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KOSHER DELIGHT - YOUR JEWISH ONLINE MAGAZINE!
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BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA |
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JEWISH AND KOSHER BOSNIA
AND HERZEGOVINA:
Jewish
community center and Synagogue
Hamdije Kresevljakovica 59, Sarajevo
Tel: + 387 33 229666
Fax: + 387 33 229667
Emal:
la_bene@open.net.ba
Web:
http://www.benevolencija.eu.org
Rabbi:
President:
Updated on: March 15, 2012
By: Tomo,
info@benevolencija.eu.org
Please update us!
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HISTORY OF THE JEWS IN BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA
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SARAJEVO HAGGADAH
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SYNAGOGUES

Synagogue in Sarajevo,
2007. Author: Małgorzata Płoszaj
ABOUT BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA:
| The National Anthem of
Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Državna himna Bosne i Hercegovine
/
Државна химна Босне и Херцеговине |
Capital
(and largest city) |
Sarajevo
43°52′N
18°25′E
/ 43.867°N
18.417°E /
43.867; 18.417 |
|
Official language(s) |
Bosnian,
Croatian and
Serbian. |
| Ethnic
groups (2000) |
48.0%
Bosniaks,
37.1% Serbs,
14.3%
Croats,
0.6% others
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Demonym |
Bosnians,
Herzegovinians
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Government |
Federal democratic republic
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- |
High Representative |
Valentin Inzko1 |
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- |
Presidency members |
Bakir Izetbegović2
Nebojša Radmanović3
Željko Komšić4 |
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Prime Minister |
Vjekoslav Bevanda |
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Independence |
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First mentioned |
950/753 |
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Banate |
1154 |
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Kingdom |
1377 |
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Independence lost
to
Ottoman Empire conquest |
1463 |
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Bosnian uprising |
1831 |
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Jurisdiction transferred
to
Austro-Hungarian Empire |
1878 |
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Annexation of Bosnia by
Austro-Hungarian Empire |
1908 |
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National Day |
November 25, 1943 (ZAVNOBIH) |
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Independence Day (from
SFR Yugoslavia) |
March 1, 1992 |
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Observed |
April 6, 1992 |
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Area |
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Total |
51,197 km2 (127th)
19,741 sq mi |
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Population |
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2011 estimate |
3,839,737 (129th5) |
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1991 census |
4,377,033 |
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Density |
75/km2 (129th5)
194/sq mi |
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GDP (PPP) |
2011 estimate |
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Total |
$31.366 billion
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Per capita |
$8,063 |
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GDP (nominal) |
2011 estimate |
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Total |
$18.294 billion
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Per capita |
$4,702 |
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Gini (2007) |
34.1 |
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HDI (2011) |
0.733 (high) (74th) |
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Currency |
Convertible Mark (BAM) |
| Time zone |
CET (UTC+1) |
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Summer (DST) |
CEST (UTC+2) |
| Drives on the |
right |
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ISO 3166 code |
BA |
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Internet TLD |
.ba |
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Calling code |
387 |
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1 |
Not a government member; the High
Representative is an international civilian peace implementation
overseer with authority to dismiss elected and non-elected officials and
enact legislation |
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2 |
Current presidency
Chair;
Bosniak. |
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3 |
Current presidency member;
Croat. |
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4 |
Current presidency member;
Serb. |
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5 |
Rank based on 2007 UN estimate of de
facto population. |
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Bosnia
and Herzegovina ( i/ˈbɒzniə
ən
hɛrtsəɡoʊˈviːnə/;
Bosnian,
Croatian and
Serbian: Bosna i Hercegovina,
Cyrillic script: Босна и Херцеговина), sometimes
called Bosnia-Herzegovina or simply Bosnia, is
a country in
Southeastern Europe, on the
Balkan Peninsula. Its capital and largest city is
Sarajevo. Bordered by
Croatia to the north, west and south,
Serbia to the east, and
Montenegro to the southeast, Bosnia and Herzegovina is
almost
landlocked, except for the 20 kilometres (12 miles) of
coastline on the
Adriatic Sea surrounding the town of
Neum. In the central and southern
interior of the country the geography is mountainous, in the
northwest it is moderately hilly, and the northeast is
predominantly flatland. The inland is a geographically
larger region and has a moderate
continental climate, bookended by hot summers and cold
and snowy winters. The southern tip of the country has a
Mediterranean climate and plain topography.
