Thursday, 17 May 2012



Zoran Đinđić Exhibition Opens in Serbia



BalkanTravellers.com   

13 March 2009 | An exhibition, dedicated to Serbia’s first democratically elected Prime Minister Zoran Đinđić, on occasion of the sixth anniversary of his assassination, opened at the Serbian Archive in Belgrade yesterday.

The exhibition, called “With an Idea and a Life - the Legacy of Zoran Djindjic,” was opened by Serbia’s current Prime Minister Mirko Cvetković, who pointed out that Djindjic paved country’s road to Europe.

Part of the objects in the exhibition, called “With an Idea and a Life - the Legacy of Zoran Djindjic,” include a red tie, a mobile phone, a bag, wallet and a watch that will forever show the time of his assassination on March 12, 2003.

Other objects included in the exhibition were his business cars, his personal ID card, passport, a UNESCO and a German Bambi award and a typewriter.

These objects are part of the personal belongings of Serbia’s first democratically elected Prime Minister, which - along with noted and his library, were donated by his widow, Ruzica Đinđić, to the Serbian Archives, Historical Museum and National Library.

Read more about Serbia on BalkanTravellers.com
Use BalkanTravellers.com's
tips to organize your trip to Serbia
 

Epicure


Bulgaria
Greece with Best Rose and Best Sweet Wine at Concours Mondial

16 May 2012 | Several Balkan countries scored excellent results at this year’s Concours Mondial de Bruxelles, which announced yesterday its awards. This success is remarkable, as it comes in severe competition amongst 8,397 wine samples from all around the world. Full Story



Curiosity Chest


Balkans
Every March, Red and White Strings Welcome Spring in Bulgaria and Romania

I remember walking along Canal Street in New York’s Chinatown on March 2 a few years ago, when I saw a man sporting a small ornament made of red and white thread pinned to his coat lapel. He must be Bulgarian, I thought to myself with a sudden rush of homesickness, but now realize that he may have been Romanian as well.
Full Story






Music


Bulgaria
The Choir that Turned England a Bit Bulgarian

One of the few constant sources of pride for Bulgarians is traditional folk music, and especially singing. But not the Oriental-beats-modified kind that often booms in nightclubs, giving their clientele the urge to jump atop tables and chairs and sway their hips around; rather the kind that, when heard, mesmerises you and gives you goose bumps, the kind that is haunting with its out-of-this universe quality, mostly figuratively but sometimes literally as well.
Full Story