{"id":1520,"date":"2022-04-14T09:36:02","date_gmt":"2022-04-14T09:36:02","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/museumofrefugees-ks.org\/?p=1520"},"modified":"2022-04-14T13:00:41","modified_gmt":"2022-04-14T13:00:41","slug":"alban-radoniqi","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/museumofrefugees-ks.org\/alban-radoniqi\/?lang=en","title":{"rendered":"Alban Radoniqi"},"content":{"rendered":"

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Interviewer: Orhidea Humolli<\/p>\n

Interviewee: Alban Radoniqi<\/p>\n

 <\/p>\n

O.H.: How would you describe the time before the war started?<\/p>\n

A: Hi.\u00a0 I am Alban Radoniqi, 35. During the war time I was 13. The war first started in the villages…<\/p>\n

O.H.: Sorry to interrupt you. You live in Gjakova and in 1999 you were living in Gjakova, right?<\/p>\n

A: Yes, they heard there had been fights in the villages. The villagers came to Gjakova to seek refuge. We sheltered a few families in Gjakova. We knew what the situation was like in the villages. We didn\u2019t have any issues in the city though. We were attending school as usually but the situation changed for us too from March 24, when the bombings started in Kosovo. Education and everything was interrupted. Then, they started burning and killing. We were sheltered at a house. We could go out during the day and play in the streets. During the night, we could hear the bombings and burnings in the city. We had to refuge in the basements or inside the house.<\/p>\n

O.H.: How difficult was it for you as a 13-year-old child to face those experiences, when you should have been doing homework and playing with your friends?<\/p>\n

A: Perhaps the adults knew what the war is and what it means. We didn\u2019t. We went out and played, as usually. But later we realized that they can murder children too, especially in our neighbourhood. After April 1, when we found out they had killed children and old people, then it was more difficult. On April 2 and after that, they came and evicted from our homes, telling us to go to Albania. Then we went to Albania on foot, from Gjakova to the border.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Did you leave the moment they told you to do so?<\/p>\n

A: We did. We left in the morning, at 8 o\u2019clock. We arrived at 8 p.m. So we walked for twelve hours to the border with Albania. We saw the Old Bazar in Gjakova completely burned down. We saw human bodies that were killed during the war. We couldn\u2019t believe it! As children, we didn\u2019t know, we had never seen people killed in the streets like that. We saw them all in rows. The Serbian police followed us on our way to Albania. We wanted to go another way, not to Albania. We wanted to go get my uncle but they didn\u2019t let us. They told us to go straight to Albania. We went somewhere, I think it was Zhup village. They gathered all of us there. At that moment, I thought they were going to kill all of us. They started shooting in the air until they lined all of us in two rows, and told us to walk to the border. We walked like that to Albania.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Is there any moment from the journey that you remember from the entire period as a refugee, since you were evicted that morning from your house? You said you saw the Bazaar when you were still in Gjakova? Are there any such moments you specifically remember from your journey to Albania?<\/p>\n

A: The key moment was when they gathered all of us in Zhup and we thought they were going to kill us. But, fortunately, they didn\u2019t. They told us to walk to Albania. When we went there, we didn\u2019t know what way to go. We had no place to sleep or stay. We spent a night in a school, at the border with Albania. We had to sleep on the floor. The following day, we walked from village Letaj in Albania until Kruma, until some Albanian military trucks came. They picked us up and took us to Durres. We spent a night in Durres, in the Durres lottery building. Then, they sent us to the camp in Roshbull, a refugee camp. We stayed there for two months. We heard about various cases there. We saw families whose loved ones had been disappeared and killed \u2013 they knew they had been killed. I also made new friends there, from cities I had never been to before. It was difficult.<\/p>\n

O.H.: You said you heard various stories from other families at Roshbull camp. First, I want to ask you if it was only your close family going to Albania when you were evicted, or was it also the broader family as well?<\/p>\n

A: My entire family and the neighbourhood organized to go to Albania, since we were told to do so by the Serbian militia. They told us to leave our houses and the entire neighbour was forced to do that.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Did you or anyone from your closer family or the neighbourhood have any dilemmas about whether you had left someone behind, whether someone had been killed or disappeared?<\/p>\n

A: We had that fear because, when the police entered on April 1 and started the massacres in our neighbourhood, they killed my aunt that day too. She is still missing, along with her husband. On our way to Albania, on April 2, we met her children too. They told us they didn\u2019t know where their parents were. It was only after the war that we realized they had been killed. My aunt\u2019s husband was found, but my aunt isn\u2019t yet. She\u2019s still missing. They came here, to our neighbourhood.<\/p>\n

O.H.: So the murders had already started in your neighbourhood.<\/p>\n

A: Yes. If we hadn\u2019t left on April 2, after a very short time they came to my family too, because my father was working in \u201cMother Theresa\u201d during the war time. He worked in the Funding Council, which funded the KLA, schools, and teachers. So, he was at the target of the police. And, a week after we left, according to one of our neighbours who stayed here the whole time, the police came and asked for people by name, in our family. But they didn\u2019t find us, and out of anger, they burned down our houses. They burned down three houses: ours, and my uncles\u2019.<\/p>\n

O.H.: I will now move to the part when you are qualified as a refugee. You said you met new people from other places. Are you still in touch with them?<\/p>\n

A: I\u2019m still in touch with two of them. They\u2019re from my town. We\u2019re still friends. I\u2019ve lost contact with the others who were from other cities. During the war, we attended school there. They improvised a classroom there, for all of us and I made many friends of my generation there.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Was it organized by the refugees in the camps?<\/p>\n

A: Yes, it was organized by the refugees, and the professors who were refugees in the camp. The teachers were either students of different subjects or people who worked as teachers before the war. They lived in the camp. So, it was organized by us, in the camp.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Did you have enough food and clothes in the camp? Were you able to take anything with you in that short time you had to leave, or did anyone take care of you there?<\/p>\n

A: Personally, I left on the clothes I was wearing. And we took two or three pairs of clothes. It was a long journey to Albania. We couldn\u2019t carry a lot of things, but we took a few things just to be able to change clothes. But it was an Italian camp, it\u2019s called Arco Valeno. They provided assistance with clothes, food, and everything else. There was also a kitchen in the camp. They cooked Italian food. The ambulance was also there for anyone who needed medical help.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Do you feel grateful? What are your thoughts on the care you were provided by Albania or the Italian camp?<\/p>\n

A: I\u2019m very grateful to the Albanian state. They helped us a lot, all Kosovo people, not just us. I\u2019m also very thankful to Arco Valeno, the association that helped us a lot in this camp. They provided us refuge because we had nowhere to go. They were the ones who sheltered us in that camp. Obviously, in tents, not in houses. But we had a very good time there. There was enough food for everyone, three times a day. There was medical care. There were enough clothes, and toys for children. The staff was Italian police officers and soldiers, plus volunteers who had come from Italia. They were very nice too. We had a good time with them.<\/p>\n

O.H.: What do you think was the approximate number of refugees in your camp?<\/p>\n

A: I could say there were 1000 people in that camp. It was a huge camp. There were many families there, about 1000 people. Most of them were women, children, and old people.<\/p>\n

O.H.: How long did you stay at this camp?<\/p>\n

A: We stayed from April 3 until June 20. We moved out on June 20.<\/p>\n

O.H.: How did you take the decision to return? When did you know you were safe to return?<\/p>\n

A: We heard that Gjakova was liberated on June 14, and Kosovo was liberated on June 12. My father, as the head of the family, didn\u2019t want us to stay in the camp. He was looking for an opportunity to return to Kosovo. At the same time, my mother was in Italy for treatment. She had a problem with her kidneys at the time. They sent her to Italy from the camp for treatment. All of my family returned, while my father stayed there for another month waiting for my mother to come back from Italy, and then they returned to Kosovo together.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Were you able to keep in touch with your mother or did anyone take care of her there?<\/p>\n

A: Yes, a doctor who worked at the same hospital where my mother was being treated accommodated my mother in her house. We kept regular contact with her from the camp. We spoke almost every day.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Did you miss having your mother next to you in such a situation? Especially when you don\u2019t know if she\u2019s okay and you can\u2019t see her.<\/p>\n

A: I missed her a lot! The good thing about it was that I knew where she was. I knew she had gone to Italy for treatment. There were many families, many children who didn\u2019t know where their parents were. Parents had disappeared or were displaced, they had no contact with them. They could have been in Albania too but in different places, and they didn\u2019t know where their family members were. At least I knew where she was, I knew she was in Italy. I knew she was alive, in contrast to many children whose mothers were killed. For example, my aunt\u2019s children still hoped she was alive, until they returned to Kosovo and found out.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Were they with you at the time?<\/p>\n

A: They were for a week or so. Then they moved to Ojst, a different city, in Tirana. We were in Roshbull, near Durr\u00ebs. They went to Tirana.<\/p>\n

O.H.: When you learned that Kosovo was liberated and you decided to come back to Kosovo, were you worried about the journey back, about how dangerous it would be? What were your thoughts and feelings about this situation back then?<\/p>\n

A: As a child, when I heard we were liberated, we didn\u2019t know it could mean anything else; we were free and I couldn\u2019t wait to return to Kosovo, to the free Kosovo, but…<\/p>\n

O.H.: Did you expect to see your friends, and find your house like you had left it?<\/p>\n

A: The first day we came back, I went straight home. We stopped at my aunt\u2019s. The first day I went home by foot, and then I saw that my house was burned down. I didn\u2019t know up until that moment.<\/p>\n

O.H.: So you were the first one of your close family who so the house?<\/p>\n

A: Yeah, I\u2019d say so. My father was in Albania. I came home, and saw the house burned down. My father knew the house had been burned, his friends had told him. I only found out when I saw it.<\/p>\n

O.H.: What was yur first reaction? Did you try to find something?<\/p>\n

A: There was nothing I could do. The adults told me not to go in because there could be mines in there, because there were cases when they\u2019d left mines in the house yards. They burned down the houses, but also left mines behind. I just looked at it from the gate because I was afraid to go inside. I saw the houses were burned. I looked for my friends. None of them was there. I didn\u2019t see anyone. I went back to my aunt\u2019s where we were staying. We stayed at my aunt\u2019s for a week, until my maternal aunt found an apartment that belonged to Serbs. They moved out of Kosovo, and left their apartments. Those of us whose houses were burned moved into their apartments. The apartment was in an awful condition. There were grenades, bullets, Serbs\u2019 masks, mine packages, you name it. We called the KLA Headquarters, and they came and removed those things. Then we settled there.<\/p>\n

O.H.: So it was habitable but it had been used to keep war equipment, right?<\/p>\n

A: Yes, because all of the residents in that building had someone working in the police or the military. And if a relative of yours works there, they obviously bring such things home, including bombs, bullets, weapons…<\/p>\n

O.H.: How long did you stay in this apartment? Did you try and find somewhere else to live or you stayed there for a while until you built your house, either with some funds or anything else?<\/p>\n

A: We stayed in that apartment until 2011, until we built our own house, thanks to the international organizations who helped us. As soon as the house was completely built, we moved into our house, and left the apartment.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Did you know whose apartment it was?<\/p>\n

A: Yes, it belonged to \u2013 can I mention the name?<\/p>\n

O.H.: If you want to.<\/p>\n

A: The apartment belonged to Vojslav Jovanovic. He called us a few times but we didn\u2019t want to talk to him. Then he sent us a message through his neighbour asking if we\u2019d want to buy the apartment, because they weren\u2019t coming back anymore and there was no reason for them to come back. We didn\u2019t want to buy the apartment. We had our own house. We goal was to build our house. Once the house was built, we didn\u2019t go there anymore.<\/p>\n

O.H.: So when you refused to buy the apartment, you stayed there and he didn\u2019t try to do anything, right?<\/p>\n

A: He didn\u2019t.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Did you know that person before? Or was it completely coincidental?<\/p>\n

A: We didn\u2019t. The other residents told us who he was. We didn\u2019t know him.<\/p>\n

O.H.: I believe it was a collective building, right?<\/p>\n

A: Yes.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Did your neighbours have a more or less similar story? Were you able to socialize?<\/p>\n

A: Everyone had a different story. We lived further away. The Serb\u2019s apartment was in the centre. We live further from the centre. It was more difficult for us because the police used to stay there. It was difficult for them living in apartments, too, because they got stuck in the building. They weren\u2019t able to go out easily. They had a lot of problems because of the Serbs too. They just waited for them to come to their houses and evict them to Albania or kill them.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Now that you remembered your journey as a refugee until you returned, you said you moved into your new house in 2011. Do you still live there?<\/p>\n

A: I do.<\/p>\n

O.H.: What is your emotional connection to your current home, compared to the home you had before the war? Is it the same feeling, is there any semblance either in the house architecture or even the yard? How do you feel now about the house as an adult?<\/p>\n

A: It was an old house, but I was born and raised there. Obviously it\u2019s a unique feeling…<\/p>\n

O.H.: That\u2019s why I wanted to ask you.<\/p>\n

A: It\u2019s different. It\u2019s a new house but still, the yard is the same. It\u2019s the same feeling, it\u2019s my home. We\u2019re not staying in someone else\u2019s house, we\u2019re not staying at a Serb\u2019s apartment. You can\u2019t find warmth in a place that is not yours.<\/p>\n

O.H.: And it makes you appreciate more.<\/p>\n

A: Of course<\/p>\n

O.H.: Do you often think about the time you were a refugee or even the time when you returned until you moved into your new house? How often do you remember it, or what impact did this story have in your life?<\/p>\n

A: I remember it all the time. For instance, every April 1, we remember the victims that were murdered in our neighbourhood. I always remember that night, when we could see flames leaping from the houses which they burned after killing the people, in order to obliterate every trace of them.<\/p>\n

O.H.: I would like to go back to the part when you returned to Gjakova and saw that your neighbourhood is not the same anymore. Did you find out that someone else had been murdered, wounded, or suffered more than just material harm after you left? Did the murders take place only before April 1 or did they continue after that? I\u2019m talking about your neighbourhood.<\/p>\n

A: The murders continued. There was no one else left in our neighbourhood: we all escaped to Albania that day, on April 1. The murders continued in other neighbourhoods, such as in Qabrati neighbourhood, in May. There are still many people missing from that neighbourhood. Many were killed and disappeared in Bllok i Ri, and Siena, too. It continued in all other neighbourhoods. Almost everyone from our neighbourhood left for Albania that day. Only one person stayed the entire time. He was very old and didn\u2019t want to leave. His wife was from Bosnia. They both stayed here.<\/p>\n

O.H.: So they were the only ones who stayed.<\/p>\n

A: Yes. There was also someone from the Egyptian community. He stayed here, too. No one else.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Did you find them here when you came back?<\/p>\n

A: We did. Our old neighbour had died during the war time. We only found his wife.<\/p>\n

O.H.: What were your relationships as refugees with those who lived here during the war time? What were your first meetings like? Did you empathise with her? What did she tell you? I\u2019m asking you about someone else but since it\u2019s related to your house, she is a witness of the whole scene,<\/p>\n

A: At the time, from April 2 when we left until June 13-14 when they left, the army stayed here. Not the police, the regular army. Our neighbourhood was their station. They stayed here the entire time. His son talked to him during the war time, and he told him, \u201cThe army is protecting us, they won\u2019t do us any harm.\u201d The situation in our neighbourhood was good then. The police, or the paramilitaries, however, were much worse. They didn\u2019t care about children, the elderly, women or men. They killed everyone.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Do you remember the ones who evicted you from your house, as you said in the beginning? Do you feel anything about that now?<\/p>\n