The country that
is now Bosnia and Herzegovina is a region that traces
permanent human settlement back to the
Neolithic age. Culturally, politically and socially, the
country has one of the richest histories in the region,
having been first settled by the
Slavic peoples that populate the area today from the 6th
through to the 9th centuries AD. They then established the
first independent
Banate in the 12th century upon the arrival and
convergence of people that would eventually come to call
themselves Dobri Bošnjani (literally "Good
Bosnians"). This evolved into the
Kingdom of Bosnia in the 14th century, after which it
was annexed into the
Ottoman Empire, under whose rule it would remain from
the mid 15th to the late 18th century. The Ottomans brought
Islam to the region, and altered much of the cultural
and social outlook of the country. This was followed by
annexation into the
Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, which lasted up until the end
of
World War I. Following the dissolution of the
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, the country,
like most other in the region,
proclaimed independence in 1992, which was followed by a
bloody war, which lasted until late 1995.
Today, the
country maintains high
literacy, life expectancy and education levels and is
one of the
most frequently-visited countries in the region.
Bosnia and Herzegovina is regionally and
internationally renowned for its
natural beauty and heritage inherited from six
historical civilizations, its
cuisine,
winter sports, its eclectic and unique
architecture and the
Sarajevo Film Festival and
Sarajevo Jazz Festivals, both the largest and most
prominent of their kind in Southeastern Europe.
The country is
home to three ethnic groups or, officially,
constituent peoples, a term unique for Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
Bosniaks are the largest group of the three, with
Serbs second and
Croats third. Regardless of ethnicity, a citizen of
Bosnia and Herzegovina is often identified in English as a
Bosnian. The terms
Herzegovinian and
Bosnian are maintained as a regional rather than ethnic
distinction, and the region of Herzegovina has no precisely
defined borders of its own. Moreover, the country was simply
called "Bosnia" (without Herzegovina) until the
Austro-Hungarian occupation at the end of the nineteenth
century.
Formerly one of
the six federal units constituting the
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, Bosnia and
Herzegovina gained its independence during the
Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s. Bosnia and Herzegovina is a
parliamentary republic, which has a
bicameral legislature and a three-member Presidency
composed of a member of each major ethnic group. However,
the central government's power is highly limited, as the
country is largely decentralized and comprises two
autonomous entities: the
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and
Republika Srpska, with a third region, the
Brčko District, governed under local government. The
country is a
potential candidate for membership to the European Union
and has been a candidate for
NATO membership since April 2010, when it received a
Membership Action Plan at the summit in
Tallinn. Additionally, the country has been a member of
the
Council of Europe since April 2002 and a founding member
of the
Mediterranean Union upon its establishment in July 2008.
Etymology
The first preserved mention
of the name "Bosnia" is in
De Administrando Imperio, a politico-geographical
handbook written by the
Byzantine emperor
Constantine VII in the mid-10th century (between 948 and
952) describing the "small country" (χωρίον in
Greek) of "Bosona" (Βοσώνα).
The
Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja from 1172-1196 of
Bar's
Roman Catholic
Christian
Archbishop Grgur names Bosnia, and references an earlier
source from the year of 753 - the De Regno Sclavorum (Of the
Realm of Slavs). The name "Bosnia" probably comes from the
name of the
Bosna river around which it has been historically based,
which was recorded in the
Roman era under the name Bossina.
More direct roots of the river's names are
unknown. Philologist Anton Mayer proposed a connection with
the
Indo-European root *bos or *bogh, meaning
"running water".[16]
Certain
Roman sources similarly mention Bathinus flumen
as a name of the
Illyrian Bosona, both of which would mean
"running water" as well.
Other theories involve the rare
Latin term Bosina, meaning boundary, and possible
Slavic origins.
The origins of
"Herzegovina" can be identified with more precision. During
the
Early Middle Ages the region was known as
Hum, from the Zachlumoi tribe of southern Slavs
which inhabited it. In the 1440s, the region was ruled by
the powerful nobleman
Stefan Vukčić Kosača. In a document sent to
Friedrich III on January 20, 1448, Stefan Vukčić Kosača
called himself "Herzog of
Saint Sava, Lord of Hum and Primorje, Grand Duke of
Bosnia". Herzog is the
German for "duke",
and so the lands he controlled later became known as
Herzegovina ("Dukedom", from the addition of -ovina,
"land"). The region was administered by the Ottomans as the
sanjak and then
pashaluk of
Hersek. The name Herzegovina was first included in the
official name of the then Ottoman province in the mid-19th
century.
