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Country : Herzegovina - Category : poetry
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| Zovem se Bosna/My Name Is Bosnia Duration : 569 Seconds Video Dance Poetry Music Pictures Love Culture Good Cause Tags :bosna, bosnia, culture, herzegovina, poetry, tv, music, zlatko, pranjic, galina, kalicin, dado, dzihan, dance
| | Sarajevo Winter 2012, XV BJCEM - Symbiosis of poetry and painting, Nermin Ahmić Duration : 298 Seconds Nermin Ahmić represented Bosnia and Herzegovina in literature at the XV Biennial of Youth Artists from Europe and the Mediterranean (BJCEM) at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Rome (MACRO). On the XV Biennial theme ''Symbiosis?'' he responded with two poems ("In A Cluster of Golden Crickets, 2010" and "And?, 2011"), and a drawing ("Steppenwolf, 2011"). For his work, Nermin Ahmić received impressive critics which categorized his work as one of the best seen at the recognized International Festival. He represented this work on the Festival Sarajevo Winter 2012, after which he is named as the most talented and serious young poet of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Ahmić explains: "The theme symbiosis pervades, as dense embroidery, different layers of the pieces. Symbiosis is present in a first thematic concentric layer. It also appears in the unification and fusing of poetry and painting through a synaesthetic impression of phonemes and sounds as colors. Moreover, it is present in the architectonic of the poetry through the eclectic combination of different technical and stylistic elements such as Rimbaud's synaesthesis, Lorca's assonance and alliteration, echoes of the French symbolists and surrealists, Dante triplet and classical metrics." In a cluster of golden crickets in a cluster of golden crickets in the air strewn with sand hidden behind quivering faces on the purple glade of dream above reef and cliffs beneath the foam of sea waves the eye suspects the darkness of green ... Tags :Painting, Poetry, Author, Drawing, Reading, Poem, Words, Artist, Writing, Symbiosis, BJCEM, XV, Biennial, of, Young, Artists, from, Europe, and, the, Mediterranean, B&H, In, Cluster, Golden, Crickets, Writer, Steppenwolf, And?, MACRO, Nermin, Ahmić, Library, Biennale, 2011, Sarajevo, Winter, 2012, Festival, Sarajevska, Zima, Bijenale, mladih, umjetnika, Evrope, Poesia, Mediterana, Poezija, Simbioza, Slikarstvo, Rome, Italy, Simbiosi
| | "Bosnia Tune" by Joseph Brodsky (poetry reading) Duration : 120 Seconds "All that is necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing" - a quotation usually attributed to Edmund Burke who did say something very similar. Similar words are also used in the Russian film adaptation of "War and Peace" by Leo Tolstoy. There are several versions of this poem. About 30000 people went missing in Bosnia during the 1992-95 war - this poem was written in 1992. Brodsky was an American of the Russian-Jewish origin. He won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1987. Pictures of the cellist of Sarajevo from this site marylea.blogspot.com For some idea of the effect of civil war in Bosnia, watch this video www.youtube.com As you pour yourself a scotch Crush a roach or check your watch As your hands adjust your tie people die In the towns with funny names Hit by bullets, caught in flames By and large not knowing why people die In small places you don't know Yet big for having no Chance to scream or say good-bye people die People die as you elect New apostles of neglect, Self restraint, etc. whereby people die Too far off to practice love For thy neighbour, brother, Slav Where your cherubs dread to fly people die While the statues disagree Cain's version, history For its fuel tends to buy those who die As you watch the athletes score Check your latest statement or Sing your child a lullaby people die Time, whose sharp, bloodthirsty quill Parts the killed from those who kill Will pronounce the latter tribe As your tribe Tags :Bosnia, Tune, Joseph, Brodsky, Poetry, Poem
