How Was Life in Yugoslavia?

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Croatian Experience with Sanda

Croatian Experience with Sanda

Күн бұрын

How was life in Yugoslavia?
How was life in Croatia during Yugoslavia compared to today when Croatia is an independent Republic of Croatia?
Was it better then or is it better now?
These are some of the questions that people keep talking about to this day, and my mom Nela Chop will help me answer them through sharing her experience of living half of her life in Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRJ) and the other half in the Republic of Croatia.
Follow my mom's channels:
1) Subscribe to my mom’s KZbin channel here: / @nelacop
2) Donate the amount you’d like here to help my mom’s recovery of blood cancer - leukemia, and the publishing of her first book: www.paypal.me/nelachop
3) Join my mom’s Patreon here: / nelachop
4) Watch her first video here about her surviving leukemia, like, share and comment: • How I Found Out I Had ...
5) Watch her video about hospital care in Croatia here: • Hospital Care: My Expe...
6) Watch her video about what you need to drink while taking antibiotics: • WATCH THIS if You Take...
6) Follow her on Instagram: / nelachop
Follow me:
Contact for language lessons and business inquiries: :
E-mail: croatianexperiencewithsanda@gmail.com
Instagram: / cursocroata
Patreon: / cursoaprendecroata
For Spanish speakers / Para los hispanohablantes:
Web: www.cursoaprendecroata.com
Contacto: info@cursoaprendecroata.com
Facebook: / cursocroata
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Thanks for watching, pozdrav iz Hrvatske!
Keywords: Yugoslavia, Croatia, Slovenia, Serbia, Bosnia, Montenegro, Macedonia, Croatian language, Serbocroatian language, Differences between Croatian and Serbian language, Are Croatian and Serbian the same, How was life in Yugoslavia

Пікірлер: 846
@Jaumebertran79
@Jaumebertran79 4 жыл бұрын
Bok, Sanda! Muchas gracias! Un vídeo muy interesante. Yugoslavia fue un régimen socialista atípico por la ruptura con la URSS de Stalin en 1948. Esto le permitió a Tito jugar un papel de puente entre el bloque occidental capitalista liderado por USA y el soviético del pacto de Varsovia (especialmente tras la reanudación de las relaciones diplomáticas con Moscú con Khrusov) y también en la esfera internacional liderando el bloque de los países no alineados. El socialismo yugoslavo, creo que su gran ideólogo fue Kardelj, fue también original y diferente del soviético. (Paro ya porque me podría pasar horas escribiendo sobre historia...). Esto que explico es teoría que puede sacarse de cualquier manual de historia pero el testimonio de tu mamá es muy interesante porque habla de sus vivencias y da su visión personal de la vida en Yugoslavia y en la actual Croacia. Muchas gracias por este interesantísimo video y saludos a ti y a tu mami!
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda 4 жыл бұрын
Jaume muchas gracias por tu excelente y educativo comentario! Tus comentarios son siempre muy bienvenidos en mi canal y, por mí, no tienes que parar de hablar sobre la historia 😊 Mas bien, me alegra saber que el video te pareció interesante. Esto es una parte de las vivencias de mi madre que pasó su infancia en los años 60 y adolescencia en los años 70. Por supuesto la vida durante los 45 años de Yugoslavia cambio mucho con cada década, así como la situación política y la modernización. ¡Te mandamos saludos! Puno pozdrava iz Hrvatske!
@JUGAopet1
@JUGAopet1 4 жыл бұрын
" Bok, Sanda! Puno vam hvala! Vrlo zanimljiv video. Jugoslavija je bila netipičan socijalistički režim zbog raskida Staljina sa SSSR-om 1948. To je omogućilo Titu da igra glavnu ulogu između kapitalističkog zapadnog bloka predvođenog SAD-om i Sovjetskim Varšavskim paktom (posebno nakon ponovnog uspostavljanja odnosa diplomate s Moskvom s Hrususom) a također i u međunarodnoj sferi koja vodi blok nesvrstanih zemalja. Jugoslavenski socijalizam, mislim da je njegov veliki ideolog Kardelj, također je bio originalan i drugačiji od sovjetskog. (Prestajem jer bih mogao satima pisati o povijesti ...). Ono što objašnjavam je teorija koja se može preuzeti iz bilo kojeg priručnika o povijesti, ali svjedočanstvo vaše majke vrlo je zanimljivo jer govori o svojim iskustvima i daje svoje osobno viđenje života u Jugoslaviji i današnjoj Hrvatskoj. Hvala vam puno na ovom zanimljivom videu i pozdravima vama i vašoj mami! " Google transl.
@kuroazrem5376
@kuroazrem5376 3 жыл бұрын
@@CroatianExperiencewithSanda wow, muy buen español.
@kuroazrem5376
@kuroazrem5376 3 жыл бұрын
El socialismo de Yugoslavia se llamaba "socialismo autogestionario", el cual proponía que los medios de producción pertenecían a los trabajadores, y no al Estado, como en los regímenes marxistas como la URSS o China. Es como el mutualismo de Produdhon más que marxismo-comunismo. In Yugoslavia, socialism was called "self-management", which basically gave the means of production to the workers instead of the State, unlike other Marxist-communist States like China or the USSR. It ressembles more Proudhon's mutualism more than Marxism-Communism.
@ianmarkcarmichael1286
@ianmarkcarmichael1286 2 жыл бұрын
I encourage everyone to read "NATO In The Balkans: Voices Of Opposition" by Ramsey Clark, Sara Flounders and others (1998), to better understand the situation in Ukraine and be able to anticipate future events.
@never2late454
@never2late454 3 жыл бұрын
I visited Yugoslavia in the early 1980's the people were so friendly , and seemed happy. the country was so beautiful . Before I went I had expected to see a poor nation with oppression. It really amazed me how modern and beautiful it was in that time.
@ianmarkcarmichael1286
@ianmarkcarmichael1286 2 жыл бұрын
I encourage everyone to read "NATO In The Balkans: Voices Of Opposition" by Ramsey Clark, Sara Flounders and others (1998), to better understand the situation in Ukraine and be able to anticipate future events.
@ninhful
@ninhful 4 жыл бұрын
I lived in East Germany in early 1980s. I enjoyed watching Yugoslavian films at that time.
@MrDgo4life
@MrDgo4life 4 жыл бұрын
How was the DDR in your experience compared to Yugoslavia?
@ninhful
@ninhful 4 жыл бұрын
The DDR and its people were very nice to Vietnamese students. No crime. Alles ist da. Beautiful. I did not have the chance to visit Yugoslavia but understand that it was more developed than the GDR.
@MrDgo4life
@MrDgo4life 4 жыл бұрын
@@ninhful In which city did you live in at that time?
@user-tp8ng4it9z
@user-tp8ng4it9z 4 жыл бұрын
film studio DEFA about indians with yugoslavian actour Goiko Mitic
@ninhful
@ninhful 4 жыл бұрын
@@MrDgo4life Ich war in Weimar und dann in Berlin. Viele Grüße.
@filipstefanovski2077
@filipstefanovski2077 3 жыл бұрын
If Yugoslavia didn't colapse I wouldn't have to move to another country
@filipstefanovski2077
@filipstefanovski2077 3 жыл бұрын
@@asinlena well im still havent moved
@abraxadabra4224
@abraxadabra4224 3 жыл бұрын
Same here. My mother decided to get out of Serbia when the war started. I feel sorry I couldn't grow up in my own country.
@filipstefanovski2077
@filipstefanovski2077 3 жыл бұрын
@@abraxadabra4224 well for me its diffrent im from macedonia and im just trying to move to find a better life
@abraxadabra4224
@abraxadabra4224 3 жыл бұрын
@@filipstefanovski2077 Everybody moves because they want a better life, otherwise everybody would like to stay in their home. But not everything that shines is made of gold!
