person:josip broz

  • Yougoslavie, Liban, Zaïre… des programmes spatiaux oubliés à la poésie nostalgique
    https://www.lemonde.fr/sciences/article/2019/01/03/liban-zaire-yougoslavie-des-programmes-spatiaux-oublies-a-la-poesie-nostalgi

    Jeudi 3 janvier, la Chine a réussi le premier alunissage sur la face cachée de la Lune. Cette prouesse inédite place Pékin au premier rang des puissances spatiales du XXIe siècle. Si la conquête de l’espace a été dominée par les Etats-Unis et l’Union soviétique dans la seconde moitié du XXe siècle, elle a aussi pu représenter à la même période un horizon d’attente pour des pays jeunes et ambitieux, désireux de se faire eux aussi une place, réelle ou symbolique, dans les étoiles.

    Ou comment minimiser un bel accomplissement technologique…

    Si c’était la France qui avait aluni,… je ne suis pas sûr que les Français trouveraient respectueux ou même simplement intelligent de comparer aux projets inaboutis du Liban, de papa Mobutu Sese Seko ou de Josip Broz Tito.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_5pJpd9Vi_U

  • Trentino and Yugoslavia narrated through a legend: roots of Marshal Josip Broz #Tito in #Vallarsa

    In Trentino there is a valley where the surname Broz is widely diffused. During the second half of the 20th century, a peculiar legend took shape among these mountains. We are in Vallarsa, a few kilometers from the town of Rovereto, where – according to many locals – the origins of Josip Broz, that history will remember as Tito, are to be found. The Yugoslav Marshal was one of the most peculiar and controversial figures of the 20th century: Partisan leader, head of the communist state that split with the Soviet Union, a prominent figure on the international political scene and, above all, leader and symbol of a country that disintegrated violently shortly after his death. The relationship between Marshal Tito and the Vallarsa Valley is being talked about for some time, and not only in Trentino, so that the page dedicated to Tito on the Italian Wikipedia refers to him as “the seventh of fifteen children of Franjo, a Croat who probably originated from Vallarsa”.
    A legend from Obra

    The story originates in the area around the village of Obra, in the Vallarsa Valley, where there is a small settlement called Brozzi. It is said that the Broz surname has been present in the area for centuries. Transmitted orally, the legend spread and evolved over time, assuming different shapes and contours. There is however a version which is more or less codified. It is narrated that a family of the future Yugoslav president lived in a place called Maso Geche, a bit isolated from Obra and nearby settlements. Valentino Broz, “Tito’s grandfather”, took over an old house, transforming it in a family cottage. Valentino had four children. One of them died at a tender age, while Ferdinando, Giuseppe and Vigilio started contributing to the household by working in the fields and as lumberjacks, integrating these activities, as much as possible, with other occasional jobs. Just like for all the other families in that area, emigration was always an option.

    Parochial registers confirm the structure of Valentino Broz’s family. What we learn from memories passed down through the generations is that Giuseppe (according to archives, Giuseppe Filippo Broz, born on August 29, 1853) and Ferdinando (Luigi Ferdinando Broz, born on April 13, 1848) – or, according to other versions of the story, Vigilio (Vigilio Andrea Broz, born on November 27, 1843) – emigrated from Vallarsa to Croatia between the 1870s and the 1880s, most probably in 1878 or 1879. At that time, both territories were part of Austria-Hungary, and in those years many people from Trentino emigrated in the eastern parts of the monarchy. The story of foundation of the village of Štivor, in Bosnia Herzegovina, is probably the best known. According to legend, the Broz brothers were driven to emigrate by the possibility of being engaged in the construction of railway Vienna-Zagreb-Belgrade. Indeed, in those years a new railway line, connecting Bosanski Brod to Sarajevo, was under construction. The first portion was completed in February 1879, and the last one in October 1882.

    Some time later, Ferdinando (or Vigilio) returned to Vallarsa, while Giuseppe married a Slovenian girl, and in 1892 they gave birth to Josip Broz, who became known to the whole world as Tito. The news about Giuseppes’s fate reached the valley, mainly thanks to the information his brother brought home.
    Tito between history and conspiracy

    The legend from Vallarsa is not an isolated case. Since the end of the Second World War in Yugoslavia, but not only, speculations began circulating that Tito might have (had) Russian, Polish, Austrian or Jewish roots. His life, marked from a young age by participation in illegal activities of the Communist Party, sudden movings and use of false names, offered an ideal breeding ground for speculations and conspiracy theories. The doubts about Tito’s true identity, particularly diffused during the 1990s, recently have been reactualized due to publication of declassified CIA document that puts in doubt Tito’s knowledge of the Serbo-Croatian language.

