AFTERMATH Slideshow Lectures
There are two upcoming events, both sponsored by colleges, which are free
and open to the public:
» Thursday, October 16, 2003
Principia College in Elsah, Illinois (not far from St. Louis).
Slideshow lecture starts at 7:30 PM and is free and open to the public.
For more information, please call Principia College at 618.374.2131.
» Wednesday, October 22, 2003
Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts.
From Noon to 1:30 PM, at the Behrakis Health Science Center, Room 310
- free and open to the public
The Center is on Leon Street, off Huntington Avenue, near the Museum of
Fine Arts (take the E line).

"In
'Aftermath,' she witnesses worn-torn Bosnia's slow steps toward peace"
article in the Boston Globe on September 29, 2003:
»
Visit the Boston Globe web site to read the article.

"The
remains of war: Looking at Sara Terry’s ‘Aftermath’"
article in the Boston Phoenix, issue date September 19-25, 2003:
»
Visit the Boston Phoenix web site to read the article.
Sara Terry
Friends of Bosnia
Ria Kulenovic and Haris Jusufbegovic
invite you to a slideshow lecture and fundraiser for "Aftermath: Bosnia’s
Long Road to Peace"
Monday, Sept. 22nd, 7 p.m.at
SABUR RESTAURANT
212 Holland, Somerville, MA (near Davis Square)
$65 donation includes food, cash bar
Your donation is fully tax-deductible
Can’t attend but want to contribute? Visit the “Support
the Project” page to make a tax-deductible contribution.

"Bosnia
no model of nation-building" for the Christian Science Monitor:
Click here to read a commentary written by Sara for The Christian Science
Monitor, about why U.S. officials shouldn’t be referring to Bosnia
as a “success story” in nation building. Article ran on July
1, 2003.
» Click
here to read the article.
(PDF document, requires Adobe Acrobat Reader. Click
here for free download.)

Aftermath
featured in El Semanal magazine:
In February, 2003, a small photo essay taken from the exhumation and identification
pictures of the Aftermath project was published in El Semanal ABC, the
Sunday magazine of one of Spain's largest daily newspapers.
» Click here to see the magazine
layout and text. (large file, please be patient...)
(PDF document, requires Adobe Acrobat Reader. Click
here for free download.)

Aftermath
is a finalist in the 2003 Alexia Foundation Award:
In February, 2003, Sara Terry was selected as one of five finalists for
her Aftermath proposal in the annual Alexia Foundation for Peace photojournalism
grant competition. The foundation was started in honor of a Syracuse University
photojournalism student, Alexia Tsairis, who was killed in the Pan Am
103 Lockerbie crash. The award honors her belief in "the capacity and
responsibility of individuals to shape and advance peace in our time."
» Click
here to see the winning entry and to learn more about the foundation:
http://newhouse.syr.edu/alexia/
» Click here to read
Sara Terry's grant proposal
(PDF document - requires Adobe Acrobat Reader. Click
here for free download.)

Aftermath
featured in the Women in Photography International online magazine, f2
eZine:
Women in Photography International is a non-profit, outreach organization
which promotes the visibility of women photographers and their work.
» Click
here to read the feature in WIPI's f2 eZine.

Aftermath
wins at 17th Annual SCOOP and News Festival:
On November 30, 2002, a selection of photos from the exhumation and identification
part of the Aftermath project won the Grand Prix Jean-Louis Calderon at
the 17th Annual SCOOP and News Festival in Angers, France. The highest
award given by the festival, the Grand Prix is named after a French photojournalist
who was killed covering the Romanian revolution in 1989.
» Click here
to visit the SCOOP and News Festival web site.

The
Christian Science Monitor, July 24, 2002:
"Young, Bosnian and Searching for Future," by Sara Terry.
A photo essay, with text, about the youth of Sarajevo and the ways they
are coming to terms with the war that interrupted their childhood years.
» Click here to read the article.
(PDF document, requires Adobe Acrobat Reader. Click
here for free download.)

"To
the Point" interview with Sara Terry, aired on April 11, 2002:
"Bosnia: Ten Years On."
A nine-minute interview about the social and political climate in Bosnia,
ten years after the war began in April 1992. Image: Waiting for Danise
Tanovic. A girl celebrates with some 2,000 other people on April 5, 2002
-- the day that Tanovic returned to Sarajevo with his Oscar for best foreign
film for "No Man's Land."
» Click
here for streaming media from KCRW.

"To
the Point" interview with Sara Terry, aired on July 11, 2001:
"Dedication of the Srebrenica Memorial, July 11, 2002."
A six-minute interview on the day of the memorial dedication, with details
of the day and analysis of the overall situation in Bosnia. "To the
Point" is a National Public Radio program produced by KCRW, Santa
Monica, and Public Radio International.
» Click on image for audio
presentation with slide show. (Requires Quicktime. Click
here for free download.)

The
Christian Science Monitor, December 11, 2002:
"Bosnia Slowly Mends," by Sara Terry.
A photo essay, with text, about Bosnians who are trying to return to homes
they fled during the 1992-1995 war -- despite the fact that international
aid for their efforts is declining.
» Click here to read the article.
(PDF document, requires Adobe Acrobat Reader. Click
here for free download.)