(21 Apr 2015) RESTRICTION SUMMARY: AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Sarajevo - 21 April 2015
1. TIMELAPSE of people walking past mural painted on side of building
2. Various of graffiti artist Caleb Neelon spraying signature on mural
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Caleb Neelon, graffiti artist:
"For me, if people see in what I do a sort of message of peace, or if they see the opportunity to do something that brings people together, then that's really, you know, that really touches my heart."
4. Various of mural
5. Bosnian students who helped paint the mural looking at it
6. People walking by mural
7. SOUNDBITE (Bosnian) Kerim Usanovic, art student who helped paint the mural:
"This painting represents, for me, three different nations here. We can see these three different sides, Bosniaks, Croats, Serbs, and those three sides are put together (in painting) so they can be united."
8. Various of mural
9. SOUNDBITE (Bosnian) Finka Jarak, Sarajevo resident:
"But this is really wonderful, I walk towards here from that bridge across and I see it (mural) and I enjoy it. It can not be more beautiful than it is."
10. Various of mural
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Eric Catalfamo, cultural attache at US embassy in Sarajevo:
"If you look closely to the mural, you can see that it's made up of lot of dots. So, each one of those is an individual contribution, and then when you look at it all together, it makes a real impact, a visual image for anyone walking by, driving by to see."
12. Tilt up of mural
13. People looking at mural
14. Various of mural
STORYLINE
An American graffiti artist has gathered youths from different sides of Bosnia's ethnic divide to jointly work on a peace-promoting project.
Armed with cans of spray paint, youngsters from Bosnia's Croat, Serb and Bosniak ethnic groups joined forces on Tuesday to begin painting "peace murals" in their divided communities.
The project called "Together we achieve more", a brain child of celebrated American graffiti artist Caleb Neelon, is meant to mark 20 years since the end of Bosnia's 1992-95 inter-ethnic war that claimed 100-thousand lives.
The idea is for young people belonging to the country's different ethnic groups, whose relationship is still dominated by suspicion and mistrust, to jointly produce peace-promoting street art.
The first mural was painted on Sarajevo's veterinary college, and it is made up of thousands of dots, connected by three different lines symbolising the three main nationalities.
The peace murals are to be painted over a two-week period in the predominantly Bosniak capital of Sarajevo, its majority Serb suburbs, as well as in the Croat-dominated southern city of Mostar.
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