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The text also adds that the garbha has "no self, soul or personality" and "incomprehensible to anyone distracted by sunyata (voidness)"; rather it is the support for phenomenal existence. [ 84 ] The notion of Buddha-nature and its interpretation was and continues to be widely debated in all schools of Mahayana Buddhism.
This film is based on a true story about events in Belgrade in 1979. Jesen u mojoj ulici [1] Autmn on My Street: Miloš Pušić: Filip Đurić, Nikola Spasojević, Milica Trifunović, Nada Dobanović, Nikola Ilić: Comedy/Youth drama: Besa [1] Solemn Promise: Srđan Karanović: Miki Manojlović, Iva Krajnc, Radivoje Bukvić: Drama/Romance film ...
The Sisters (2011 film) Skinning (film) Slovenian Girl; Soldier's Lullaby; Some Birds Can't Fly; Special Education (film) Special Treatment (film) St. George Shoots the Dragon; Stitches (2019 film) Strange Girl (film) Super 8 Stories
Sunyata is a well-discussed subject with zillion papers/books written by so many scholars, as you know. This is not a subject where scholarly publications are in a dearth. Dedicating 25 to 35% on such an important topic to one paper/view with "a drunkard who sleeps with his mother, a madman wandering naked, etc" like content, in one go, is just ...
For this film, Pavle Vuisić was awarded the Golden Arena. In 1972 Bata Živojinović played the role of his life in Valter Defends Sarajevo. Three years later the film was shown on Chinese national television, making Živojinović a film star in China. [25] In 1973, two films were made that performed very well at the box office.
Dara of Jasenovac (Serbian: Дара из Јасеновца, romanized: Dara iz Jasenovca) is a 2021 Serbian historical drama film directed by Predrag Antonijević.Based on the testimonies of survivors, [5] it deals with war crimes and atrocities that took place at Jasenovac concentration camp, [6] which was a part of the Holocaust and the wider genocide of Serbs in the Independent State of ...
The film was released in FR Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro) in May 1998 where it became a cinema hit with 450,000 admission tickets sold [13] despite its promotional cycle in the country being severely impacted by the government's refusal to run the film's ads on state television RTS (then under general manager Dragoljub Milanović).
The film opens with a faux newsreel—presented as a sardonic allusion to the Yugoslav state-owned Filmske novosti [] news organization's tone and delivery—reporting on the 27 June 1971 opening ceremony of the Tunnel of Brotherhood and Unity near an unnamed village in the Goražde municipality in eastern SR Bosnia-Herzegovina, constituent unit of the Yugoslav Federation.