Do
not cry
The second part, the
disappointment.
All the hope that Albanians had
with the arrival of the new system was blown up overnight.
In exchange for a can of Coca Cola
and avoiding lines to get food, corruption and deceit, scam and fraud were
established in Albania. Young Lea saw with her own eyes that what the people
had dreamed of, that what her parents expected had been a chimera. Thousands of
families were ruined when a form of savings spread throughout Tirana and other
cities that was in reality a hidden theft that was only discovered — as is
usually the case — when this activity collapsed. An economic scheme that
everyone knows and in which, however, many continue to believe.
Democracy also brought to Leushka's
world the terrible and unjust Structural
Reforms, in capital letters, the loss of jobs and the bankruptcy of the
country; while she had her own torments…
My teenage
years were, for the most part, unblessed, something that was made even worse
whenever my family insisted on convincing me that I had no reason to feel that
way.
(It is clear that a teenager is not
helped, on the contrary, his feeling is reinforced by telling him that he has
no reason to feel bad.)
Tears came to my eyes when I read,
in this chapter, Lea's volunteering at the orphanage and the life of little
Ilir.
A great book.
From my Borstal
LDR
Lea Ypi.- Free. Coming of Age at the End of History. Allen Lane. London 2021