On initial proclamation of
independence in 1992 the country's official name was the
Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina but following the
1995
Dayton Agreement and the new constitution that
accompanied it the name was officially changed to Bosnia
and Herzegovina.
History
Early history
Bosnia has been
inhabited since at least the
Neolithic age. The earliest Neolithic
population became known in the
Antiquity as the
Illyrians.
Celtic migrations in the 4th century BC were
also notable. Concrete historical evidence for
this period is scarce, but overall it appears
that the region was populated by a number of
different peoples speaking distinct languages.
Conflict between the Illyrians and
Romans started in
229 BC, but Rome did not complete its
annexation of the region until
AD 9.
It was precisely in
what is now Bosnia and Herzegovina that Rome
fought one of the most difficult battles in its
history since the
Punic Wars, as described by the Roman
historian
Suetonius.
This was the Roman campaign
against the revolt of indigenous communities
from
Illyricum, known in history as the
Great Illyrian Revolt, and also as the
Pannonian revolt, or
Bellum Batonianum, the latter named after
two leaders of the rebellious Illyrian
communities,
Bato/Baton of the
Daesitiates, and Bato of the
Breuci.
The Great
Illyrian revolt was a rising up of Illyrians
against the Romans, more specifically a revolt
against
Tiberius' attempt to recruit them for his
war against the
Germans. The Illyrians put up a fierce
resistance to the most powerful army on earth at
the time (the
Roman Army) for four years (AD 6 to AD 9),
but they were finally subdued by Rome in AD 9.
The last Illyrian
stronghold, of which their defence won the
admiration of Roman historians, is said to have
been Arduba.Bato of Daesitiates was captured and
taken to Italy. It is alleged that when Tiberius
asked Bato and the Daesitiates why they had
rebelled, Baton was reputed to have answered: "You
Romans are to blame for this; for you send as
guardians of your flocks, not dogs or shepherds,
but wolves." Bato spent the rest of his life
in the Italian town of Ravenna.
In the Roman
period, Latin-speaking settlers from the entire
Roman Empire settled among the Illyrians,
and Roman soldiers were encouraged to retire in
the region.
The land was
originally part of
Illyria up until the Roman occupation.
Following the split of the Roman Empire between
337 and 395 AD, Dalmatia and Pannonia became
parts of the
Western Roman Empire. Some claim that the
region was conquered by the
Ostrogoths in 455 AD. It subsequently
changed hands between the
Alans and the
Huns. By the 6th century, Emperor
Justinian had reconquered the area for the
Byzantine Empire. The
Illyrians were conquered by the
Avars in the 6th century.
Modern knowledge of
the political situation in the west Balkans
during the
Early Middle Ages is unclear. Upon their
arrival, the
Slavs brought with them a tribal social
structure which probably fell apart and gave way
to
Feudalism only with
Frankish penetration into the region in the
late 9th century. The
Slavic tribes also brought their mythology
and pagan system of beliefs, the Rodovjerje.
In particular,
Perun /
Перун, the highest god of the pantheon and
the god of thunder and lightning is also
commonly found in Bosnian toponymy, for instance
in the name of Mount Perun (Perunova
Gora / Перунова Гора). Along with the
Slavic settlers, the native Illyrians were
Christianized. Bosnia and Herzegovina,
because of its geographic position and terrain,
was probably one of the last areas to go through
this process, which presumably originated from
the urban centers along the Dalmatian coast.
Thus, Slavic Bosnian tribes remained pagans for
a longer time, and finally converted to the
Bogumil Christian faith.
The principalities
of
Serbia and
Croatia split control of Bosnia and
Herzegovina in the 9th and 10th century, but by
the
High Middle Ages political circumstance led
to the area being contested between the
Kingdom of Hungary and the Byzantine Empire.
Following another shift of power between the two
in the early 12th century, Bosnia found itself
outside the control of both and emerged as an
independent state under the rule of local
bans.
