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    The aim of the project Unveiling personal memories on war and detention is to affirm personal memories of all interested witnesses of political events in Croatia and to preserve them from falling into oblivion.Read more

    The methodology which Documenta – Centre for Dealing with the Past uses in collecting personal memories is partially grounded in the basic methodological principles of the oral history method. It has been used since 1948, when the oral history method was accepted in the scientific community as a technique of documenting history and it enables Documenta, as a human rights organization working on the process of dealing...Read more

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    The CroMe project is financed by the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs under Matra Programme: supporting social transition. The Matra programme supports countries in Southeast and Eastern Europe in the transition to a pluralist and democratic society, governed by the rule of law.Read more

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Ivo Škorić

Ivo Škorić was born in 1964 in Germany. His mother's parents were Volksdeutsche. During the period of Yugoslavia, her mother was shunned due to her father's collaboration with the Ustaše regime. The family of Ivo Škorić's father was communist-oriented: his paternal grandfather was a part of the system, despite the fact that at the time of the communist regime in Yugoslavia he experienced certain problems resulting from his ideological convictions. In the 1980s, at the time of the liberalisation of society in Yugoslavia, Ivo Škorić started working at Omladinski Radio 101 [Youth Radio] and for other independent media. He was also an activist of the peace movement that existed in that period. As a result, in 1985 his passport was withdrawn and he was placed under surveillance by the security services. In 1990 he won a six month scholarship and went to the United States where, after being granted asylum, he has remained to this day. During his time in the US, he has founded an association which seeks to help immigrants from the former Yugoslav countries.

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Family background Identity Views on politics Education Education system in Yugoslavia Tito's death Yugoslavia in the 1980s Feeling of ethnic affiliation Milošević's rise to power Future of Yugoslavia from the perspective of the 1980s Liberalization of social relations Censorship and auto-censorship Awakening of national awareness The break-up of Yugoslavia Room for subversion Tuđman's victory Radio 101 Confiscation of passport Inter-national relations before the Homeland War With émigrés in the USA Radio show for Croatian diaspora View from the USA "Racoon" association Living in megalopolis Ethnic rootedness Observations today Democracy today
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