On Friday I headed to the south coast.
As soon as I passed Palasa and Dhërmi , the car was red from the dust of the construction of hundreds of hotels or villas that were still unfinished.
I took it for a wash, but it felt like I washed the car with beer, because the price had increased by 10 thousand lek.
Do you remember Janaqi, Raqi and Fotaqi?
Their grandfather, Nikollaqi, an immigrant from Greece, worked as a laborer on my grandfather's lands, which, by law 7501, were given to the minorities who worked them and not to us, the owners.
On my grandfather's land, with the money from the hashish they sold in Greece, they built a hotel, initially with 2 stars, but every year they increase it by one star and this year they were inaugurating it with 5 stars.
I arrived at the hotel in the afternoon and at the reception I found Janaq escorting 4 Albanian tourists out with a northern dialect. I went in to separate them, as the situation was getting worse. I calmly pulled him onto the terrace by the sea and asked him what had happened.
Janaqi sat down and said to me:
"Kreshnik, we are preparing for the tourist season and we have decided not to allow Kosovars or mountaineers in the hotel."
I was stunned and asked him: why?
He told me:
“Last year I caught a couple from Kosovo with watermelons in their room.”
"Bravo Janaq, what else?" I said, "what have you prepared for the tourist season?"
Janaq took the pen from the waiter and began to write on the tablecloth:
1- We have doubled the room prices, 420 euros per night because we want elite tourists.
2- We have increased restaurant prices by 70%.
3- We hired 5 workers from Bangladesh because in the end, a piece of wood was put in and they were not paid.
4- We have hired 3 girls from the Philippines who clean in the morning, give massages to clients in the afternoon, and in the evening, my brothers and I put some "rubber" on them.
5- We have secured a quantity of fish from Vietnam at 3 euros/kg, to sell to Italian, Spanish and German tourists supposedly as wild fish.
6- We have increased parking prices, 20 euros per night.
7- We have trained waiters to change prices according to tourists, with 3-4 different menus.
Other prices for Albanians, others for Poles, others for Germans.
8- We have stopped them from taking water and food on the beach loungers and we are selling them a 0.5 L bottle of water for 10 euros.
Fortunately, at that moment Janaqi left and I thought I would enjoy the sunset a little while drinking a glass of wine.
As soon as I took the first sip, I was left with a lump in my throat as the sound of the scalding began. Three workers were working to build a 6-meter swimming pool, where not even frogs could swim, but Janaqi considered it a criterion for a 5-star hotel.
I got up nervously and went to my room to take a shower and cool down. Of course, there was no water in the hotel or the entire area. I had to buy 3-4 bottles of water downstairs at the bar to brush my teeth.
The air conditioner wasn't working and I asked Janaq to bring me two blankets.
As usual, I woke up early because I like to write on my laptop while drinking cappuccino at the beach bar.
I am very inspired by the waves of the sea and I have anti-stress, but as happens throughout the Albanian coast, the "animals" do not let you enjoy nature. The music in the bar was in the "cup" of the sky high.
I called the waiter and said:
"Please turn down the music, because we can't stand it either, but you're waking up the tourists too."
He told me:
"I have orders from Janaqi to raise my voice so loud that it can be heard at the other hotel."
At that moment, in addition to covering my ears, I also had to cover my nose. The smell of sewage permeated the entire terrace, and the waiter realized it and said:
"Mr. Kreshnik, it will rain, because that's how it always happens. The feces that are dumped into the sea become more windy when the weather is bad."
I got up and went to the car. It seemed like the quietest, cleanest, most comfortable, and most romantic place compared to the 5-star resort.
Suddenly I asked myself: why did I come? After all, apart from the longing for the land of my parents, there is nothing left in that place, but they are tearing it apart and destroying all its beauties.
Everything there has been concreted and "Golemized".
My Albania is no longer there, with parks, forests, fields, citrus groves.
There you will no longer find the coast or the Albanian Riviera……..
I left with the speed of the wind and then left Janaq to enjoy the occupied properties while preparing for the tourist season……