Diasporas Speaking

Rina Limoni

A trilingual and critical diasporas podcast series chronicling Kosovar, Albanian and Balkan diaspora histories.

  1. 07/11/2025

    Srebrenica Genocide 30 Years on | Survival, Loss, and the Ongoing Fight for Justice with Selma Jahić

    Selma Jahić was born in 1988 in Srebrenica and grew up nearby in a village called Blječeva. During the war years from 1992 to 1995, she and her family stayed exclusively in Srebrenica and the surrounding area.In August 1995, Selma came to Vienna after being expelled from Srebrenica in July 1995, a time during which she lost many family members. Since then, she has been living in Vienna. She completed her schooling in Austria and trained as a media designer.She currently works as a content manager for a public institution. In her private life, Selma is very active as an activist and has been deeply involved in memorial work related to the genocide against the Bosniaks for several years.On 11 July 1995, in the town of Srebrenica declared a United Nations "safe area" two years earlier—over 8,000 Bosniak men and boys were systematically murdered by Bosnian Serb forces. At the time the worst atrocity committed on European soil since the Second World War.Despite rulings from international courts, including the ICTY and the ICJ, formally recognising the massacre as genocide, denial and political manipulation continue to distort the truth. Over 8,300 victims have been identified, yet the remains of more than 1,000 are still missing.Truth, accountability, and recognition of the genocide are essential for reconciliation and lasting peace in the Western Balkans.For this episode of Diasporas Speaking, I speak with Selma Jahić, who, together with her brother and mother, survived the Srebrenica genocide. She shares her family’s story of survival, loss, and the ongoing fight for justice and remembrance.

    44 min
  2. 06/13/2025

    From the Margins to the Centre: Reframing Mental Health Through a Community Lens

    From the Margins to the Centre: Reframing Mental Health Through a Community Lens with Alberta Sinani Alberta Sinani is a Kosovo-born artist and community psychologist based in Austria. Her work explores themes of migration, intergenerational resilience, and liberation practices within communities. As a Fulbright Student in the U.S., she has focused on immigrant youth mental health and civic engagement—work that inherently demands generational healing as a first step toward sustainable peacebuilding. With a background in political science and social design, Alberta bridges academia, activism, and art to create transformative spaces for collective healing and agency, grounded in cross-communal solidarity. Community psychology is a branch of psychology that looks beyond the individual to understand how wider social, economic, and cultural factors shape people's lives. It focuses on collective wellbeing, social justice, and empowering communities to address the root causes of inequality- such as poverty, discrimination, and marginalisation.In this episode, I am joined by Alberta Sinani, who shares her insights into how community psychology engages with these communities-not to impose solutions, but to work with them, recognising their strengths and supporting grassroots efforts to create meaningful change.Intro music: North-Albanian Instrumental Interlude: Defatoret Shamikuqet - 'Potpuri'.

    42 min
  3. 05/29/2025

    Post-2000 Migration from Serbia: Storming Against Your Government's Political Legacy

    Post-2000 Migration from Serbia: Storming Against Your Government's Political Legacy with Damnjan Jovanović'sDamnjan Jovanović was born in Montenegro and grew up in Serbia, where he earned a Bachelor of Science in Electrical, Electronic, and Communications Engineering Technology from the University of Belgrade. A passionate technologist, Damnjan is fluent in multiple programming languages and thrives at the intersection of creative work, human connection, and technical problem-solving.Driven by curiosity and a love for engaging with people, he brings energy to every project and finds inspiration in meaningful audience interactions. Outside of work, Damnjan lives by a "family first" philosophy. He’s a proud father who cherishes time spent camping, hiking, exploring, and simply being present with his loved ones—no car, just adventure and closeness.A devoted endurance athlete, Damnjan’s biggest personal treat is long-distance triathlons. These solo challenges fuel his deep connection to nature, mindfulness, and the power of the human body in motion.In this episode, we explore the political legacy of Slobodan Milošević and how it continues under the leadership of Aleksandar Vučić. From nationalism to media control, we trace the threads of authoritarianism that have shaped Serbia’s post-Yugoslav reality. We also look at why so many Serbians—especially the young and educated—are choosing to leave, driven by corruption, stagnation, and a lack of real change.Tune in to listen to Damnjan Jovanović's story and understand how a healthy alternative to history can exist. Intro: North-Albanian Instrumental

    26 min
  4. 05/17/2025

    After all, Eurovision explains everything

    After all, Eurovision explains everything with Dr Catherine Baker Dr Catherine Baker is Reader in 20th Century History at the University of Hull. Her research on narratives of national and European identity in media and popular culture centres on the post-Yugoslav space and its transnational connections, from the Eurovision Song Contest to the region’s place in global politics of race. She is the author of books including Race and the Yugoslav Region: Postsocialist, Post-Conflict, Postcolonial? and Sounds of the Borderland: Popular Music, War and Nationalism in Croatia Since 1991, and The Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s. She is co-editor (with Bogdan C. Iacob, Anikó Imre and James Mark) of Off White: Central and Eastern Europe and the Global Politics of Race, and editor of three other volumes. She is a former co-convenor of the British International Studies Association’s South-East Europe Working Group. The Eurovision Song Contest is more than just a music competition — it mirrors European politics, culture, and identity, defying its territorial borders.Eurovision often reflects international relations, national image-making, and political tensions.Voting patterns sometimes align with regional alliances or historical ties, while performances and song choices can make political statements or respond to current events. In this way, Eurovision claims to be unpolitical but acts as a stage where broader political and social dynamics play out, ofiering insight into how countries see themselves and each other within Europe.In this episode I will be joined by Dr Catherine Baker, where together we will explore how Balkan popular culture has shaped and been showcased in the Eurovision Song Contest. Intro: North-Albanian Instrumental Interlude: Severina - 'Prijateljice' #eurovision #balkans #kosovo #kosova #albania #bosnia #croatia #montenegro #northmacedonia #serbia #slovenia #diaspora #diasporasspeaking

    47 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

A trilingual and critical diasporas podcast series chronicling Kosovar, Albanian and Balkan diaspora histories.