Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Dina Bajraktarević

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Ethnicity
  
Bosniak

Children
  
2

Albums
  
Dodji Dragi Ne Dangubi

Spouse(s)
  
Zika Nikolic

Record label
  
Diskos


Years active
  
1977–87

Role
  
Singer

Occupation
  
Singer

Name
  
Dina Bajraktarevic

Genres
  
Sevdalinka, Folk music

Dina Bajraktarevic httpsiytimgcomvi8LTMjJdVvAhqdefaultjpg

Full Name
  
Hajrudina Bajraktarevic

Born
  
19 March 1953 (age 71) (
1953-03-19
)
Doboj, PR Bosnia and Herzegovina, FPR Yugoslavia

Parent(s)
  
Mehmed (1909–1966) Hajrija (1916–2008)

Similar People
  
Mirjana Bajraktarevic, Silvana Armenulic, Alma Cardzic, Asim Brkan, Damir Imamovic

Dina bajraktarevic sudbina je tako htjela


Hajrudina Bajraktarević Nikolić (born 19 March 1953), known professionally as Dina Bajraktarević, is a Bosnian former singer and the younger sister of Silvana Armenulić and Mirjana Bajraktarević. Both of her sisters died in a car crash in 1976.

Contents

Early life and family

Hajrudina Bajraktarević was born in Doboj, PR Bosnia and Herzegovina, FPR Yugoslavia to a Muslim Bosniak family with thirteen children. Her father was Mehmed Bajraktarević (1909–1966), a local cake shop operator, and her mother was Hajrija (1916–2008). The family surname has origins in the Ottoman Empire; bajrak is the Turkish word for flag. Hajrudina's sister Silvana (born Zilha) started singing at an early age, but their father, a local cake shop operator, was not supportive of her singing career.

Dina Bajraktarević httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb7

Dina had a brother named Hajrudin who died about two weeks after being mauled by a dog in the 1940s. After her brothers death, her father found solace in alcohol and solitude, neglecting the family and his business. After her father's cake shop closed, the family suffered greatly. The family of thirteen children included sisters Hajrudina, Zilha (Silvana), Abida, Mirsada and Ševka, and brothers Hajrudin, Muhamed, Izudin, Abudin, and Ismet. Her oldest sister Ševka's son Sabahudin Bilalović became a professional basketball player who died aged 43 of a heart attack on the beach while swimming with his son. Ten years later, Ševka and her husband Lutvo both died of natural causes in September 2013, just days apart.

In 1955, Silvana moved to Sarajevo at the age of sixteen where she lived with her aunt and sang in local kafanas for money. She eventually landed a professional singing career which led way to sister Mirsada getting a record deal and recording her first album at the age of eighteen in 1969 and releasing it in 1970.

The singing sisters, Silvana and Mirsada, died together in a car crash on 10 October 1976 near the Serbian village Kolari. At the time, Mirsada, who was in the second term of her pregnancy, was sharing a home with Dina.

Career

After her sisters deaths, Dina was approached to release an album. Hesitant to sing professionally at first, she ended up releasing three extended plays: one in 1978, 1979 and 1980. She had major success with the song "Sudbina je tako htjela" (Fate Wanted It That Way). She then took a break from music and had two sons, Silvano and Silvan, with her husband singer Žika Nikolić. Their sons Silvano and Silvan, named after Dina's late sister Silvana, are singers as well, although Silvano is not singing actively anymore, whilst Silvan is taking music to a professional level with his voice.

Bajraktarević made a return to music in 1987 with a full-length studio album, Dođi dragi ne dangubi (Come Dear, Do Not Waste Time). That was her final release before retiring from music.

Later life

During the Bosnian War of the 1990s, Dina, together with her husband, sons and mother Hajrija fled their home in Doboj for Denmark. Mother Hajrija lived to the age of 91, dying in 2008. Five years after their mothers' death, Dina's oldest sister Ševka died on 30 September 2013 in Trebinje at the age of 79, leaving Dina the last living of the female Bajraktarević children.

Discography

During her short career, Bajraktarević released three extended plays and one studio album:

Songs

Dodji dragi ne dangubi1987
Moj Bosanac1987
Voljeni cuj1987

References

Dina Bajraktarević Wikipedia