Thursday, November 28, 2013

Everything about Adnan Jonuzaj 44 !!

Everything about Adnan Jonuzaj 44 !!

The debate that rages over which country  Adnan Januzaj should represent appears to be rather more civilised in England  than it is elsewhere.
Last week on Albanian television they  discussed the most sought-after teenager in European football on a programme  entitled Hero or Traitor, the view  being that he would be the latter if he turned his back on his family’s heritage  to represent anyone else.
On the face of it the 18-year-old who shot to  prominence with two brilliant goals in only his third appearance for Manchester  United would seem to be spoilt for choice. His direct style and willingness to  dribble past defenders as if it was the most natural thing in the world has  everyone purring.
The reality, however, is very different and  those who have encountered Januzaj on his journey are saddened by the pressure  being placed on his gifted young shoulders.
Pressure: Adnan Januzaj, pictured during a tournament at the Athenee Royal De Jette school, has a lot of pressure on his shoulders

Way back when: Januzaj (circled) with RWDM Brussels FC U11s - his club before Anderlecht
Born in Brussels, Januzaj is the son of  Kosovar-Albanian parents who fled the Balkan crisis to escape the poverty and  persecution suffered by other members of their family. Today their story can be  told for the first time.
But it is a story that means Januzaj could  play for Belgium, Albania, Kosovo, Turkey or England, and to date Januzaj has  not revealed his preference and nor has his protective father, Abedin.
Januzaj’s agent, Dirk de Vriese, says no  family members will be speaking until a lucrative new contract with United has  been agreed, although Europe’s other top clubs are circling if that does not  materialise. But there is clearly more to it than that.
It is thought that, were they a  FIFA-affiliated team and therefore able to participate in competitive  international football, Kosovo would be first choice. As it is, England are  understood to be the favoured alternative.
A cousin of Adnan, Idriz Januzaj, 11, pictured near the block of flats he lives in, in the town of Istog, Kosovo
Nearby: Just outside the town of Istog lies the hamlet of Januzaj
The FA certainly believe that to be the case  and they are seeking to establish if the possession of a British passport could  lead to the five-year FIFA residency rule being bypassed.
But even that, with the image of highly-paid  lawyers going into battle in a bid to land the prize asset, feels like  exploitation given the picture that is painted of a quiet, dedicated young man  and his humble family.
From his old teachers to his earliest  coaches, nobody has a bad word to say about this boy or his father. Even  Anderlecht, the Brussels football club that lost him at 16 to United because in  Belgium it is prohibited to place players of that age under contract, wish him  only the best.
‘We are not happy at all that a player we  lost for €300,000, a fee that was set by FIFA, is now worth 20 million,’  Anderlecht spokesman David Steegen told Sportsmail.
‘He was born in Brussels, educated here at  our club; he’s one of ours and it makes us angry what has happened. But we are  happy for Adnan. He is a good boy.’
In Belgium there have been unsubstantiated  reports of United paying an additional €200,000 to the Januzaj family and  providing them with a home in a gated apartment block in one of the smarter  parts of Manchester where he lives with his mum and dad.
Steegen does, however, acknowledge that  Anderlecht did to RWDM Brussels FC what United would do to them four years  later. RWDM was local to the Januzaj family home in the middle-class Brussels  suburb of Koekelberg – a place dominated by the stunning Basilica – and Abedin  would take Adnan to training after leaving the Chevrolet-Opel dealership where  he worked as an accountant.
‘We could see very early that Adnan was a  fantastic player,’ said Jean-Paul Pira, who runs the 14 youth teams at RWDM. ‘He  was not a big player – very slightly built – but his technique was out of the  ordinary. In one game for the under 10s I remember him scoring 16 or 17 goals in  a 22-0 win.’
Pira also remembers Adnan’s father. ‘He was  always very calm and supportive, but he never told him how well he had played;  only that he could do better.’
RWDM received not a penny from Anderlecht.  ‘Zero!’ said Pira. But again, there are only feelings of generosity towards  Januzaj. ‘One of his old team-mates – Eloy Suarez – brought in these photographs  for you,’ Pira then explained. ‘Everyone here is very proud.’
Adnan's uncle, Shemsedin Januzaj, and his son Idriz, pictured outside their flat
Key man: Januzaj looked destined for the top in his school days
Teenage kicks: Januzaj (pictured back left) with team-mates from his school
Abdel Jaichi is proud too, and as Januzaj’s  sports teacher at the Athenee Royal De Jette school in Koekelberg for four years  he should be. He taught Januzaj from 12 until he moved to Manchester at 16 and  remembers ‘a timid boy who set an example to the other students with his work  ethic’.
‘Adnan was by far the most talented player at  the school but he was very unselfish,’ said Jaichi. ‘He would dribble past  opponents but always try to give the opportunity to score to a team-mate. And  there was never a problem with his studies.’
Sir Alex Ferguson has spoken of Januzaj as ‘a  beautifully balanced player’, while a youth team coach at Anderlecht – Yannick  Ferrera – has compared him to Johan Cruyff. It is also noted that he shares his  birthday with Cristiano Ronaldo and Neymar: February 5.
Many identify Januzaj’s father as his biggest  influence, including a former Anderlecht youth team-mate. Michael Heylen, who is  now at Courtrai, said: ‘Januzaj is the greatest talent I’ve ever played with. He  was so fast over the first few yards that all opponents were taken by  surprise.
‘But if Adnan played a bad match, his father  let him know about it. At times he could be very tough and sometimes Adnan had  tears in his eyes. But I had an idea that his dad knew what he was doing. He  taught his son to take the knocks and that was good for his  development.’
