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The tradition of females assuming a “male role” in Albania, either in the absence of a male head of household or to avoid an arrange marriage, is slowly ending.Drane Markgjoni is one of Albania's last "sworn virgins" – an age-old custom in which women assume the role of a man and are accepted as such by their family and society.
"My life has been a dog's life," lamented the 87-year-old, gazing away in her modest home in Shkodra, in northern Albania, where religious paintings mix with photographs of her deceased loved ones.
Yet the octogenarian insisted she had no "regrets."
She quickly smiled again as she recalled memories of a destiny shaped by the weight of tradition and the exacting conditions imposed by the post-World War II communist regime of Enver Hoxha.
Dressed in old pants and a dark jacket, with her white hair trimmed short, Markgjoni, who never learned to read or write, tried to protect herself from the cold in her icy home.

Drane Markgjoni, 87 talks in her room in Shkodra, northern Albania, on 9 March 2009
She was born in Bajram Curri, in the north of the country. From the cradle, her marriage was arranged in line with the custom of the time.
But on her wedding day in 1949, her husband fled Albania for neighbouring Yugoslavia, a common occurrence during the difficult post-war period. Several hours later, Hoxha's police arrested all the men from his family.
Markgjoni suddenly found herself alone with the women and children of her husband's family. She said the marriage was never consummated.
And that is when she decided to "convert," adopting "the role of the man of the house" in line with the centuries-old Albanian tradition of sworn virgins.
The decision meant renouncing her gender forever and pushing aside the possibility of having another husband, bearing children and engaging in any sexual relations.
"I didn't have any other choice," she said, recalling how she was deported to the south of the country with the women and children of her fiancé’s family.
A supreme “sacrifice”
For 12 years, she lived the life of a traditional man, working on building sites, carrying cement bags and even sharing dormitories with men, where she was accepted without any trouble.
Such women who become "the man of the house" are labelled a "virgin" in Albania.
Working shoulder to shoulder with men, they enjoyed wide respect and their choice was considered a "supreme sacrifice," said Aferdita Onuzi of the Anthropology Institute in Tirana.
Onuzi, an ethnologist, said the last cases of women who decided to become "virgins" date back to the 1960s.
The phenomenon also occurs in Kosovo and was found in both Christian and Muslim families. During Albania's 50 years of communism up until 1990, however, authorities nearly put an end to the practice.
Onuzi estimated that fewer than 10 "virgins" were still alive in Albania.

A Kosovo's Albanian girl celebrates the country's formal independence in 2005
There were two ways to become a "virgin," she said: a girl decides to take over man's duties when all males in the family are dead or gone, or to become a "virgin" to avoid a marriage with a man arranged at birth.
An uncle of such young woman generally negotiates with a "fiancée’s" family to find a solution, said Onuzi.
If the reasons for refusing the marriage were not considered valid, the young woman's family had to give the fiancé’s family a bullet to kill her, according to the ethnologist.
"To remain without a husband proves the strength of one's character,” Markgjoni said. “You have to be very determined. In the old times, you could trust men, travel with them. But now, women are considered an object. And women only think of how to pester their men.”
Markgjoni has also been marked by deep faith in the Roman Catholic church, something she says has helped her cope in life.
"It is they who give me strength," she said as she reached out and touched the religious images above her bed.
Pierre Glachant/AFP/Expatica
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