The first
Bosnian monarch was
Ban Borić. The second was
Ban Kulin whose rule marked the start of a
controversy with the
Bosnian Church, because he allowed an
indigenous
Bogomilism sect considered heretical by the
Roman Catholic Church. In response to Hungarian
attempts to use church politics regarding the
issue as a way to reclaim sovereignty over
Bosnia, Kulin held a council of local church
leaders to renounce the heresy and embraced
Catholicism in 1203. Despite this, Hungarian
ambitions remained unchanged long after Kulin's
death in 1204, waning only after an unsuccessful
invasion in 1254.
Bosnian history
from then until the early 14th century was
marked by a power struggle between the
Šubić and
Kotromanić families. This conflict came to
an end in 1322, when
Stephen II Kotromanić became Ban. By
the time of his death in 1353, he was successful
in annexing territories to the north and west,
as well as Zahumlje and parts of Dalmatia. He
was succeeded by his nephew
Tvrtko who, following a prolonged struggle
with nobility and inter-family strife, gained
full control of the country in 1367. Tvrtko
crowned himself on 26 October 1377 as Stephen
Tvrtko I the
King of
Rascia,
Bosnia, Dalmatia, Croatia, the
Seaside.
Based on
archaeological evidence, he was crowned in the
in Mile near
Visoko in the church which was built in the
time of
Stephen II Kotromanić's reign, where he was
also buried alongside his uncle Stjepan II.
Following his death in 1391 however,
Bosnia fell into a long period of decline. The
Ottoman Empire had already started its
conquest of Europe and posed a major threat
to the
Balkans throughout the first half of the
15th century. Finally, after decades of
political and social instability, the Kingdom of
Bosnia ceased to exist in 1463.
The Ottoman conquest
of Bosnia marked a new era in the country's
history and introduced drastic changes in the
political and
cultural landscape. The Ottomans allowed for
the preservation of Bosnia's identity by
incorporating it as an integral province of the
Ottoman Empire with its historical name and
territorial integrity — a unique case among
subjugated states in the Balkans.
Within Bosnia the
Ottomans introduced a number of key changes in
the territory's socio-political administration;
including a new landholding system, a
reorganization of administrative units, and a
complex system of social differentiation by
class and religious affiliation.
The three
centuries of Ottoman rule also had a drastic
impact on Bosnia's population make-up, which
changed several times as a result of the
empire's conquests, frequent wars with European
powers, forced and economic migrations, and
epidemics. A native Slavic-speaking Muslim
community emerged and eventually became the
largest of the ethno-religious groups due to the
restriction imposed by the
Ottoman Empire,
and conversions-for-gain.
The Bosnian
Christian communities also experienced major
changes. The Bosnian
Franciscans (and the Catholic population as
a whole) were to a minor extent protected by
official imperial decree, while the Bosnian
Church disappeared altogether.
As the Ottoman
Empire continued their rule in the
Balkans (Rumelia),
Bosnia was somewhat relieved of the pressures of
being a frontier province, and experienced a
period of general welfare. A number of cities,
such as Sarajevo and
Mostar, were established and grew into
regional centers of trade and
urban culture and were then visited by
Ottoman traveler
Evliya Çelebi in 1648. Within these cities,
various Ottoman Sultans financed the
construction of many works of
Bosnian architecture such as the country's
first library in
Sarajevo,
madrassas, a school of
Sufi philosophy, and a
clock tower (Sahat Kula), bridges
such as the
Stari Most, the
Tsar's Mosque and the
Gazi Husrev-beg's Mosque.
Furthermore, some
Bosnians played influential roles in the Ottoman
Empire's cultural and
political history during this time.Bosnian
recruits formed a large component of the Ottoman
ranks in the battles of
Mohács and
Krbava field, while numerous other Bosnians
rose through the ranks of the Ottoman military
to occupy the highest positions of power in the
Empire, including admirals such as
Matrakçı Nasuh; generals such as
Isa-Beg Isaković,
Gazi Husrev-beg and
Telli Hasan Pasha; administrators such as
Ferhat-paša Sokolović and
Osman Gradaščević; and
Grand Viziers such as the influential
Mehmed Paša Sokolović. Some Bosnians emerged
as
Sufi mystics, scholars such as
Ali Džabič; and poets in the
Turkish,
Albanian,
Arabic, and
Persian languages.