No distractions: Januzaj has no tattoos, no flash cars and no sponsorship deals
Different ball game: Januzaj with ex-United player Quinton Fortune at the Oklahoma City Thunder v Philadelphia 76ers NBA game in Manchester
Anderlecht credit Abedin with the fact that  his son is so grounded. There are no tattoos, no flash cars. He does not even  have any sponsorship deals, with Abedin so confident his son will fulfil his  considerable potential he thinks it more prudent to wait.
But to understand Abedin Januzaj you have to  know his story and the struggle the Januzaj family faced during Kosovo’s violent  past.
While Abedin fled Kosovo, other members of  this close-knit family took up arms in the country’s war of independence against  the Serbs as the former Yugoslavia disintegrated.
But the bond between them remains strong,  with relatives speaking fondly this week of the teenage football star who  frequently visits the bustling provincial town of Istog, nestled beneath the  mountains that separate Kosovo from Serbia and Montenegro.
Every summer the fluent Albanian-speaking  youngster spends several weeks at the family home, a tidy farm surrounded by  fields of maize, in a hamlet named after the Januzaj family. In these times of  peace Januzaj can play football with his uncles and cousins. But those relatives  recall the struggle against the oppression of communism and anti-Albanian racism  in war-torn Kosovo.
The eldest of six children, Abedin was  expected to provide for the family after his father Idriz, a textile factory  worker, became ill with cancer. But faced with the prospect of being forced to  join the Serb-dominated Yugoslav Army to fight in Bosnia, Abedin fled to Belgium  in 1992.
Adnan's uncle, Shemsedin Januzaj and his wife Lavi (back left) during their time fighting with the KLA
By then Abedin’s uncle, Januz, had already  been jailed for 15 years for taking part in a protest demanding Albanian rights  in the part of Yugoslavia that is now Kosovo. Later his younger brother,  Shemsedin, would join Januz in the Kosovo Liberation Army, independence fighters  backed by the allies.
Speaking to Sportsmail, Shemsedin  said: ‘From the 1980s until today we have struggled as a family. We were  persecuted by the Serbian system. I was a fighter with the KLA and so was my  wife. We fought together in the same brigade. One of my best friends was killed  – he stepped on a landmine.
‘I was 18 when I joined the KLA. I fought  between January 1998 and June 1999. I couldn’t put up with the repression, the  rape of women and the violence any more. It was the time to die fighting for our  nation. I was not frightened because I knew what we were doing was  right.
‘There are still a lot of people missing – we  don’t know what happened to them during the war.’
On April 1, 1999 Serb forces attacked Istog,  killing civilians, torching houses and destroying the 18th century mosque. As  Istog mayor Muhamet Rexhaj said, the whole town was burnt down. ‘All 300  houses,’ he said, though the Januzaj’s house survived as it was on the  outskirts.
‘Some 17 people were murdered, including two  disabled people. Five members of one family were burned alive. The rest of the  population fled.’
Mayor Rexhaj spoke of how ‘the Januzaj family  were persecuted by the Serbs’.
A herd of sheep are walked past the Januzaj family home in Januzaj
Shemsedin, an unemployed former rescue worker  who struggles to provide for his wife and two children, tells of how Abedin fled  not only to escape the oppression of the Serbs but ‘to provide for the family’  by sending money home. ‘My father died two years later so Abedin was the head of  the family after that,’ he said.
Abedin’s wife and Adnan’s mother, Ganimete  Sadikaj, was also the victim of repression. Born into one of the wealthiest  families in Istog, the Sadikajs were considered a threat by the Serb-dominated  Yugoslav regime after World War Two. They were forced to leave Kosovo and  deported to Turkey under a plan to suppress Albanian nationalism.
The family would later move to Belgium where  Adnan’s grandfather, Alija, set up a business.
A former neighbour, Arif Haskaj, said: ‘The  Sadikaj family had a lot of land and a farm. They were among the richest people  in the village. But they had to escape to Turkey because the Serbian authorities  took away their land and their property during the communist times, after World  War Two.’
In Brussels the family became part of the  city’s Albanian community and it was there that Abedin and Ganimete met.
Januzaj (circled) as part of the RWDM Brussels FC U11 side, during happier times for the family
In Istog the locals tell of  how the Sadikaj family paid for the renovation of that 18th century mosque,  while many will visit the tea shop that is owned by the Januzaj family. Visar  Januzaj, Adnan’s cousin, works as a waiter there.
‘Adnan often comes to the cafe,’ he said. ‘I  have played football with him plenty of times and he’s really good.’
Even a colonel in the Kosovan Police says he  has played with the rising star of Manchester United. ‘He was 14 at the time and  we didn’t know who he was,’ he recalled. ‘When he came on we could not work out  why he was so good – how he could do everything with the ball.’
From the streets of Kosovo: Children play football in a road in Istog
To the top: Januzaj is performing on the game's biggest stage, for Manchester United
The Januzaj family were angered by that  debate on Albanian television. Even so, on Tuesday Adnan offered greetings to  fellow Muslims on the Islamic holy day of Eid ul Adha.
As villagers in Istog were slaughtering sheep  in their back gardens as part of the Muslim festival, he wrote on his Facebook  page: ‘Eid Mubarak to all Muslim fans.’
His bond with his family’s past is also  strong, and at the Kosovan FA they have not yet resigned themselves to losing  him to England. ‘We cannot stop them playing for another team,’ said a  spokesman. ‘But we have a lot of support within FIFA, so it’s a case of when  rather than if we receive full recognition. Then hopefully boys like Adnan will  want to play for Kosovo.’
Daily Mail

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