Serbia Quotes
Quotes tagged as "serbia"
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“When these people, my mother and people like her, came out here it was like leaving a reality; leaving a planet; turning your back. I guess we don’t appreciate it was such a big deal that they may never come back, never see their family again. – John Savić”
― Suffering, Redemption and Triumph: The first wave of post-war Australian immigrants 1945-66
― Suffering, Redemption and Triumph: The first wave of post-war Australian immigrants 1945-66
“Europeans the Poles or Balts coming in here … we brought here knowledge with us and our culture with us, but we assimilated … assimilated is not one way, it’s a two-way street. - Fred Ritzkowski, German”
― Suffering, Redemption and Triumph: The first wave of post-war Australian immigrants 1945-66
― Suffering, Redemption and Triumph: The first wave of post-war Australian immigrants 1945-66
“I like it! I liked it when man to man no matter whether he is boss or he is ordinary worker, but in meantime they go to the pub, they drink beer together and call by first name. I like that. After few years, I think that Queensland is the best place in Australia … I am Queenslander! – Alex Sucharsky, Ukranian”
― Suffering, Redemption and Triumph: The first wave of post-war Australian immigrants 1945-66
― Suffering, Redemption and Triumph: The first wave of post-war Australian immigrants 1945-66

“Playing pool with Korean officials one evening in the Koryo Hotel, which has become the nightspot for foreign businessmen and an increasing number of diplomats (to say nothing of the burgeoning number of spies and journalists traveling under second identities), I was handed that day's edition of the Pyongyang Times. At first glance it seemed too laughable for words: endless pictures of the 'Dear Leader'—Little Boy's exalted title—as he was garlanded by adoring schoolchildren and heroic tractor drivers. Yet even in these turgid pages there were nuggets: a telegram congratulating the winner of the Serbian elections; a candid reference to the 'hardship period' through which the country had been passing; an assurance that a certain nuclear power plant would be closed as part of a deal with Washington. Tiny cracks, to be sure. But a complete and rigid edifice cannot afford fissures, however small. There appear to be no hookers, as yet, in Pyongyang. Yet if casinos come, can working girls be far behind? One perhaps ought not to wish for hookers, but there are circumstances when corruption is the only hope.”
― Love, Poverty, and War: Journeys and Essays
― Love, Poverty, and War: Journeys and Essays

“Europe, he says, is frightened that an influx of foreigners will erode European values. But what values will there to be uphold if we abandon our duty to protect those less fortunate than ourselves? Wat incentive do we give to refugees to maintain the fabric of our society if that fabric is so ragged in the first place? "If Europe is not able to show a better way of life to them, then they will think that their morality is better than ours."
"They need to face some higher standards of morality, " he says. "If not, they will set their own."
[Quoting Serbian priest Tibor Varga]”
― The New Odyssey: The Story of Europe's Refugee Crisis
"They need to face some higher standards of morality, " he says. "If not, they will set their own."
[Quoting Serbian priest Tibor Varga]”
― The New Odyssey: The Story of Europe's Refugee Crisis
“For as long as anyone can remember, the history of Kosovo has been a battlefield pitting Serbs against Albanians. Each believes different things because each has been taught different things, and as they reach further back into time it becomes easier to argue whatever they want in order to find support for their view of the present.”
― Kosovo: What Everyone Needs to Know
― Kosovo: What Everyone Needs to Know

“....in Bosnia, mass rape was a policy of the war, systematically carried out, implicating neighbors, paramilitaries, soldiers.”
― The Unquiet Dead
― The Unquiet Dead
“Moji suborci i ja nismo pravili razliku između ljudi koje smo branili, a ja nisam ni znao tko je Srbin, a tko Hrvat. Nikome od nas to nije bilo važno niti smo o tome pričali. Dok se srpski civili prijavljuju vojsci da su Srbi, usput nas prokazuju, a najgore od svega je to što optužuju bez razloga izmišljajući nebulozne zločine.”
― Preživio sam Vukovar i Ovčaru
― Preživio sam Vukovar i Ovčaru