A: The one who told us to leave for Albania was a Serbian resident of the neighbourhood.<\/p>\n

O.H.: So you knew him.<\/p>\n

A: We knew him. I know his name, but I can\u2019t remember his last name right now. He\u2019s name is Nenad. He said, \u201cIt\u2019s better for you if you leave. Leave today.\u201d He kind of wanted to help us. I went out at 7 am. I saw Nenad coming home. That is, they would go out at night, burn houses, kill people, especially him, because we could see him going out all the time with a Kalashnikov rifle on his arm. As he was tired because he didn\u2019t sleep all night, he used to drag the Kalashnikov. He used to say \u201cHi\u201d to us every time he saw us. That night, he just looked at me, and kept walking. I think he took part in the massacres of April 1 in our neighbourhood.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Do you think he also participated in the massacre where your aunt was killed?<\/p>\n

A: He was one of them, yes.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Why do you think he didn\u2019t say \u201chi\u201d to you? Do you think he felt sorry for having killed your aunt or was it kind of a warning or threatening?<\/p>\n

A: I don\u2019t know. I don\u2019t think he felt sorry. But he always used to greet all of us in the neighbourhood because we were close neighbours for a long time. But that day he didn\u2019t say hi, I don\u2019t know if it was because he felt sorry or what. He didn\u2019t say hi. Maybe he did feel sorry after everything he saw and did the night before, you could be right.<\/p>\n

O.H.: I\u2019m just making an assumption so that you can remember that scene clearly, without wanting to suggest anything.<\/p>\n

A: We were used to seeing him coming in the morning, going to his house and sleeping. That day, when he returned from that night, he went home, made his coffee, and came outside. He stayed outside the entire time. He didn\u2019t go to bed. Then he started talking to a neighbour. He told him, \u201cIt\u2019s better for you if you go to Albania.\u201d As soon as we left our houses, some police officers arrived. They were Albanians but they worked with the Serbian police. They massacred Albanians too. They were called Mush Jakup. Their last name is Ibra. I don\u2019t know if they\u2019re still alive or if they\u2019re dead. They came and talked to this Serb and kept walking. We continued walking to Albania through a secondary road. They didn\u2019t let us go through the main road where the massacres had been committed. We wanted to go there and see our aunt\u2019s house, to call them. They didn\u2019t let us. They took us another way because they knew we would see the murders and everything they had done.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Do you think they did it on purpose, not only to hide those scenes, but also to keep you confused, not knowing what had happened?<\/p>\n

A: It could be. But I think the main reason was to prevent us from seeing them because people living nearby saw them. They saw the victims on the street, they saw children killed in the street, they saw the burned houses. They heard that they had killed people and then burned them. They didn\u2019t let us go that way and see those scenes. They took us another way.<\/p>\n

O.H.: You said that you knew the person who advised you to escape from Kosovo and that he used to greet you. Did you meet him when you came back?<\/p>\n

A: No, he wasn\u2019t here when we came back. There were no Serbs here anymore, they had all left.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Okay. So you don\u2019t know anything about his whereabouts.<\/p>\n

A: No, we don\u2019t know where he is or whether he\u2019s alive. He was around 50 years old back then. I don\u2019t know if he\u2019s still alive or dead, or where he lived. We have no information about him.<\/p>\n

O.H.: I tried to make a comparison between your current life and your life as a child. However, what I would like to know is how you recovered. Because you witnessed a few scenes or realized what war is. But you were still a child when you came back. You were a teenager during 2000-2003. Where did you find the strength to continue living, especially knowing that you weren\u2019t living in your house and you weren\u2019t safe?<\/p>\n

A: We got used to that kind of life. We got used to living in someone else\u2019s apartment. When you see people who have lost everything, not only material possessions but their loved ones too, going on with their lives, there\u2019s nothing else you can do. Life goes on.<\/p>\n

