Voleo bih da ste barem jedan mesec gde sam ja na zapadu,tada bi ste shvatili koliko nas vole?ne vole nas bas srbe neznam zasto?ali nas ne vole!.
		
		
	 
Koliko nas drugi narodi vole ili ne vole je posebna priča, ali kada su jevreji u pitanju mislim da naši ljudi malo znaju da nas jevreji stvarno vole kao narod.
                             
[h=2]Fundamentally Freund: Tomislav Nikolic, the president of Serbia, began an official state visit to Israel Monday.[/h]
		
		
	
	
Serbian President Tomislav Nikolic.  Photo: REUTERS/Marko Djurica             
                                          Tomislav Nikolic, the president of Serbia, began an official state visit to  Israel Monday, marking the first time that he has traveled to Jerusalem since  his election triumph last year.
Normally, the only excitement generated  by a visiting head of state is some rowdier honking of Israelis’ car horns, as  drivers find themselves trapped in a series of capricious and unforgiving  traffic jams. But Nikolic’s three-day stopover is far more than just another  diplomatic social call. 
Serbia is an important friend and ally of the Jewish  state and the Serbian leader’s visit underlines just how close relations have  become between the two countries. Israelis and world Jewry should welcome this  turn of events and seek additional ways to broaden and deepen the relationship  still further.
Indeed, the parallels between Israel and Serbia could not  be more striking. Both are small countries in combustible regions which the  international media love to criticize. Neither Serbia nor Israel gets a fair  hearing at various international forums, and each is coming under relentless  pressure to accede to the demands of their foes.
Much of the world has  been pressing Serbia to forgo the breakaway province of Kosovo, even though it  is the cradle of Serbian civilization.
And Israel of course is constantly  being pressured to withdraw from Judea, Samaria and parts of Jerusalem, the  heart of our ancient homeland.
But it is not only in our present  predicaments that one can find such compelling similarities.
Our history  and that of the Serbs are also profoundly intertwined, both in triumph and in  tragedy.
In the mid-19th century, one of the founding fathers of Zionism,  Rabbi Yehuda Alkalay, served as a rabbi in the Serbian town of Zemun outside  Belgrade. Historians say his views were influenced greatly by the Serbian  nationalism of his day, and that his writings inspired Theodor Herzl’s  grandfather to embrace the Zionist cause.
In this sense, the two  countries can each trace their modern-day yearnings for freedom and independence  to the same period and source.
Nearly a century later in World War II, at  the Jasenovac concentration camp run by Croatia’s fascist Ustashe regime, Jews  and Serbs found themselves side by side as both were targeted for extermination  by the Nazis and their sympathizers.
It is precisely because our  historical experiences bear such a likeness to one another that Jews and Serbs  share such strong bonds of friendship and understanding.
On a visit to  Belgrade last week, I had the opportunity to speak to numerous Serbs, from taxi  drivers to government officials, all of whom expressed admiration for Israel and  its accomplishments.
And unlike in many other European capitals, I did  not feel in the least bit uncomfortable roaming the streets of Belgrade with a  kippa on my head. Just days before my arrival, the Conference of European Rabbis  had held a large gathering in the city which brought together rabbinical leaders  from across the continent.
Sure, for some Jews, the very mention of the  name “Serbia” still conjures up vicious stereotypes of war criminals and  racists. But that is neither fair nor accurate. This is 2013. Serbia is no  longer an autocracy in conflict with its neighbors. The country has transformed  itself into a vibrant model of democracy, one that has gone to great pains to  put the past behind it. In an unprecedented move, Serbia extradited two former  presidents, various government ministers, three army chiefs of staff and several  police and army generals to stand trial in The Hague on charges related to the  Balkan wars of the 1990s.
And the Serbs have done so even though the  International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia has proven to be  decidedly one-sided in its handling of various cases that have come before it.  Moreover, to lump all Serbs together and label them in a derogatory manner is  intellectually dishonest and even slanderous. In fact, it is because Belgrade  has made such great strides over the past decade that the European Union agreed  last year to make Serbia an official candidate for EU membership.
Given  these changes, it is time for those who still consider Serbia to be a villain to  reconsider their position. This intrepid and spirited nation, standing at the  crossroads between East and West, has repeatedly seen its territory occupied,  its people expelled and its good name vilified.
As Jews, we know all too  well what such suffering means, which is why we should view Serbia as a natural  partner and move to boost our trade, investment and tourism with the Balkan  nation, whose importance in the region will only continue to grow.
So  “
Dobrodosli u Izrael,” (welcome to Israel), our friend President  Nikolic.
And may your visit signal the further strengthening of relations  between Serbs and Jews.             
	
	
	
		Kod:
	
	
		http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Editorials/Dobrodosli-u-Izrael-President-Nikolic-311495
	 
 
I ja živim na zapadu, mogu da kažem da mi je drago kada primetim koliko se jevreji srdačnije odnose kada čuju da sam srbin.
Znam da se smeju da se reklamiraju drugi forumi, ali smem da kažem da postoji jevrejski forum i na njemu podforum samo jednog drugog naroda.Da li pogađate kog?