| | 21.3.2012. - Opening ceremony of Poetry marathon 2012, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina Duration : 47 Seconds Info: diogen.weebly.com Tags :MVI, 8837, xvid
| | MAK DIZDAR - Smrt, Poruka u mramorje prispjelom (K.Spavac16) Duration : 259 Seconds Mehmedalija "Mak" Dizdar (17 October 1917 - 16 July 1971) was one of the greatest Bosnian and Yugoslav poets of the second half of the 20th century. Mak Dizdar was born to a Bosniak family in StolacBosnia and Herzegovina in 1917. In 1936, Dizdar relocated to Sarajevo where he attended and graduated from the Gymnasium. Dizdar spent his World War II years as a supporter of the Communist Partisans. He moved frequently from place to place in order to avoid the NDH authorities' attention. After the war, Dizdar was a prominent figure in the cultural life of Bosnia and Herzegovina, working as the editor-in-chief of the daily Oslobođenje (Liberation). He served as head of a few state-sponsored publishing houses and eventually became a professional writer and the President of the Writers' Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina, a post he held until his death. Dizdar's two poetry collections and series of longer poems, Kameni spavač ("Stone sleeper") (1966--1971) and Modra rijeka (1971), fused seemingly disparate elements. He drew inspiration from pre-Ottoman Bosnian Christian culture, from the sayings of heterodox Islamic visionary mystics, and from the 15th century Bosnian vernacular linguistic idiom. His poetry referenced medieval Bosnian tombstones ("stećci" or "mramorovi" - marbles) and their gnomic inscriptions on the ephemerality of life. It articulated a distinctive vision of life and death, drawing on Christian and Muslim Gnostic sensibilities of life as a passage between "tomb ... Tags :volimmaka, Putovi, Slovo, Covjeku, Pravednik, Molitva, Labud, Zapis, Otkivanje, Prepoznavanje, Kolo, Ljeljeni, Sunce, Ruke, Mjesec, Vremenu, Dazd, Vode, Bola, Rijeci, Radimlja, Suocenje, Smrt, Poruka, Mramorje, Brotnjice, Svatovska, Rukom, Petorici, Prestolju, Sinu, Odlasku, Vitezu, Nespini, Kosara, Gorcin, Štitu, Casti, Nadi, Nevoljni, Vojno, Hiza, Milama, Blago, Razmirje, Onemuštio, Ocima, Smijehu, Uspavanka, Jabukov, Cvijet, Krajina, Krinovi, Zemlji, Proslov, Duboko, Razbojište, San, Slojevito, Slavoslavlje, Bolesti, Modra, Ceono, Potonje
| | Emily Dickinson Poetry for Women, 2011: The Congo, Darfur, Bosnia, Amherst? Duration : 431 Seconds ... "Bosnia-Herzegovina, Rwanda, Darfur, Somalia, Amherst?" "POEMS OF WITNESS AND WORTH" Emily Dickinson's poetry as included in "The Rape and Recovery of Emily Dickinson, In Her Words, Poems of Witness and Worth"? Absolutely implausible, improbable to say the least that Emily Dickinson, a nineteenth century New England poet, could be an advocate for women in the Congo in 2010! An Emily Dickinson poetry indeed does! "When a nearly universal experience of a woman being raped is the belief that she is going to die, ... " finds its ultimate expression in her poem "The Soul has Bandaged moments - ". "Warfare, global violence and domestic violence can barely be differentiated when the weapon as a phallus symbol becomes a phallus as weapon.". Living up to its title "THE RAPE AND RECOVERY OF EMILY DICKINSON, IN HER WORDS, POEMS OF WITNESS AND WORTH" is a brave little book that reveals for the first time the identity of the poet's legendary "mystery lover" as the Hon. Edward Dickinson, the premier American poet's father. The narrative, a powerful story told in her poems makes clear the tyrannical Edward Dickinson's life time sexual violation of his daughter. In eighty-five poems of astonishing analysis, concise and astute, embodying rage as well as ecstasy, the truth is preserved and the poet's gorgeous sanity immortalized, in POEMS OF WITNESS AND WORTH. Tags :emilydickinson, emilydickinsonpoetry, Amherst, mackinnon, marnecarmean, Congo, womenforwomen, Women, Rape, Incest, Poetry, Fistula
