Avdhela Project

The Avdhela Project aims to collect, edit and open to the public academic works on the Aromanians based on a series of specific principles.

[1] The Avdhela Project is an independent nonprofit initiative[2] developed by the Predania Association, and it aims to "identify, edit and offer" artistic and scientific works on Aromanian culture and make them free of charge and easily accessible to any potentially interested researcher or individual through its digital library.

It has a section with the description of the group and its principles, rules and values in six languages in the following order: Aromanian, Romanian, Greek, English, French and German.

He did not manage to publish the book before his passing and it was kept in his family for fifty years until Iotta's granddaughter Mioara handed it over to Maria Pariza, an Aromanian scholar from Constanța (Custantsa), Romania.

The Avdhela Project claimed that a total of 1,000 Aromanian, Megleno-Romanian and Romanian priests, professors and teachers and also simple students were murdered for similar reasons.

[9] On 7 May of the same year, the Avdhela Project helped organize a conference at the Faculty of Orthodox Theology of the University of Bucharest on religious aspects of the Aromanians and Megleno-Romanians.

Logo of the Avdhela Project