Description
The original collection received in 2016 contained 134 VHS tapes that were converted to .mp4 files for access copies in the
Digital Repository. An additional 15 .mp4 files were added at a later date, resulting in 147 .mp4 files of oral history interviews
with 96 former political prisoners.
Background
"In 1991, at the dawn of the collapse of Albania's communist regime, Rose Dosti accompanied her husband Luan Dosti to Albania
to locate and reunite with her husband's siblings after a lapse of 47 years. The seven Dosti siblings, aged 5 to 16 when they
were rounded by the Communist regime in 1945, were imprisoned and interned until 1991 as punishment for being the sons and
daughters of Hasan Dosti, a former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and co-founder of Albania's first Democratic party in
opposition to the regime. Rose and Luan did not know their whereabouts, or if, in fact, they were alive. All seven siblings
by now married with children were located in the Gradisht prison camp, a dilapidated collection of small mud huts with dirt
floors with only plastic tarps covering the structure. All the Dostis, then in their 70's and 80's, had spent 47 years in
prisons and slave labor camp with only 16 ounces ration of bread per day, an outhouse accommodating 40 families, a water well
a mile off, no access to food products, deprivation of all human and civil rights, daily humiliation and terror of punishment.
It was soon clear that the Dosti's were not alone and that the story of imprisonment of more than 50,000 Albanian citizens—about
10% of the population every year-- must be told. But how? In 2004, Rose, along with like-minded friends, produced "Prison
Nation: Albanian 1943-1990" a 12 minute documentary film to raise awareness in the United States of Albania's little known
tragic history of this period. It was clear that a foundation was needed to raise funds to collect and preserve as many testimonies
of former political prisoners as possible before their stories were lost. In 2008, the Albanian Human Rights Project (AHRP)
was formed with an illustrious Board of Directors including the first American Ambassador to Albania William E. Ryerson, among
others. AHRP began its time-sensitive goal of recording testimonies, primarily from survivors in their 70's and 80's, so their
stories would not be lost. These testimonies would be accessible as historical documents for scholarly study, education and
inspiration. Thus far, 100 DVD testimonies have been filmed and are now preserved at the Albanian Central Archive in Tirana,
Albania, as well as the Wende Museum and Archive of the Cold War, in Los Angeles where scholars, through its Open Access online
catalog, may study them. Original footage is also digitized and archived at the USC Digital Repository at the University of
Southern California for access to scholars globally." As per the 'About AHRP' page of the Albanian Human Rights Project website:
https://www.albanianhumanrightsproject.org/learn.
Restrictions
All requests for permission to publish or quote from oral histories must be submitted in writing to the USC Digital Repository
at uscdr@usc.edu. Permission for publication is given on behalf of the Digital Repository as the owner of the digital items
and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained.