She worked as a bank clerk, a promoter in the field of foreign tourism, and a journalist for Duga before devoting herself to a full-time literary career in 1996.
[3][4][5] In 2008, Habjanović Đurović defended the response of Muslim organizations in Serbia to Sherry Jones's novel The Jewel of Medina.
The Muslim leaders emphasized that they had no interest in banning literature but wanted to draw attention to the desecration of their faith that they identified in the book.
[...] When I was writing An Observation of the Soul, in the segment where I wrote about Skanderbeg, I had to study Albanian history of the fifteenth century.
In Habjanović Đurović's account, Marković's sorrow from the early death of her mother attracted Milošević to her, as he "felt the need to relieve her pain, to protect and cherish her.
"[9] Habjanović Đurović appeared in the ninth position on the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS)'s Future We Believe In electoral list as a non-partisan candidate in the 2016 parliamentary election.