Mirko Mag - 1st Kid`s festival
Transcription
Mirko Mag - 1st Kid`s festival
This event, which will last for seven days, will be attended by children from all parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina, for whom bus and train transport to Sarajevo will be organized on a daily basis. You too can take part in this, and have the opportunity to see the best movies and animated films for young people from the past two years, meet your favourite local showbiz celebrities in person, participate in many workshops, make a lot of new friends and travel the length and breadth of your country. Apart from watching the daily central event, the showing of the movie, the children will also participate in various workshops concerning the promotion of human rights and child protection, the anti-drug campaign, protection from mines, campaigns for projects of public interest, and exhibitions and other activities that have already been arranged with domestic and international institutions, such as: OSCE, the Goethe Institute, the City of Sarajevo, the Sarajevo Drum Orchestra, School for Applied Arts, Sarajevo, the SOS Kinderdorf, the Mladi protiv side (Young People Against AIDS) organization, the International Womens' Club, the Sarajevo Canton Court and many others. The main goal of this event is to work on mutual reconciliation between communities and build trust among children. That is why SFOR is the main sponsor of THE KIDS' FESTIVAL. You will also see Pin and Gvin, the penguins you already know well, who, together with MIRKO, your favourite magazine, have prepared many surprises for all the guests! The expected daily attendance is over 3,000 children, from Sarajevo and towns throughout BH. According to estimates, this festival will be attended by 20,000 - 25,000 children. Come and be a part of all of this. You can win many prizes and have a positive experience that will stay with you at least until the 2nd KIDS' FESTIVAL. Susanne Prahl-Landzo, who studied film making, was born in Germany. Since 1994 she has lived in Sarajevo, where she started a family. She first worked as the head of the Federal Television's International Exchange Office, and then, from 1997 to 2004, she was the director of the Children's Program of the Sarajevo Film Festival. Ms. Prahl-Landzo is the creative force behind the idea to organize this new Kid's Festival - a cultural event dedicated to the children of Bosnia and Herzegovina, which will be held annually in Sarajevo from this year on. We asked Ms. Prahl-Landzo to tell all those who want to come to the festival what they might expect from this event. S. Prahl-Landzo: First of all, you will have a great time and participate in a festival that is like no other in the world. Second, you will have the opportunity to feel like a part of Europe. Because, as you know, Bosnia has been through a war, but that is something that happened almost ten years ago. Still, many parents reminisce about their time in the former Yugoslavia and insist that they were better off then. They say that the current situation is disastrous. But when you are fifteen or ten years old, it really doesn't help to hear that things were better before the war. Five or ten years from now, Bosnia and Herzegovina will be a part of Europe, so let's turn toward Europe, come out of the tunnel and stop thinking about the past. It is truly traumatic to live in a small village and see on TV that it is the 21st century out there, and then come out of your room and see that you don't have water, asphalt, a cinema, and that you are living in the Middle Ages. The Kids' Festival is one day in your life when those two worlds - the one you see on TV and the one you actually live - will merge into one. You will feel like a member of a normal society, of Europe, a modern person. Simply like a child among other children. It is really important to bring children from secluded areas here. I believe that that is more important than even the idea of bringing children from the Republika Srpska and Federation closer together - that problem is behind us already. I believe that children from small villages are the highest priority right now. Those who come to the Kids' Festival will have an unforgettable experience! For one week, the City of Sarajevo will not only be the capital of BiH - it will also be the capital of the young. We from the EUPM are certain, that this great event will provide cheerful experience. As a EUPM who is here to support and help your police, we find it great that the police of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the police force that is protecting your peace and order, is involved in the Kid's Festival. Many police officers from different parts of your country will unite in their support to the Kid's Festival. Furthermore, they will allow you to experience yourself the daily work of the police. You will be able to ride in a real police car or on a police motorcycle. Police dogs and their trainers will be there for you and explain their work. You can pat the animals, take photos and ask whatever questions you may have. And, who knows, may be you will decide in the end to become a policeman or a policewoman? But until that might happen, we from the EUPM, who come from 34 different countries of the world and work together day by day, wish you a fun time in Sarajevo. Enjoy Kid's Festival 2004! "Children will be safe!" - this is the message which Nebojsa Maric, a spokesperson for the combined police force of the whole of BiH, has sent to the children who decide to visit "Kids` Festival". He told us: "The safety of the children is the reason why there has been great cooperation between the Police from the Republika Srpska and the Federation of BiH and the State Border Service. We will together organize safe transportation to the "Kids` Festival" in Sarajevo for children from 77 towns and places in Bosnia and Herzegovina. And in addition to guaranteeing safety, police officers at the festival will be there for the kids who might want to talk to them or hang out with them. Moreover, all police officers will have presents for the children. This way of developing trust between the police and citizens is quite normal in developed countries, and this festival will be an excellent opportunity to start such a practice in BiH as well." MIRKO 71 5