| | MAK DIZDAR - Modra rijeka (K.Spavac33) Duration : 285 Seconds Mehmedalija "Mak" Dizdar (17 October 1917 - 16 July 1971) was one of the greatest Bosnian and Yugoslav poets of the second half of the 20th century. Mak Dizdar was born to a Bosniak family in StolacBosnia and Herzegovina in 1917. In 1936, Dizdar relocated to Sarajevo where he attended and graduated from the Gymnasium. Dizdar spent his World War II years as a supporter of the Communist Partisans. He moved frequently from place to place in order to avoid the NDH authorities' attention. After the war, Dizdar was a prominent figure in the cultural life of Bosnia and Herzegovina, working as the editor-in-chief of the daily Oslobođenje (Liberation). He served as head of a few state-sponsored publishing houses and eventually became a professional writer and the President of the Writers' Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina, a post he held until his death. Dizdar's two poetry collections and series of longer poems, Kameni spavač ("Stone sleeper") (1966--1971) and Modra rijeka (1971), fused seemingly disparate elements. He drew inspiration from pre-Ottoman Bosnian Christian culture, from the sayings of heterodox Islamic visionary mystics, and from the 15th century Bosnian vernacular linguistic idiom. His poetry referenced medieval Bosnian tombstones ("stećci" or "mramorovi" - marbles) and their gnomic inscriptions on the ephemerality of life. It articulated a distinctive vision of life and death, drawing on Christian and Muslim Gnostic sensibilities of life as a passage between "tomb ... Tags :volimmaka, Putovi, Slovo, Covjeku, Pravednik, Molitva, Labud, Zapis, Otkivanje, Prepoznavanje, Kolo, Ljeljeni, Sunce, Ruke, Mjesec, Vremenu, Dazd, Vode, Bola, Rijeci, Radimlja, Suocenje, Smrt, Poruka, Mramorje, Brotnjice, Svatovska, Rukom, Petorici, Prestolju, Sinu, Odlasku, Vitezu, Nespini, Kosara, Gorcin, Štitu, Casti, Nadi, Nevoljni, Vojno, Hiza, Milama, Blago, Razmirje, Onemuštio, Ocima, Smijehu, Uspavanka, Jabukov, Cvijet, Krajina, Krinovi, Zemlji, Proslov, Duboko, Razbojište, San, Slojevito, Slavoslavlje, Bolesti, Modra, Ceono, Potonje
| | Lapa Brana Singer Interview Mostar Bosnia & Herzegovina Yugoslavia Music Duration : 165 Seconds Brana Interview - www.BAZHE.com Video Lapa Brana Interview Mostar Yugoslavia BKBAZHE is a writer, poet, and artist. He is the author of DAMAGES (creative nonfiction) —Winner in the Writers Digest Awards and IDENTITIES (poetry). He is published and exhibited in Europe and America. More info at: BK Bazhe Website: www.bazhe.com Amazon Books & Art by BK Bazhe astore.amazon.com YouTube Videos by BK Bazhe: www.youtube.com Google Blog by BK Bazhe: bazhe.blogspot.com Tags :Lapa, Brana, Interview, Mostar, Yugoslavia, Biggest, Yugoslav, fan, turbo, folk, alternative, country, indie, pop, rock, soul, world, music, belgrade, serbia, bosnia, macedonia, slovenia, croatia, montenegro, kosovo, vojvodina, dalmacia, show, tv, stage, performing, yugoslavian, balkan, narodna, uzivo, zabava, zvezda, dance, spot, singing, film, disco, pesma, clip, scene, bazhe, author, artist, poet, yu, bk, damages, identities, club, shows, program, performance, concert, movie, muslim, christian, jewish, media, report, euro, usa, slavic, star, idol
