Palic, Serbia
This is an excerpt from a November 2008 letter, though some of the pictures were taken later. This weekend I spent time with some of the journalists from the region at Palic Lake. The lake is set in the very flat landscape of the Pannonian Plain and on a windy day it may have more terrain than the surrounding countryside. When I was there the lake was flat calm with mist rising, shrouding the piers and the 19th century empire hotels and villas. Palic is a piece of the Habsburg Empire that found itself just a few kilometers on the … Continue reading Palic, Serbia
Novi Sad, Serbia
These are excerpts from an April 2009 letter. Spring has arrived and I have spent as much time as possible overcoming vitamin D deficiency drinking espresso on sunny sidewalks and walking through Belgrade’s and Novi Sad’s parks. On Saturday Suzi and I drove to Novi Sad, Serbia’s second city, a Hapsburg town on the Danube a little over 100 kilometers north of Belgrade. We visited friends and took a look at the Novi Sad School of Journalism weekend school. We had a stroll along the Danube and enjoyed the views of the citadel across the river and the colorful … Continue reading Novi Sad, Serbia
Novi Pazar, Serbia
Here is an excerpt from a February 11, 2010 family letter. 7 AM: looking out a hotel window, fog from the river, steam from tile roofs and smoke from chimneys all mingle and rise past the top of a minaret towards the snowcapped mountains carrying smells of baking bread, roasting coffee and wood smoke touched with soft coal. Two hours earlier the muezzin’s call to prayer would have mingled with these mists but I wasn’t looking out the window just then. The call to prayer nudged me awake long enough for me to check the time, think my own devotions … Continue reading Novi Pazar, Serbia
Nis, Serbia
Here are some paragraphs from a 2009 family letter. Last weekend we traveled to the southern city of Nis.We had a little time for sightseeing around work. We were in Nis to help demonstrate remote broadcast at the Nis Film Festival. The festival was in the old Turkish citadel so the main tourist attraction was all around us. We had a pizza in the garden of the Turkish bath. We drove out of town to visit the Skull Tower and the Nis Hot Springs. The tower is about 10 feet high and is lined with the skulls of Serb rebel … Continue reading Nis, Serbia
Serbia, Mokra Gora
(This is an excerpt from a letter from March 2009) Last week I visited a resort, Mecavnik, in the Tara Mountains near the Bosnian border just outside the town of Mokra Gora. It was built by Emir Kusturica, the Serbian filmmaker (“Arizona Dream”, “Underground”). We are planning to have the IREX Journalism Summer School there in June and July. Mecavnik is an “ethno village” designed to look like a traditional Serbian village and was built, I think, first as a film set. It is the site of the annual Kustendorf Film Festival and has a modern cinema, indoor pool, gym, … Continue reading Serbia, Mokra Gora
Serbia, The Iron Gates of the Danube
This is an excerpt from a Feb, 2011 letter about the Iron Gates. I’ve wanted to get to the Iron Gates of the Danube since I first started coming to Serbia. The Iron Gates are where the Danube narrows and … Continue reading Serbia, The Iron Gates of the Danube
Guca, The Trumpet Capital of the Balkans
This is my letter from the Guca Festival. August 14, 2011 Belgrade, Serbia Dear Friends, As you drive into the Guca valley it looks like morning mist lifting, but we arrived at about noon and getting off the bus realized … Continue reading Guca, The Trumpet Capital of the Balkans
Belgrade, 2000
These are pictures from Belgrade in 2000. We moved back as soon as we could get a visa, just days after Milosevic lost power. Continue reading Belgrade, 2000
Belgrade, Tito’s Grave, Yugo Nostalgia.
This is from an April 2009 letter: When I picked up my teacup a few mornings ago, the one with Tito, I noticed that my fingers were black. I don’t know if Tito is rubbing off on me. But the cup is a bit less stark than it once was. On Saturday I went to an exhibit “The Tito Effect” at the museum near his tomb. It explores the charisma that held Yugoslavia together after the Second World War. At the entrance a youth choir was singing. The group was backed up by a bass, guitar, and drum. They … Continue reading Belgrade, Tito’s Grave, Yugo Nostalgia.
Belgrade Street Life
There is always activity on Belgrade’s streets, good food and a festival of free entertainment. Continue reading Belgrade Street Life
Belgrade, St. Sava Temple
The Serbs claim this is the largest Orthodox Church in the world. The Georgians contest this, but it is big. I have actually attended a wedding in one of the chapels here. St. Sava dominates a part of Belgrade. Continue reading Belgrade, St. Sava Temple
Belgrade, NATO Bombing Sites.
