Pashko Vasa
Pashko Vasa (1825–1892), also known as Vaso Pasha or Wassa Effendi, was an Albanian Catholic statesman, poet, and novelist from Shkodra who contributed significantly to the Albanian National Awakening by promoting cultural revival and political unity among Albanian-speaking territories within the Ottoman Empire.[1][2]
Vasa participated in the 1848 revolutions in Italy, where he experienced imprisonment and later documented his ordeal in the Italian-language work La mia prigionia.[1] His poetry, notably O moj Shqiptyri ("Oh Albania, poor Albania"), urged Albanians to prioritize national identity over religious divisions, encapsulated in the verse "Feja e shqiptarit është shqiptaria" ("The religion of the Albanian is Albanianism"), which became a rallying cry for transcending sectarianism amid Ottoman decline and Balkan nationalisms.[1][3]
In his 1879 treatise The Truth on Albania and the Albanians, Vasa critiqued the Congress of Berlin's territorial rearrangements and Ottoman Tanzimat reforms, employing the Pelasgian theory to assert Albanian autochthony and continuity as an ancient people distinct from neighboring Greeks and Slavs, while advocating for autonomous Albanian governance under Ottoman suzerainty rather than immediate independence.[4] Balancing nationalism with bureaucratic loyalty, he served in Ottoman administration, including as mutasarrif of Mount Lebanon from 1882 until his death in Beirut in 1892, where his remains were later repatriated to Albania.[5][2]