Today’s Enlightening 
Entertainment will be 
presented in Bosnian, 
with subtitles in Arabic, 
Aulacese (Vietnamese), 
Chinese, English, 
French, German, 
Indonesian, Italian, 
Japanese, Korean, Malay, 
Persian, Portuguese, 
Russian, Spanish 
and Thai.
Greetings, 
good-hearted viewers! 
Welcome to 
Enlightening Entertainment. 
Today, let us go to 
Bosnia and Herzegovina, 
a beautiful country 
located in southeast Europe 
on the Balkan peninsula. 
Formally 
a part of Yugoslavia, 
the country gained 
its independence in 1992, 
with Bosniak, Serb 
and Croat as the three 
main ethnic groups. 
The region is a cradle 
to one of the most 
ancient civilizations. 
Its magnificent sceneries, 
rich culture 
and friendly people have 
attracted so many visitors 
from all over the world. 
We are honored 
to meet Her Excellency 
Biljana Gutic-Bjelica, 
Ambassador of 
Bosnia and Herzegovina, 
in Ottawa, Canada. 
She shared with us 
about natural and cultural 
heritage of the country.
The whole 
Bosnia-Herzegovina is 
a very beautiful country. 
It is a heart-shaped 
country, (Yes.) 
in the Balkans, and it’s in 
the center of the former 
Yugoslavia Republics, 
and in the centre 
of the Balkans itself. 
We have mountains, 
beautiful ones. 
We have the sea, the coast.
We have many 
beautiful rivers, and I know 
that all the foreigners 
that come as a tourist, 
on business trip, 
whatever, they come to 
Bosnia-Herzegovina. 
they stay pulled by
the rivers.  
Bosnia and Herzegovina 
has always been 
at a crossroads. 
This has helped 
to create a rich history 
of contributions 
by many cultures.
Each child 
in Bosnia-Herzegovina 
knows how the mosque 
looks like, 
how the synagogue 
looks like, 
and the churches – 
either Catholic 
or Orthodox churches – 
look like. 
They can even 
recognize the sounds 
that come from 
different worship places. 
We are an Olympic country. 
If you know 
the Olympic Winter Games, 
the 14th in 1984, were 
in Bosnia-Herzegovina. 
So all our mountains 
surrounding Sarajevo 
as a capital, 
are Olympic mountains.
And our rivers are 
so beautiful. 
One of them was called 
“Una” by Romans. 
When they came, and saw 
the beauty of the river, 
they said, “This is Una,” 
meaning in Latin 
“the Only One.” 
And that is the name 
of my daughter, and 
that is very familiar and 
common name among 
the female children in 
Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Nature’s beauty 
permeates all across 
Bosnia and Herzegovina. 
The beauty of the Una River 
is indescribable, 
and the famous waterfalls 
of Strbacki Buk 
are magnificent.
The Neretva River 
was compared 
by famous Arthur Evans 
to a peacock’s 
glorious feathers, 
showing all the colors 
of the rainbow 
fluttering in the breeze.
Along the banks 
of the Drina River, 
known and unknown 
writers, poets, artists, and 
travel writers marveled.
There are also the Tara, 
Krivaja, Vrbas, and 
Sana rivers whose beauty 
has been portrayed 
in many paintings. 
Bosnia and Herzegovina 
also has many lakes and 
a wealth of waterfalls.
There’s some 
beautiful waterfalls.
Yes, yes, in Jajce, 
which is applying 
to be also enlisted in 
United Nations 
Educational, Scientific 
and Cultural Organization 
(UNESCO) 
World Heritage list. 
And we have 
two beautiful bridges, 
“Old Bridge” in Mostar, 
and “Mehmed Pasa 
Sokolovic Bridge” 
in Visegrad, both listed in 
the World Heritage List 
of UNESCO. 
And it means 
that Bosnia-Herzegovina 
is a country of beautiful, 
beautiful landscapes, and 
bridges that symbolically 
connect people, do not 
divide them by rivers, 
but connect people, 
different religions, 
different cultures, 
languages, traditions 
and so on.