However, by the
late 17th century the Empire's military
misfortunes caught up with the country, and the
conclusion of the
Great Turkish War with the
treaty of Karlowitz in 1699 once again made
Bosnia the Empire's westernmost province. The
following century was marked by further military
failures, numerous revolts within Bosnia, and
several outbursts of plague. The Porte's false
efforts at
modernizing the Ottoman state were met with
distrust growing to hostility in Bosnia, where
local aristocrats stood to lose much through the
proposed reforms.
This, combined
with frustrations over political concessions to
nascent Christian states in the east, culminated
in an unsuccessful revolt by
Husein Gradaščević, in 1831 after the
Turkish Sultan
Mahmud II slaughtered and abolished the
Janissary.
Related rebellions would be
extinguished by 1850, but the situation
continued to deteriorate. Later agrarian unrest
eventually sparked the
Herzegovinian rebellion, a widespread
peasant uprising, in 1875. The conflict rapidly
spread and came to involve several Balkan states
and Great Powers, a situation which eventually
led to the
Congress of Berlin and the
Treaty of Berlin in 1878.
Austro-Hungarian
rule (1878–1918)
At the
Congress of Berlin in 1878, the
Austro-Hungarian Foreign Minister
Gyula Andrássy obtained the occupation and
administration of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and he
also obtained the right to station garrisons in
the
Sanjak of Novi Pazar, which remained under
Ottoman administration. The Sanjak preserved
the separation of Serbia and Montenegro, and the
Austro-Hungarian garrisons there would open the
way for a dash to Salonika that "would bring the
western half of the Balkans under permanent
Austrian influence."
"High [Austro-Hungarian]
military authorities desired [an...] immediate
major expedition with Salonika as its
objective."
On 28
September 1878 the Finance Minister, Koloman
von Zell, threatened to resign if the army,
backed by the
Archduke Albert, were allowed to advance
to Salonika. In the session of the Hungarian
Parliament of 5 November 1878 the Opposition
proposed that the Foreign Minister should be
impeached for violating the constitution
with his policy during the Near East Crisis
and by the occupation of Bosnia-Herzegovina.
The motion lost 179 to 95. The gravest
accusations were raised by the opposition
rank and file against Andrassy.
Although an
Austro-Hungarian side quickly came to an
agreement with Bosnians, tensions remained in
certain parts of the country (particularly the
south) and a mass emigration of predominantly
Slavic dissidents occurred.
However, a state of relative
stability was reached soon enough and
Austro-Hungarian authorities were able to embark
on a number of social and administrative reforms
which intended to make Bosnia and Herzegovina
into a "model colony".
With the aim of
establishing the province as a stable
political model that would help dissipate
rising South Slav nationalism, Habsburg rule did
much to codify laws, to introduce new political
practices, and to provide for modernisation. The
Austro-Hungarian Empire built the three Roman
Catholic churches in Sarajevo and these three
churches are among only 20 Catholic churches in
the state of Bosnia.
Within three
years of formal occupation of Bosnia
Herzegovina, Austria-Hungary, in 1881, obtained
German, and more importantly, Russian, approval
for the annexation of these provinces, at a time
which suited Vienna. This mandate was formally
ratified by the
Dreikaiserbund (Three Emperor's Treaty) on
June 18 of that year.
Upon the accession of Czar
Nicholas II, however, the Russians reneged on
the agreement, asserting in 1897 the need for
special scrutiny of the Bosnian Annexation issue
at an unspecified future date.
External matters
began to affect the Bosnian Protectorate,
however, and its relationship with
Austria-Hungary. A bloody coup occurred in
Serbia, on June 10, 1903, which brought a
radical anti-Austrian government into power in
Belgrade.
Serb attempts to foment
agitation followed, advocating a unified South
Slavic state, ruled from Belgrade. This gained
little support amongst most of the population of
Bosnia Herzegovina, and only found fertile
ground with disaffected portions of the Orthodox
minority. Also, the revolt in the
Ottoman Empire in 1908, raised concerns that
the Istanbul government might seek the outright
return of Bosnia Herzegovina. These factors
caused the Austrian-Hungarian government to seek
a permanent resolution of the Bosnian question,
sooner, rather than later.