This is from an October 2000 letter from Belgrade, on my first visit to the city after Milosevic lost power– and my first visit since the NATO bombing. When someone asks “do you want to see the sights” he really means “sites,” the places hit during the NATO bombing. Like in Pristina, the tour points out how accurate the bombing really was. People mark time “before bombing, after bombing” always pronouncing the second “b” in bombing. And when people ask “how has Belgrade changed” they expect me to cite the most visible of the sites, the tall building next … Continue reading Belgrade, NATO Bombing Sites.
Belgrade Nights
Belgrade is a night city. It is party center in Europe, but it also has stately buildings and grand evening walks. Continue reading Belgrade Nights
Belgrade, Hotel Moskva
These paragraphs are from a 2012 letter. We returned to the Moskva Hotel, where we had stayed so many nights in the 1990s. When we came back we stayed where we started, at the Moskva. The deskman knew us after a decade of absence from the hotel. The Moskva is one of my top three emotional picks for hotels in the world. We spent hundreds of nights here in the 1990s and early 2000s, sometimes staying for a month at a time. I watched the massive demonstrations against Milosevic from the Moskva’s windows. In 1997 Ljiljana chose the Moskva for … Continue reading Belgrade, Hotel Moskva
Belgrade, Kalemegdan: Where the Danube and Sava Rivers Meet.
Kalemegdan is where the Danube and Sava Rivers meet. It is a fortified site that has been held by the Celts, Romans, Byzantines, Serbs, Turks, Austrians, Germans, Yugoslavs and the Serbs again. It is a park, fort, and the place where Belgrade spends weekend afternoons. The pictures are from Kalemegdan and other places mentioned in the letter. These are excerpts from an March 2009 letter. On Sunday in Belgrade the parks came alive. Today Belgrade’s walking street was full of strollers eating ice cream and popcorn, stopping for an iced coffee at one of the cafes and strolling on … Continue reading Belgrade, Kalemegdan: Where the Danube and Sava Rivers Meet.
Beograd, The White City (Belgrade in the winter.)
Some winter pictures of Belgrade. Belgrade has very good snow removal allowing you to walk without slipping very soon after a snowfall. Continue reading Beograd, The White City (Belgrade in the winter.)
Belgrade
We lived in Belgrade for almost four years at two different times. We have been working there for longer, with many trips to work with local radio and TV stations and with B92. We love the city and want to … Continue reading Belgrade
Serbia
Suzi and I first came to Serbia in Jan 1997 to do an assessment of local radio for IREX. We have been working in Serbia, on and off, since then, including living in Serbia in 2000 and 2001 and between … Continue reading Serbia
Christmas in Cairo
In 2010 Suzi lived in Cairo and while she flew up to Budapest to join me at that Christmas Market, she attended the Cairo Christmas Market. Here are comments from her family letter. 12/3/2010 I was wrong when I … Continue reading Christmas in Cairo
9/11, Kosovo and Slovakia
Suzi and I were in Kosovo on 9/11, 2001. I wrote these letters in the aftermath of 9/11. I am putting them in the “Winds of Change” category because the events of 9/11, and the response, affected a change in … Continue reading 9/11, Kosovo and Slovakia
Vienna Christkindl Market
This is from a letter written in 1997. Suzi and I were living in Bratislava, Slovakia. And while it was only 65 KM (40 miles) from Bratislava to Vienna there was a real difference between former communist Slovakia and EU … Continue reading Vienna Christkindl Market
Schloss Hellbrunn Advent Market, Salzburg, Austria.
In 2012 I got to three of Salzburg’s 5 markets, the Chriskindel Market in the main square, the Mirabellplatz Christmas market and the Schloss Hellbrunn Advent Market on the grounds of a palace where the Gazebo from the movie Sound … Continue reading Schloss Hellbrunn Advent Market, Salzburg, Austria.
Maribellplatz Advent Market, Salzburg, Austria
In 2012 I got to three of Salzburg’s 5 markets on the high speed Rain Jet train from Munich. The ones I visited were the Chriskindel Market in the main square, the Mirabellplatz Christmas market and the Schloss Hellbrunn Advent … Continue reading Maribellplatz Advent Market, Salzburg, Austria
Salzburg Christkindlmarkt, Austria
In 2012 I got to three of Salzburg’s 5 markets, the Chriskindel Market in the main square, the Mirabellplatz Christmas market and the Schloss Hellbrunn Advent Market on the grounds of a palace where the Gazebo from the movie Sound … Continue reading Salzburg Christkindlmarkt, Austria