FROM:Joha Glazer Serif, Sarajevo TO:Joha Glazer Remza ,Merkas Klita,Nazareth Ilit ,Karmel 25,Izrael My dear wife and children, I am alive and well. My relatives are all alive and well, and the relatives from Remza's family are alive and well. I would like to ask you, my dear wife, to send me some money so I could set up gas installations, because I have been freezing to death during these past three years. You can send me the money through the Jewish Community in Sarajevo and *please send it DM because the value of the U.S. Dollar has fallen*. I wish you all a happy Pesah... FROM: Marko VESHOVIC TO:dulac@x400.diplomatie.fr I am an intellectual, writer born 50 years ago in Montenegro, living for 30 years in Sarajevo. I teach poetry at the University of Philosophy. During the war, I am writing for Oslobodenje and Bosnian War Days...I am married and I have a ten year old daughter. My book was published in Zagreb and that's a book of war articles and the name is Death is a master from Serbia after a verse by German poet Paul Celan : Death is a master from Germany. FROM: Marko VESHOVIC TO:Ned TEMKO If you could say something in two sentences to the world leaders, what would that be? I would say: it is a great luck that in 1939 there were no United Nations. Because if there were, Hitler would be ruling today. FROM: Marko VESHOVIC To: Lorie LICHTEN Response to your question: How do you survive? Today, I must admit I am doing not so bad as I was a year ago. I earn, writing for various newspapers, 200 DM a month. With that amount of money, my wife, my daughter, and I are surviving. The trouble is that my wife and I spend the half of that amount on cigarettes. But it is bearable. What is a typical day life? Exhausting. My home has turned into a hostel. During these three past years, 70 foreign journalists have stayed in my home. FROM: Mirza Agic ISKCON Sarajevo TO: Lorin Kalisky What do you do for good time?I read Bhagavd Gita with realization of the verses which have been spoken 5000 years ago. How do you relax? I do dance Swami Step. Good bands in Sarajevo? Yes there are good bands like Gita Govinda. How's night life? Nightlife-dark! FROM: Haris Hadziavdagic TO: BMW Factory Germany I am 20 years old and I am crazy for BMW. I live in Sarajevo, which is under the siege for the past three years and it is impossible to find new parts for my motorcycle BMW R - 65 made in 1981. I need a back tire and rear mirrors. My motorcycle is the only motorcycle in this town that survived many bullets and grenades, that was driven on turpentine, nail polish cleaner and very little gasoline. Despite these fact I still drive it through out this city, because this is not ordinary motorcycle. It is a BMW. Grateful in advance. My address is: Haris Hadziavdagic Remzije Omanovica 71 Sarajevo Bosnia-Herzegovina. FROM: Davor Milicevic TO:Internet I'm eighteen years old and I go to the electrotechnical vocational school. My Question: How many people have been killed in Paris with sniper shot during one day? FROM: Alma Duran TO: The Internet community I am an eighteen-year-old girl and I am a high school pupil. I also work as a English translator on Independent Radio called "Studio 99". My parents are divorced and live with my mother. I am not married, and that is unusual in Sarajevo. Young people get married here very often because of the war. One can loose one's life very easily here every day and because of that people are getting married a lot, all the time. What I miss the most is a normal teenage life. I should be traveling and having fun, making new friends, seeing other cities and countries. But instead of that I have to bring water to my flat and carry it in my hands for two or three miles. You see, during heavy shellings we did not have any water in our homes. We had to go to few natural sources of water, fill the plastic gallons with water and carry it to home. That is very exhausting. I also miss going out after ten o'clock, because there is a police curfew starting ten o'clock in the evening. But although death is all around us, we girls still try to look good. Our way of fighting is to look beautiful and to show to those beasts that are killing us that youth and life will triumph over death. FROM: Zoran Illich, deputy editor-in-chief of Independent Radio and Television "STUDIO 99" - Sarajevo TO: The Internet community There are still many mixed marriages and mixed families [in Sarajevo]. The problem is not in Sarajevo among Sarajevans because we still respect each other. The problem concerns nationalistic extremists from the national parties. If you don't believe that, please come to Sarajevo. In my opinion, you will be surprised. Sarajevo is still under siege but people have the spirit. Don't be afraid we will survive. In conclusion, let me ask you all a question: Is it possible in Europe to accept new politics without nationalistic and separatist ideas and leaders? That's all and many greetings from Sarajevo. Zoran Illich