| | TIDF/Muhammad ,terror and poets-The killing of Uqba & Al-Nadr Duration : 660 Seconds The killing of Uqba bin Abu Muayt & Al-Nadr bin al-Harith. It seems that this missionary doesnt read his own holy book, if he does he wouldnt accuse our beloved prophet Muhammad peace and blessing be upon him of being a terrorist since the God of the bible himself is the biggest terrorist. Moses and his army killed women and children, doing that Moses broke the 6th commandment thou shall not kill anyone. Maybe breaking the 6th commandment during war is fine , maybe in Christianity its fair to kill women and children, and thats what we have witnessed on all Christians wars , they target the women and children before men, and recently we have witnessed that in Bosnia and Herzegovina war , where Muslim women and children were slathered and the whole world watched and the same is happening everyday in Palestine , young children in schools are targeted by Jewish army. On the other hand I challenge anyone to bring a single verse where its states that Muslims are allowed to kill women and children , on the contrary , prophet Mohammad have forbid killing women , children , old people or even people priests or Rabbis We see it in your Bible, one of your greatest prophets killing women and children by God's permission, meaning Jesus allowed it! So hence Jesus was responsible for killing women and children, and so was Moses so according to the Christians own argument, Moses cannot be a prophet since he killed. Note Moses and his army did this to many cities, verse 37 says there was ... Tags :GUIDE, ISLAM, QURAN, MUHAMMAD, KORAN, JIHAD, TERROR, TERRORISM, WAR, NAME, ALLAH, MUSLIM, ISRAEL, ARAB, BIBLE, NEW, TESTAMENT, ahmadsquran5, قتل, عقبة, والنضر, prophet, qurish, jews, sam, shamoun, david, wood, answering
| | MAK DIZDAR - Zapis o štitu, o casti, o nadi, Nevoljni vojno (K.Spavac22) Duration : 315 Seconds Mehmedalija "Mak" Dizdar (17 October 1917 - 16 July 1971) was one of the greatest Bosnian and Yugoslav poets of the second half of the 20th century. Mak Dizdar was born to a Bosniak family in StolacBosnia and Herzegovina in 1917. In 1936, Dizdar relocated to Sarajevo where he attended and graduated from the Gymnasium. Dizdar spent his World War II years as a supporter of the Communist Partisans. He moved frequently from place to place in order to avoid the NDH authorities' attention. After the war, Dizdar was a prominent figure in the cultural life of Bosnia and Herzegovina, working as the editor-in-chief of the daily Oslobođenje (Liberation). He served as head of a few state-sponsored publishing houses and eventually became a professional writer and the President of the Writers' Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina, a post he held until his death. Dizdar's two poetry collections and series of longer poems, Kameni spavač ("Stone sleeper") (1966--1971) and Modra rijeka (1971), fused seemingly disparate elements. He drew inspiration from pre-Ottoman Bosnian Christian culture, from the sayings of heterodox Islamic visionary mystics, and from the 15th century Bosnian vernacular linguistic idiom. His poetry referenced medieval Bosnian tombstones ("stećci" or "mramorovi" - marbles) and their gnomic inscriptions on the ephemerality of life. It articulated a distinctive vision of life and death, drawing on Christian and Muslim Gnostic sensibilities of life as a passage between "tomb ... Tags :volimmaka, Putovi, Slovo, Covjeku, Pravednik, Molitva, Labud, Zapis, Otkivanje, Prepoznavanje, Kolo, Ljeljeni, Sunce, Ruke, Mjesec, Vremenu, Dazd, Vode, Bola, Rijeci, Radimlja, Suocenje, Smrt, Poruka, Mramorje, Brotnjice, Svatovska, Rukom, Petorici, Prestolju, Sinu, Odlasku, Vitezu, Nespini, Kosara, Gorcin, Štitu, Casti, Nadi, Nevoljni, Vojno, Hiza, Milama, Blago, Razmirje, Onemuštio, Ocima, Smijehu, Uspavanka, Jabukov, Cvijet, Krajina, Krinovi, Zemlji, Proslov, Duboko, Razbojište, San, Slojevito, Slavoslavlje, Bolesti, Modra, Ceono, Potonje
| | Lepa Brena Epidemija Ljubavi Bosnia & Herzegovina Ski Resort Duration : 180 Seconds Brena Skiing - www.BAZHE.com BK BAZHE is a writer, poet, and artist. He is the author of DAMAGES (creative nonfiction) —Winner in the Writers Digest Awards and IDENTITIES (poetry). He is published and exhibited in Europe and America. More info at BK Bazhe Website: www.bazhe.com Amazon Books & Art by BK Bazhe astore.amazon.com YouTube Videos by BK Bazhe: www.youtube.com Google Blog by BK Bazhe: bazhe.blogspot.com Tags :Epidemija, Ljubavi, by, Lepa, Brena, Bosnia, Herzegovina, Ski, Resort, skiing, sports, winter, olimpics, games, bk, bazhe, sportist, medals
