Friday, November 8, 2013

Children's Voices in War Times


  

Books about war stand as monuments, constant reminders of the devastation that war brings. When that book comes from a child who experienced war, it is an even more powerful cry to stop all violence.

In this post I will present two translated works of non-fiction for children, both from Bosnia: Zlata's Diary: A Child's Life in a War Time Sarajevo (2006) by Zlata Filipović, translated by Christina Pribichevich-Zoric; and My Childhood Under Fire (2006) by Nadja Halibegovich, translated by the author herself. Both diaries describe life in Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina, during the Bosnian War (1992-1995). Both books, autobiographies, are personal stories of what you don't hear in the news. Both authors have been known as Bosnian Anne Frank.

Zlata was only 11 years old when she started keeping a diary in 1991 and never knew there will be a war soon. When the war started the diary, called Mimmy, is her only friend. In 1995 it was published in English translation in UK and the US. Anthony Powers composed a choir work based on the diary.

My Childhood Under Fire is the diary that the 12 year's old Nadja kept between 1992 and 1995. Originally published in Bosnian language, the author translated and published the book in Canada and the US. She is still a peace activist.

No comments:

Post a Comment