    Apart from dozens of newspaper articles and many publicistic texts, the question of Tito’s origins has never been the subject of proper historiographic research. None of the scholars who seriously occupy themselves with history of Yugoslavia has ever shown any particular interest in this issue. Even the most recent Tito’s biographies, written by world-renowned historians such as Geoffrey Swain and Jože Pirjevec, don’t contain any reference to different theories about his origins, only a traditional version whereby Tito was the son of Franjo Broz, a Croat from Kumrovec in Zagorje, and Marija Javeršek, originally from village of Podreda, in Slovenia. The only partial exception is represented by considerations made by Vladimir Dedijer in his monumental biography of Tito, published in 1981. A former member of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, sacked at the time of the Affaire Djilas, becoming a professional historian, in his book Dedijer attempts to refute speculations about Tito’s origins, reinvigorated after his death in May 1980.
    The birth and life of a legend

    In attempting to clarify the question, Vladimir Dedijer also makes reference to the Trentine case which, few months earlier, has been reactualized in Italy in an article appeared in the weekly Gente. The article has been published few days after Tito’s death, relying on a story transmitted orally over the years, according to some since the end of the Second World War, when the name of Josip Broz began to appear in the newspapers around the world. In addition to photos of the Vallarsa Valley and Maso Geche, the article contained statements of descendants of the family of Valentino Broz. Don Giuseppe Rippa, the then parson of Vallarsa, played an important role in defining the contours of the story, contributing to a process of consolidation of its credibility.

    It is possible that Vladimir Dedijer has come to know about the Trentin legend thanks to attention given to it in the newspapers of the Italian minority in Yugoslavia. Shortly after the publication of the above mentioned article on the weekly Gente, the weekly newspaper Panorama from Rijeka started showing interest in the story, sending a crew to Vallarsa to find out more details. After talking to Don Rippa and some other local personalities, such as writer Sandra Frizzera, and studying parish registers, journalists from Rijeka have come to a conclusion that there was no evidence of a relationship between Trentin and Yugoslav Brozes. Vladimir Dedijer reacted by publishing Tito’s family tree, compiled by Andrija Lukinović, archivist from the Historical Archive of Zagreb [now called the Croatian State Archive], on the basis of preserved parish registers. Using available data, Lukinović reconstructed the paternal-line geneaology of the Broz family from the beginning of the 17th century, when parish registers were started in Kumrovec. As far as the previous period is concerned, Dedijer remains cautious, nevertheless quoting different sayings whereby the Broz family originated in Bosnia, Herzegovina, Spain, Istria, France or even Italy. In any case, we are talking about the possible settlement in Zagorje more than four centuries ago.

    However, these information have not reached Trentino, where a word began to spread that in the whole Yugoslavia there have been no trace of the Broz surname. The descendents of the family of Valentino Broz continued releasing interviews, telling family stories and anecdotes. Also, it is narrated that representatives of Yugoslav government came to Obra, maybe even Tito himself. Many newspaper articles and reportage talked about physiognomic proximity, claiming that the Trentin Brozes bore a “remarkable resemblance” to Yugoslav leader.

    In 1984 it was decided to create a commission, as part of “The Popular Committee of Obra di Vallarsa”, composed of historians, journalists and the then major, with the aim of clarifying the question through meticulous researches and investigations. However, no definite answer nor concrete evidence has been reached. Did Tito have Trentin origins or not? Over the years, the same information continued to circulate, but the story became gradually consolidated.

    In the same period, the credibility of the story has been publicly recognized by some prominent personalities, such as politician Flaminio Piccoli, who has stated, on the occasion of a congress held in Rome in 1991, that Tito’s ancestors were from Trentino. Representative of the Italian Christian Democratic party (DC) in Trentino at the time, Piccoli asserted that he had “great respect” for Marshal Tito, because “his great grandfather was Trentin, originally from the region around Rovereto”. The story changes again – it was not Tito’s father, but rather his great grandfather who was from Trentino – but it is told by a prominent politician who met Tito personally.

