Vorea UJKO
BIOGRAPHY

Vorea Ujko (1918-1989), pseudonym of Domenico Bellizzi, is
among the most popular and respected of the Arbëresh (Italo-Albanian)
poets. Ujko was a modest priest from Frascineto (Alb. Frasnita)
in Calabria who taught modern literature in Firmo (Alb. Firma)
where his memory has been cherished since his death in a car
accident in January 1989. Ujko's verse, a refined lyric expression
of Arbëresh being, has appeared in many periodicals and
anthologies as well as in seven collections, four of which were
published in Italy, two in Albania and one in Kosova. Vorea Ujko
is a poet of rich tradition. He is the worthy heir of the great
nineteenth-century Arbëresh poets Girolamo De Rada (1814-1903)
and Giuseppe Serembe (1844-1901), both of whom he admired very
much. His verse is intimately linked with the Arbëresh experience,
imbued with the gjaku i shprishur (the scattered blood).
Though devoid of the lingering sentiments of romantic nationalism
so common in Albanian verse, and the standard motifs of exile
lyrics, Ujko's poetry does not fail to evince the strength of
his attachment to the culture of his Balkan ancestors despite
five hundred years in the dheu i huaj foreign land.
His verse collections include: Zgjimet e gjakut, Castrovillari
s.a. (The awakening of the blood); Kosovë, Cosenza
1973 (Kosova); Mote moderne, Schiavonea 1976 (Modern times);
Ankth, Prishtina 1979 (Anguish); Stinët e mia,
Corigliano Calabro Stazione 1980 (My seasons); Këngë
arbëreshe, Tirans 1982 (Arbëresh songs); Burimi,
Tirana 1985 (The source); and Hapma derën, zonja
mëmë, Tirana 1990 (Open the door, mother). |