Pedja kojovic biography of michael
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25.07.2024
17:11:00
DODIK: EVERY bekymmer IN BiH COMES FROM BOSNIAK POLITICAL REPRESENTATIVES
Bosniak political representatives drive their own people out of their mind, mislead them with the story of a unitary BiH, act unilaterally wherever they can do some damage, without any agreement, consensus of two equal entities and three constituent peoples, but in legal and political life - Dayton is their border and they can't get over that. None of what they try to do without Republika Srpska has no meaning and a good part of the world understands that, and anyone who has read the Constitutio
Interviewed by: Tatjana PARAĐINA BANJA LUKA, JULY 25 /SRNA/ - The President of Republika Srpska Milorad Dodik said in an interview with SRNA that every problem in BiH comes from the structures of the SDA and Bosniak political representatives, who are trying in every possible way to block any agreement. When asked to comment on the fact that the four cantons in the FBiH, which are gover
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Humanity in the Arts
A conversation with Danis Tanović about film, war, his hometown, and Eastern Europe’s favorite politician: Bernie Sanders.
DANIS TANOVIĆ is a Bosnian filmmaker whose film No Man’s Land won the 2001 Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film. His latest movie, Death in Sarajevo, is out now. Set in Sarajevo on the 100th anniversary of the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand — an event generally considered the flashpoint for World War I — the story is a multilayered parable of contemporary Europe. It won the Jury Grand Prize at this year’s Berlin International Film Festival. American filmgoers may be most familiar with his 2009 English-language film Triage, starring Colin Farrell, which grapples with post-traumatic stress coming from war.
Tanović started out as a filmmaker recording the siege of Sarajevo. At 1,425 days, it is the longest siege in the history of warfare. The uneasy stalemate that ended the Bosnian War, codified in the 1995 Dayton Ac • American poet (1955–2022) For the Canadian ice hockey player, see Kent Johnson (ice hockey). Kent Johnson (June 23, 1955 – October 25, 2022) was an American poet, translator, critic, and anthologist. His work, much of it meta-fictional and/or satirical in approach, has provoked a notable measure of controversy and debate within English-language poetry circles. From the late 1990s, Johnson was widely thought to be the author of the Araki Yasusada writings, which a reviewer for the Nation magazine, in 1998, called “the most controversial work of poetry since Allen Ginsberg's Howl.”[1] Johnson, however, never officially claimed authorship of the material, presenting himself only as “executor” of an archive supposedly composed by a writer, or writers, whose choice was to maintain a principled anonymity in relation to the work. In recent years, the Yasusada discussion has moved from the realm of literary scandal and goss Kent Johnson (poet)
Life and career
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