@filipstefanovski2077
@filipstefanovski2077 3 жыл бұрын
@@abraxadabra4224 thats 100% true
@jamescameron9522
@jamescameron9522 3 жыл бұрын
My family had escaped during the war, everything was just as your mom had said. Rich or Poor didn't matter we were all in the same boat together, I'm Yugoslavian stil at heart. whether you be Serbian, Croatian or anything else you all are my brothers and sisters
@user-im6fy4qp6m
@user-im6fy4qp6m 9 ай бұрын
yes thats socialism in a nutshell. bring everyone down to the same bottom level.
@LD-wm7jm
@LD-wm7jm 3 жыл бұрын
When Yugoslavia died, one of the brightest beacons of socialist optimism was gone forever.
@starlightglimmer3260
@starlightglimmer3260 Жыл бұрын
But vietnam still exist
@valentinbarinov
@valentinbarinov 2 ай бұрын
​@starlightglimmer3260 that's true:D but Yugoslavia was definitely THE country to live in, they are both amazing and I hope socialism will rise again
@nguyentiensu3825
@nguyentiensu3825 27 күн бұрын
​@@starlightglimmer3260vietnam are more like capitalism now man, just like china, school hopital aint free
@markomarkovic5729
@markomarkovic5729 4 жыл бұрын
Great video Sanda! Yugoslavia was a great place, and had a really great potential. Your mom mentioned free housing, and it worked because part of the salary went into a common housing, which the company used for the purchase of apartments, which were later allocated the employees. That worked until the '90's, my dad got his apartment in 1987. There was another benefit that the employees of the Yugoslav companies had - paid vacation. Almost all Yugoslav companies owned resorts on the coast and in the mountains, so holidays were extremely cheap for every Yugoslavian family. Yugoslavian tourism was well developed, and according to World Tourism Organization, in 1989 Yugoslavia was among the 10 most developed countries in the world. Tourism is considered an invisible export, and Yugoslavia has been generating a large income from tourism. We also had strong domestic production, and almost everything was produced, and there was no need to import. Yugoslav socialism was at the level of the Scandinavian social protection system, which is considered the best in the world. The Yugoslav model was called self-management, there were so-called workers' councils, on which all important decisions were made, and workers elected directors, they decided on investments, etc... It was a different time, people loved their country and had a strong sense of solidarity. Almost the entire country was built (roads, railways, bridges, buildings) through the so-called youth workers' actions - young people throughout Yugoslavia VOLUNTARILY went around the country and participated in the reconstruction and development. There was a low crime rate due to the secret police sending criminals abroad. They would mostly become secret service associates, received passports and official IDs, and in exchange for freedom, they did dirty work for the Yugoslav service and dealt with the so-called "internal enemies of the state." Unfortunately, it all backfired, because all of these criminals have become the dogs of war and leaders of paramilitary formations in the '90s. If you're interested in how and why the tragedy occurred in Yugoslavia, I suggest you check out some interview with Croatian investigative journalist Domagoj Margetić, who discovered the trail of money and how leaders of Serbs, Croats and Bosniaks enormously enriched themselves while people were killed in a senseless war . He claims he has evidence that a minimum of $ 150 billion has been looted from the former Yugoslavia. Sorry for the lengthy comment, but this is a very extensive topic. God bless your mom and you and greetings for beautiful Rijeka from Belgrade!
@stefanfreestylez
@stefanfreestylez 3 жыл бұрын
Good write up man but alot of those that worked for the secret service were honest good men too. Example of someone well known being franko simatovic. From the personal stories i heard he was a good man but you gotta put the blame on someone i guess.... Of course there were some mental cases that were specifically chosen around the time of the country breaking up. Majority of those maniacs are still running free today. But Jebiga man shit happens it was a great country i hope one day everyone in that area agrees to form something like that again. Too much corruption to make that possible though these days. :^/
@philippe5947
@philippe5947 3 жыл бұрын
Yugoslavia seemed lovely.. the only default I've heard about so far is its authoritarianism, and Tito's crimes (illegal elections) but other than that, he seemed like a good leader, and Yugoslavia like a wonderful market socialist country.. if only it didn't break up :(
@luismadrid7513
@luismadrid7513 3 жыл бұрын
Yo soy de los que piensa que los balcánicos y el mundo entero, perdieron mucho con la desintegración de la Republica Federal Socialista de Yugoslavia... Un hecho que deberia aun hoy merecer mejores investigaciones, donde la rigurosidad este por encima de los intereses nacionalistas sectarios, para entender realmente mucho mejor la historia contemporanea, y los mismos intereses que suelen estar detras de ella.... Saludos desde Caracas, Venezuela.
@mihaelbitola3812
@mihaelbitola3812 2 жыл бұрын
@@philippe5947 TITO have died penniless hi was having couple of children he left nothing to them not a single dolar absolutely nothing , they were having nothing when he was alive, they were having some ordinary jobs and they were providing for them self and they were living in apartments like the others ordinary citizens, and he was the president for 40 years, he was literally working 12 hours a day every day, and he was a human being he made some mistakes, I really want now to have president like him for life than to watch this selfish and greedy Hippocrates to day destroying the ordinary People.
@shyper17
@shyper17 2 ай бұрын
​@@stefanfreestylezThere were good and bad people in everything of course. But the leaders of the SRs in the 90s were war profiteers, there is no doubt in that. The only thing that surprised me is this huge number of 150 billion dollars. That's huge. Even for war profiteers.
@lalala5471
@lalala5471 3 жыл бұрын
My parents were born in Yugoslavia and whenever they talk abt their amazing lifes when Tito was our leader it feels like a beautiful fairytale
@nomadvehr827
@nomadvehr827 2 жыл бұрын
Well Sara, that's your perspective. It all depends on who you ask, for my grandparents and my father it was not so amazing . My Dida fled Yugoslavia on a boat to Italy at the time after spending 3 years in prison for selling regulated goods. It was the post war and there was a whole black market situation. He then brought the family to Italy and went scouting in South America where they all finally settled. There were 2 words that were big no-nos on his table: Tito and Comunism. The other word he did not like much was Yugoslavia since he always identified as a Croat first and Dalmatian second. The bright side to this story is that it would have been a fairytale for him, I would not be writing this comment now.
@nomadvehr827
@nomadvehr827 2 жыл бұрын
@Class is Fundamental not an Ustaša, when Croatia ceded Dalmatia to the Italians he fled for Slavonia. That kind of says it all.
@nomadvehr827
@nomadvehr827 2 жыл бұрын
@Class is Fundamental I heard similar stories from people from the local Croatian community. I understand the Yugoslavia point of view. I also understand the exploitation by politicians of the latent resentments between nationalities. I am sure that with a bottle of rakija on the table we can talk for hours about this we may not reach an agreement, but I am sure we will have fun trying.
@vixen878
@vixen878 7 ай бұрын
@@nomadvehr827 good
@timeousrequiem4772
@timeousrequiem4772 4 жыл бұрын
If Yugoslavia still existed I would live there! Sounds like an awesome place :з
@tomerkeret2191
@tomerkeret2191 4 жыл бұрын
I wish I could visit Yugoslavia before the war. Where people had smiles instead of scars.
