Andreas Zarbalas

Andreas Zarbalas (Greek: Ανδρέας Ζαρμπαλάς, Albanian: Andrea Zarballa, 1942) is an Albanian-born Greek poet and journalist.

Biography

Zarbalas, was born in the village of Llazat near Sarandë, in southern Albania. He initially worked as a Greek language teacher in local schools. He graduated from the teacher's academy of Gjirokaster.[1] At 1968 he started to write poems in the literary column of the newspaper Laiko Vima, which was the only printed media allowed to be published in Greek language, in communist Albania (1945–1991). He mainly composed poems in free verse.[2] During 1970-1990, he composed several poems, but due to strict censorship by the authorities of the People's Republic of Albania he decided to bury them in order to avoid persecution.[1] Those works were published after the restoration of Democracy (1991).[1]

With the collapse of the communist regime in Albania that year he became one of the founding members and the first President of the local Greek political and cultural organization Omonoia. At the following elections he got elected as a representative of Omonoia in the Albanian Government.[3]

Zarbalas published his first poetry collection We insist (Greek: Επιμένουμε), in 1981. Moreover, with his collection 101 poems for a handful of earth (Greek: Ποιήματα για μια χούφτα τόπο, 1992), written in 1972, but unpublished until 1991, Zarbalas became a key figure among the Greeks in southern Albania. He used free verse as a symbol of free spirit. Zarbalas used many traditional elements with a metaphoric and allegoric approach.[2] Though literature was strictly censored by the regime of the People's Republic of Albania he managed in several cases to avoid censorship and to promote the distinct ethnic identity of the local Greek element by using allegory.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Barkas, Panagiotis (2005). Η Λογοτεχνία στην Εθνική Ελληνική Μειονότητα [Literature in the Ethnic Greek Minority] (PDF). Gjirokastër: Shblu, University Eqrem Çabej. pp. 179–182. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 December 2018. Retrieved 26 December 2018.
  2. ^ a b Frantzi, Anteia (2006). "Literature and National Consciousness of the Greek Minority in Northern Epirus". The Historical Review / La Revue Historique: 205–214. Archived from the original on 2011-07-23.
  3. ^ Ανδρέας Ζαρμπαλάς Archived March 16, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. Comsio online magazine. (Greek)