| | Duge Noge Lepa Brena Comedy Movie Bosnia Macedonia Slovenia Montenegro Croatia Serbia Duration : 282 Seconds Lepa Brena - About: www.BAZHE.com Video Duge Noge, Movie Film Comedy Clips BKBAZHE is a writer, poet, and artist. He is the author of DAMAGES (creative nonfiction) — Winner in the Writers Digest Awards and IDENTITIES (poetry). He is published and exhibited in Europe and America. More info at: www.BAZHE.com Amazon Books & Art by BKBazhe astore.amazon.com YouTube Videos by BK Bazhe: www.youtube.com Google Blog by BK Bazhe: bazhe.blogspot.com Tags :duge, noge, Film, Movie, Comedy, Clips, Lepa, Brena, Yugoslavia, folk, dance, parody, pranks, series, short, sketch, spoof, video, blog, bosnia, hercegovina, macedonia, serbia, croatia, slovenia, montenegro, balkan, songs, videos, bk, bazhe, damages, identities, book, story, poetry, art, poem, writing, painting, creating, books, poems, stories, sculptures, oil, paintings, mixed, multi, media, author, writer, artist, poet, gardener, global, reporter, world, traveler, international, explorer, director, videographer
| | KAMENI SPAVAC - SLOVO O COVJEKU - Mak Dizdar VANGELIS - (1492)-Monastery Of La Rabida (02) Duration : 154 Seconds Mehmedalija "Mak" Dizdar (17 October 1917 - 16 July 1971) was one of the greatest Bosnian and Yugoslav poets of the second half of the 20th century. Mak Dizdar was born to a Bosniak family in StolacBosnia and Herzegovina in 1917. In 1936, Dizdar relocated to Sarajevo where he attended and graduated from the Gymnasium. Dizdar spent his World War II years as a supporter of the Communist Partisans. He moved frequently from place to place in order to avoid the NDH authorities' attention. After the war, Dizdar was a prominent figure in the cultural life of Bosnia and Herzegovina, working as the editor-in-chief of the daily Oslobođenje (Liberation). He served as head of a few state-sponsored publishing houses and eventually became a professional writer and the President of the Writers' Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina, a post he held until his death. Dizdar's two poetry collections and series of longer poems, Kameni spavač ("Stone sleeper") (1966--1971) and Modra rijeka (1971), fused seemingly disparate elements. He drew inspiration from pre-Ottoman Bosnian Christian culture, from the sayings of heterodox Islamic visionary mystics, and from the 15th century Bosnian vernacular linguistic idiom. His poetry referenced medieval Bosnian tombstones ("stećci" or "mramorovi" - marbles) and their gnomic inscriptions on the ephemerality of life. It articulated a distinctive vision of life and death, drawing on Christian and Muslim Gnostic sensibilities of life as a passage between "tomb ... Tags :Putovi, Slovo, Covjeku, Pravednik, Molitva, Labud, Zapis, Otkivanje, Prepoznavanje, Kolo, Ljeljeni, Sunce, Ruke, Mjesec, Vremenu, Dažd, Vode, Bola, Rijeci, Radimlja, Suocenje, Smrt, Poruka, Mramorje, Brotnjice, Svatovska, Rukom, Petorici, Prestolju, Sinu, Odlasku, Vitezu, Nespini, Kosara, Gorcin, Štitu, Casti, Nadi, Nevoljni, Vojno, Hiža, Milama, Blago, Razmirje, Onemuštio, Ocima, Smijehu, Uspavanka, Jabukov, Cvijet, Krajina, Krinovi, Zemlji, Proslov, Duboko, Razbojište, San, Slojevito, Slavoslavlje, Bolesti, Modra, Ceono, Potonje