I understand 
even eco-tourism is 
becoming quite popular?
Yes, yes, very popular. 
We have many 
very nice villages, 
intact villages where only 
our asphalt roads 
are the signs of 
modern city living. 
The beautiful nature, 
beautiful landscapes… 
and I think that 
all the people that go to 
Bosnia and Herzegovina 
will take with them 
beautiful memories 
of their time spent there. 
A lot of forests too, I hear?
Yes, lots of forests. 
We actually have 
the only forest 
of that kind in Europe, 
it is called Perućica.
Perućica is one of 
the last remaining 
primeval forests
of Europe, that is, 
an old-growth forest 
with very old trees. 
One of the trees is 
the tallest measured 
Norway Spruce tree, 
reaching a height 
of 63 meters! 
Perućica is part of the 
Sutjeska National Park, 
and unless accompanied 
by park rangers, 
people are usually 
unable to enter due to 
its dense verdant foliage.
It’s an undisturbed forest?
Yes, yes, 
that’s a virgin forest.  
It’s so thick that 
it is very easy to get lost. 
So only experts and 
scientists are allowed to 
go there and explore it.
Beautiful. (Yes.) 
When we return, 
we’ll find out more 
about the cultural 
and spiritual beauty of 
Bosnia and Herzogovina, 
with Her Excellency 
Biljana Gutic-Bjelica, 
Ambassador of 
Bosnia and Herzegovina, 
in Ottawa, Canada. 
We will be right back. 
Please stay tuned 
with Supreme Master 
Television. 
Thank you for joining us 
again on today’s 
Enlightening Entertainment, 
featuring the glorious 
Bosnia and Herzegovina. 
Her Excellency 
Biljana Gutic-Bjelica, 
Ambassador of 
Bosnia and Herzegovina, 
in Ottawa, Canada, 
shares with us highlights 
of her country’s food 
and music culture.
Many salads, many meals 
made of cabbage 
and carrots 
and different kinds of 
preparing of potato, 
it is very common 
in our cuisine. 
And of course, 
Mediterranean food because 
Bosnia-Herzegovina has 
two kinds of climate, 
it’s Mediterranean 
in the southern part 
and it’s Continental 
in the northern part 
of the country. 
So many, many meals 
that usually are, let’s say, 
eaten in those 
Mediterranean countries, 
especially in Croatia, 
which is our 
immediate neighbor, 
and on the coastline 
of Croatia, is also eaten
in the southern part of 
Bosnia and Herzegovina.
And I understand here 
you’ve quite a reputation 
for coffee as well? 
Yes, coffee as well. 
We have a 
very interesting proverb. 
Whenever you are invited 
for coffee, don’t ever say, 
“I do not drink coffee,” 
because people 
are not inviting you 
to have coffee,
they are inviting you 
to have chat 
and some leisure time.  
During the day 
coffee is drunk 
for two or three hours, 
maybe even longer if 
we have time and themes 
to discuss.  
It is a favorite Bosnian 
and Herzegovinian 
leisure time, 
time to spend with 
your friends, your family.  
Bosnia-Herzegovina is 
a country of 
many ethnic groups, 
including Serbs, 
Bosniaks and Croats, and 
smaller groups such as 
Jews and Roma people. 
Each adds 
their own traditions, 
folklore, and music.
So-called 
ethnic instruments are 
maybe Gusle, Sargija, 
Flula, those are mainly 
string instruments, 
but really characteristic 
for that part of Europe. 
And I think that 
some of them are not 
to be found anywhere else. 
And our folklore, 
meaning traditional dance, 
folk dance, is very popular. 
And I know 
that even in Canada, 
our diaspora, which is 
very huge and numerous, 
has their own 
cultural associations 
that are fostering 
the cultural tradition 
of the people that 
they originally come from. 
There was one dance 
in particular?
Yes, in our language 
it is “Nijemo kolo.” 