    What also contributed to building credibility of the story were numerous publications dedicated to emigration from Trentino, an issue that, since the 1980s, has attracted increasing interest. Already in 1984, Bonifacio Bolognani – Franciscan friar and scholar originally from Trentino who moved to the United States – mentioned a legend from Obra in his book about emigration from Trentino, published in English. The local writers and historians are those who paid greatest attention to the story: Daniella Stoffella refers to it in her book about emigration from Vallarsa, while Renzo Grosselli mentions it in a study about emigrants from Trentino which is widely read. Remo Bussolon and Aldina Martini revived it in the most important work about the history of Vallarsa. The theory of Tito’s Trentin origins is also being mentioned in different academic essays published in other countries (Frédéric Spagnoli, 2009). We are talking about more or less precise publications, some of which treat the argument with caution, but that, often citing each other, contribute to strengthening the authoritativness of the legend.

    In the meantime, a local section of RAI [Italian public radio and television broadcaster] started to show an interest in the story, relaunching it periodically through tv reports. In 2008, a special program was dedicated to the legend of Obra, and on that occasion journalists from Trentino went to Croatia for the first time to hear the other side of the story. They went to Kumrovec, where they visited the birth house of Yugoslav leader and studied parish registers, trying to learn more about the history of Tito’s family and about his “Croatian father” Franjo Broz. But the question remained: Is it possible that Marija’s marriage with Franjo was her second wedding? Or rather, did she married Franjo after she gave birth to Tito and after Giuseppe Broz died?

    In the summer of 2015, a visit of Tito’s granddaughter Svetlana Broz to Vallarsa, invited to a culture festival to present her book about the Yugoslav wars, becomes the occasion to discuss the issue. Asked during an interview to comment on the theory about Tito’s Trentin roots, Svetlana Broz responded vaguely and compliantly, saying: “That theory is just a theory. I have documentation that proves that my grandfather was born in the Croatian village of Kumrovec, as stated in his official biography. However, I can neither confirm nor deny anything about his ancestors”. In such ambivalent spaces, the legend from Vallarsa continues to live. Narrated and repeated mostly in Trentino, from time to time it arouses the interest of a wider public.
    A story about Trentino and Yugoslavia

    Of all the legends about the origins of the Yugoslav president, the Trentin one is probably most closely related to the history and identity of a local community, unlike the others, often inspired by different conspiracy ideas. It evocates the history of the territory profoundly marked by the migration phenomenon and is paradigmatic of a broader history of emigration from Trentino at the end of the 19th century and of pervasiveness of collective memories in those valleys. Its diffusion beyond the borders of Vallarsa, began in the 1980s, followed a gradual opening-up of Trentino to the international processes and reinforcement of consciousness about its “place in the world”. Above all, it is an integral part of the process of ri-elaboration of the traumatic experience of migration which profoundly marked local community: discovery of illustrious ancestors can help in making a sense of loss.

    At the same time, this legend makes us think about the image socialist Yugoslavia projected abroad, about its perception in Italy and among inhabitants of one of the most remote valleys of Trentino. Considered a hostile country in the post-war period, over the following decades Yugoslavia was increasingly perceived by the Italian public as a close neighbor, so that relationships with the political leadership of socialist country were considered a question of public interest. It is narrated that inhabitants of the Vallarsa Valley had been deeply moved by Tito’s death in May 1980 and that a local parson “had recited the prayer for Josip Broz”. A few years later, when asked for his opinion about Marshal Tito, an inhabitant of the valley pointed out a change of perception: “There is no way to reconcile obscure and bloody events from his early years, ambition, will to power, sectarianism and violence of the first Tito with wise and prudent politician, magnanimous towards his enemies, which was the second Tito”.

    The Trentin roots of Yugoslav Marshal remain a legend. In all those years, no proof has emerged that confirms that Giuseppe Broz, who probably emigrated to Croatia and Bosnia in search of work, was Tito’s real father. On the other hand, the official version of Tito’s biography remains undisputed. But like all legends, regardless of their adherence to reality, the one about “Trentin” Tito immerse us in perceptions, imaginings and memories deposited at the intersection of personal life stories, local vicissitudes and the Great History.


    https://www.balcanicaucaso.org/eng/Areas/Italy/Tito-and-Vallarsa-The-history-of-a-legend-190146

    #histoire #légende #Trentino #Italie #ex-Yougoslavie #Yougoslavie #Obra

    #vidéo:
    https://www.balcanicaucaso.org/eng/Media/Multimedia/Marshal-Tito-and-Vallarsa
    #film

    ping @albertocampiphoto @wizo —> articolo disponibile anche in italiano: https://www.balcanicaucaso.org/aree/Italia/Compa-esano-Tito!-Storia-di-una-leggenda-190146

  • Kadinjača Memorial Complex – Zlatiborski okrug, Serbia - Atlas Obscura

    https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/kadinjaca-memorial-complex

    A grand Yugoslav memorial to the group of partisans who fought and died resisting western Serbia’s Nazi occupation.

