Sabina Vajrača

Sabina Vajrača (born 30 May 1977) is a Bosnian American film director, screenwriter, and film producer. Vajraća is best known for having directed and produced the 2005 Bosnian documentary Back to Bosnia.[2][3][4]

Sabina Vajrača
Born (1977-05-30) 30 May 1977[1]
Banja Luka, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, Yugoslavia
NationalityBosnian American
OccupationFilm director, screenwriter, producer
Years active1995–present

Biography

Sabina Vajrača was born to a Bosniak family in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, which then a part of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, where she lived until the Bosnian War started in 1992. She started her artistic life as a poet and a short-story writer, completing her first novel at ten years of age. It involved a girl, a dog and a boy who saves the world. It was a huge hit among her friends.

By thirteen she had read all the books available at her local children's library and she persuaded the librarian to give her a card for the adult branch. Around the same time she decided to become a film director. She made plans to attend the Prague Film School and eventually win an Oscar.

At the age of fourteen she found herself on a losing side of a war. With one suitcase and a book under her arm she left her home, her family and her plans behind. She was never to see most of the people she knew thus far again.

She spent the next two years in Croatia. It was there that, at sixteen, she saw her first play. She decided then and there to spend the rest of her life in theatre. Desperate to start as soon as possible, she turned to one thing she knew she could do – write, and founded a theatre magazine Teatralije with four of her friends. She made plans to attend the Academy of Dramatic Arts in Zagreb and eventually work for the national theatre. Two years later she was standing in Tampa International Airport, holding a distinct blue and white refugee bag.

Sabina currently lives in New York City.

Film

  • Back To Bosnia (Bosnian:Na put kuci, u tudjinu) – 2005[5]
  • Apparition (2009)[6]
  • Smoking Kills (2011)
  • Summer Abroad (planned)[7]

Television

  • Generations Matter (ESPN)[8]
gollark: I'm pretty sure we *have* done the ingroup/outgroup thing for... forever. And... probably the solutions are something like transhumanist mind editing, or some bizarre exotic social thing I can't figure out yet.
gollark: I mean that humans are bad in that we randomly divide ourselves into groups then fiercely define ourselves by them, exhibit a crazy amount of exciting different types of flawed reasoning for no good reason, get caught up in complex social signalling games, come up with conclusions then rationalize our way to a vaguely sensible-looking justification, sometimes seemingly refuse to be capable of abstract thought when it's politically convenient, that sort of thing.
gollark: No, I think there are significant improvements possible. But different ones.
gollark: I'm not talking about humans being bad in that sense, myself.
gollark: Ah, yes, right the second time.

References

  1. IMDB. "IMDB". IMDB.com. Retrieved 4 August 2011.
  2. Piwowar, Małgorzata (22 April 2010). "Zbrodniarze cieszą się życiem". Rzeczpospolita (in Polish). Retrieved 5 August 2010.
  3. Bosnian-Herzegovinian Film Festival Interview
  4. IMDB
  5. Back to Bosnia Official Website
  6. Sabina's Website
  7. IndieGoGo
  8. Vimeo
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