@puppetmasternostringsonme8293
@puppetmasternostringsonme8293 4 жыл бұрын
@Hannah Cabana it was greater as you think
@bobob8820
@bobob8820 4 жыл бұрын
My dad was in yugoslav and bosanska armija
@maplesyrup7626
@maplesyrup7626 4 жыл бұрын
Ye Wish it still existed becouse I whould be a citizen of it:)
@maplesyrup7626
@maplesyrup7626 4 жыл бұрын
@@bobob8820 yep
@guoyixu5793
@guoyixu5793 4 жыл бұрын
love and respect from China. Born in 1990s, my generation has no cutural links to Yugoslavia, but people of my parents' or grandparents' age have deep connection culturally with Yugoslavia, because I was told by them that everyone in China in the 1950-1970 period watched Yugoslavian movies, and were amazed at how good the living standard were at Yugoslavia. Although China and USSR were in military alliance during 1950s, the two countries didn't get along well after that and had a few military confrontations. Overall, China didn't want to participate in the Cold War but to develop as an independent nation, and the socialist path adopted by China now is in no way close to USSR. Just to be clear that socialist is not evil, and not all socialist countries are the same. Socialist countries can also prosper and bring the vast majority of people high quality of life and be open-minded.
@markomarkovic5729
@markomarkovic5729 4 жыл бұрын
Although the Yugoslav system wasn't perfect, it was incomparably better than the system in today's banana republics of the former state. There are several reasons for the disintegration of Yugoslavia and the senseless civil war. After the fall of the Berlin Wall, the need for Yugoslavia as a buffer zone between East and West ceased. The then national leaders provoked the war, in order to plunder their own people. An investigative journalist from Croatia gathered evidence that Croats laundered money for Serbs and vice versa, even though they were at war. It is estimated that they robbed at least 150 billion dollars, and the money ended up in secret accounts. This is not a conspiracy theory, he also testified before the European Parliament, but the European Union is not interested in resolving this case, because then we wouldn't be in debt bondage. Great powers also had interests, primarily Germany and the United States. Natural resources and former socialist economic giants are owned by companies from Germany and the United States. The largest NATO base is located in Kosovo, and Kosovo also has huge mineral resources - worth 900 billion, according to US estimates from 1998. Madeleine Albright, NATO General Wesley Clark and the Clinton family have a large share in the ownership of energy companies from Kosovo. German companies own almost the entire Croatian coast. We are today just a source of cheap labor, humiliated and robbed. Unfortunately, a large part of the people don't understand that, and they hate each other, just because they believe in different God, or because they are "evil" Serbs / Croats / Bosniaks...
@comontista3124
@comontista3124 4 жыл бұрын
What do they think about cultural revolution.
@valente1004
@valente1004 3 жыл бұрын
@@markomarkovic5729 So sad that cultural differences destroyed that great socialistic project
@momocha5154
@momocha5154 3 жыл бұрын
Comon Tista It was a chaos. The society was out of control. People go crazy . Youngers could judge those who against the revolution. So many schoolers,officers and teachers had bullied by crazy people... Most of them had to suicide. Otherwise the crazy young people would killed them by cruel methods. One of the chairman was judged by the crazy people and be kicked to die....
@sheldoncooperanarchist
@sheldoncooperanarchist 3 ай бұрын
only really evil socialist country was cambodia
@christ.895
@christ.895 4 жыл бұрын
Love yugoslavia from greece❤️✌🏼if only balkans were in peace we could achieve many things
@filipstefanovski2077
@filipstefanovski2077 3 жыл бұрын
Wow the first greek ever that doesnt hate us!!!
@filipstefanovski2077
@filipstefanovski2077 3 жыл бұрын
I thought that all greeks hate us.
@redlightning9130
@redlightning9130 3 жыл бұрын
@@filipstefanovski2077 greeks loved Yugoslavia what do you think?
@batjackjohnson252
@batjackjohnson252 2 жыл бұрын
Balkans will perhaps only have lasting peace when the Savior returns. Otherwise it could be argued to be the most war torn region of the entire world. Strong people & good cultures, BUT maybe ancient curses in blood for thousands of years. Macedonia sure is a great example these days for all it's neighbors. In my opinion the total society of Serbia is improving. However it usually takes only one Balkan nation to regress the entire region back to its relative norm. IF all those nations enter the EU then perhaps there could be a hundred years of peace soon as the EU survives the next decade or two.
@AlexCab_49
@AlexCab_49 4 жыл бұрын
I would love to have lived or at least emulate the Yugoslavia system. I'd like to have a job and healthcare and education and know my children won't have to struggle with rent, mortgages, unemployment and tuition.
@dogguy8603
@dogguy8603 4 жыл бұрын
But dont you dare criticize the Marshal Tito, or want to control you life in any way
@tribinaaux4043
@tribinaaux4043 4 жыл бұрын
dog guy there was no need to criticize Tito if everything was fine
@dogguy8603
@dogguy8603 4 жыл бұрын
@@tribinaaux4043 besides lack of basic human rights, if you cant criticize the government then you are not free or have basic human rights
@rockcommen1106
@rockcommen1106 4 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I'm sure you'd love the government having complete control of what you do and can say. At one point, you weren't allowed to leave the country or you would be arrested. Look at how many people still escaped. That should tell you everything.
@AlexCab_49
@AlexCab_49 4 жыл бұрын
@@rockcommen1106 seems you'd rather have free speach then the guarantee you won't go homeless, unemployed or in massive debt from medical bills or going to college.
@NkoDmtryPoletv
@NkoDmtryPoletv 4 жыл бұрын
I heard many great stories about the former Yugoslavia from my parents when we were still the Soviet Union.. I want to visit the former yugoslavian countries cause I know that these 6 nations weren't just ruch in history but also in culture and in places... ♥ 🇷🇺
@_Mark41
@_Mark41 3 жыл бұрын
It was too good to be True. Serbs, bosnians and others were good in yugoslavia, while croatia and Slovenia werent. It also doesnt help that yugoslavia did some sketchy and horrible things to croats. It was kinda good, but you cant compare it to today
@dinosibonjic2915
@dinosibonjic2915 3 жыл бұрын
@@_Mark41 Slovenia was the richest country. 10 day war only with Serbia. But Bosnia had the most blood and political war. Once your a catholic in Bosnia ur a croat while ur a damn Bosniak. And if ur a muslim THAN ur a bosniak. If ur a muslim in croatia that u are croatian
@darkoulmer6881
@darkoulmer6881 3 жыл бұрын
@@_Mark41 It was good for everyone in Yogoslavia until Tito's death. Because he didn't appointed a succsessor Yugoslavia was ruled by council of SFRJ, in which every state had one representative. And every law and proposal, everything was voted at the council. It worked good until Milošević gave autonomy to Vojvodina and Kosovo leading to that they had one member in the council, but since they still being Serbia led to that Serbia have majority in council and everything that it wasn't in interes of Serbia was automatically overvoted. That along with constant inflation caused by giving to much power to the union and Slovenia and Croatia being the states with the best economy they had to financially help other state led to dissatisfaction and Slovenia and Croatia decided to leave alliance.
@that1niceguy246
@that1niceguy246 Жыл бұрын
@@darkoulmer6881 Kosovo and Vojvodina were Autonomous Regions before Milošević, but he effectively took over power from the leaders of these provinces - Kosovo had a strong desire to become it's own Republic instead of being under control from Belgrade which Milošević did not like - and initiated a coup d'etat in Montenegro which gave meant he had control over 4 out of the 8 votes the council would have.
@jennb7642
@jennb7642 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for uploading! I'm all the way from Louisiana, United States .. My great grandmother migrated from Yugoslavia. My grandmother and grandfather told me stories when I I was younger I'm now 30 and been researching the nation and came across your video! Your mom seems so sweet, by the way! Thank you for uploading!
@Kriosaivak
@Kriosaivak 4 жыл бұрын
I'm an American, and even I have to say that I wish I could go to Yugoslavia today. :(
@quarksandstuff4011
@quarksandstuff4011 4 жыл бұрын
Aidan Buford go to the Philippines then!
