Early life Qamili was a villager from
Sharra (in
Tirana) and was the
Sheikh of a
tekke belonging to the
Melami order of
dervishes that sought social equality and rejected wealth and luxury.
Peasant revolt The uprising began in mid-May 1914, but had its origins in 1913. The rebellion was mainly uphold by illiterate peasants that fearing to lose the lands they were given during the
Ottoman Empire objected the laws of a foreign ruler. The uprising base was in the regions of
Shijak,
Kavaja and
Tirana. On 3 June 1914, the rebels, who were led by mufti Musa Qazim Beqari, made their demands known at a gathering in Kavaja, among which was the overthrow of the Western-installed
Prince Wied. The Muslim insurgents demanded the reunion of Albania with the Ottoman state or at least to be ruled by an
Ottoman caliph, the reinstatement of the
Shariah, the removal of the Albanian flag and its replacement with the
Ottoman flag. The revolt gained moderate success in central Albania, being able to seize Lushnjë and on 1 September Vlorë. Two days later, Prince Wied in Durrës was forced to abandon his six-month kingdom and the Muslim rebels legislated the re-union of Albania with the Ottoman state. With Wied removed,
Essad Pasha, who had the support of Italy, returned from exile in October 1914. Haxhi Qamili referred to Christians as "kaurrët") and "bad people... who even God doesn't love". During his pro-Ottoman revolt, Christians were slaughtered and tortured. and they raised the flag of the Ottoman Empire and restored Ottoman Turkish as the national language. Rebels killed several Muslim clerics who were involved in Albanian nationalist cycles. The rebellion was only tacitly supported by the Ottomans, who as a consequence of the
Balkan Wars were physically separated from the Albanian lands. The Ottoman preoccupation with the looming
First World War also rendered diplomatic and material support impractical.
War with Essad Pasha Essad Pasha Toptani, a supporter of the feudal lords, took power with Serbian support. Qamili became one of the leaders of the renewed rebellion and was elected by the Islamic rebels as their commander-in-chief. by the end of November 1914, the rebels had regained the upper hand in Tirana and burnt Essad Pasha’s palace to the ground.
Death In an effort to aid Essad's government and to further its own territorial aims, the
Kingdom of Serbia launched an invasion of central Albania on June 2, 1915 but was promptly met by resistance led by Qamili at
Qukës where, however, the rebels' outnumbered and outgunned forces were defeated by the Serbs. Through this intervention the "rebellion, with [its] vague, unsettled political objectives, which did, nevertheless, have both a popular and a social basis" was suppressed. The Serbian forces arrested Qamili and other rebel leaders and sent them as prisoners to Durrës, where they were tried in a court presided over by
Xhelal Bey Zogu and sentenced to be hanged. ==Analysis==