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Forum2026-03-05 10:07:00

Who "killed" Elisa Spiropali?!

Shkruar nga Irena Beqiraj

Who "killed" Elisa Spiropali?!

This is the story I tell my friends when they ask me what I think about Elisa Spiropali's departure and subsequent message.

In the summer of 1942, Winston Churchill had a long meeting with Stalin, a meeting that, according to historians, created bridges of connection in the fight against Hitler.

"The day after the one-on-one meeting, where they had obviously also drunk vodka, Churchill sent a message to Stalin:

"Dear friend! Perhaps it is excessive what I am writing to you, but both of us must ensure that our interpreters are discreet and maintain the confidentiality of our conversations."

Stalin returns with a note - Dear friend, think about your translator! I killed my translator yesterday."

This is the story I tell my friends when they ask me what I think about Elisa Spiropali's departure and subsequent message.

No, Spiropali is not collateral damage of Balluk's departure, which is being delicately dismantled by the government, creating the idea that it will exercise power through people chosen by it. The one who has fled politics and the one who is dead have the same power.

As Elisa knows very well that she has not served the public good. Although I must say that if I had to choose between the two, I would choose to work at a desk with Elisa without any hesitation.

But it must be said that serving Rama is the line of least resistance, the easy path. The servant does not worry, he thinks he knows his values, the servant does not care about others, the servant is looking for the adrenaline that power gives him.

Elisa was Rama's translator, and Rama himself suffered from paranoia about what his translators might say up and down! Modern autocrats like Rama do not take their servants' lives, but their honor.

spiropali

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