@elaovi
@elaovi 4 жыл бұрын
People’s republic Of corona Don’t go to the Philippines
@lepikova
@lepikova 3 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info?search_query=yugoslavian+issues+warning
@MacetazzOpina
@MacetazzOpina 3 жыл бұрын
@@quarksandstuff4011 dont go to the philippines
@dr.c0a585
@dr.c0a585 3 жыл бұрын
Unluckly USA supported the politics who destroyed our freedom, now we are BANANA PUPPET STATES OF AMERICA
@droppsterx2373
@droppsterx2373 3 жыл бұрын
Amazing video,it's sad how we fought each other at the end and how it fell apart.greetings from Serbia.
@Bumaroupjotrobru
@Bumaroupjotrobru 4 жыл бұрын
So the trade off was, more poverty in exchange of some rich people being able to accumulate capital? Seems like capitalism just made everything worse :/
@goatwarrior3570
@goatwarrior3570 3 жыл бұрын
That was not capitalism that was fault of war annihilating the economy and infrastructure and corrupt politicians ensuring their friends and family profiteer at the expense of everyone else. Even if they introduce socialism again, at this point it will just be those same corrupt politicians with all the money and everyone else sharing in equal nothingness.
@philippe5947
@philippe5947 3 жыл бұрын
@@goatwarrior3570 I mean, sure, but I get their point, the nations that used to form Yugoslavia are now capitalist, and in a very bad situation. Correct me if I'm wrong - which I might very well be - but at the collapse of Yugoslavia market socialism was also replaced by capitalism, no?
@goatwarrior3570
@goatwarrior3570 3 жыл бұрын
​@@philippe5947 Yes, we are in a bad economic situation but as I am saying before, that is not the fault of capitalism, it is the fault of corrupt, jingoistic politicians. Also destruction to infrastructure during the wars, in Bosnia and Croatia over reliance on tourism is hindering progress. There is also issue of young skilled workers leaving country for EU for better wages, far too much reliance on public sector, something left over from socialist times, too high deficit, too much black market trading, too much bureaucracy hindering new companies and making unattractive to foreign investment. It cannot be overstated just how much of this poor management is result of political corruption. The economic hardships of Yugoslavia were in place long before the transition to capitalism. Under socialist system unemployment was terrible and debt was huge. SFRJ was borrowing vast amounts from Western nations to keep economy functioning and sending young unemployed overseas, mainly Germany, so they could give illusion of lower unemployment. The final economic collapse in 1990 was what causes the breakup of SFRJ. Also corruption in these times was widespread. They have worker controlled factories but to get a job there you're going to have to be relative of someone on council or bribe someone. This result in terrible productivity as worker can be lazy and still hold job and receive labor bonus depending on if their uncle or something is high up in council. I think horrors of war and current bad economic situation give some older people rose tinted memory of former Jugoslavia. There was much economic hardship in final decades but some people benefit from the security of worker collective firms, even if that security was through corruption. I think they don't want to accept it was all an illusion that would and did eventually collapse into chaos. I hope one day Bosnia, Serbia and Croatia can move forward like other former communist countries of Europe and progress somewhere but it's a long hard road ahead.
@user-qg4um9hx8e
@user-qg4um9hx8e 3 жыл бұрын
@@goatwarrior3570 A bad economic situation because of neoliberalism, it's interesting that you condemn reliance on the public sector yet mourn the loss of infrastructure. Strong infrastructure is the result of correctly allocated state money for public projects that benefit that, the public. I recommend reading about neoliberalism economics, after Yugoslavia split, this economic policy swept the sovereign states and today's bad situation is largely the result of this policy (including worker exodus to other countries due to a lack of local industry). prospect.org/economy/neoliberalism-political-success-economic-failure/
@goatwarrior3570
@goatwarrior3570 3 жыл бұрын
@@user-qg4um9hx8e "A bad economic situation because of neoliberalism" You really don't know a thing about the situation here if you think it's due to neoliberalism. Let me guess, you are American?
@abraxadabra4224
@abraxadabra4224 3 жыл бұрын
In Italian there is a saying: " When you leave the old for the new you know where you've been but not where you're going to"
@TheSkyGuy77
@TheSkyGuy77 2 жыл бұрын
Very true
@filipstefanovski2077
@filipstefanovski2077 3 жыл бұрын
Well I am from Macedonia and I can understand every yugoslavian language accept for slovenian
@ladev91
@ladev91 3 жыл бұрын
I mean, there are only really 3 languages Macedonian, serbo-croation, and Slovenian
@mrlee361
@mrlee361 3 жыл бұрын
Nobody understands Slovenian 🤣😭
@mrlee361
@mrlee361 3 жыл бұрын
@Horvatska Banovina Of course, there is multiple definitions for South Slavic language Serbo-Croatian is one of them. The language differs in grammar, dialects and ling. script (Latin, Cyrillic). But in the core they are all the same: a South Slavic language that was changed over time from Romans, Austrians, ottomans etc. But you Balkan people really need to stop hating each other because of nationalist beliefs. Greetings from Germany. ✋🏻😊
@filipstefanovski2077
@filipstefanovski2077 3 жыл бұрын
@@mrlee361 I understand it but I cant speack it
@Benjamin.S-Dardani
@Benjamin.S-Dardani 3 жыл бұрын
@@ladev91 and there is montenegrin, Bosnian and bulgarian. Not just only your languages also other slavic languages
@NI-lp3qo
@NI-lp3qo 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the excellent video! Part of my family is from Yugoslavia and this was very informative as someone who is trying to discover how daily life functioned in the country. I appreciate the balanced perspective comparing the positives and negatives of Socialist Yugoslavia vs. Modern Croatia.
@cativegas
@cativegas 3 жыл бұрын
This was a beautiful video to watch, very helpful and entretaining. Thank you Sanda !
@alphadraconian3483
@alphadraconian3483 4 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately things changed it used to be a wonderful amazing beautiful place where everyone and everything was wonderful and everyone was happy and life was wonderful l miss it so much . I have fond memories of the Amazing country of old Yugoslavia ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
@_Mark41
@_Mark41 3 жыл бұрын
It was too good to be True. Serbs, bosnians and others were good in yugoslavia, while croatia and Slovenia werent. It also doesnt help that yugoslavia did some sketchy and horrible things to croats. It was kinda good, but you cant compare it to todayđ
@rsmlinar1720
@rsmlinar1720 3 жыл бұрын
@Awawawa CM they didnt happen in later years. Brotherhood and unity was encoureged, Tensions rose again towards last years of yugoslavia.
@fernandomilicich8160
@fernandomilicich8160 4 жыл бұрын
I think Yugoslavia it was the best country in the east Europe
@miko886
@miko886 3 жыл бұрын
I think it was best country in a world, there was no borders for us in that time
@lolawho8676
@lolawho8676 3 жыл бұрын
It was not part of Eastern Europe. Belonged to non-alliance movement. Geographically belongs to south Europe. It was the best country worldwide...
@es3359
@es3359 3 жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you for making this video! My grandparents emigrated from Yugoslavia to Canada in the 1960s, and I've always been curious about what life was like in Yugoslavia after they left. Hopefully I'll have a chance to visit Slovenia and Croatia (my grandparents' home states) once this pandemic is over.
@roseavara9682
@roseavara9682 3 жыл бұрын
Yugoslavia is a pretty positive example of a socialist system that actually worked fairly well. especially given how many people who used to live there often have positive opinions of it. its not a perfect example of course, there were still numerous flaws, but its a good demonstration of its potential.
@KyokugenVlog
@KyokugenVlog 4 жыл бұрын
thank you for the precious video.
