In northern Albania
Vajtim is performed by women "singing in verse the praises of the deceased, with a heart-breaking and moving voice". Women stop their lamentation of the dead and move away from the place they occupy next to the dead when the men start the gjâmë.
Gjâma e Burrave () is a
death rite performed only by men and for men only, in Albania, exclusively in the highlands of
Dukagjin,
Gjakovë and
Iballë,
Pukë. To perform this rite, a
quorum of ten or more men is needed. During the ritual, the men strike their chests and scratch their faces, repeating:
O i mjeri unë për ty o biri/nipi/miku jem, (Oh poor me, o my son/nephew/friend), depending on the deceased.
Gjâma served the unique purpose of expressing one's grief, but at the same time, to spread the bad news in adjacent regions for others to come and visit the deceased's family. The practice was strictly forbidden during the Communist regime. It was revived after 1990. The practice of the
Gjâma is connected to the death of
Skanderbeg in 1468. The assumption of the connection between the
Gjâma and Skanderbeg's death is based on
Marin Barleti's remarks that
Lekë Dukagjini had pulled out his hair and his beard as a sign of deep sorrow for his leader's death. The tradition has survived in the
Malësia region. Albanian
Catholics practiced the
Gjâma more often than Albanian
Muslims in the Malësia region. According to the Muslim faith, crying for the dead is prohibited to men. Today Albanian Catholics of
Montenegro no longer perform the
Gjâma and hire instead professional mourners called
Gjâmatarë, from Northern Albania. The
vajtim is well known in the
Albanian mythology and
epic poetry. One of the most beautiful parts of the
Kreshniks' cycle is
Vajtimi i Ajkunës, (). ==Southern Albania==