A year later, the day of his thesis defense arrived. The hall was filled with professors, peers, and a handful of community members, including the imam and Besmir. Arian stood before them, his heart beating like a drum, and began:
When Arian began his final year at the University of Tirana, the weight of his thesis pressed on him like the summer heat over the flat roofs of his neighborhood. He had chosen a topic that felt both daring and intimate: “The Qur’an in the Latin Script – A Study of Accessibility and Cultural Dialogue.” The idea had sprouted one evening in the modest kitchen of his grandmother’s house, when the soft clatter of plates was punctuated by the rustle of a thin, well‑worn booklet his uncle had brought from Istanbul. Kurani Me Shkronja Latine.pdf
“In a country where the Latin alphabet has been the script of our literature, poetry, and law, the Qur’an has often seemed distant, locked behind an unfamiliar script. ‘Kurani Me Shkronja Latine’ opened a door—not to replace the original, but to invite a new generation to hear its voice in a language they can pronounce. A year later, the day of his thesis defense arrived