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching and commenting, don't forget to subscribe and press the notification bell! :)
@enriquevp77
@enriquevp77 4 жыл бұрын
I found very valuable information in this video and also very interesting since it was explained by these two wonderful girls who were actually living there during two key periods in recent history and that is very important to understand the context of these countries today. Just loved it! 10/10
@shawnafitzsimmons1852
@shawnafitzsimmons1852 Жыл бұрын
The love between you and your mom is so evident. Thank you for this historical context and especially the differentiation between the nuances of socialism, including the different ways it manifests. I know this video is 3 years old but I wish your mom the best of health. My nona is from Pula and I have been learning so much from your videos so I can speak to her in her native language since she has no one else to do that with. Thank you for your generosity in sharing your knowledge!
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this comment! It made my day. My mom is alive and quite well, we managed to get through covid. It is wonderful that you are learning hrvatski to talk to your nona!! Well done! 🥰 All the best & good luck! Sretno!
@arturbychkov6267
@arturbychkov6267 4 жыл бұрын
Love Yugoslavia with all my heart!
@madurarachu4966
@madurarachu4966 2 жыл бұрын
Please I have to come to
@scentomania7226
@scentomania7226 3 жыл бұрын
Question is why you need 5 cars? 3 houses? Actually we dont need it.
@OfficialSilverMoon
@OfficialSilverMoon 3 жыл бұрын
Exactly! I know so many people who lived in the USSR and East germany say how when they were young they would buy into western propaganda of how infinite options and choice are signs of development and progress but now they reminisce the old times when they didn’t have to worry about rent, monthly grocery expenses, children’s education, healthcare costs and so much. So many belarussians tell me how back then they had everything a person needs and now that they supposedly have so many “choices” they can’t afford any.
@pacorondon3680
@pacorondon3680 3 жыл бұрын
@@OfficialSilverMoon 😆😅😅😅😅😅😆👍 people, human beings are never ok until they are like sssshhhhh....
@cr4554
@cr4554 3 жыл бұрын
Why do you not need it and someone not willing to work for it like most do deserve it?
@yomyomcam
@yomyomcam 3 жыл бұрын
This is very interesting. In my early childhood, Yugoslavia still existed, the separation process and later war in Croatia were events I saw. Terrible times. It is amazing how these days we can get to hear someone from Yugoslavia despite the time and distance. Great videos. Thanks for sharing.
@RobertoSanchez-mb9rj
@RobertoSanchez-mb9rj 3 жыл бұрын
Congratulations y'all both for having shared such interesting things
@cwwmillwork
@cwwmillwork 11 ай бұрын
This is very informative. ❤
@SifuMatias
@SifuMatias 4 жыл бұрын
I love your channel I am a descendant of Croats My last name is Maric from my grandfather and Topic from my grandmother who lived in Split, I send you best regards, the work you are doing is very good and educational
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I am happy you enjoy my work and find it useful. Best regards!
@user-bi3vs7id6c
@user-bi3vs7id6c 4 жыл бұрын
Brate you are 100 % CROAT ! Greetz From a Croat born in Germany 🇭🇷😉
@user-bi3vs7id6c
@user-bi3vs7id6c 4 жыл бұрын
@Damian Wayne why?
@user-bi3vs7id6c
@user-bi3vs7id6c 4 жыл бұрын
@Damian Wayne hahhahhah okay American Gangster! Go in your Disneyland like the Roman empire and wait when they get destroyed ☝️
@filipstefanovski2077
@filipstefanovski2077 3 жыл бұрын
@@user-bi3vs7id6c wow learned some croatian brate
@ivanapeka
@ivanapeka 3 жыл бұрын
Amazing video! Just loved it!
@doramilicich7220
@doramilicich7220 4 жыл бұрын
Gracias Sanda y Nela! Nos gustó mucho el vídeo que vimos en familia. Con mucha objetividad abordaron diferentes aspectos de la vida en Yuguslavia y Croatia. Muy interesante el relato de tu madre a través de sus vivencias.
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda 4 жыл бұрын
Hola Dora, muchas gracias por tu lindo comentario, me encanta saber que vieron el video en familia y que te gustó la manera en la que lo hicimos. Muchos saludos, puno pozdrava!!!
@blindearth5937
@blindearth5937 4 жыл бұрын
Well I learned something today. Great vid :)
@hereBDBD
@hereBDBD 3 жыл бұрын
thank you both and all the best to your mom.
@under545
@under545 2 жыл бұрын
Your mother is a wise, perceptive, and eloquent woman. What a treasure to have in your life!
@YummYakitori
@YummYakitori 4 жыл бұрын
Having visited Slovenia, Croatia and BiH recently just half a year ago, in my opinion all three countries are quite different today. Slovenia felt more rural, sparsely populated with great nature and fresh air. Zagreb was soooooo densely populated, it was crowded absolutely everywhere and for some reason it was the only place in the world I've been to where almost every single restaurant was fully booked at any time of the day (hope you'll be able to tell me why; I was visiting in early December and I wonder if its due to any festive season). Dubrovnik is really really expensive (over-inflated prices for tourists) though really beautiful (stunning sunrise and sunsets, unlike anywhere I've been to in the world, would love to live there). The Plitvice Lakes is my favourite place in Croatia -- would definitely visit again!! Mostar (BiH) definitely had a unique Muslim "East meets west" feel to it in terms of architecture etc.
@contekozlovski
@contekozlovski 4 жыл бұрын
Slovenia has 100 in/km2, Croatia and Bosnia both have 75 in/km2. Only 10% of slovenians live in Ljubljana, while almost 25% of croatians live in Zagreb. If you drove from Zagreb to Split with the highway, you would see and empty space all the time.
@nomadvehr827
@nomadvehr827 2 жыл бұрын
@@contekozlovski and a little "cultural" note about Slovenia: You need to have your passport at hand to play the accordion 😂😂😂😂
@ceciliarojas3915
@ceciliarojas3915 9 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this video. I'd love a video about life in Croatia before being Croatia, before being Yugoslavia 🙂
@mabemartinez4420
@mabemartinez4420 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Sanda!! I'm Colombian, I was in Croatia 4 months ago, It´s a beautiful country, I´m fall in love with Croatia !!😍
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda 2 жыл бұрын
So cool!
@joedoe-sedoe7977
@joedoe-sedoe7977 3 жыл бұрын
She was very pleasing to listen to, I wasn’t expecting that from such an area with much conflict.
@greatboniwanker
@greatboniwanker 4 жыл бұрын
I remember Yorgoslavia ...
@user-fc1gj5io4x
@user-fc1gj5io4x 4 жыл бұрын
I was fortunate to holiday through Yugoslavia in 1990 - the people are beautiful and so friendly and i got the same friendliness across the whole country. I holidayed again through there recently across the new 6 countries and i got a sense that majority of people everywhere miss Yugoslavia. I love the region and the People. and i love this video i have learnt a lot. god bless the whole region.
@camilledumange4609
@camilledumange4609 3 жыл бұрын
Bravo!! Nela CHOP. Muchas gracias!!!! Más videos sobre cómo era la vida en el otro sistema. Que encanto de mujer. Qué maravilla de madre e hija. Les deseo lo mejor
@nigelfranciscarty8887
@nigelfranciscarty8887 3 жыл бұрын
Very interesting video. I've always been fascinated by the former Yugoslavia, and the new place it's become. I've only ever been to Slovenia, but I'd like to visit the rest of the former Yugoslavia some day..
@markclinton8681
@markclinton8681 2 жыл бұрын
How are you doing
@nayibborges
@nayibborges Жыл бұрын
Bok Sandra 😀 Gracias por compartir este video de tu mamá y su vida en la antigua Yugoslavia... Este país, deportivamente hablando, fue una potencia deportiva 😀, sobretodo en baloncesto y fútbol, la otra vez comentaba con un amigo si no se hubieran separado, mi respuesta fue, creo que ya hubiesen ganado varios mundiales 😀 Gracias y saludos para ti y tu mamá 👍
@anindiantraveler
@anindiantraveler 2 жыл бұрын
I am a Travel Blogger and going to explore Ex-Yugoslavia countries soon. Your video helped me to understand its history.