“Until the war had broken out, there had been some sort of order in the strange and complex mixture of the four disparate peoples crowded into the little valley, all calling themselves Bosnians. They celebrated separate holidays, ate different foods, feasted and fasted on different days, yet all depended on one another, but never admitted it. They had lived amidst an ever present, if dormant, mixture of hatred and love for each other. The Muslims with their Ramadan, the Jews with Passover, the Catholics with Christmas, and the Serbs with their Slavas- each of them tacitly tolerated and recognised the customs and existence of others. With suckling pigs turned on spits in Serbian houses, giving off a mouth-watering fragrance, kosher food would be eaten in Jewish homes, and in Muslim households, meals were cooked in suet. There was a certain harmony in all this, even if there was no actual mixing. The aromas had long ago adjusted to one another and had given the city its distinctive flavor. Everything was "as God willed it." But it was necessary to remove only one piece of that carefully balanced mosaic and that whole picture would fall into its component parts which would then, rejoined in an unthinkable manner, create hostile and incompatible entities. Like a hammer, the war had knocked out one piece, disrupting the equilibrium.”
― Miris kiše na Balkanu
― Miris kiše na Balkanu

“I think of myself as a political idiot. Idiot, in ancient Greece, denoted a common person without access to knowledge and information--all women, by definition, and most men. I am unable to make judgments. I see no options I can identify with. Is that normal?”
― The Diary of a Political Idiot: Normal Life in Belgrade
― The Diary of a Political Idiot: Normal Life in Belgrade

“Do you know what we call windows in Belgrade?' she asked. All our windows are broken and crisscrossed with scotch tape. 'Windows 99.”
―
―
“Apart from the Croat-Muslim unifying narrative, the Ustashe also used overtly anti-Serb propaganda. They banned the Cyrillic alphabet, which is the Serb national alphabet, on April 25, 1941, and on May 3, 1941 passed legislation that viewed religious conversion for the Orthodox as the only way to grant them equal rights before the law.”
― Alliance Formation in Civil Wars
― Alliance Formation in Civil Wars
“Praktično, nema srpskog političara koji ne misli da su Srbi stoka. Teorijski, nema Srbina koji ne misli da su ovdašnji političari prva generacija svojih porodica kojima je otpao rep. Svi su u pravu.”
―
―

“We had watched the Sacramento Kings, my favorite NBA team, playing the Indiana Pacers. The Pacers had won but it was still fun, especially since we had tickets for the third row. I couldn't believe my eyes when I saw Vlade Divac and Predrag Stojakovic, two Serbs playing in the Kings, waving at me and saying hello. They recognized the jersey of Divac's former team from Belgrade that I had been wearing.”
― Not My Turn to Die: Memoirs of a Broken Childhood in Bosnia
― Not My Turn to Die: Memoirs of a Broken Childhood in Bosnia

“Vremenom
Naučili smo
I skrštenih ruku
Pogledima da
Grlimo se na sav glas
Čak i kada ćutimo.”
― Pitomi vulkan
Naučili smo
I skrštenih ruku
Pogledima da
Grlimo se na sav glas
Čak i kada ćutimo.”
― Pitomi vulkan

“Pune su mi oči smeha
Dok čekam,
Usana svežih
Meni da se vratiš
I dodirom
Sve moje smrti
U sekundi ozdraviš.”
― Pitomi vulkan
Dok čekam,
Usana svežih
Meni da se vratiš
I dodirom
Sve moje smrti
U sekundi ozdraviš.”
― Pitomi vulkan
“Нек над Србијом божур цвета
на грани ветра на руци лета
нек се злато проспе низ вече
нек четврта Морава потече”
― Словенска роса
на грани ветра на руци лета
нек се злато проспе низ вече
нек четврта Морава потече”
― Словенска роса