    In western Serbia, a pink and white stone complex sits on a mountaintop overlooking many miles of green valleys. But the soft pastel colours and scenic views of this sprawling memorial belie a history of struggle and sacrifice.
    Top Places in Serbia

    The city of Užice, in western Serbia, was the first region to win its independence from World War II-era Nazi occupation. In late 1941 partisans recaptured the city from the Germans, and declared the city and its surroundings the “Republic of Užice”—but it would be short lived.

    #spomenik #mémoire #ex-yougoslavie #serbie

  • Faut-il être nostalgique de #Tito ?
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/international/261217/faut-il-etre-nostalgique-de-tito

    Vidéo accessible dans le corps de l’article. On appelle cela la « Yougonostalgie » : une partie des Balkans rêve aujourd’hui de l’ex-Yougoslavie et du régime du #Maréchal_Tito, un moment vécu comme une période d’unité et de relative prospérité. Qu’en était-il ? La première grande #biographie de Josip Broz Tito paraît en français. Écrite par l’historien slovène Joz̆e Pirjevec, elle est une somme précieuse pour comprendre ce que fut le régime titiste.

    #International #Jozé_Pirjevec #yougoslavie

  • Croatie : le conseil municipal de #Zagreb débaptise la place Tito

    L’extrême droite a réussi son coup de force : dans la nuit de jeudi à vendredi, le conseil municipal de Zagreb a débaptisé la place Tito. C’était le prix du ralliement des partisans de Zlatko Hasanbegović à l’inamovible maire de la capitale croate, Milan Bandić. La décision suscite une vague de protestations.


    https://www.courrierdesbalkans.fr/Croatie-le-conseil-municipale-de-Zagreb-debaptise-la-place-Tito

    #Place_Tito #Tito #toponymie #Croatie #ex-Yougoslavie #mémoire

  • Württ. Kunstverein Stuttgart: Titos Bunker

    The point of departure for this exhibition, on show at the Württembergischer Kunstverein from May 27 to August 6, 2017, is a particular place, Tito’s bunker in Konjic (Bosnia and Herzegovina), which is equally negotiated as concrete location and as open-ended metaphor.

    From 1953 to 1979, the former head of state in Yugoslavia, Josip Broz Tito, initiated the top-secret construction of a gigantic and—at least theoretically—nuclear-safe bunker in Konjic, a town situated around 40 kilometers south of Sarajevo (and today located in Bosnia and Herzegovina). This shelter, drilled 300 meters deep into the mountain and occupying a space of 6,500 square meters, was conceived for the survival of 350 chosen representatives of the country’s political and military elite of that time—including just one woman: Jovanka B. Broz, Tito’s wife. Tito himself outlived the accomplishment of the structure by just one year.
    Not until the 1990s did the existence of this construction project, which cost 4.6 billion US dollars, become public knowledge. At this time, still no global atomic war had happened, fortunately, but the nation (or more precisely: its “elites”) that was (were) to be rescued in this bunker had disappeared: it was quasi atomized.

    In 2011, the two artists Edo und Sandra Hozic succeed in launching the Project Biennial D-0 ARK, whose site was to be Tito’s Bunker. From the very beginning, their aim has been to amass a collection of art through the biennial that would ultimately serve as a basis for a museum in the bunker.


    http://www.wkv-stuttgart.de/en/program/2017/exhibitions/titos-bunker
    http://www.wkv-stuttgart.de/en/program/2017/exhibitions/titos-bunker/konjic

    #tito #bunker #art #exposition

  • Photos : These 1970s brutalist buildings in Serbia look like Star Wars spaceships — Quartz

    http://qz.com/655106/photos-these-1970s-brutalist-buildings-in-serbia-look-like-star-wars-spaceships

    Signalé par @isskein que je remercie

    https://qzprod.files.wordpress.com/2016/04/forkate-3.jpg?quality=80&strip=all&w=1600

    Mirko Nahmijas has lived in Belgrade his whole life, but looking through the lens of his Canon 6D has helped him see the futuristic buildings looming over his city with new eyes.

    “When you’re born here you never appreciate it,” he says. “You never notice the buildings.”

    Nahmijas started shooting images of the brutalist buildings of his hometown in January. The style of architecture, also known as socialist modernism, was popular in Serbia in the 1970s when the country was still known as Yugoslavia and was under the communist rule of Josip Broz Tito. His images capture the stark, almost alien beauty of the structures against clear blue skies, free of their urban context and empty of humans.

