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April 25, 2005

Monique van Dusseldorp reports Smartmobs about an interesting television project called Videoletters which is trying to rebuild bonds between former friends and neighbours in the

Starting in 1999, Dutch documentary makers Katarina Rejger and Eric van den Broek searched and found people willing to send their former friend a 'video letter' which they brought across the border to show; filmed the response of the receiver, who could also send a 'return' video letter - in some cases also resulting in a first meeting since the war.

The resulting heart breaking 25 minute documentaries are presently being broadcast in weekly installments by the public broadcasters of Serbia and Montenegro, Kosovo, Croatia, Bosnia, Slovenia and Macedonia. In addition to the TV programme, the Videoletters website offers a social networking website where anyone looking for former contacts can send in a video letter, put out a search request, keep a weblog or add pictures.

Busses equipped with internet connections and webcams and permanent internet counters equipped with webcams are available throughout the
countries involved in the project.

Also the site has a multilingual search engine, allows you to connect to people but also to places (which makes sense), and has an ad hoc jury system - if discussions go out of hand or postings are made that are considered offensive, a random selection of members need to decide what to do.

press clippings

fact sheet

more of Mediametic about connecting people in cyberspace via videoletters

Thank you Monique !

Via Smart Mobs


Originally from Smart Mobs, remediated by yatta on Apr 25, 2005 at 12:34 AM


Comments

Hello:
I just wanted to share couple of thoughts after watching one of the series in NYC. The idea is wonderful, all stories are very touching, but I cannot say that the creators of the series are UNBIASED, and it's sad. It's very clear with who they simpathize, and especially upsetting was the comment during discussion, when the lady (one of the makers of the series) said "it was back then, when Kosov was still a part of Serbia." It STILL officially IS Serbia, even though STOLEN from it by ALbanians (and of course all orchestrated by the outside forces.) The overtones of very anti-Serb attitude are clear throughout the tapes and it's unfair. Also there is no mentioning of the place from where it all started (the break-out of Yougoslavia) -- Kraina Serbska. No surprises -- NYC would never host UNBIASED series on Yugolsavia. Bottomline: it's a tragedy in the making (what now is happening in former Yugoslavia) and should not be done by biased people.
Sincerely,
Galena

Posted by: Galena at June 23, 2005 02:52 PM

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