@price396mc
@price396mc 3 жыл бұрын
Lijep video! Nadam se da je mama dobro, to je najbitnije. Pozdrav
@frobinson6876
@frobinson6876 3 жыл бұрын
Lovely video - well done!
@tekbal
@tekbal 4 жыл бұрын
PRVI KOMENTAR! WOHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO! We want the video about history of Croatia!
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda 4 жыл бұрын
Of course, there are several videos about Croatia's history, nature, tourism and culture in preparation :)
@zinzi4831
@zinzi4831 3 жыл бұрын
I want it, I want it, I want it
@jugoslavsubotic4776
@jugoslavsubotic4776 2 жыл бұрын
Baš dobar video. Hvala lepo devojke . Tvoja mama je fenomenalna. Puno pzdrava is crne gore! Čuvajte se .
@Isidorovski
@Isidorovski 4 жыл бұрын
Moja majka je iz Beograda i ona je studirala econimiju u Beogradu,sve sto ti kaze tvoja majka ide isto za moju, zivela Yugoslavija!!!!!!! :(
@bsansovich
@bsansovich 3 жыл бұрын
I appreciate thees videos Sanda, I would like to learn more about the country that my fathers line came from.
@luizlozer3838
@luizlozer3838 3 жыл бұрын
You mean that you lived in a certain type of paradise, with security, education, home for everyone and work for everyone. And it worked well. The problem was that if you tried to sabotage that system, the system would defend itself trying to preserve those achievements. And you were tired of it. Today life is full of anxiety, fear and you see old people eating from garbage cans. got it. And you were ungrateful muggles who threw everything away. People are strange. Not forgetting that the generation that built this system faced a bloody war with an evil enemy. They won this war and built this paradise-like system. And you, children of that generation threw it all away. Well, the advantage is that today few people can have many houses, car companies .... I see. Socialism was great! Shame on you!
@justaguy6544
@justaguy6544 3 жыл бұрын
An excess of luxury turns people into spoiled ungrateful brats. The same has happened to every empire throughout history. In order to achieve a long lasting and stable paradisiacal system, life can never be made to be 'too' easy.
@wegothefunk
@wegothefunk 3 жыл бұрын
If a Yugoslavia still existed I would want to live there so badly. Yugoslavia has become an obsession of mine
@wegothefunk
@wegothefunk 3 жыл бұрын
@@justaguy6544 you sound american. Socialism is bad because if we don’t have mass struggle and poverty, life is too easy, and it implodes.” What a ridiculous notion.
@andrejcccc
@andrejcccc 3 жыл бұрын
Youre naive. We were dependent on the west vs east tension wich generated money and political power to us as the unaligned strong nation. Our economy was plummeting during the 80s and our leaders requests for backing our dinar were ignored. Our leader, who was revered and respected had died a decade earlier and left noone as a succesor, old ethnic tensions emerged and "communist yugoslav leaders" capitalized on them instead of defending yugoslavia as they should. The socialism we loved had already died out there were no paid vacations, paid lunches and free apartments left for the newer generations who were not as loyal and grateful as the previous. All it needed for disaster was a spark wich was not prevented or even encouraged by certain world powers who didnt want a strong south slavic state influencing their policies in the post soviet balkans. Yugoslavia wasloved and many people still mourn it but it was doomed a decade before the war broke out.
@luizlozer3838
@luizlozer3838 3 жыл бұрын
@@andrejcccc I am not naive, of course there were problems, there were important course corrections that should have been made, both in youguslavia and in the soviet union. Certainly, a big part of the "communist leadership" had already degenerated into a careerist elite that had nothing more to do with the guys who truly looked for the future. What makes me angry, is the waste of the opportunity to advance the way of life on this small and poor planet, and you guys, apparently, came close. I'm cheering for you to find your way back towards a socialism full of abundance and freedom, as dreamed by Marx and Tito.
@crocrocroatian
@crocrocroatian 3 жыл бұрын
Hvala, Sanda! Informative video. Visit Split and Dubrovnik!
@montypython4ever
@montypython4ever 4 жыл бұрын
Greatings from Scandinavia, the realisation of what you tried to acheave, i have heard from a serbian.
@dr.c0a585
@dr.c0a585 3 жыл бұрын
When we are questioned what our nationality is, I say Yugoslav, even if all my grandparents were ethnicaly clear Serbs. USA destroyed our freedom, supporting pro fascistic organisations and politics. I really low Tito, but he had only 1 fault, what is deviding the Banate of Serbia into a non existent nationalities like Bosniaks, Montenegrins, and Macedonians, who were always considered as a Serbs, if he didnt do that SRY or Yugoslavia(Serbia) would win Yugoslav wars and we would all now live in peace.
@batjackjohnson252
@batjackjohnson252 4 жыл бұрын
God Bless your family & Rest In Peace Comrade Tito
@teodorad1235
@teodorad1235 4 жыл бұрын
johnnie anon Tito wasn’t that good
@papichulo4171
@papichulo4171 3 жыл бұрын
Teodora D Tito was pretty good, and it wasn’t just the death of Tito that made Yugoslavia fall apart, its a bit more nuanced than that.
@nou1438
@nou1438 3 жыл бұрын
@johnnie anon Communist Yugoslavia was great because of Tito. It's not Yugoslavia that was great and Tito just came along. Tito created communist Yugoslavia and while his rule had issues he made the nation prosper
@walterheisenbergwhite6034
@walterheisenbergwhite6034 3 жыл бұрын
@johnnie anon Well Tito did suppress nationalism. Did fuck over Stalin. And was able to stay neutral after the revolution. Jugislavia only fell apart after he died.
@walterheisenbergwhite6034
@walterheisenbergwhite6034 3 жыл бұрын
Holy shit my grammar
@nino210
@nino210 4 жыл бұрын
Super video. Hvala puno.
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda 4 жыл бұрын
Hvala i molim!
@wernerjulinhomantillapizar8255
@wernerjulinhomantillapizar8255 2 жыл бұрын
Muchas gracias por el video! Soy peruano, pero no sé por qué tengo ese sentir de "Yugonostalgia", y el comienzo fue desde las Olimpiadas de Sarajevo 84, que las amo demasiado, y el SynthPop Yugoslavo, bandas como: Romantične Boje, La Card, Max & Intro and so many others! 🇵🇪❤️
@markomilosevic3725
@markomilosevic3725 3 жыл бұрын
Pozdrav Sanda. Super ti je video. Mislim da sto vise zivot bude bio tezi u nasim drzavama da ce se ljudi sve vise secati i pricati o Jugoslaviji. U komentarima vidim da pricas i spanski pored engleskog. Lepo je videti mlade ljude koji se o ovo vreme opsteg ludila i opsednutosti drustvenim mrezama interesuju za kulturu i jezike. Zelim tebi i tvojoj porodici sve najbolje.
@MrTitan111
@MrTitan111 10 ай бұрын
Bok Sanda! How interesting this video. Thank you for do it!
@shaunw9270
@shaunw9270 4 жыл бұрын
Hello from England 👋🙂 Very interesting video . I'm 50 & grew up believing Yugoslavia was part of the USSR and admit to never hearing of Croatia or the other five nations until my early twenties. Thank you .
@aleksandarmicin9955
@aleksandarmicin9955 3 жыл бұрын
Well, that's kinda disturbing...
@grims2947
@grims2947 3 жыл бұрын
Aleksandar Micin ?
@markbaker4425
@markbaker4425 3 жыл бұрын
@johnnie anon nothing to do with the soviets after ww2.
@wolfyyyranchh1
@wolfyyyranchh1 3 жыл бұрын
Same, I thought all Eastern Europe was part of USSR
@chickenlover657
@chickenlover657 3 жыл бұрын
Because your media is a liar and keeps you in the dark, like all western media.