| | MAK DIZDAR - Zapis o Zemlji - (K.Spavac27) Duration : 310 Seconds Mehmedalija "Mak" Dizdar (17 October 1917 - 16 July 1971) was one of the greatest Bosnian and Yugoslav poets of the second half of the 20th century. Mak Dizdar was born to a Bosniak family in StolacBosnia and Herzegovina in 1917. In 1936, Dizdar relocated to Sarajevo where he attended and graduated from the Gymnasium. Dizdar spent his World War II years as a supporter of the Communist Partisans. He moved frequently from place to place in order to avoid the NDH authorities' attention. After the war, Dizdar was a prominent figure in the cultural life of Bosnia and Herzegovina, working as the editor-in-chief of the daily Oslobođenje (Liberation). He served as head of a few state-sponsored publishing houses and eventually became a professional writer and the President of the Writers' Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina, a post he held until his death. Dizdar's two poetry collections and series of longer poems, Kameni spavač ("Stone sleeper") (1966--1971) and Modra rijeka (1971), fused seemingly disparate elements. He drew inspiration from pre-Ottoman Bosnian Christian culture, from the sayings of heterodox Islamic visionary mystics, and from the 15th century Bosnian vernacular linguistic idiom. His poetry referenced medieval Bosnian tombstones ("stećci" or "mramorovi" - marbles) and their gnomic inscriptions on the ephemerality of life. It articulated a distinctive vision of life and death, drawing on Christian and Muslim Gnostic sensibilities of life as a passage between "tomb ... Tags :volimmaka, Putovi, Slovo, Covjeku, Pravednik, Molitva, Labud, Zapis, Otkivanje, Prepoznavanje, Kolo, Ljeljeni, Sunce, Ruke, Mjesec, Vremenu, Dazd, Vode, Bola, Rijeci, Radimlja, Suocenje, Smrt, Poruka, Mramorje, Brotnjice, Svatovska, Rukom, Petorici, Prestolju, Sinu, Odlasku, Vitezu, Nespini, Kosara, Gorcin, Štitu, Casti, Nadi, Nevoljni, Vojno, Hiza, Milama, Blago, Razmirje, Onemuštio, Ocima, Smijehu, Uspavanka, Jabukov, Cvijet, Krajina, Krinovi, Zemlji, Proslov, Duboko, Razbojište, San, Slojevito, Slavoslavlje, Bolesti, Modra, Ceono, Potonje
| | MAK DIZDAR - Zapis o vitezu, Zapis o Nespini, Kosara, Gorcin (K.Spavac21) Duration : 375 Seconds Mehmedalija "Mak" Dizdar (17 October 1917 - 16 July 1971) was one of the greatest Bosnian and Yugoslav poets of the second half of the 20th century. Mak Dizdar was born to a Bosniak family in StolacBosnia and Herzegovina in 1917. In 1936, Dizdar relocated to Sarajevo where he attended and graduated from the Gymnasium. Dizdar spent his World War II years as a supporter of the Communist Partisans. He moved frequently from place to place in order to avoid the NDH authorities' attention. After the war, Dizdar was a prominent figure in the cultural life of Bosnia and Herzegovina, working as the editor-in-chief of the daily Oslobođenje (Liberation). He served as head of a few state-sponsored publishing houses and eventually became a professional writer and the President of the Writers' Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina, a post he held until his death. Dizdar's two poetry collections and series of longer poems, Kameni spavač ("Stone sleeper") (1966--1971) and Modra rijeka (1971), fused seemingly disparate elements. He drew inspiration from pre-Ottoman Bosnian Christian culture, from the sayings of heterodox Islamic visionary mystics, and from the 15th century Bosnian vernacular linguistic idiom. His poetry referenced medieval Bosnian tombstones ("stećci" or "mramorovi" - marbles) and their gnomic inscriptions on the ephemerality of life. It articulated a distinctive vision of life and death, drawing on Christian and Muslim Gnostic sensibilities of life as a passage between "tomb ... Tags :volimmaka, Putovi, Slovo, Covjeku, Pravednik, Molitva, Labud, Zapis, Otkivanje, Prepoznavanje, Kolo, Ljeljeni, Sunce, Ruke, Mjesec, Vremenu, Dazd, Vode, Bola, Rijeci, Radimlja, Suocenje, Smrt, Poruka, Mramorje, Brotnjice, Svatovska, Rukom, Petorici, Prestolju, Sinu, Odlasku, Vitezu, Nespini, Kosara, Gorcin, Štitu, Casti, Nadi, Nevoljni, Vojno, Hiza, Milama, Blago, Razmirje, Onemuštio, Ocima, Smijehu, Uspavanka, Jabukov, Cvijet, Krajina, Krinovi, Zemlji, Proslov, Duboko, Razbojište, San, Slojevito, Slavoslavlje, Bolesti, Modra, Ceono, Potonje
| | Abdulah Sidran - Bašeskija Duration : 245 Seconds
