rookie je napisao/la:
Shaban je napisao/la:
rookie je napisao/la:
Ko je veæi Srbin, jel Ivo, ili Andriæ?

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Cini mi se Andric!
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Pa da, mo¾da po prezimenu koje je naslijedio od èovjeka koji se odaziva na ime Antun Andriæ.
Mo¾da zato ¹to mu je ¾ena bila Srpkinja... Znam da mo¾e¹ od ¾ene preuzet prezime, al nacionalnost, to mi je nepoznato

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Mozda se nasao medju nama kao i Tesla na SVIM spiskovima najvecih Hrvata....
Ako si upoznat sa likom i delom I.A. onda znas i ko je bio McNeil..... Inace odlomak iz biografije:
Introduction by William H. McNeil,
Ivo Andric was born in Travnik, Bosnia, in 1892, but he spent his first two years in Sarajevo, where his father worked as a silversmith. This was a traditional art, preserving artisan skills dating back to Ottoman times; but taste had changed and the market for the sort of silverwork Ivo's father produced was severely depressed. The family therefore lived poorly; and when the future writer was still an infant, his father died, leaving his peniless young widow to look after an only child. They went to live with her parents in Visegrad on the banks of the Drina, where the young Ivo grew up in an artisan family (his grandfather was a carpenter) playing on the bridge he was later to make so famous, and listening to tales about its origin and history which he used so skillfully to define the character of early Ottoman presence in that remote Bosnian town. The family was orthodox Christian, i.e. Serb; ...
Translator's Foreword by Lovett F. Edwards, p 7
Dr Ivo Andric is himself a Serb and a Bosnian.
P.S.
There is a number of Croatians thinking as if they acquired some rights to proprely align Andric with their idea of ethnicity.
The very great writer, many times in his life, was forced to explicitly express and declare himself as a Serb. At least, his attitude and perception of his ethnic background has to be respected ultimately.