Year And A Half Wait For Wife To Enter The U.S.
"I do but your can't" could very well describe
Albi Beluli's marriage vows to his Albania sweetheart Gentjana who had to wait
over a year and a half before she could join her husband here in the United
States.
Albi, who along with his family own and operate the
Grahamsville Deli met Gentjana two years ago while he was visiting family on his
father's side in Elbasan, Albania.
The popular Deli at it's original location near the bank was
destroyed by fire in 1987 and has been at it's present site opposite the old
post office since the late 80's. Albi was born in Beacon, went to school in
Newburgh and graduated in 1994 from Tri-Valley Central. He learned his cooking
skills from his father who continues to work in the Deli.
Beluli graduated from Sullivan County Community College and
attended some college at Fredonia before returning to the Grahamsville Deli
business.
Albi is also an outstanding musician as a guitar
player-singer and does more solo performances then band gigs. Self-taught he
likes playing classic folk and rock.
Although Albi was introduced to Gentjana by his cousin
Minolta he could not date her or ask her to marry him until his family went to
Gentjana's family and got their permission.
Getting parents permission to date and to get married in a
very strong tradition in Albania but it was convenient for Albi that the two
families knew each other.
Following his six-week vacation in Albania Albi returned to
Grahamsville and this budding romance soon created a lot of communications
between he and Gentjana. They talked on the telephone and internet email. They
soon found the internet a lot more economical then phone service after what Albi
noted was an 11 minute telephone call that cost $48. He was later able to get a
Verizon special rate of 300 minutes for $10 extra on his regular
bill.
On his second trip to Albania before New Year's Eve two
years ago Albi and Gentjana were immediately engaged and then married by a
Justice of the Peace.
Marriage in Albania does not require a marriage license
which is provided to the couple several weeks after their wedding.
Returning to the United States without his wife but with
original copies of the wedding license, his wife's birth certificate, her proof
of residence and her identification card Albi hired an immigration lawyer who's
specialty was eastern Europe immigration. The lawyer prepared an application for
a relative visa but advised Albi that it could take over a year to
get.
Albi noted that the lawyer filed the application with the
Department of Homeland Security (DOHS) and this triggered lengthy email
correspondence with Gentjana when the DOHS again asked for another copy of the
marriage license and at various times two additional copies of what already had
been filed.
Albi said several of the procedures he had to provide the
DOHS included proof that he was never married (that went to Albania officials),
proof of his income for three years, birth certificates for both Albi and his
wife, an interview with the U.S. Embassy in Albania, a list of phone records, a
letter from Gentjana's father giving permission for marriage, copies of airline
stubs Albi used to fly from New York to Albania and back to New York, copies of
the private emails between the two, vaccination records and picture albums of
the two.
Following a year and a half of waiting and dotting all the
i's and crossing all the t's and footing the bill for expensive legal fees
Gentjana was granted the intervew Mr. and Ms. Beluli had long been waiting for
and the approval of her relative visa.
Albi returned to Albania at that time where the couple
celebrated wedding receptions one night with her family and one night with his
family. The separate wedding receptions are also tradition in
Albania.
The time soon arrived for their flight (together), arriving
at JFK in New York on June 29 and the start of Gentjana's new married lifestyle
in the hamlet of Grahamsville.
Upon arriving at JFK a sealed packet from the Embassy in
Albania was presented to U.S. Customs. Two weeks following her arrival in the
U.S. she was given her "green" card and in 5 years she will be eligible to
become an American citizen.
Gentjana went to school in Elbasan to become a high school
teacher. She is now becoming familiar with the Deli business which specializes
in hot dishes, sandwiches, home made dishes and pizza.
She noted, "I'm learning how to cook pasta, lasagna,
egg-plant parmesan all which is different from Albania style cooking which is
similar to a Northern Greece diet."
Asked what she thought of her new lifestyle here in America
Gentjana noted, "there are very different customs here and I'm still making some
of my Albania-style foods and slowly getting use to some of the food
here."
She also does very well with the English language which she
studied in her Albania schools.
Identification of above photos
Albi and Gentjana Beluli's wedding photo which took place in
Elbasan, Albania.
Albi and Gentjana Beluli displaying one of the Grahamsville
Deli's special spare-rib dishes that Gentjana is now learning to
cook.
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