On July 2, 1908, in
response to the pressing of the
Austrian-Hungarian claim, the Russian Imperial
Foreign Minister Alexander Izvolsky offered to
support the Bosnian Annexation in return for
Vienna's support for Russia's bid for naval
access through the
Dardanelles Straits into the Mediterranean.
With the Russians being, at
least, provisionally willing to keep their word
over Bosnia Herzegovina for the first time in 11
years, Austria-Hungary waited and then published
the annexation proclamation on October 6, 1908.
The international furor over the annexation
announcement caused Izvolsky to drop the
Dardanelles Straits question, altogether, in
an effort to obtain a European conference over
the Bosnian Annexation.
This conference never
materialized and without British or French
support, the Russians and their client state,
Serbia, were compelled to accept the
Austrian-Hungarian annexation of Bosnia
Herzegovina in March 1909.
Political
tensions culminated on 28 June 1914, when Serb
nationalist youth
Gavrilo Princip, a member of movement
Young Bosnia,
assassinated the heir to the
Austro-Hungarian throne,
Archduke Franz Ferdinand, in Sarajevo – an
event that proved to be the spark that set off
World War I. Although some Bosnians died serving
in the armies of the various warring states,
Bosnia and Herzegovina itself managed to escape
the conflict relatively unscathed.
Kingdom of
Yugoslavia (1918–1941)
Following the war,
Bosnia and Herzegovina joined the South Slav
kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (soon
renamed Yugoslavia). Political life in Bosnia at
this time was marked by two major trends: social
and economic unrest over
property redistribution, and formation of
several political parties that frequently
changed coalitions and alliances with parties in
other Yugoslav regions.
The dominant ideological
conflict of the Yugoslav state, between Croatian
regionalism and Serbian centralization, was
approached differently by Bosnia's major
ethnic groups and was dependent on the
overall political atmosphere.
The political reforms brought
about in the newly established Yugoslavian
kingdom saw few benefits for the Bosniaks;
according to the 1910 final census of land
ownership and population according to religious
affiliation conducted in Austro-Hungary, Muslims
(Bosniaks) owned 91.1%, Orthodox Serbians owned
6.0%, Croatian Catholics owned 2.6% and others,
0.3% of the property. Following the reforms
Bosnian Muslims had a total of 1,175,305
hectares of agricultural and forest land taken
away from them.
Although the
initial split of the country into 33
oblasts erased the presence of traditional
geographic entities from the map, the efforts of
Bosnian politicians such as
Mehmed Spaho ensured that the six oblasts
carved up from Bosnia and Herzegovina
corresponded to the six sanjaks from Ottoman
times and, thus, matched the country's
traditional boundary as a whole.
The establishment
of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1929, however,
brought the redrawing of administrative regions
into
banates or
banovinas that purposely avoided all
historical and ethnic lines, removing any trace
of a Bosnian entity.
Serbo-Croat tensions over the
structuring of the Yugoslav state continued,
with the concept of a separate Bosnian division
receiving little or no consideration.
The famous
Cvetković-Maček Agreement that created the
Croatian banate in 1939 encouraged what was
essentially a partition of Bosnia between
Croatia and Serbia.
However the rising threat of
Adolf Hitler's
Nazi Germany forced Yugoslav politicians to
shift their attention. Following a period that
saw attempts at
appeasement, the signing of the
Tripartite Treaty, and a coup d'état,
Yugoslavia was finally invaded by Germany on 6
April 1941.
World War II (1941–45)
Once the kingdom of
Yugoslavia was conquered by Nazi forces in World
War II, all of Bosnia was ceded to the
Independent State of Croatia. The Croat
leaders embarked on a campaign of extermination
of
Serbs, Jews,
Roma, communists and large numbers of
Josip Broz Tito's
Partisans by setting up a number of
death camps.
Many Serbs
themselves took up arms and joined the
Chetniks; a Serb nationalist movement that
conducted operations coordinated with Nazi
forces against the partisans. The Chetniks were
also known to persecute and murder non-Serbs and
communist sympathizers. They committed many war
crimes against Bosnian Muslims in Eastern
Bosnia. On October 12, 1941 a group of 108
notable Muslim citizens of Sarajevo signed the
Resolution of Sarajevo Muslims by which they
condemned the
persecution of Serbs organized by
Ustaše, made distinction between Muslims who
participated in such persecutions and whole
Muslim population, presented informations about
the persecutions of Muslims by Serbs and
requested security for all citizens of the
country, regardless of their identity.
