Wikipedia does not yet have an article with this exact name.
Start the Buz article (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Buz&action=edit)
If you have created this page in the past few minutes and it has not yet appeared, it may not be visible due to a delay in updating the database. Please wait and check again later before attempting to recreate the page.
Search for Buz in other articles
If you created an article under this title previously, it may have been deleted. See candidates for speedy deletion for possible reasons.
Look for Buz in Wiktionary, our sister dictionary project.
Here, Buzu is far from the madding crowd and far from his native Moldova, a place where "painters still carry with them a kind of burden—which you can feel in their works, but mostly in their behavior." A sort of humbleness or hopelessness, he suggests, but wouldn't name it.
Buzu seems to be a painter born too late, uncomfortable with the postmodernist "happening" or advertising which claims the status of art.
Buzu, who is not aware of any influence upon himself and thinks it's a mistake to try to put an artist in a box or on a shelf, has already experienced the opinionated remarks of omniscient critics who change their taste as the wind blows.
Fear of people like the Tigrean Buzu who would not like them, and fear that she would sense that they oppose the 16 million dollars daily revenue that the Tigrean Woman's association digs up out of Oromia and buys all kinds of leisure staff from all across the globe.
Buzu is in the middle of partly hostile, partly indifferent, partly desperate mating dance.
In the first place, what Woizer Buzu must know, if she has a will to know, is that the Oromos (as a society of nation) are/were not an endogamous nation, and that in the course of their history they have never counted on a racist ideology of blood relationship.