Obstacles
to Reconciliation By
Ljiljana Kovacevic
A
priest of the Serbian Orthodox Church in the Bosnian town of Prijedor, Ranko Maletic,
urges his congregation every Sunday sermon to respect the rights of all their
neighbors and help returnees to the Prijedor region make a peaceful and dignified
life for themselves. Every Friday, Imam Merzuk Efendi Hadzirasidovic, sends the
same message to Muslims gathered in the mosque. Despite this, however, attacks
against religious buildings, not only in the Prijedor region, but throughout Bosnia
and Herzegovina, are ever more frequent.In
the night between Dec. 4 and Dec. 5 last year, unknown perpetrators hurled a hand
grenade on to the balcony of the building housing the Islamic Religious Community
office in the Prijedor settlement of Donja Puharska, in Republika Srpska, one
of the two entities in Bosnia. The explosion damaged the building which an IRC
official, Sejfo Hodzic, who was in the building with his wife at the moment of
the blast, has estimated to equal some 3,000 marka. RS
police chief Radomir Njegus says that nine attacks against IRC buildings and 18
on non-Serb-owned property were registered last year in the entity. Njegus adds
that most of the assaults against Muslim holy buildings happened in the Prijedor
region. Police in that town arrested seven people, of whom four minors, in connection
with the attacks including one attack on a Muslim graveyard in the village of
Donja Puharska. "The same group was planning to blow up the IRC building
in that settlement," Njegus also said. An
old Bosniak women was murdered in Kozarska (Bosanska) Dubica, a town in which
Serbs comprise the majority population, at the beginning of 2003. The perpetrators
have not yet been found. At the end of January this year, masked attackers broke
into the home of Bosniak Fuad Ramic in Prijedor. They injured him and his
mother, Djula Ramic, 80, and took EUR6,000 from them. "This
is the first time since we returned five years ago that we have been attacked
and robbed," says Djula. Her son adds that he had never though that that
they could be robbed, and that he wishes to return to Munich, where he has been
living since 1971, as soon as possible. "I have a German pension and
my wife is still working. Sometimes I work on the black market, because I would
like to eventually return as an upright man, not as a dog. After this, I am no
longer certain that there is anything worth coming back to," Fuad says. At
the end of January, in the settlement of Kozarac, near Prijedor, inhabited mostly
by Bosniak returnees, someone stoned an Orthodox church. Priest Mladen Majkic
says that the attackers broke windows and carved Islamic symbols -- a star and
a crescent -- into the outer walls. The church is dedicated to Apostles Peter
and Paul and dates from the late 19th century. Before
the war, Muslims were the majority population in Kozarac. After they were exiled
during the war, their homes were occupied by Serbs exiled from the Knin area after
the 1995 Croatian operations Flash and Storm. After the war, the Bosniaks returned
to their homes and are again the majority in Kozarac. After
the attack on the Orthodox church everyone with whom our reporters spoke to in
Kozarac denied any knowledge whatsoever of the identity of the attackers. They
also condemned the attacks. "I oppose all attacks on churches, but I am also
against attacks on mosques which have become more frequent as of recently,"
said a 20-year old man who, like his fellow townspeople, declined to give his
name. It
is a fact, however that Muslim sacred buildings are targeted in Serb-dominated
places and that Orthodox churches are attacked in places where Muslims are the
majority population. Thus, an Orthodox church in Bosanski Petrovac, a town in
the Muslim-Croat Federation where Serbs were the majority before the war, now
a predominantly Muslim town, was recently broken into and all of the money gathered
from icon and candle sales stolen. In
mid-January, in the village of Jablan Do, near Trebinje, which lies only two kilometers
from the border with Croatia in the region of Konavli, 11 houses belonging to
Serbs who now live in Trebinje or Herceg Novi as refugees, were damaged. The attackers
made Ustasha symbols with stones at several entrances to the village. A handful
of Serbs from Jablan Do, afraid to reveal their names to reporters, only said
in a brief press release they were quite aware of what this meant -- that they
were not welcome in the neighborhood. Some
international representatives in Bosnia and some Bosnian politicians see the victory
of nationally-oriented parties in last year's October elections as the cause of
the increasing attacks. "We are witnesses to growing violence. I believe
that this has to do with the fact that the nationalists (the Party of Democratic
Action, the Serb Democratic Party and the Croatian Democratic Union) are again
in power," U.S. Ambassador in Bosnia Clifford Bond recently said. He believes
that local and religious leaders ought to "condemn such incidents more strongly,
and show their commitment to the reconciliation process." At
the same time certain analysts well-versed in events in Bosnia say that the forces
that lost the elections (the Alliance for Change and the Alliance of Independent
Social Democrats) are behind the attacks on religious buildings and returnees.
According to them, these forces want to prove that peaceful co-existence is impossible
with the nationalists in power. And
while political parties and observers are trying to establish the cause for the
deterioration, local government and religious representatives in ethnically-mixed
regions are trying to solve the problems themselves. Local government representatives
in Prijedor, together with dignitaries of the Serbian Orthodox Church and the
Islamic Religious Community, have condemned all attacks saying that such acts
of vandalism could only be committed by people who are not religious at all. Priest
Maletic and Imam Hadzirasidovic have agreed to regularly condemn assaults on the
other ethnic group's shrines in their sermons, and try to teach their congregations
the importance of restoring dialogue between the peoples of Bosnia. The
heads of all four major confessions in Bosnia -- Reis i Ulema Mustafa Ceric, Metropolitan
of Dabar Bosnia Nikolaj, Bosnian Archbishop Vinko Puljic and Jewish Community
in Bosnia President Jakob Finci -- have all condemned the attacks against the
religious buildings and returnees. In a joint press release they demanded from
the government in Bosnia to "respond immediately and resolutely at the first
signs of violence against returnees, because delays in finding the perpetrators
of violent acts raises suspicions and upsets ordinary people, making rebuilding
trust among different ethnic groups more difficult." The
religious leaders, furthermore, expect the Bosnian Parliament to soon pass a bill
on the freedom of religion which, they believe, will help curb religious intolerance
and violence and prevent individuals and groups from spreading hatred and intolerance
against members of other religious groups. Now
it is up to the Bosnian government and entity police to act and ensure safety
for all Bosnian citizens, regardless of their religious and ethnic background.
In addition to this, the police in Bosnia have an additional responsibility --
to act promptly and efficiently in an environment in which many war wounds have
not healed. So far, this has happened in a disturbingly negligible number of cases. (BETA) |