Starting in 1941,
Yugoslav communists under the leadership of
Josip Broz Tito organized their own
multi-ethnic resistance group, the
partisans, who fought against both Axis and
Chetnik forces. On 29 November 1943 the
Anti-Fascist Council of National Liberation of
Yugoslavia with Tito at its helm held a
founding conference in
Jajce where Bosnia and Herzegovina was
reestablished as a republic within the
Yugoslavian federation in its Habsburg borders.
Military success
eventually prompted the Allies to support the
Partisans, but Tito declined their offer to help
and relied on his own forces instead. All the
major military offensives by the antifascist
movement of Yugoslavia against Nazis and their
local supporters were conducted in
Bosnia-Herzegovina and its peoples bore the
brunt of fighting. More than 300,000 people died
in Bosnia and Herzegovina in World War II.
At the end of the war the
establishment of the
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia,
with the
constitution of 1946, officially made Bosnia
and Herzegovina one of six constituent republics
in the new state.
Socialist Yugoslavia (1945–1992)
Because of its
central geographic position within the
Yugoslavian federation, post-war Bosnia was
selected as a base for the development of the
military defense industry. This contributed
to a large concentration of arms and military
personnel in Bosnia; a significant factor in the
war that followed the break-up of Yugoslavia
in the 1990s. However, Bosnia's existence within
Yugoslavia, for the large part, was peaceful and
prosperous. Though considered a political
backwater of the federation for much of the
1950s and 1960s, in the 1970s a strong Bosnian
political elite arose, fueled in part by Tito's
leadership in the
Non-Aligned Movement and Bosnians serving in
Yugoslavia's
diplomatic corps.
While working
within the communist system, politicians such as
Džemal Bijedić,
Branko Mikulić and
Hamdija Pozderac reinforced and protected
the sovereignty of Bosnia and Herzegovina[34]
Their efforts proved key during the turbulent
period following Tito's death in 1980, and are
today considered some of the early steps towards
Bosnian independence. However, the republic did
not escape the increasingly nationalistic
climate of the time. With the fall of the Soviet
Union and the start of the break-up of
Yugoslavia, the old communist doctrine of
tolerance began to lose its potency, creating an
opportunity for nationalist elements in the
society to spread their influence.
Bosnian War for
independence (1992–1995)
Main
article:
Bosnian War
On 18 November 1990
the first multi-party parliamentary elections
were held (with a 2nd round on 25 November),
which resulted in a
national assembly dominated by three
ethnically based parties, which had formed a
loose coalition to oust the communists from
power.
Croatia
and
Slovenia's subsequent declarations of
independence and the warfare that ensued placed
Bosnia and Herzegovina and its three constituent
peoples in an awkward position. A significant
split soon developed on the issue of whether to
stay with the
Yugoslav federation (overwhelmingly favored
among Serbs) or seek independence
(overwhelmingly favored among Bosniaks and
Croats).
The
Serb members of parliament, consisting
mainly of the
Serb Democratic Party members, abandoned the
central parliament in Sarajevo, and formed the
Assembly of the Serb People of Bosnia and
Herzegovina on 24 October 1991, which marked
the end of the tri-ethnic coalition that
governed after the elections in 1990. This
Assembly established the
Serbian Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina
on 9 January 1992, which became
Republika Srpska in August 1992.
On 18 November
1991, the party branch in Bosnia and Herzegovina
of the ruling party in the Republic of Croatia,
the
Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ), proclaimed
the existence of the
Croatian Community of Herzeg-Bosnia, as a
separate "political, cultural, economic and
territorial whole", on the territory of Bosnia
and Herzegovina, with
Croat Defence Council (HVO) as its military
part.
The Bosnian government did not
recognize it. The
Constitutional Court of Bosnia and
Herzegovina declared
Herzeg-Bosnia illegal, first on 14 September
1992 and again on 20 January 1994.
A declaration of
Bosnia and Herzegovina sovereignty on 15 October
1991 was followed by a referendum for
independence from
Yugoslavia on 29 February and 1 March 1992
boycotted by the great majority of the Serbs.