    @serbie #architecture #brutal_architecture #brutalisme

  • #Le_Corbusier’s Visions for Fascist #Addis_Ababa

    Had Le Corbusier’s sketch for the colonial capital of Addis Ababa been realized, it would have been one of the most ruthlessly planned cities of the twentieth century. On the 19th of August 1936 (a mere three months after the conquest of Addis Ababa), Le Corbusier wrote to #Mussolini to offer his technical services and to comment on the appropriate design for the new cities of Africa Orientale Italiana, the Italian colonial empire. The design, which accompanied the letter, would show “how a city for modern times is born”, as the famous architect put it.


    http://failedarchitecture.com/le-corbusiers-visions-for-fascist-addis-ababa
    #Addis_Abeba #architecture #urbanisme #fascisme #colonialisme #Ethiopie
    cc @reka @albertocampiphoto

  • Atheist Rap - Wartburg Limuzina
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iPns2KiG564

    Google translate ...
    http://www.releaselyrics.com/0ac3/atheist-rap-wartburg-limuzina

    Il ya un an nous avions une voiture
    Mais ils étaient porcs ont mangé la moitié
    Et parce que nous aimons la vitesse folle
    Nous nous acheté une limousine Wartburg

    Wartburg berline avec cinq vitesses
    Un vrai sort de la fumée et de la roue de son air
    Et là où il ya de la fumée sans feu
    Aïe, baiser Dieu, de sorte que le moteur est en feu !
    Yep monter le moteur, mais parce PICI
    Ainsi, chaque conducteur se vante Wartburg
    châssis lui durs, épais de deux doigts
    un « mortizeri difficile, nous avons souffert de la Croix-

    Wartburg berline la plus longue la machine
    Cet’ri feuille de mètre et cinq Meteri fumée
    Wartburg berline la plus longue la machine
    Cet’ri feuille de mètre et cinq Meteri fumée

    Wartburg berline, la machine confortable
    Il a fait Pera de l’ex-RDA
    Et pas que cela rend tout honneur
    Je le garde de l’échappement fuit un peu de graisse
    Il ya de pare-chocs en béton, ne peut pas tuer ’éléphant
    Un siège lui doux comme une bite parfois
    Tous les paiements reçus le grand-père de mon fils
    Ils ne seront pas "autour d’elle qui soudoyer pas

    Wartburg berline la plus longue la machine
    Cet’ri feuille de mètre et cinq Meteri fumée
    Wartburg berline la plus longue la machine
    Cet’ri feuille de mètre et cinq Meteri fumée

    Wartburg berline se trouve dans le garage
    Garage près de la porcherie et ma montre
    Pour mon cochon nouveau pas dévorer ronde
    Comme nous Trabanta mangé la moitié
    Je vais reposer et boire quelques bières
    Lorsqu’il n’est pas couché diable, les porcs en quête de nourriture
    Mais pas comme Wartburg Trabant trompette
    Parce que les porcs Wartburg sont laissés sans dents

    Wartburg berline la plus longue la machine
    Cet’ri feuille de mètre et cinq Meteri fumée
    Wartburg berline la plus longue la machine
    Cet’ri feuille de mètre et cinq Meteri fumée

    Blu Trabant, l’autre tube de Atheist Rap
    http://www.releaselyrics.com/70aa/atheist-rap-blu-trabant

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atheist_Rap

    The first live appearance the band made in late 1988 at the Petrovaradin Fortress’ Beogradska kapija. After the appearance, the band, with the repertoire consisting of two songs, had another performance, on May 22, 1989, with several local acts.
    ...
    The performance provided the band a cult status, despite not having any recordings released.
    ...
    On January 1990, the band performed at the alternative music festival called Bolje uživo nego u mrtvo (Better Live Than Dead), and made first recordings on June 1990, but the beginning of the Yugoslav wars at the beginning of the 1990s stopped the band from releasing the first CD release in the region.
    ...
    It was at the insisting of Tetcha Morales (manager, guitar) and Voja Žugić (Scorned Records, Three Pals Zine) that the band recorded their debut album Maori i Crni Gonzales (Māori and Black Gonzales), recorded at the Do-Re-Mi Studio in Novi Sad by the end of 1992, and released it in 1993. Despite the humorous lyrics of the songs “Ljubav” ("Love"), featuring the sampled speech of Josip Broz Tito, “Wartburg limuzina” ("Wartburg Limousine"), “Blu Trabant” ("Blue Trabant") and “Plitka poezija” ("Shallow Poetry", named after the first Pekinška patka album, and a mixture of cover versions by Pekinška Patka), the album had low sales.[clarification needed] However, the band received the Album of the Year Award at the Brzi Bendovi Srbije (Fast Bands of Serbia) festival, where they occasionally performed under pseudonymous names Božidara Starog Punk (Old Božidar’s Punk) and Električni Jurica (Electric Jurica). “Wartburg limuzina” and “Blu Trabant” became hits in Serbia and Republic of Macedonia.

