COALITION FOR WORK

             WITH PSYCHOTRAUMA AND PEACE 

                     cwwppsummer@gmail.com, tel. and  fax +385-32-441975;

                                              in Croatia:  M. Drzica 12, 32000 Vukovar;

                                                        in The Netherlands:  Ds. S. Tjadenstraat C81, 9663 RD Nieuwe Pekela

                                                           © 2005 Coalition for Work With Psychotrauma and Peace

Home

 

About Us

 
Support the CWWPP
 
News About the CWWPP
 

Cooperation With Other Organizations

 

Projects

 

Power Point Presentations

 

Documents

 
The CWWPP in the Media
 
Maps of the Region
 
Photographs
 

Consultancies by the CWWPP

 
Employment
 

Study With The CWWPP

 
Research Interests of the CWWPP
 
Links to Other Sites

Guide for Visitors

 

The Coalition for Work with Psychotrauma and Peace

Photographs

 

We are very grateful to Bobbi Kendig, Peter Lippman, Anne-Blanche Saveniers, Johanna Steindl, Rolli Werner and others for allowing us to use their photographs on this website.

All photographs are copyright to the photographers.

 

To see early drawings and postcards, click here.

To see Vukovar before 1991, click here.

To see Vukovar and the region today, click here.

To see photographs of groups and people, click here.

To see miscellaneous photographs, click here.

 

For photographs of the Vukovar Synagogue, click here.

To see a photographic exhibition by Werner Rolli from January, 2003, click here.

To see the work of Dragutin Budač,an Osijek artist, click here.


Early Drawings and Postcards [go to top]

Vukovar Before the Recent War [go to top]

Vukovar in 1608

Map of the Region from 1717

The Grande Hotel/Hall of the Workers

Hotel k Lavu

Dobravoda - as the name implies, a spring and a shrine

Vukovar Today

The Eltz Castle, built in the mid-18th century

The Bata Factory, later Borovo, where, before the recent war, 23 000 people worked, now completely destroyed

Groups and People [go to top]

Borovo Selo City Hall, where the 1991 war started

One of many cemetaries

Ovcara - one of the many mass graves in the region

The monument at Ovcara

The town center in 1991

The Center of Vukovar in 1995

This statue that dates from World War II and also embodies the suffering of the recent war was removed for political reasons in the spring of 2003.

European Union Street

One of the Gymnasia (advanced secondary schools) in 1996

The Grande Hotel, later Hall of the Workers, that hosted the first Communist Congress of Yugoslavia in the 1920s

The (Catholic) Franciscan Abbey in 1996

The Paunovic (a prominent family in Vukovar) Mausoleum

The (former) home of Lavroslav Ruzicka, Nobel Prizewinning Chemist

The Danube side of the Eltz Castle, built in the mid-18th century

Next to the castle.

The famous - and infamous - Vukovar Hospital, near the offices of the CWWPP

The Water Tower- symbol of Vukovar

The water tower - a symbol of Vukovar

Vukovar Railway Station

The Vutex Textile Factory

Miscellaneous Photographs [go to top]

Professor Arpad Barath of Pecs, Hungary

Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Pal, Passover 2003 in Vukovar; Mr. Pal is one of the few Vukovar Jews to survive World War II. He is an artist in Zagreb.

Stefan Sablic - director, musician, Cantor from Belgrade at Passover, 2003 in Vukovar

Waiting for Mr. Green, performed by Predrag Ejdus as Mr. Green and Srdan Timorov as Ross, directed by Stefan Sablic, June, 2003, sponsored by the AJDC

Work with Group 484 and the Center for Peace Vukovar, 1996

Youth Group, 1998

Vesna Patkovic of the Women's Group Stope Nade

 

The offices of the CWWPP in Vukovar

Vukovar scene

We want the truth about our missing persons in Sotin

Sign warning against mines. There are many places where such signs should appear but do not

In translation: No one is normal here.

The dove of the Vucedol culture, 3000 years old. This is the (we think very appropriate) symbol of Vukovar.