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The Diary of a Political Idiot: Normal Life in Belgrade
The Diary of a Political Idiot Normal Life in Belgrade Author:Jasmina Tesanovic The Diary of a Political Idiot is a woman writers story of life in Belgrade under NATO bombing. Labeled a traitor by nationalist Serbs because she opposes the war in Kosovo, Jasmina Tesanovic records the intimate details of ordinary life under extraordinary circumstances. Tesanovics Diary is remarkable because it chronicles recent h... more »istory from an insiders point of view rarely heard out of Milosevics Yugoslavia. As Tim Judah writes in his introduction, The Diary of a Political Idiot "shows us how they could be us; what it feels like, what it is like to be trapped in a country isolated by its regime, where completely ordinary people pay for the crimes of their leaders." How Tesanovics diary entries found their way into print is a story of its own. Hours after NATO started bombing Yugoslavia, Jasmina Tesanovic received an e-mail from a friend in Sweden, who wanted to know how she was doing. Jasmina didnt have time to write back, so she sent entries from her diary. Her friend, the writer Ana Valdes, posted Jasminas diary entries on the web site of a magazine she wrote for. Within a week, the diaries had been posted anonymously on fifty web sites, translated into several languages, and sent in emails throughout the world. Jasmina knew nothing of this. When a friend in London sent Jasmina an excerpt from the diary, she read a few paragraphs and thought, This woman writes exactly like me. Nevertheless, Tesanovic did not believe she was reading her own diary until her friend traced the e-mail from Sweden to Holland to Croatia and back to Jasmina. Someone had removed Jasminas name to protect her. The diary of an anonymous woman from Belgrade had become everybodys diary. The Diary of a Political Idiot was chosen to represent the work of Serbian writers on the PEN Trans European Writers train. The Diary has now been translated into eleven languages. It first appeared in English in Granta (Issue 67) in 1999. A ruthless reviewer from Belgrade called The Diary of a Political Idiot "a book of the marginal for the marginal the best book written this year, but it never will be mainstream in Serbia." Midnight Editions was created to preserve just such "marginal" voices which, as Tim Judah writes, are often lost "because of the enormity of crimes committed in their names." Jasminas Diary never made the news, the wire services, the major TV networks, or mainstream magazines, but it has found its way into the hands of astute editors and readers around the globe. At a time when "compassion fatigue" is seen as both the cause and the unavoidable consequence of current international news reporting, we believe that Jasmina Tesanovics wide readership is as much a testimony to the intelligence and compassion of her readers as it is to her own.« less