One picture is more than 1000 words…

Text by Almir Hodzic
With permission and pleasure…ODNmZTc4ZGFiYiMvYkZvdk9uNzJpWFJHNGJaNUhwX2hFeU5sN053PS8weDA6OTYweDYwNS84NDB4NTMwL3MzLmFtYXpvbmF3cy5jb20vcG9saWN5bWljLWltYWdlcy9kNjRlZTUwMTZmYTExZjk2YzliMGEyZGMwNjE4NDg1YzUyMjViMGI4ZGU4MDhiODI0NWUyNDAwOTY1YmQ3NWY5LmpwZw

 

This picture from 1941 shows a Muslim woman on the streets of Sarajevo, using her veil to cover her Jewish neighbor’s yellow star.

After the Nazi invasion, Sarajevo and the rest of Yugoslavia came under the Ustaša regime. Collaborating with the Nazis, the Ustaša enacted race laws that targeted Jews, Serbs, and Roma. Of the 39,000 Jews that lived in the territory controlled by the Ustaša, only 20% survived WWII.

So you might ask why a Muslim woman was aiding her Jewish neighbor.

Bosnia has been a land of many ethnicity and cultures for centuries. Serbs, Croats, Muslims, and even Jews lived alongside each other and integrated their cultures amongst their communities. Jews that escaped the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisitions found refuge in the Ottoman-controlled territories of the Balkans. And during the onset of WWII, the Kingdom of Yugoslavia generic cipro 500mg opened its borders to Jews fleeing Austrian persecution.

Sarajevo, in particular, was multicultural with flourishing religious cooperation. Sometimes called the “Jerusalem of Europe,” it embodied the concept of religious coexistence. Sarajevo was the only major European city to have a mosque, a Catholic church, an Eastern Orthodox church, and a synagogue in the same neighborhood.

So it should come to no one’s surprise that a Sarajevo would reach out to assist a fellow neighbor in times of distress, no matter her religious affiliation. It’s a great lesson for us today.

http---s3.amazonaws.com-pmbucket-site-users-38477-original

Almir Hodzic
Currently studying at the Pennsylvania State University in the process of attaining degrees in international politics and history. Area of focus is politics and transitions in Eastern Europe/Balkans due to the fact of being born in Former Yugoslavia….