O.H.: You also lost a loved one and you know that feeling. What about school? Were you motivated to learn, considering that you had attended a different, improvised education in Albania?<\/p>\n

A: No, we went to regular schools. Regular education started in September. In most of the classrooms, not in mine though, there was a flower in each desk, for every missing child, who had either been killed or displaced to other countries. There were a lot of children absent. There were many children who had been killed or disappeared.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Was there any flower dedicated to any of your friends or people you used to know?<\/p>\n

A: I had a friend from the Vesa family. He is alive, the only family member that survived!\u00a0 He was wounded. I mentioned my aunt.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Yes.<\/p>\n

A: I didn\u2019t have other friends missing.<\/p>\n

O.H.: I guess, being with other friends or peers is a different feeling from being with your family or adults, but you obviously felt the absence of those children whom you were used to seeing at school.<\/p>\n

A: I knew them. They were my age but we weren\u2019t friends.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Was there any teacher missing?<\/p>\n

A: I know one of the teachers was wounded during the war. I don\u2019t know if any teacher had been killed, though. The entire staff was there.<\/p>\n

O.H.: So the lesson process continued?<\/p>\n

A: Yes. That teacher was wounded at the beginning of the war, until school started.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Were you motivated to learn after all those experiences, especially after seeing those flowers in the desks?<\/p>\n

A: Obviously, we weren\u2019t very motivated to learn because we had just returned from Albania and had been through a war. But over the time, we got used to it and continued the learning process as usually. We started where we had left off, which was grade 7 or me. We continued learning, despite the absences of students. There weren\u2019t any teachers murdered, but there were many students who had been murdered in different neighbourhoods.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Did you organize a commemoration, apart from the flowers, to remember them in the following years?<\/p>\n

A: When those people were reburied, the entire school was present at the reburial ceremony, with funeral wreaths and flowers. We walked from the school to the cemeteries, to empathize with the families who had loved their loved ones. It\u2019s quite a long distance, it\u2019s not close. Every anniversary, every April 1, we go there to honour their memory and we light candles at their houses. We also expect visitors at the cemetery to commemorate them.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Going back to what you personally experienced, when you compare it to the collective experiences, I can notice your motivation when you say, \u201cPeople went through worse things\u201d. However, your experience is not any less difficult because in less than a week you had to change a few locations, first as a student in Gjakova, then as a refugee in Albania, coming back and attending school again with many peers missing in a completely different situation, within a very short period of time. You also had to live somewhere else for a while. What did this whole period add to your identity, to your character or development? How has it affected the way you see life, the way you make decisions? Is there anything you think you can or cannot do because of this experience?<\/p>\n

A: I was young at that time, but war makes you stronger, particularly when you lose someone. You keep going stronger. I don\u2019t know.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Okay. I don\u2019t want to trouble you any further, so is there anything you want to add, anything that I forgot to ask about?<\/p>\n

A: I tried my best to share my whole story and what I remember from the wartime. Thank you for the interview.<\/p>\n

O.H.: Thank you, thank you very much. It was an honour for us.<\/p>\n

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[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] [\/vc_column_text][\/vc_column][\/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text] Interviewer: Orhidea Humolli Interviewee: Alban Radoniqi   O.H.: How would you describe the time before the war started? A: Hi.\u00a0 I am Alban Radoniqi, 35. During the war time I was 13. The war first started in the villages… O.H.: Sorry to interrupt you. You live in Gjakova and in 1999 you were […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":1004,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[22],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/museumofrefugees-ks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1520"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/museumofrefugees-ks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/museumofrefugees-ks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/museumofrefugees-ks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/museumofrefugees-ks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1520"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/museumofrefugees-ks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1520\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1522,"href":"https:\/\/museumofrefugees-ks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1520\/revisions\/1522"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/museumofrefugees-ks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/1004"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/museumofrefugees-ks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1520"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/museumofrefugees-ks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1520"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/museumofrefugees-ks.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1520"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}