Fehim Zavalani was an Albanian journalist and activist of the Albanian National Awakening. He was also the editor of Bashkimi i Kombit, one of the most important Albanian newspapers of the era. In 1908 he became one of the head organizers of the Congress of Monastir, in which the Albanian alphabet was standardized.
Fehim Zavalani came from a Muslim-Protestant family of Kolonjë, southern Albania.[1] In 1896, along with Sabri Frashëri and Shefqet Frashëri, he founded the patriotic Secret Association of the Albanians of Manastir (Albanian: Organizata e Fshehte e Shqiptareve te Manastirit) [2] In 1905, along with Gjergj Qiriazi and Bajo Topulli he founded the committee of the liberation of Albania, one of the first çetë (armed guerilla groups) in Bitola, Macedonia.[1] In Bitola he also founded the organization Bashkimi, whose alphabet proposal would become the official alphabet of Albania, and became the editor of Bashkim i Kombit, the organization's newspaper. After the newspaper published an eye-witness account of a massacre perpetrated by the Ottoman army in northern Albania, the Ottoman authorities arrested Zavalani and the rest of the staff of Bashkimi i Kombit.[3] On October 8, 1908 Luigj Gurakuqi proposed him to organize a conference for the standardization of the Albanian alphabet.[4]
The conference, known as the Congress of Monastir, was organized by Bashkimi in Zavalani's house in Bitola and led by Zavalani from November 14 to November 22, 1908.[2] Fehim Zavalani held the introductory speech at the congress and was one of its delegates. Other delegates of the congress from his family include Izet Zavalani, delegate of Florina and Gjergj Zavalani.[2] In July 23–28, 1909 he was one of main participants and the leader of the Albanian faction of the Congress of Debar, organized in Debar by the Young Turk association Union and Progress.[5] The Young Turks aimed to impose osmanization of the Albanian society. Zavalani was one of the group of the Albanian nationalists who declined to sign off on the already prepared document, and instead forced the organizers to accept a series of articles in the final document, one of the most important of which was to allow the Albanian language to be taught in elementary schools freely.[5] Fehim Zavalani's son, Tajar Zavalani (1903–1966), was an important Albanian historian, journalist, and translator. He started in 1940 the BBC Radio service in the Albanian language where he was the speaker for 26 years until his death in 1966.