Social Democratic Party of Albania (1943)
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| Social Democratic Party of Albania | |
|---|---|
| Partia Socialdemokrate e Shqipërisë | |
| Leaders | Musine Kokalari |
| Dates of operation | 1943–1946 |
| Dissolved | 1946 |
| Active regions | Albania |
| Ideology | Social democracy |
| Political position | Centre-left to left-wing |
| Status | Banned in 1946 |
| Allies | Albanian partisans Communist Party of Albania (Until 1946) Legaliteti |
| Opponents | Fascist Party of Albania Committee of the Mountains Communist Party of Albania (From 1946) |
| Battles and wars | Albanian resistance of World War II |
The Social Democratic Party (Albanian: Partia Socialdemokrate e Shqipërisë) was an Albanian political organization that existed from 1943 to 1946. Created on the initiative of the writer and Social democratic activist Musine Kokalari. She had originally been allied with the Communists up until 1946, when she began to openly speak out from a general democratic position, and against the established dictatorship of the Communist Party and Enver Hoxha. It was banned by the Sigurimi during a repressive campaign. In Post-communist Albania it has been considered as an organization that had fought for democracy.[1]
The political movement for Social Democracy was considered absent in Albania in the 1940s. There was practically no developed industry in the country and, accordingly, no organized labor movements. However, the ideas of Democratic Socialism were shared by some representatives of the Albanian Intelligentsia.[1] The first social democratic party in Albania was founded by the young but by that time well-known writer Musine Kokalari, the first Albanian woman writer. Social democracy in its understanding meant ideological and political unity based on freedom and social equality.[2] In 1943, Kokalari joined the National Liberation Movement of Albania, which fought against the Italian and German occupiers. However, the LANC acted under the authority of the Communist Party, while the Social Democratically oriented Kokalari was not only anti-fascist but also anti-communist. In addition, she had a sharp conflict with Nexhmije Hoxha the wife of the leader of the Communist Party of Albania and the People's Liberation Front, Enver Hoxha.
Kokalari attempted to mediate a coalition between the pro-Communists and the nationalist movement Balli Kombëtar. According to her plan, this would shift both movements to a consistently democratic platform and would strengthen them in opposition to the occupiers. To strengthen her position, Kokalari decided to join not individually, but as the leader of her own political group.[3]
Adhering to the center-left ideology of social democracy, Kokalari established the Social Democratic Party. She was supported by lawyer, playwright and publicist Mit'hat Araniti, lawyer Skënder Muço, literary critic Isuf Luzaj, and linguist Selman Riza.[4][5]