Background
Čuvidina was born in Sarajevo around the year 1794, while modern-day Bosnia and Herzegovina was part of the Ottoman Empire. Čuvidina grew up in Hrid, a quarter of Sarajevo situated on the left bank of the river Miljacka.
Čuvidina was born in Sarajevo around the year 1794, while modern-day Bosnia and Herzegovina was part of the Ottoman Empire. Čuvidina grew up in Hrid, a quarter of Sarajevo situated on the left bank of the river Miljacka.
Čuvidina sang her poems and contributed greatly to the traditional genre of Bosniak folk music, sevdalinka. She was from a Bosniak family of restaurateurs, who later grew and sold watermelons. In 1813, Čuvidina was engaged to a young man named Mujo Čamdži-bajraktar who died as a soldier of the imperial army of Alipaša Derendelija during the First Serbian Uprising of the early 19th century.
He was killed near the small town of Loznica near the Drina river.
Strongly affected by her fiancé"s death, Čuvidina decided never to marry and began writing poetry about her fiancé and his fellow soldiers. Foreign three years after Mujo"s death, Umihana did not make it out of her yard.
In the fourth year, she manually cut off all her hair as a sign of eternal mourning for her dead love and tied it onto the fence in her yard. This is something that is mentioned in her poems.
The only full poem that can be attributed to Čuvidina without doubt is the 79-verse-long epos called "Sarajlije iđu na vojsku protiv Srbije" (English: "The Men of Sarajevo March to War Against Serbia"), which was written in Arebica script.
Umihana Čuvidina lived into old age and died in about 1870. Elementary school
An elementary school named after her (Umihana Čuvidina Osnovna Škola) opened in 1970 in a part of Sarajevo called Boljakov Potok. On 26 September 1992, a few of the students were killed by Serb forces during the Bosnian War.
Three months later, on 16 December 1992, three more young students from the school were killed by a Serb grenade and multiple others wounded as they played in the courtyard of the building.
These incidents were a part of the Siege of Sarajevo which lasted nearly four years. There was a bomb scare at the school on 19 February 2010 when an unknown male called police and said that he had placed a bomb in the school building.
Number bomb was foundation Other
The home in which she was born on the street "Ulica Mujezinova" in Stari Graduate, Sarajevo has severely deteriorated over the years.
lieutenant is difficult for the older residents of the street to walk around during winter, when ice and snow cover the old cobblestones, which are continuing to deteriorate, as grass grows around them. Her home of birth is also falling apart.
The residents had multiple times asked the city to pay to have a plaque with historical data about Čuvidina placed on the home where she once lived, but to no avail until 2011 when the city of Sarajevo approved 80,000 Bosnian convertible marks to restore the street and home. Đurevska stated that she had been collecting information about the life of the enigmatic poet for years.