@markovangjeli7982
@markovangjeli7982 4 жыл бұрын
I lived in Yugoslavia now in the poor Republic of Kosovo
@MrBurns-im6ou
@MrBurns-im6ou 4 жыл бұрын
🇭🇷🇽🇰
@lilZyzz
@lilZyzz 4 жыл бұрын
i whanted to write u mean serbia sooo hard but nah i whont we ae all one country
@shuhratkessikbayev8886
@shuhratkessikbayev8886 4 жыл бұрын
Kosovo? That's a funny way to say Serbia
@mancho522
@mancho522 3 жыл бұрын
Did you live good in Yugoslavia? :)
@RandomGuy-ej5dr
@RandomGuy-ej5dr 3 жыл бұрын
Kosovo is in a poor republic of Serbia.🇽🇰=🇷🇸
@nevamele2152
@nevamele2152 2 жыл бұрын
life in Yugoslavia was very good. it was like paradise. Miss you Yugoslavia ♥️♥️♥️
@tamararociosusich8955
@tamararociosusich8955 4 жыл бұрын
Hola sanda! Mi bisabuelo era de Yugoslavia, de lo que sería actualmente grabovac en Croacia. Vino a la Argentina a buscar una vida mejor, se casó con una mujer austriaca y tuvieron su descendencia, mi abuelo también se casó con una mujer croata aquí en la Argentina. Actualmente estoy queriendo tramitar la ciudadanía pero se me está complicando porque en la zona en donde nació mi bisabuelo hubo una guerra contra los serbios y se quemaron las iglesias con ella toda su documentación. De todas maneras quiero seguir aprendiendo sobre su cultura e idioma, es sumamente interesante. Gracias!!!!!
@nanajordan2189
@nanajordan2189 3 жыл бұрын
Mila moja Yugoslavia, nashi brati i sestri, volim vi !!! Pozdravi ot Bulgaria
@dejansimic1009
@dejansimic1009 3 жыл бұрын
Ljubim te :)
@dan-tech2647
@dan-tech2647 3 жыл бұрын
Pozdrav iz Slovenia 😎 👌🏻
@markclinton8681
@markclinton8681 2 жыл бұрын
Hey 🌹
@jugoslavsubotic4776
@jugoslavsubotic4776 2 жыл бұрын
Pozdrav iz crne gore !
@stevenguevara2184
@stevenguevara2184 2 жыл бұрын
What lovely Sisters. Im fascinated with that part of the world.
@dzonikg
@dzonikg 4 жыл бұрын
My grandfather had 3 cars in same time in 70s so u could have ...also u could have own private company but not big..i thing most was like 10 or 15 employers ..it was called samostalna zanatska radnja or samostalna trgovinska radnja ,samostalna ugostiteljska radnja etc..depend off type off business
@johar2745
@johar2745 3 жыл бұрын
I want to ask what percentage of government tax from privately owned businesses at that time.??
@admirmuminovic6382
@admirmuminovic6382 3 жыл бұрын
My dad had 3 cars and we also had a apartment and we had a house
@dzonikg
@dzonikg 3 жыл бұрын
​@moljac Off course private property existed ..all citizens houses were private property ..for government tax on private business i dont know....my grandfather was making metal fences and he lived good but work a lot ..like 10-12 hours a day.....that is reason most still choose to work in socialist companies ..because they worked less and could live normal with salary ..so problem was for him to find workers ..he mostly had 2 or 3
@chickenlover657
@chickenlover657 3 жыл бұрын
@@dzonikg Today you can't live if you don't work 10-12 hours.
@dzonikg
@dzonikg 3 жыл бұрын
@@chickenlover657 I work 2-3 hours a day..but i work online for my self
@mgtow3005
@mgtow3005 3 жыл бұрын
I have explored the region so far. I lived Bosnia and Herzegovina the most. The loveliest people in the region.
@99Boiko
@99Boiko 3 жыл бұрын
Nice to know the once-great country is still appreciated by those who lived there, the younger generations, and many many people from all over the world! I regret the end of the Soviet Union for a bunch of similar reasons, and I say this as a Ukrainian raised in England whose parents FLED the Soviet Union over an incident that got out of control back in 1980. Yet when they worked they were diplomats. Long story.
@Aaple_gav_Aaple_vlog
@Aaple_gav_Aaple_vlog 3 жыл бұрын
Mam i am from india, very good knowledge shared by ur mom, thanks
@AvenueANONowhere
@AvenueANONowhere 4 жыл бұрын
I believe Yugoslavia will be reunited one day, it was the role model of what a socialist country could be, btw, if Yugoslavia became more democratic, it would be much better. Greeting from China(PRC), Yugoslavia’s old comrade.
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda 4 жыл бұрын
That's a topic for debating :) Greetings to China from Croatia!
@beyond_modernity8554
@beyond_modernity8554 3 жыл бұрын
unfortuantely China failed at establishing socialism. Now it's just authoritarian capitalism. Could've at least been democratic...
@nou1438
@nou1438 3 жыл бұрын
It would be much better if the nations from ex Yugoslavia united economically at first to help each other
@MacetazzOpina
@MacetazzOpina 3 жыл бұрын
@@beyond_modernity8554 unfortuantely Russia failed at establishing socialism. Now it's just authoritarian capitalism. Could've at least been democratic...
@beyond_modernity8554
@beyond_modernity8554 3 жыл бұрын
@@MacetazzOpina yep, goes for any other attempt, except Vietnam after the 80s maybe.
@Camilo-zy8rt
@Camilo-zy8rt 2 жыл бұрын
You are too sweet Sanda. I wish you were my croatian teacher Btw, my great grandfather was croatian. My grandfather was a christian lebanese; and his grandfather was a Croatian priest who went to live to Lebanon to exercise his priesthood in a church of Beirut. (I am colombian)
@aleabogado6703
@aleabogado6703 4 жыл бұрын
Interesting. From Spain .
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@atanaslazarov9982
@atanaslazarov9982 4 жыл бұрын
Pozdrav do mama! 😊 Fenomenalno..
@karinvodanovicparedes2505
@karinvodanovicparedes2505 3 жыл бұрын
Amo tus videos son muy entretenidos y educativos ,me ayudan mucho
@markclinton8681
@markclinton8681 2 жыл бұрын
Hey 🌹
@mikem1186
@mikem1186 4 жыл бұрын
VERY nice you guys, i was watching few of your videos for awhile but i subscribed after this, I am Croatian, born in the early 80's in Yugoslavia, i am living in USA. So nice to see such a educational video.Thank you very much i wish everyone was like you guys. Pozdrav iz USA.
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda
@CroatianExperiencewithSanda 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks! Welcome to my channel and thanks for subscribing. When did you move to USA, during childhood or as an adult? I hope you still call both countries your home and enjoy the best of what each one has to offer 🙂 Pozdrav iz sunčane Hrvatske!
@mikem1186
@mikem1186 4 жыл бұрын
@@CroatianExperiencewithSandaThank you, yes i have moved when i was 20,now 36 i do call both countries my home. I haven't been back since, i am planing return visit sometime soon.Pozdrav iz ne tako suncanog New York. Bog ljepo cuti od tebe i tvoje mame o nasoj zemlji.Ja sam iz Pozege.Slavonac.
@gabrielplese7516
@gabrielplese7516 4 жыл бұрын
Greetings from here Croatia!
@AmitKumar-sy7lx
@AmitKumar-sy7lx 4 жыл бұрын
I love to know about your country, life and culture... Love from INDIA 🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳...
@savespasovski3748
@savespasovski3748 4 жыл бұрын
Yugoslavia ❤
@MrHmjg
@MrHmjg 2 жыл бұрын
a talk most parents should have with their children...