    Atheist Rap - Live @ Koncert Godine 2010
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vw3LbpOxOUY

    –-----

    Wartburg 1000
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8cUJYMsEtPw

    Melkus 1000
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-ZgqlzzKmQ

    On peut toujours commander une Melkus. La voiture est fabriquée à partir de pièces détachées de l’époque. Dans le reportage on nous explique que dans la version de base équipée d’un moteurs deux temps elle atteint les 100 à l’heure plus vite que la Opel GT qui date de la même époque. C’est faux si on croit le reportage suivant.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ujq_owRpEU


    Il y avait même une Opel GT électrique.
    http://opelgtworld.de/site04el.htm

    Finalement les rêves automobiles se ressemblaient des deux côtés du rideau de fer, leurs versions nostagiques et ironiques aussi.

    #punk #serbie #sovietisme

  • 25 Abandoned Yugoslavia Monuments that look like they’re from the Future | Crack Two

    http://www.cracktwo.com/2011/04/25-abandoned-soviet-monuments-that-look.html

    Via Bénédicte Tratnjek

    These structures were commissioned by former Yugoslavian president Josip Broz Tito in the 1960s and 70s to commemorate sites where WWII battles took place (like Tjentište, Kozara and Kadinjača), or where concentration camps stood (like Jasenovac and Niš). They were designed by different sculptors (Dušan Džamonja, Vojin Bakić, Miodrag Živković, Jordan and Iskra Grabul, to name a few) and architects (Bogdan Bogdanović, Gradimir Medaković...), conveying powerful visual impact to show the confidence and strength of the Socialist Republic. In the 1980s, these monuments attracted millions of visitors per year, especially young pioneers for their “patriotic education.” After the Republic dissolved in early 1990s, they were completely abandoned, and their symbolic meanings were forever lost.

    From 2006 to 2009, Kempenaers toured around the ex-Yugoslavia region (now Croatia, Serbia, Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, etc.) with the help of a 1975 map of memorials, bringing before our eyes a series of melancholy yet striking images. His photos raise a question: can these former monuments continue to exist as pure sculptures? On one hand, their physical dilapidated condition and institutional neglect reflect a more general social historical fracturing. And on the other hand, they are still of stunning beauty without any symbolic significances.

    #ghosts_town #yougoslavie #monuments #communisme-monumental

  • Unforgiven, unforgotten, unresolved: Bosnia 20 years on - FT.com
    http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/2/8a698dbe-73af-11e1-aab3-00144feab49a.html?ftcamp=traffic/email/content/monthnl//memmkt#axzz1qPdDsU6a

    Unforgiven, unforgotten, unresolved: Bosnia 20 years on

    By Alec Russell

    Mayor Tomislav Popovic has a dark three-piece suit, a diffident demeanour and weighs every syllable as if his career depends on it. He reminds me of a small-town Yugoslav bureaucrat from the old days; he even favours the wooden party language of Josip Broz Tito’s era. Only the picture of Prince Lazar, Serbia’s medieval tragic hero, on the wall of his office marks the change of tone in his town since Yugoslavia’s fall. I have come, after all, to the land of Serb nationalist permafrost. Visegrad is in Republika Srpska, the ethnically cleansed enclave carved out by Radovan Karadzic in the 1992-1995 war. When I ask about the picture, the mayor looks a little embarrassed, as he is, understandably, when I ask how Visegrad is confronting its past.

  • « Houston, We Have a Problem » : le programme spatial yougoslave qui a permis aux Américains de marcher sur la lune (Le Courrier des Balkans)
    http://balkans.courriers.info/article19003.html

    La Yougoslavie a développé un programme spatial que Josip Broz Tito a vendu aux Américains en 1961 ! Voilà comment résumer en une phrase la bande-annonce du projet intitulé Houston, We Have a Problem, créé par le réalisateur slovène Žiga Virc. Source : Le Courrier des Balkans