Tags :sidran, abdulah, bosna, ba, poeme, spirituality, sevdah, sarajevo, Bosnia And Herzegovina, Serbian, Croatia, Hrvatska, Poetry, Poem, Words, Spoken, saks61
| | MAK DIZDAR - Slavoslavlje, Dvadeset i drugo, Slovo o bolesti (K.Spavac32) Duration : 322 Seconds Mehmedalija "Mak" Dizdar (17 October 1917 - 16 July 1971) was one of the greatest Bosnian and Yugoslav poets of the second half of the 20th century. Mak Dizdar was born to a Bosniak family in StolacBosnia and Herzegovina in 1917. In 1936, Dizdar relocated to Sarajevo where he attended and graduated from the Gymnasium. Dizdar spent his World War II years as a supporter of the Communist Partisans. He moved frequently from place to place in order to avoid the NDH authorities' attention. After the war, Dizdar was a prominent figure in the cultural life of Bosnia and Herzegovina, working as the editor-in-chief of the daily Oslobođenje (Liberation). He served as head of a few state-sponsored publishing houses and eventually became a professional writer and the President of the Writers' Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina, a post he held until his death. Dizdar's two poetry collections and series of longer poems, Kameni spavač ("Stone sleeper") (1966--1971) and Modra rijeka (1971), fused seemingly disparate elements. He drew inspiration from pre-Ottoman Bosnian Christian culture, from the sayings of heterodox Islamic visionary mystics, and from the 15th century Bosnian vernacular linguistic idiom. His poetry referenced medieval Bosnian tombstones ("stećci" or "mramorovi" - marbles) and their gnomic inscriptions on the ephemerality of life. It articulated a distinctive vision of life and death, drawing on Christian and Muslim Gnostic sensibilities of life as a passage between "tomb ... Tags :volimmaka, Putovi, Slovo, Covjeku, Pravednik, Molitva, Labud, Zapis, Otkivanje, Prepoznavanje, Kolo, Ljeljeni, Sunce, Ruke, Mjesec, Vremenu, Dazd, Vode, Bola, Rijeci, Radimlja, Suocenje, Smrt, Poruka, Mramorje, Brotnjice, Svatovska, Rukom, Petorici, Prestolju, Sinu, Odlasku, Vitezu, Nespini, Kosara, Gorcin, Štitu, Casti, Nadi, Nevoljni, Vojno, Hiza, Milama, Blago, Razmirje, Onemuštio, Ocima, Smijehu, Uspavanka, Jabukov, Cvijet, Krajina, Krinovi, Zemlji, Proslov, Duboko, Razbojište, San, Slojevito, Slavoslavlje, Bolesti, Modra, Ceono, Potonje
| | KAMENI SPAVAC - ZAPIS O ZEMLJI - Mak Dizdar ,VANGELIS-(El Greco)-Movements X,(27) Duration : 410 Seconds Mehmedalija "Mak" Dizdar (17 October 1917 - 16 July 1971) was one of the greatest Bosnian and Yugoslav poets of the second half of the 20th century. Mak Dizdar was born to a Bosniak family in StolacBosnia and Herzegovina in 1917. In 1936, Dizdar relocated to Sarajevo where he attended and graduated from the Gymnasium. Dizdar spent his World War II years as a supporter of the Communist Partisans. He moved frequently from place to place in order to avoid the NDH authorities' attention. After the war, Dizdar was a prominent figure in the cultural life of Bosnia and Herzegovina, working as the editor-in-chief of the daily Oslobođenje (Liberation). He served as head of a few state-sponsored publishing houses and eventually became a professional writer and the President of the Writers' Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina, a post he held until his death. Dizdar's two poetry collections and series of longer poems, Kameni spavač ("Stone sleeper") (1966--1971) and Modra rijeka (1971), fused seemingly disparate elements. He drew inspiration from pre-Ottoman Bosnian Christian culture, from the sayings of heterodox Islamic visionary mystics, and from the 15th century Bosnian vernacular linguistic idiom. His poetry referenced medieval Bosnian tombstones ("stećci" or "mramorovi" - marbles) and their gnomic inscriptions on the ephemerality of life. It articulated a distinctive vision of life and death, drawing on Christian and Muslim Gnostic sensibilities of life as a passage between "tomb ... Tags :volimmaka, Putovi, Slovo, Covjeku, Pravednik, Molitva, Labud, Zapis, Otkivanje, Prepoznavanje, Kolo, Ljeljeni, Sunce, Ruke, Mjesec, Vremenu, Dazd, Vode, Bola, Rijeci, Radimlja, Suocenje, Smrt, Poruka, Mramorje, Brotnjice, Svatovska, Rukom, Petorici, Prestolju, Sinu, Odlasku, Vitezu, Nespini, Kosara, Gorcin, Štitu, Casti, Nadi, Nevoljni, Vojno, Hiza, Milama, Blago, Razmirje, Onemuštio, Ocima, Smijehu, Uspavanka, Jabukov, Cvijet, Krajina, Krinovi, Zemlji, Proslov, Duboko, Razbojište, San, Slojevito, Slavoslavlje, Bolesti, Modra, Ceono, Potonje