@WaseemAhmed-jc3wg
@WaseemAhmed-jc3wg 7 ай бұрын
very nice discussion you and your mama very well and nice lady with true story for past nice good
@jillbalakovich1515
@jillbalakovich1515 4 жыл бұрын
Hello. I like your channel. I think would be interesting if you and your Mother would do a video on what life was like in Croatia before 1911. Because my Great grandparents came from there. It would be instresting to know what life was like for them when they live there. I really like your channel and I like learning from you and your Mother when you do videos together. From Jill
@dkeith45
@dkeith45 3 жыл бұрын
Great video ladies, and your mom is cute : ). FYI you might enjoy watching 'Ushanka Show' here on KZbin. Sergei was born in 1971 in Ukraine during the Soviet USSR days and moved to Michigan, USA in the late 90's. He's made a lot of great videos about what life was like in the USSR days.
@GigoSplit1
@GigoSplit1 4 жыл бұрын
odličan kanal za edukaciju o Hrvatskoj. keep up good work. pozz iz Splita
@luismadrid7513
@luismadrid7513 3 жыл бұрын
La historia de los pueblos eslavos y de Yugoslavia en particular es demasiado interesante. Después de leer "Un puente sobre el Drina" de Ivo Andric, pude tener una idea mas precisa de las grandes riquezas culturales que han de encontrarse en esas comarcas donde históricamente han vivido los eslavos del sur. Ojala y algún día sea posible subtitular este video en español Sanda. Un caraqueño que tiene tiempo investigando sobre ustedes los balcánicos lo agradecería mucho... Te saludo por tu trabajo en pro del multiculturalismo en este año 2021. Espero seguir aprendiendo algo de Croata viendo tus videos.
@miaobrunelle1673
@miaobrunelle1673 4 жыл бұрын
Socialism was great in Yugoslavia
@user-fk9md2il4d
@user-fk9md2il4d 4 жыл бұрын
During Titos time, the majority of Crops and food was farmed by Albanian and bosnian farmers who worked in terrible conditions so that the serbs could eat and party in Belgrade in their nice houses and neighbourhoods, while they lived of the backs of Bosnians and Kosovo Albanians. So Serbia is a selfish country full greedy people, who still think most of the Balkans belongs to them. When Nato rained bombs on them 2000 people died in Belgrade and they still complain about it today, when in Kosovo 12,000 albanians were killed and in Bosnia 50,000 were killed, search the massacre of Srebenica, 8000 Bosnian men were killed in a town in one day. They should be ashamed of themselves. that was life in Yugoslavia My Aunt was giving birth in 1988 and the hospital did not let her give birth in their facilities because she was albanian. That country should be ashamed of themselves
@jme5466
@jme5466 4 жыл бұрын
@@user-fk9md2il4d But you forgot to add that NATO killed 8.000 albanians in Kosovo and 5.000 serbs.
@nicolasbehak6815
@nicolasbehak6815 4 жыл бұрын
@@user-fk9md2il4d I get your point but you are talking about the declain period of yugoslavia that I agree was horrible, but yugoslavia under tito's rule was great.
@themaniac2448
@themaniac2448 4 жыл бұрын
@@user-fk9md2il4d that was after tito Tito was a good leader
@user-fk9md2il4d
@user-fk9md2il4d 4 жыл бұрын
@@themaniac2448 He was a lot better than Milosevic and I repeat again, He was great for the Serbians, but still did not fully respect the other ethnic groups. He just tried to hold the balance and keep it all together, but there was a deep hatred brewing within.
@imjustsilleh
@imjustsilleh Жыл бұрын
Hello Sanda, Hello Nela, Such a nice story ... Too Bad it is not true though. Jugoslavija was formed after World war 1 (so NOT after WW2). And it was renamed in 1929. It really sounds interesting ... Like some sort of a fairytale ... But, sadly, it is not what was going on in Jugoslavija. Education was free, but the percentage of illiterate people was around 50% until 1970's ! Health care was free. You are right about that. We did NOT have so many doctors or specialists ... But it was OK. Homeless people might have been rare in Croatia, but I was born and raised in a slum in Jugoslavija. So there were no houses or apartments for my family and many families in Belgrade, Nis, Leskovac etc. Jobs were available ONLY for those that supported Communists and were members of their party. Romani population (around 5-10% of total population) was living out of "thin air". Why would a country with 0% crime rate have a jail or a prison ? Some people were allowed to have MUCH more than a planned minimum ;) Other than this ... Thank you for sharing your experience (it is NOT true but it is nice to hear your opinion). Miss Sanda, Miss Nela, you are beautiful. Peace.
@seustaceRotterdam
@seustaceRotterdam Жыл бұрын
Veliki pozdrav iz Holandi! Ja sam bio jedan put U Rijeci! Divan grad!
@albeeinla
@albeeinla 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks youu. Would you have or know a video of life in Zadar Yugoslavia in the 1930s? I’d like to understand my ancestors better.
@tomerkeret2191
@tomerkeret2191 4 жыл бұрын
I visited Yugoslavia and came back a shot time ago. What a beautiful nation. What a sad story of one people turned apart by crazy nationalism and by criminals along with external intervention (I see no real differences in Serbs, Croats and Bosniaks). I wish you guys would build Yugoslavia again. Maybe Slovenia is better off outside of Yugoslavia but all the other nations are full of poverty, hatred, borders and different currencies. I hope one day the young people in all of these nations will make Yugoslavia great again, with Slovenia or without it. Slovenia wasn't really effected by the war and has been blooming ever since 1991. What you can't say about the other nations of Yugoslavia. Long live Yugoslavia.
@ianmarkcarmichael1286
@ianmarkcarmichael1286 2 жыл бұрын
I encourage everyone to read "NATO In The Balkans: Voices Of Opposition" by Ramsey Clark, Sara Flounders and others (1998), to better understand the situation in Ukraine and be able to anticipate future events.
@yaminreza5510
@yaminreza5510 4 ай бұрын
Love your Voice
@parkerhuffman3480
@parkerhuffman3480 3 жыл бұрын
My uncle and aunts time was not fun in Bosnia... 😪
@sarahseamons5016
@sarahseamons5016 4 жыл бұрын
Havala awesome vid keep up the good work I would like to visit buitiful Croatia if I could ever get the money lol it would be fantastic
@aljotharakan6328
@aljotharakan6328 2 жыл бұрын
Haiii, Sanda i ❤️ Croatia and this is really lovely experience!!!😍💓👌Sanda, You're So Lovely and I Love You!!!😍😘💓🧚‍♀️🌹.And Croatia my dream country i Pray for one day i traveling to Croatia because i love Europe and Croatia and i love Croatian History and Culture and European Culture and History!!!💓😍👌. And i like your travel blog is very Best and i Subscribed your KZbin channel Love you so much Sanda!!!😍😍😍🥰🥰🥰💞💞💞💘💓💓💓😘🧚‍♀️🌹👍👏👏👏
@axis19752
@axis19752 3 жыл бұрын
I am New Zealand maori. My lineage also includes Slavic. I'm interested..
@momocha5154
@momocha5154 3 жыл бұрын
Greetings from China! Yugoslavia was the best friend of China. The time without comrades from Yugoslavia is tough! We miss that time and your lovely country ! We have became the last evil for US and his alliance....
@DogsOnAcid
@DogsOnAcid 3 жыл бұрын
Don't forget Vietnam & Cuba, socialist fraternity!
@momocha5154
@momocha5154 3 жыл бұрын
@@DogsOnAcid Chia is already capitalist... There are huge gap between rich and poor. So we lost lots of old friends,such as the friends from the 3rd world .We changed our mind and terrified the other..
@crodsbye
@crodsbye 3 жыл бұрын
Honestly Yugoslavia was cool with everyone, except for Stalin
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