Dubai Telegraph - The loneliness of one of Albania's last sworn virgins

EUR -
AED 4.330579
AFN 77.266839
ALL 96.708198
AMD 445.46619
ANG 2.110843
AOA 1081.316863
ARS 1700.694028
AUD 1.687655
AWG 2.122541
AZN 2.002628
BAM 1.956978
BBD 2.37682
BDT 144.326855
BGN 1.980296
BHD 0.444522
BIF 3497.000679
BMD 1.17919
BND 1.50296
BOB 8.153872
BRL 6.251007
BSD 1.180105
BTN 106.648728
BWP 15.623402
BYN 3.380334
BYR 23112.116738
BZD 2.373318
CAD 1.612265
CDF 2629.592863
CHF 0.917372
CLF 0.025758
CLP 1017.051614
CNY 8.181277
CNH 8.179236
COP 4367.91885
CRC 585.052081
CUC 1.17919
CUP 31.248525
CVE 110.330929
CZK 24.229993
DJF 210.145573
DKK 7.466882
DOP 74.474819
DZD 153.207747
EGP 55.257417
ERN 17.687844
ETB 183.873954
FJD 2.60542
FKP 0.870248
GBP 0.867624
GEL 3.177906
GGP 0.870248
GHS 12.956742
GIP 0.870248
GMD 86.080679
GNF 10357.18898
GTQ 9.051409
GYD 246.887529
HKD 9.213338
HNL 31.171759
HRK 7.53549
HTG 154.808568
HUF 377.857133
IDR 19901.183377
ILS 3.689389
IMP 0.870248
INR 106.892355
IQD 1545.930332
IRR 49673.363328
ISK 145.004928
JEP 0.870248
JMD 184.571074
JOD 0.836064
JPY 185.167781
KES 152.115755
KGS 103.120256
KHR 4762.724816
KMF 494.080306
KPW 1061.273312
KRW 1730.472671
KWD 0.362435
KYD 0.983392
KZT 582.020256
LAK 25364.264067
LBP 105700.236479
LKR 365.189769
LRD 219.491158
LSL 19.064673
LTL 3.481841
LVL 0.71328
LYD 7.475467
MAD 10.831272
MDL 20.055069
MGA 5221.142053
MKD 61.664068
MMK 2476.307031
MNT 4222.329188
MOP 9.496215
MRU 47.073328
MUR 54.313289
MVR 18.218526
MWK 2046.23141
MXN 20.445556
MYR 4.654854
MZN 75.173049
NAD 19.064673
NGN 1613.520157
NIO 43.424844
NOK 11.460444
NPR 170.638689
NZD 1.966965
OMR 0.453393
PAB 1.180105
PEN 3.96677
PGK 5.130087
PHP 69.0445
PKR 330.420345
PLN 4.216994
PYG 7792.656533
QAR 4.30097
RON 5.092447
RSD 117.387184
RUB 90.793016
RWF 1722.336492
SAR 4.422242
SBD 9.502085
SCR 16.378828
SDG 709.245463
SEK 10.665463
SGD 1.501262
SHP 0.884698
SLE 28.831333
SLL 24727.016071
SOS 673.205131
SRD 44.656155
STD 24406.844556
STN 24.514753
SVC 10.325214
SYP 13041.336023
SZL 19.055467
THB 37.273592
TJS 11.0454
TMT 4.13306
TND 3.419443
TOP 2.839205
TRY 51.430241
TTD 7.990809
TWD 37.354601
TZS 3048.205337
UAH 50.922545
UGX 4212.517207
USD 1.17919
UYU 45.537211
UZS 14474.710797
VES 445.71614
VND 30599.970885
VUV 141.48863
WST 3.214841
XAF 656.351989
XAG 0.015755
XAU 0.000241
XCD 3.186819
XCG 2.12678
XDR 0.816291
XOF 656.349204
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.119428
ZAR 19.012251
ZMK 10614.117983
ZMW 21.920098
ZWL 379.69858
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.55

    +0.13%

  • CMSD

    0.0200

    23.89

    +0.08%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • JRI

    -0.1500

    13

    -1.15%

  • AZN

    -0.2900

    187.16

    -0.15%

  • BCC

    -1.0700

    89.16

    -1.2%

  • BCE

    -0.7700

    25.57

    -3.01%

  • RIO

    -5.3600

    91.12

    -5.88%

  • NGG

    -0.9000

    86.89

    -1.04%

  • GSK

    1.9400

    59.17

    +3.28%

  • BTI

    0.3300

    61.96

    +0.53%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2000

    16.42

    -1.22%

  • RELX

    0.3100

    30.09

    +1.03%

  • VOD

    -1.0900

    14.62

    -7.46%

  • BP

    -1.0300

    38.17

    -2.7%

The loneliness of one of Albania's last sworn virgins
The loneliness of one of Albania's last sworn virgins / Photo: ORSOLA MEMA - AFP

The loneliness of one of Albania's last sworn virgins

For decades, Gjystina Grishaj chopped wood, drove tractors and tended livestock as the man of the house in a remote valley in northern Albania, only to find herself alone after years of sacrifice supporting her family.

