benefactor and politician. His company constructed the first theater of Üsküb (now Skopje) and participated in the development of the railway line that connected Kosovo with Skopje – a project which he personally financed.

An active Albanian rights activist, he was also the only Catholic to be elected to the city council of Skopje. Bojaxhiu died in 1919 in obscure circumstances, which led to reports that attributed his death to poisoning by Serbian agents. His children included Lazar, and Agnes Bojaxhiu (Mother Teresa).

Life

Born in Prizren in Kosovo in 1874, Bojaxhiu moved to Skopje in the Kosovo Vilayet (present-day Macedonia) after 1900, where he first worked as a pharmacist and later became a partner in a construction company.[1] He was a polyglot; as well as Albanian he also spoke French, Italian, Macedonian, Serbo-Croat and Turkish. In the early 1900s, he married Dranafile Bernai with whom he had three children: Aga (b. 1905), Lazar (b. 1908) and Agnes (b. 1910), with the latter becoming later better known as Mother Teresa. Nikollë Bojaxhiu's company constructed the city's first theater and part of the railway line that connected Skopje with the region of Kosovo.[2] He was also the owner of a wholesale food company and the only Roman Catholic member of the city council of Skopje.[2]

On the day of the Albanian Declaration of Independence (November 28, 1912) he hosted a meeting that was attended by Bajram Curri and Hasan Prishtina among others.[2] After the region's incorporation into Serbia, Bojaxhiu joined various Albanian rights political organizations. He died in 1919, a few hours after he returned from a political meeting in Belgrade. Several biographers have attributed his death to poisoning by Serbian agents.[2] The location, purpose and participants of the meeting remain unknown. His son Lazar considered the theory of poisoning to be a certainty, while his daughter Agnes described it as unconfirmed.[2]

His funeral process was attended by large numbers of people and representative of all the religious communities. As a sign of respect, that day all school children were given dedicatory handkerchiefs and jewellers' shops remained closed.[2] After his death, his partner appropriated the entirety of their companies' assets and left nothing to his widow and offspring.[1]

Ethnicity controversy

In 2003 Albanian scholar Aurel Plasari argued that Nikollë Bojaxhiu could have been of Aromanian origin, mainly based on a document, found by Macedonian author Stojan Trencevski, which asserted that Mr. Bojaxhiu was, at some point, the representative of the Aromanian community of Skopje.[3] However this hypothesis has been rejected by scholar Albert Ramaj, who, based on the testimony of a contemporary, Lalush Lalevski, argues that the representative of the Aromanian community at the time, whose last name was Boiadjijev, was another person, and entirely unrelated to Nikollë Bojaxhiu.[4] Ramaj's position was later endorsed by scholars Ukshini and Xhufi.[5]

Sources

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  4. Ramaj, Albert in "Stublla 15 November 2003, p. 12
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