Basha in a different interview talks about his personal life: Childhood was happy thanks to the love and care of his parents, despite the conditions of the dictatorship

2024-12-07 15:26:09 / POLITIKË ALFA PRESS

Basha in a different interview talks about his personal life: Childhood was
The chairman of the Democratic Party-Euro-Atlantic Democrats, Lulzim Basha, gave a special interview on the show "Fit" on News24, where he shared memories from his childhood.

Speaking about the first years of his life, Basha emphasized that, despite the difficult conditions of the communist dictatorship, the care and love of his parents made his childhood happy.

He recalled that although Albania was under the regime of that time and families faced deprivations, he had no bitter memories thanks to the love he received from his family. Basha added that the warmth of the family and the strong ties with relatives were very important to him, which created a tighter community, a feeling that he says is missing today.

" I remember it as a happy childhood. Despite the fact that they were completely different times. My childhood coincides with the time when Albania was under the communist dictatorship, great deprivations for Albanian families.

But thanks to the extraordinary care of the parents, of the family as a whole, that is, I have no bitter memory of the deprivations that virtually every family, or the vast majority of Albanian families, lived with during communism. So, I have happy childhood memories.

First of all, I think thanks to the love with which I grew up in my family, I have been blessed with an extraordinary love throughout my life, from the one with which my parents raised me, and later with my wife, with my daughters mine. But when I think of it as a chronology, as you asked me, it is very important for children to feel the warmth of the family.

And I have felt it. Of course, there was a time when ties with families, in the broadest sense of the word, with first cousins, aunts, uncles, uncles, and aunts, were much greater. There was really only one day off, Sunday, but it was a day devoted entirely to visiting each other's families, big family lunches. As a whole, that is, it was a much more fertile community than today. This is, I believe, anyone who has experienced it, feels the lack," Basha said.

 

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