Hello is me again, anyway about the play we watched on the last day is about the hard life of how some people live in and were abruptly disrupted by the the Bosnian war

Here are the details
Class Enemy (Asian Premiere)
East West Theater Company (Bosnia & Herzegovina)
“Passionate, shocking, awakening!” – Oslobodenje, Sarajevo.
Abandoned by their teachers, they wait, and they hope. Desperate and violent, they vandalise, they curse, they threat. While waiting, they start conducting their own lessons, telling dramatic, bleak and poignant stories about their own lives. They are underprivileged, but yet gifted, and they long to be recognised, acknowledged, confronted, and taught about life.
Nigel Williams’ play of the 80s is updated by Bosnian theatre director and film-maker Haris Pašović to present-day Sarajevo, a city still recovering from the Bosnian conflict of the 90s. Seven boys and girls conduct their own lessons as they wait for teachers who never arrive. Two funny guys Ma and Ca (Kitty and Cat) sing hip-hop songs – the only language in which they can express themselves. Pegla (Iron), the relentless bully whips up a frenzy. The dangerous beauty Kobra (Cobra) carefully manicures her nails and beat up the boys. The ever-unnoticeable Koka (Chick) turns into a revolt leader. The lovable classroom clown Klinjo (Kid) proves to be a racist. The rebel who breaks shop windows Nebo (Sky) transforms into an artist. In a final confrontation with the Deputy Headmistress, tragedy strikes. What seems in the beginning an ordinary day in a classroom turns into disaster.
Lord of the Flies meets Animal Farm in this production filled with pitch-perfect tension brilliantly captured by a young cast whose own childhood school days were abruptly disrupted by war. Based on research amongst disillusioned youths coping with dysfunctional families in post-war Bosnia, Pašović’s Class Enemy paints an unnerving dystopia, sounding a clarion call for change in a world where violence in schools and campuses increasingly vie for news headlines.
Performed in Bosnian with English surtitles.
Play includes Coarse Language and Violence
Restricted to Audiences 16 years and above only
The ticket cost $38, the play was very funny, and quite realistic.The problem about the play is that we had keep an eye on subtitle and the people on the play .Each of them ,had an unique act. Is a very nice play i would recommend to watch .
oh yeah btw there is an event somewhere 20-22 june 8pm bedok reservoir anyone want to come?
francis