A great man is one who collects knowledge the way a bee collects honey and uses it to help people overcome the difficulties they endure - hunger, ignorance and disease!
- Nikola Tesla

Remember, remember always, that all of us, and you and I especially, are descended from immigrants and revolutionists.
- Franklin Roosevelt

While their territory has been devastated and their homes despoiled, the spirit of the Serbian people has not been broken.
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Exhibition dedicated to Nikola Tesla opens in New York

An exhibition of the Belgrade Museum of Nikola Tesla has opened at the New York Hall of Science in Queens.

The opening was attended by Heir to the Yugoslav Throne Prince Aleksandar Karađorđević, his wife Katarina, members of the diplomatic corps and intellectual and science figures from New York.

The exhibition, "Tesla's Wonderful World of Electricity," opened on Wednesday, on the birthday of the Serbian-American scientist and inventor, and was prepared in coordination with the New York museum and supported by the Belgrade City Hall and the Serbian General Consulate in New York.

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The opening was attended by more than 200 people, including State Department official Thomas Gallo, Greek Ambassador to the UN Michael Spinellis, Cypriot General Consul in New York Koula Sophianou, Montenegro's General Consul Zoran Janković and Croatian Consul Marina Rogina.

The exhibition shows the most important details from the life of the scientific genius, many interactive models of his most significant inventions that were the basis of the second industrial revolution and a series of inventions that were Tesla's pioneering steps in radio, high-frequency currents, remote control and wireless communication.

Head of the Nikola Tesla Museum Vladimir Jelenković told crowd that, metaphorically speaking, Tesla was again in New York 70 years after his death.

Jelenkovic believes the exhibition is one of the many ways to find out why Tesla has remained one of the most intriguing and popular creative minds of the modern age even after so many years.

Prince Aleksandar was one of the main speakers, and he pointed out that his father King of Yugoslavia Petar Karađorđević II visited Tesla in 1942, two days before the scientist's 86th birthday.

He also noted in his speech that Tesla was to him a symbol of courage, humanity - "and typical Serbian stubbornness when faced with a strong force."

Nothing could stop Tesla, he stated, adding that the scientist sought to change the world and ended up changing it forever.

Serbia's General Consul in New York Mirjana Živković said the goal of the exhibition was to draw attention to Tesla's name, as an extraordinary man and a great mind that marked the world of today, but still not known well enough by the public.

A Serb by origin, European by education and American by choice, a citizen of the world, Tesla had the gift of staying ahead of the time he lived in, she pointed out. Even 70 years after his death, he is still ahead of the present time, she added.

From B92.net


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People Directory

Nenad Vukićević

Born: Jagodina, Serbia. Education: Graduated from University of Belgrade, Electrical Engineering. Emigrated to USA in 1984. Provides consulting and software development services in the area of embedded systems, systems software, and communications. President of the Serbian Unity Congress 2002-2005, former President of the local Serbian church Board in Saratoga for many years and provides web and Internet support for SUC. President, founder and creator of the Serbian Blago Fund. Married with three children, and resides in Los Altos, California.

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Publishing

Holy Emperor Constantine and the Edict of Milan

by Bishop Athanasius (Yevtich)

In 2013 Christian world celebrates 1700 years since the day when the Providence of God spoke through the holy Emperor Constantine and freedom was given to the Christian faith. Commemorating the 1700 years since the Edict of Milan of 313, Sebastian Press of the Western American Diocese of the Serbian Orthodox Church published a book by Bishop Athanasius Yevtich, Holy Emperor Constantine and the Edict of Milan. The book has 72 pages and was translated by Popadija Aleksandra Petrovich. This excellent overview of the historical circumstances that lead to the conversion of the first Christian emperor and to the publication of a document that was called "Edict of Milan", was originally published in Serbian by the Brotherhood of St. Simeon the Myrrh-gusher, Vrnjci 2013. “The Edict of Milan” is calling on civil authorities everywhere to respect the right of believers to worship freely and to express their faith publicly.

The publication of this beautiful pocket-size, full-color, English-language book, has been compiled and designed by Bishop Athanasius Yevtich, a disciple of the great twentieth-century theologian Archimandrite Justin Popovich. Bishop Athanasius' thought combines adherence to the teachings of the Church Fathers with a vibrant faith, knowledge of history, and a profound experience of Christ in the Church.

In the conclusion of the book, the author states:"The era of St. Constantine and his mother St. Helena, marks the beginning of what history refers to as Roman, Christian Empire, which was named Byzantium only in recent times in the West. In fact, this was the conception of a Christian Europe. Christian Byzantine culture had a critical effect on Europe; Europe was its heir, and then consciously forgot it. Europe inherited many Byzantine treasures, but unfortunately, also robbed and plundered many others for its own treasuries and museums – not only during the Crusades, but during colonial rule in the Byzantine lands as well. We, the Orthodox Slavs, received a great heritage of the Orthodox Christian East from Byzantium. Primarily, Christ’s Gospel, His faith and His Church, and then, among other things, the Cyrillic alphabet, too."