Today, the Bektashi present an image of moderation and tolerance. Within the community, alcohol consumption is permitted, there are no dress codes, and their doctrine combines Shiism with elements of mysticism and dervish worship. They claim to make up as much as 30% of the Albanian population, although the official census recorded them at around 5–10%, while worldwide it is estimated that there are 7 to 20 million Bektashi, with strong communities in Turkey and smaller ones in Greece — mainly in Thrace — and the US.
The Bektashi, as mentioned, diachronically carry a reputation for tolerance, inclusivity, and anti-clericalism — traits that gave it an unusual proximity to socialist ideals of equality and fraternity. In the early years of Enver Hoxha’s regime, some Bektashi leaders even aligned with the new state, presenting their movement as a “modern” and progressive face of Islam, distinct from Sunni orthodoxy. But the rapprochement was short-lived. By 1967, when Hoxha declared Albania the world’s first atheist state, the Bektashis, like all religious groups, were silenced, their tekkes shut down and their clergy persecuted. The hard irony remains: this community that once was celebrated for its compatibility with socialist narratives of brotherhood and emancipation was ultimately crushed by the very materialist ideology it had sought to accommodate.
It is this tradition of heterodox tolerance that allows Rama to present it as a „treasure” for the country’s image, but also in line with the ideological positions and connections that he wants to appear to be promoting. Although a minority, the Bektashi are for him the most convenient example of an Islam without fanaticism, capable of being promoted internationally as an Albanian brand
