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Arif Heralić (5 May 1922 – 17 June 1971)[1] was a Bosnian Roma metal worker on a blast furnace in Zenica. He had 11 children and issues with alcoholism and mental illness.[2] As a disabled worker, Heralić died in extreme poverty in 1971.[1]
Arif Heralić | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 17 June 1971 Zenica, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, Yugoslavia | (aged 49)
Occupation | blast furnace worker |
Known for | Being on a banknote |
Banknote and iconography
editHis picture was taken by Nikola Bibić, a Borba news photographer, in 1954[2] and from the papers he came to feature on a 1,000 Yugoslav dinar banknote issued from 1955 to 1981, re-nominated to ten new dinars since 1965. He is still (as of 2023) popular as an icon of industrial worker in the former Yugoslavia.
The banknote is not to be confused with the 20,000 dinar banknote, which depicts Alija Sirotanović.
See also
edit- Alija Sirotanović, model for a 20,000 dinara banknote
References
edit- ^ a b Viščević, Zlatko (2 April 2007). "Arif Heralić, lik s novčanice od 1.000 i 10 jugoslavenskih dinara".
- ^ a b Berčić, Vojdrag (1967). "Devalvacija jednog osmjeha". YouTube.