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| zeljko blace on Fri, 8 Apr 2005 12:43:36 +0200 (CEST) |
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| [nettime-see] Je li tko gledao prvo emitiranje videolleters-a? (pressrelease:Videoletters to reconcile war-torn Balkans) |
Prije par dana saznao sam za projekt http://www.videoletters.net/
i nazalost prvo emitiranje u Hrvatskoj je odgodjeno za tjedan dana.
Je li tko gledao prvo emitiranje videolleters-a u drugim drzavama u
regiji? Bas me zanimaju prve impresije...
----------------------------------------------------------------------
pressrelease: Videoletters to reconcile war-torn Balkans
Videoletters to reconcile war-torn Balkans
World premiere on April 2 of a unique documentary series allowing former
friends and neighbours separated by the wars in the Balkans to talk with
each other again through videoletters. The series will be broadcasted
simultaneously from April to June by seven public TV channels from all
the countries of the Former Yugoslavia, a unique cooperation at this
level since the end of the 1990s wars.
Busses equipped with internet connections and webcams will travel
through the Former Yugoslavia to allow people to make a videoletter to
their former friends. A special interactive internet site to be launched
on April 2 will give the opportunity to load your own videoletter and
search for lost friends.
A unique documentary series allowing former friends, colleagues and
neighbours separated by the wars in the Former Yugoslavia to talk with
each other again through harrowing videoletters will have its first
broadcast on April 7 2005. The first episode of the series, directed by
Dutch filmmakers Katarina Rejger and Eric van den Broek, will then be
shown simultaneously on TV channels from all the countries of the Former
Yugoslavia: Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia and Montenegro,
Macedonia, Slovenia as well as by Kosovo. It is the first time since the
bloody wars in the Balkans that these channels agreed to such an
extensive cooperation. In each of the 20 episodes of the series, friends
who have not spoken to each other since or because of the wars, exchange
emotional videoletters, seeking to renew contact and restore trust. Some
express sadness or anger, some confess their guilt, some put an end to
rumours, fears and suspicions. After this exchange most of the people
met face to face again, often for the first time since the war.
Rejger and Van den Broek, who received worldwide praise for an earlier
documentary about the Serb student movement Otpor, conceived this five
year project as a tool to reconnect people. “During our earlier filming
in the region, we noticed that there was an invisible barrier between
the people from the different communities. One-time friends hated each
other, were angry, felt betrayed, abandoned and very afraid. Instead of
telling their friends how they felt, they told us,” Rejger and Van den
Broek recall. “We wanted to force them to break the silence, to go
beyond the rumours and the lies and to address their one-time friends
directly so they would not live on hating each other”. The series, to be
broadcasted for the first time in the Former Yugoslavia, is the heart of
a larger project devoloped by Rejger & van den Broek as a tool for
reconciliation and conflict-resolution in post war countries all over
the world.
Two examples of stories featured in Videoletters
Emil and Sasa, two young Bosnians who were best friends before the war,
meet again after years of silence. Emir, a Bosnian Muslim had to flee
during the conflict whilst Sasa, a Serb, had to join the Bosnian Serb
army. Torn apart by rumours that Sasa had committed war crimes, the two
never spoke with each other until they started to exchange videoletters
that put an end to mistrust.
Vlada lives in Belgrade and Ivica in Zagreb. They used to spend the
summers together. Their parents were friends but since the war, they do
not have any contact anymore. Videoletters brings them back together and
shows that their friendship is still intact despite the fights between
Serbs and Croats in the 1990s.
A comprehensive reconciliation project
Next to the simultaneous broadcast in all countries from the Former
Yugoslavia, special busses equipped with internet connections and
webcams will crisscross the region to allow people to make their own
videoletters for a lost friend. Permanent internet counters will be set
up for the same purpose. The access will be free of charge.
A special internet site will also be launched enabling people to post
their videoletters and search for their lost friend.
A special helpline for people experiencing strong emotions or traumas
after seeing the videoletters will be accessible after every broadcast.
Talk shows and debates about truth and reconciliation will be
broadcasted on radio and tv following each episode.
Note for the media: A gala premiere will take place on April 2 in Cafe
Sur Dayton, close to Sarajevo. Katarina Rejger and Eric van den Broek as
well as the main characters of the series will attend. Representatives
from the RTV channels to Croatia, Slovenia, Serbia and Montenegro,
Kosovo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia and from several goverments
and international organisations (The Dutch ministry of Foreign Affairs,
The British Foreign and Commonwealth Office, The British Embassy
Belgrade, Press Now, Open Society Institute, Care Netherlands, Swiss
Embassy Bosnia and Herzegovina, GTZ, XS4ALL) will also be present.
A special compilation of the series will be shown and the internet site
will be officially launched. The evening will also include music and
dancing. Media representatives are welcome to attend this Premiere. If
you wish to attend please register before 22 March 2005 by sending an
e-mail to rec {AT} videoletters.net (mention media, name, and contact
details) or take contact with press officers in the following countries:
For more information on the Videoletters project or interview requests
Videoletters Head Office Amsterdam
Jurrien Rood tel.: +31.6.1728.8539 e-mail: j.rood {AT} videoletters.net
In Skopje: +389/23177125
In Ljubljana / Zagreb: +385/98704497
In Sarajevo: +387/61733007
In Pogdorica: +38569/016047
In Pristina: tel.: +377/44145407
In Belgrade: +381/113340464
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