| | KAMENI SPAVAC - SLOVO O SLOVU PROSLOV,PRVO,2,3,4,5 Mak Dizdar VANGELIS 1492 Eternity(28) Duration : 226 Seconds Mehmedalija "Mak" Dizdar (17 October 1917 - 16 July 1971) was one of the greatest Bosnian and Yugoslav poets of the second half of the 20th century. Mak Dizdar was born to a Bosniak family in StolacBosnia and Herzegovina in 1917. In 1936, Dizdar relocated to Sarajevo where he attended and graduated from the Gymnasium. Dizdar spent his World War II years as a supporter of the Communist Partisans. He moved frequently from place to place in order to avoid the NDH authorities' attention. After the war, Dizdar was a prominent figure in the cultural life of Bosnia and Herzegovina, working as the editor-in-chief of the daily Oslobođenje (Liberation). He served as head of a few state-sponsored publishing houses and eventually became a professional writer and the President of the Writers' Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina, a post he held until his death. Dizdar's two poetry collections and series of longer poems, Kameni spavač ("Stone sleeper") (1966--1971) and Modra rijeka (1971), fused seemingly disparate elements. He drew inspiration from pre-Ottoman Bosnian Christian culture, from the sayings of heterodox Islamic visionary mystics, and from the 15th century Bosnian vernacular linguistic idiom. His poetry referenced medieval Bosnian tombstones ("stećci" or "mramorovi" - marbles) and their gnomic inscriptions on the ephemerality of life. It articulated a distinctive vision of life and death, drawing on Christian and Muslim Gnostic sensibilities of life as a passage between "tomb ... Tags :volimmaka, Putovi, Slovo, Covjeku, Pravednik, Molitva, Labud, Zapis, Otkivanje, Prepoznavanje, Kolo, Ljeljeni, Sunce, Ruke, Mjesec, Vremenu, Dazd, Vode, Bola, Rijeci, Radimlja, Suocenje, Smrt, Poruka, Mramorje, Brotnjice, Svatovska, Rukom, Petorici, Prestolju, Sinu, Odlasku, Vitezu, Nespini, Kosara, Gorcin, Štitu, Casti, Nadi, Nevoljni, Vojno, Hiza, Milama, Blago, Razmirje, Onemuštio, Ocima, Smijehu, Uspavanka, Jabukov, Cvijet, Krajina, Krinovi, Zemlji, Proslov, Duboko, Razbojište, San, Slojevito, Slavoslavlje, Bolesti, Modra, Ceono, Potonje
| | Zam Zabava Miliona Lepa Brena Neda Zlata Jami Viki Sasha Buba Folk Duration : 143 Seconds BK Bazhe = www.amazon.com Zam Lepa Brena - www.BAZHE.com BK BAZHE is a writer, poet, and artist. He is the author of DAMAGES (creative nonfiction) —Winner in the Writers Digest Awards and IDENTITIES (poetry). He is published and exhibited in Europe and America. eBooks & Art by BK Bazhe www.amazon.com More info at: BK Bazhe Website: www.bazhe.com Amazon Books & Art by BK Bazhe astore.amazon.com YouTube Videos by BK Bazhe: www.youtube.com Google Blog by BK Bazhe: bazhe.blogspot.com Tags :Lepa, Brena, Zam, Zabava, Miliona, Neda, Jami, Zlata, Viki, Sasha, Buba, Folk, dance, music, bk, bazhe, yugosphere, yugonostalgia, balkan, serbia, croatia, bosnia, herzegovina, slovenia, montenegro, macedonia, kosovo, vojvodina, dalmatia, yugoslavia, jугославија, kraina, republica, srpska, hrvatska, srbija, crna, gora, slovenija, bosna, hercegovina, makedonia, beograd, zagreb, sarajevo, skopje, lubljana, podgorica, pristina, balkanize, mess, breakup, crisis, problems, poverty, conflict, history, ethnic, war, sad, bad, problem, hate, divide, break
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