Translation in English 
could be “mute dance,” 
where there’s no music 
but the rhythm for players 
is given by thumping 
your feet on the ground. 
And it also is intended 
to be enlisted 
for an UNESCO list 
as a unique dance 
of that kind in the world.  
Many great 
and creative minds 
have graced this nation. 
Ambassador Biljana 
Gutic-Bjelica mentions 
a few of her heroes.
Nikola Tesla, a famous, 
famous scientist, who 
actually was born not in 
Bosnia and Herzegovina; 
he’s a Serb from Croatia. 
And we all learned 
about him, his life, 
and his achievements 
in science. 
And he’s famous for 
Canada as well, you know, 
the Niagara Falls. 
He had experiments there 
and many of 
his famous achievements 
and um experiments 
and technical things 
that he made 
were installed 
at the Niagara Falls 
at this hydro plant. 
And he had really 
a great mind 
that could influence 
any child of that time, 
because we read a lot 
about him and we were 
very proud of him.  
Ivo Andrić  was praised 
with the Nobel Prize 
in 1961 
for his novel in Bosnian. 
And in the languages 
of our country, 
it is “Na Drini cuprija.” 
In English, it is 
“The Bridge 
over the Drina River.” 
And that is the very bridge 
that was enlisted 
on the UNESCO 
World Heritage List. 
That is the bridge 
in Višegrad, 
Mehmed-Paša Sokolović 
bridge, and very famous 
for his architecture. 
And that part of 
Bosnia-Herzegovina 
has always been 
very interesting to historians 
and to novelists as well. 
It is a remarkable novel.  
The whole environment 
that we lived in 
and the whole curricula 
at school really gave us 
some ideas of noble lives 
and noble achievements 
in life. So myself
and my friends we all
were inspired by them.
Next, in describing 
the characteristics 
of the people of 
Bosnia and Herzegovina, 
Ambassador 
Biljana Gutic-Bjelica 
said the following:
We are famous 
for our humor, 
and it is a capability 
to make a joke 
from any, absolutely 
any situation in life, 
no matter how sad it is. 
But it’s so, so clever 
a way of making jokes 
that many foreigners 
are sometime surprised. 
The spirit of people, this, 
this funny side of each of us 
still is very alive. 
People who live 
in Bosnian-Herzegovina 
are very famous 
for its humor. 
I didn’t know that, 
that is actually lovely.
It really is 
the characteristic that 
I admire at my co-citizens.
The different groups 
of religious believers of 
Bosnia and Herzegovina 
have always kept 
a strong faith in God.
Bosnian-Herzegovina’s 
history has always been 
very much influenced 
by religion.  
Two major religions 
that are practiced 
in Bosnia-Herzegovina: 
That is Islam by Muslims 
in Bosnia-Herzegovina 
called Bosniacs, [and] 
it is Christianity, both 
Catholic and Orthodox. 
The Catholicism 
is practiced by Croats 
in Bosnia-Herzegovina, 
the Croatian people. 
And the Orthodox 
Christianity 
is practiced by Serbs 
in Bosnia-Herzegovina. 
And there’s also Judaism 
and some other religions. 
People of 
Bosnia-Herzegovina, 
they are very spiritual. 
The spirituality of people, 
their need to believe in God, 
to practice their religion, 
to keep 
the traditional customs 
that are particular
for Bosnia-Herzegovina 
for each of the religions, 
that is being 
practiced there, it always 
has been very important 
to people and it is still.
Thank you, 
Your Excellency 
Biljana Gutic-Bjelica, for 
opening our eyes and hearts 
to the lovely land 
and spirited people of 
Bosnia and Herzegovina. 
May your jewel of 
a country and co-citizens 
continue to live in 
happiness, prosperity, 
and peace.
It was a pleasure having 
your company today on
your company today on
Enlightening Entertainment. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television 
for Words of Wisdom, 
up next after 
Noteworthy News. 
May your life be blessed 
with joy and harmony.