“Until the war had broken out, there had been some sort of order in the strange and complex mixture of the four disparate peoples crowded into the little valley, all calling themselves Bosnians. They celebrated separate holidays, ate different foods, feasted and fasted on different days, yet all depended on one another, but never admitted it. They had lived amidst an ever present, if dormant, mixture of hatred and love for each other. The Muslims with their Ramadan, the Jews with Passover, the Catholics with Christmas, and the Serbs with their Slavas- each of them tacitly tolerated and recognised the customs and existence of others. With suckling pigs turned on spits in Serbian houses, giving off a mouth-watering fragrance, kosher food would be eaten in Jewish homes, and in Muslim households, meals were cooked in suet. There was a certain harmony in all this, even if there was no actual mixing. The aromas had long ago adjusted to one another and had given the city its distinctive flavor. Everything was "as God willed it." But it was necessary to remove only one piece of that carefully balanced mosaic and that whole picture would fall into its component parts which would then, rejoined in an unthinkable manner, create hostile and incompatible entities. Like a hammer, the war had knocked out one piece, disrupting the equilibrium. Wartime turned differences into outright hatred and instead of blaming the foreign enemy for all their hardships, people blamed their nearest neighbours, which, in turn, represented an invaluable favour to the true enemy of all.”
― Miris kiše na Balkanu
― Miris kiše na Balkanu

“Једва чекам да научим српски, ваљда ће ми многе ствари бити јасније. Међутим, неки искуснији пријатељи ми кажу да сам оптимиста и да са Србима још нико није нашао заједнички језик.”
― Pisma iz Srbije
― Pisma iz Srbije
“You perhaps know that many people in Styria, in Moravia, in Serbia, in Poland, and even in Russia, believe in vampires.
[Chapter 6 A Bath Of Blood]”
―
[Chapter 6 A Bath Of Blood]”
―
“Naši odani i plemeniti saveznici, Francuzi i Englezi, hitaju nam u pomoć, i već su i sami glasovi o njihovom dolasku udvostručili snagu i hrabrost naših vojnika pa ipak, oni možda neće stići na vreme da nam obezbede pobedu. Kao na Kosovu polju, sada se borimo u suštini sami.”
― Heroine Velikog rata
― Heroine Velikog rata

“Мислим да је лудо што сами палимо све своје за собом; непријатељ ипак не може доспети да све поруши и попали.
Није он мраз па да исцеди земљу као што мраз исцеди рибу. Напротив, уколико више оставимо за собом и њега дуже задржи разарање, утолико више има наде да ће бар нешто остати од нас и за нама.Зато не треба палити и рушити. Напротив, треба градити, чак и сад. А сви смо ми зидари. Необичан мрамор дат нам је за зидање: сати и дани и године, а сан и вино су леп.
Тешко ономе коме дукате у кеси поједу бакрењаци и коме ноћ поједе дане!”
― Unutrasnja strana vetra, ili, Roman o Heri i Leandru
Није он мраз па да исцеди земљу као што мраз исцеди рибу. Напротив, уколико више оставимо за собом и њега дуже задржи разарање, утолико више има наде да ће бар нешто остати од нас и за нама.Зато не треба палити и рушити. Напротив, треба градити, чак и сад. А сви смо ми зидари. Необичан мрамор дат нам је за зидање: сати и дани и године, а сан и вино су леп.
Тешко ономе коме дукате у кеси поједу бакрењаци и коме ноћ поједе дане!”
― Unutrasnja strana vetra, ili, Roman o Heri i Leandru

“Има људи, који су у свом животу видели свега неколико залазака сунца, а још мање има људи који су видели свитање и оргије сунчевог изласка.
Обожавају природу само деца и лудаци; само они говоре с биљкама по путу и с камењем у пољу. На од њих стоје још филозофи и песници, који се детињски уски супротној тачци поменутог пријатеља за такав свет била је крволочна онолико колико је његова љубав за природу била дивљачка.”
― Gradovi i himere
Обожавају природу само деца и лудаци; само они говоре с биљкама по путу и с камењем у пољу. На од њих стоје још филозофи и песници, који се детињски уски супротној тачци поменутог пријатеља за такав свет била је крволочна онолико колико је његова љубав за природу била дивљачка.”
― Gradovi i himere
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