Bitef

Slovensko mladinsko gledališče Ljubljana, Slovenija

PROKLET BIO IZDAJICA SVOJE DOMOVINE

Režija:

Oliver Frljić

18. septembar, 17:00 Bitef teatar Trajanje; 75'

The Mladinsko Theatre Ljubljana, Slovenia

DAMNED BE THE TRAITOR OF HIS HOMELAND

Directed by:

Oliver Frljić

September 18 th , 17:00 Bitef Theatre Duration: 75'

Hej Sloveni u Jugoslaviji Pesmu Hej Sloven i su kao himnu prvi put pevali na prvom zasedanju AVNOJ-a. Do kraja Drugog svetskog rata, a i kasnije, zbog jakog osećanja pripadnosti sveslavenskoj zajednid, spontane se nametnula kao himna nove federativne Jugoslavije. No, nedugo posle završetka rata počelo se razmišljati о novoj himni koja bi potpunije izrazila duh i ciljeve nove socijalisticke zajednice jugoslovenskih naroda i narodnosti. Prvi konkurs za himnu je raspisan godine 1946. Kasnije je bilo još pokušaja. Poslednji je bio 1983. i to od strane Saveznog veća Skupštine SFRJ. Nijedan od prispelih predloga nije prihvacen. Godine 1977. je odredbom zakona za privremenu himnu izabrana pesma Hej Sloveni, a ustavnim amandmanom SFRJ iz 1988. tačka 1 amandman 9, proglasena je za (ne više privremenu) himnu SFRJ. Po raspadu Jugoslavije su je kao himnu i dalje upotrebljavali Srbi i Crnogorci, sve do raspada poslednje Jugoslavije.

Hey Slavs in Yugoslavia The song Hey Slavs was first sung as the national anthem at the First Session of the AVNOJ. By the end of the Second World War it had been adopted for the anthem of the new federal Yugoslavia, due to its pervading feeling of the adherence to the idea of Pan-Slavism. However, soon after the war had ended, the need for a new anthem arose; an anthem that would express the spirit and the aims of the new socialist unity of the Yugoslav nations and ethnicities. The first competition was announced in 1946 and more attempts followed. The last one, in 1983, was announced by the Federal Council of the Yugoslav Assembly. None of the applications was successful. In 1977, Hey Slavs was established as a temporary anthem and in 1988, by the SFRY Constitution, by the clause l, amendment 9, it was pronounced the (no longer temporary) anthem of SFRY, After the breakup of Yugoslavia, the song was still used as the national anthem by the Serbs and the Montenegrins until the breakup of the last Yugoslavia.