综艺书籍之爱:一个萨拉热窝的故事

书籍之爱:一个萨拉热窝的故事

Ljubav prema knjigama: Priča o Sarajevu

影片信息

  • 片名:书籍之爱:一个萨拉热窝的故事
  • 状态:已完结
  • 主演:Lamija/Hadziosmanovic/Mustafa/Jahic/
  • 导演:Sam/Hobkinson/
  • 年份:2011
  • 地区:英国、卡塔尔
  • 类型:纪录片/历史/战争/综艺/
  • 评分:2.0分
  • 热度:608 ℃
  • 语言:英语
  • 时间:2024-04-28 05:15
  • 简介:A wonderful documentary, by turns heartbreaking and heartwarming, about how during the Bosnian war a most unlikely group of heroes prising academics, librarians, and other staff, including the nightwatchman and a cleaner risked their lives to rescue thousands of irreplaceable Islamic manucs – and preserve a nation*s history. Amid bullets and bombs, this handful of passionate book-lovers safeguarded more than 10,000 unique, hand-written antique books and documents – the most important texts held by Sarajevo*s Gazi Husr* Beg Library, founded in 1537.When Sarajevo fell under siege in 1992, Mustafa Jahic, director of the Gazi Husr* Beg Library, decided that the 10,000 manucs it held must be s*ed. *S*ing the documents of civilisation is in my opinion, equal to s*ing human lives,* Jahic says. *Books are our past, our roots. Without the past, we don*t h*e a present or a future*. Over 2 million books were destroyed during the siege. As with the Russians in Chechnya or the Salifists in Mali, the Bosnian Serbs knew the importance of destroying a nation’s culture, even though they shared so much of that culture.They transported the manucs across the city of Sarajevo from hiding place to hiding place, under sniper fire and shelling. There was no means of carrying the books, so old banana crates were used. The only way Mustafa Jahic could get from home to see the books was through here, at the mercy of enemy snipers. *Muslim gr*es are not much use to hide behind when the snipers are shooting, they are too thin and white,* he says. *So I would run towards the Orthodox and Catholic parts of the cemetery, those gr*es s*ed my life*At the height of the siege, staff of the Gazi Husr* Beg began a project to make microfilm copies of all 10,000 unique manucs. Not an easy task when there is no hot running water and only intermittent electricity. The microfiche machine had to be **uggled in through the Sarajevo Airport tunnel and then someone who knew how to use it found. I bet they would h*e been very glad of the Google Books Digitisation project.There is a sub-plot here relating to the translation of The History of Bosnia by Sallih Muvekkit, a unique manuc, the earliest history of the nation dating from the late 19th century, and provides the documentary with a wonderful ending.I loved the nightwatchman, a refugee from the Congo who, when afforded the opportunity to le*e, talks of how the people of Sarajevo g*e him a home and he felt it was his duty to stay and protect the books. (One for the Daily Mail readers…)
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    番茄不卡网(www.xihsdy.com)为您提供综艺《书籍之爱:一个萨拉热窝的故事》剧情概述:A wonderful documentary, by turns heartbreaking and heartwarming, about how during the Bosnian war a most unlikely group of heroes prising academics, librarians, and other staff, including the nightwatchman and a cleaner risked their lives to rescue thousands of irreplaceable Islamic manucs – and preserve a nation*s history. Amid bullets and bombs, this handful of passionate book-lovers safeguarded more than 10,000 unique, hand-written antique books and documents – the most important texts held by Sarajevo*s Gazi Husr* Beg Library, founded in 1537.When Sarajevo fell under siege in 1992, Mustafa Jahic, director of the Gazi Husr* Beg Library, decided that the 10,000 manucs it held must be s*ed. *S*ing the documents of civilisation is in my opinion, equal to s*ing human lives,* Jahic says. *Books are our past, our roots. Without the past, we don*t h*e a present or a future*. Over 2 million books were destroyed during the siege. As with the Russians in Chechnya or the Salifists in Mali, the Bosnian Serbs knew the importance of destroying a nation’s culture, even though they shared so much of that culture.They transported the manucs across the city of Sarajevo from hiding place to hiding place, under sniper fire and shelling. There was no means of carrying the books, so old banana crates were used. The only way Mustafa Jahic could get from home to see the books was through here, at the mercy of enemy snipers. *Muslim gr*es are not much use to hide behind when the snipers are shooting, they are too thin and white,* he says. *So I would run towards the Orthodox and Catholic parts of the cemetery, those gr*es s*ed my life*At the height of the siege, staff of the Gazi Husr* Beg began a project to make microfilm copies of all 10,000 unique manucs. Not an easy task when there is no hot running water and only intermittent electricity. The microfiche machine had to be **uggled in through the Sarajevo Airport tunnel and then someone who knew how to use it found. I bet they would h*e been very glad of the Google Books Digitisation project.There is a sub-plot here relating to the translation of The History of Bosnia by Sallih Muvekkit, a unique manuc, the earliest history of the nation dating from the late 19th century, and provides the documentary with a wonderful ending.I loved the nightwatchman, a refugee from the Congo who, when afforded the opportunity to le*e, talks of how the people of Sarajevo g*e him a home and he felt it was his duty to stay and protect the books. (One for the Daily Mail readers…)

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