Text size:

Grishaj is among the last of Albania's so-called "sworn virgins" -- an ancient, gender-bending tradition that saw her renounce sex, married life and parenthood in exchange for the right to live and work as a man in the deeply patriarchal society.

The choice -- made over 30 years ago -- was simple. With her father sick and eldest brother dead, she embraced the "burreneshe" identity -- as it is known in Albania -- which allowed her to provide for her family.

But now at 58, Grishaj is alone after her relatives, like hundreds of thousands of other Albanians, emigrated in search of a better life -- leaving her behind in their family home.

"After all the sacrifices I've made for my family, it's the loneliness that weighs on me," Grishaj told AFP.

"There have always been a lot of us living in this big house, which is now plunged into silence. I'm overwhelmed with grief."

- 'I would hide' -

Grishaj came of age during the hard years of communist rule and the chaotic aftermath that followed Albania's entry into the global economy.

To add to their woes, Grishaj's family struggled to make ends meet living in an isolated valley along Albania's craggy, northern frontier -- where winters are harsh and traditions run deep.

With six mouths to feed, her sister married off, eldest brother dead, and her father stricken with disease, Grishaj decided to make the ultimate sacrifice.

"I decided to work like a man to help with my siblings' education and my father's medicine," said Grisha.

Her mother, however, pushed back "insisting a lot that I get married," she added. But "when people came to ask for my hand in marriage, I would hide."

Over the years, Grishaj hardened up physically as she helped the family scratch out a living doing manual labour.

"I became the mainstay," she said.

But life as a burreneshe came with its advantages.

Being a sworn virgin enabled her to escape arranged marriages without disgracing her family.

She wore her hair short and pants long and was able to drink brandy in the cafes with the men and have a say in major decisions in the home.

In the village, where barely 20 people live year-round, she became affectionately known by her nickname Duni.

Her choice to forsake womanhood for a life of hard labour has earned her "respect" in the eyes of the community, said Paulin Nilaj, the owner of a nearby guest house in Lepushe.

"She has adopted the habits of men to have a special status," he adds. "I've always known her like that, so if one day she got married, that's when I'd be surprised."

- 'Pillar of the family' -

The role is a familiar one for Albania's sworn virgins.

"It was a very appreciated and honoured choice," anthropologist Aferdita Onuzi told AFP.

"These women who decided to be the pillar of the family, to rub shoulders with men in the hardest tasks, enjoyed the respect of all, such a choice is considered the supreme sacrifice."

There is no official figure regarding the number of burrenesha remaining in the Balkan nation of 2.8 million. Most experts suspect there are no more than a handful left as Albania embraces modernity.

"Maybe with me the chapter will be closed, no one will become a burreneshe anymore. Because today life is different, there's no such pressure. Those who want to work can do so anywhere," said Grishaj.

In any case, experts agree that the choice has little to do with sexual identity.

"Sexual relations were not even a subject," insisted Elsa Ballauri, a rights activist and curator of a museum in Tirana dedicated to the history of Albanian women.

The phenomenon is "the result of social circumstances that force someone to impose themselves in a society of men," Ballauri added.

Grishaj shuns any notion that her decision was linked to sexuality, saying "not even God should hear such talk".

And despite the fixation for some in the West with gender-appropriate pronouns, Grishaj said "she doesn't care" about her grammatical place in the world.

"It doesn't matter, it's my life," she shrugged.

And that life has been made all the more difficult now that her family has moved abroad.

After a lifetime of embracing jobs outside of the home, Grishaj has been forced to learn the domestic chores she long shirked, like cooking and cleaning.

Despite a lifetime of hard labour, Grishaj said she has been left with little.

To support herself, she makes herbal remedies concocted from wildflowers and roots foraged in the mountains along with fruit brandy that she sells to tourists.

Even still, Grishaj refuses to ask her siblings or 12 nephews and nieces for help.

"It's difficult for them too," Grishaj said. "They are Albanian immigrants."

F.Chaudhary--DT