The turnout in the independence referendum was
63.4 per cent and 99.7 per cent of voters voted
for independence.
Bosnia and Herzegovina declared
independence on 3 March 1992. Following a tense
period of escalating tensions the opening shots
in the incipient Bosnian conflict were fired
when Serb paramilitary forces attacked Bosnian
Croat villages around Capljina on 7 March 1992
and around Bosanski Brod and Bosniak town
Gorazde on 15 March. These minor attacks were
followed by much more serious Serb artillery
attacks on Neum on 19 March and on Bosanski Brod
on 24 March. The killing of a Bosniak civilian,
woman (Suada
Dilberović), on 5 April 1992 by a sniper,
while she was demonstrating in Sarajevo against
the raising of barricades by Bosnian Serbs, is
widely regarded as marking the start of warfare
between the three major communities.
Secret
discussions between
Franjo Tuđman and
Slobodan Milošević on the division of Bosnia
and Herzegovina between Serbia and Croatia were
held as early as March 1991 known as
Karađorđevo agreement. Following the
declaration of independence of the Republic of
Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Serbs attacked
different parts of the country. The state
administration of Bosnia and Herzegovina
effectively ceased to function having lost
control over the entire territory. The Serbs
wanted all lands where Serbs had a majority,
eastern and
western Bosnia.
The Croats and
their leader Tuđman also aimed at securing parts
of Bosnia and Herzegovina as Croatian. The
policies of the Republic of Croatia and its
leader Franjo Tuđman towards Bosnia and
Herzegovina were never totally transparent and
always included Franjo Tuđman's ultimate aim of
expanding Croatia's borders. Bosnian Muslims,
the only ethnic group loyal to the Bosnian
government, were an easy target, because the
Bosnian government forces were poorly equipped
and unprepared for the war.
International
recognition of Bosnia and Herzegovina increased
diplomatic pressure for the
Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) to withdraw
from the republic's territory which they
officially did. However, in fact, the Bosnian
Serb members of JNA simply changed insignia,
formed the
Army of Republika Srpska, and continued
fighting. Armed and equipped from JNA stockpiles
in Bosnia, supported by volunteers and various
paramilitary forces from Serbia, and
receiving extensive humanitarian, logistical and
financial support from the
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, Republika
Srpska's offensives in 1992 managed to place
much of the country under its control.
Initially, the
Serb forces attacked the non-Serb civilian
population in Eastern Bosnia. Once towns and
villages were securely in their hands, the Serb
forces – military, police, the paramilitaries
and, sometimes, even Serb villagers – applied
the same pattern: Bosniak houses and apartments
were systematically ransacked or burnt down,
Bosniak civilians were rounded up or captured,
and sometimes beaten or killed in the process.
2.2 million refugees were displaced by the end
of the war (of all three nationalities).
Men and women
were separated, with many of the men detained in
the camps. The women and indeed some children,
as young as twelve years of age, were kept in
various detention centres where they had to live
in intolerably unhygienic conditions, where they
were mistreated in many ways including being
raped repeatedly. Serb soldiers or policemen
would come to these detention centres, select
one or more women, take them out and rape them.
In June 1992 the
focus switched to
Novi Travnik and
Gornji Vakuf where the Croat Defence Council
(HVO) efforts to gain control were resisted. On
18 June 1992 the Bosnian Territorial Defence in
Novi Travnik received an
ultimatum from the HVO which included
demands to abolish existing Bosnia and
Herzegovina institutions, establish the
authority of the Croatian Community of Herzeg-Bosnia
and pledge allegiance to it, subordinate the
Territorial Defense to the HVO and expel Muslim
refugees, all within 24 hours. The attack was
launched on June 19. The elementary school and
the
Post Office were attacked and damaged.
Gornji Vakuf was
initially attacked by Croats on 20 June 1992,
but the attack failed. The
Graz agreement caused deep division inside
the Croat community and strengthened the
separation group, which led to the conflict with
Bosniaks. One of the primary pro-union Croat
leaders,
Blaž Kraljević (leader of the
Croatian Defence Forces (HOS) armed group)
was killed by HVO soldiers in August 1992, which
severely weakened the moderate group who hoped
to keep the Bosnian Croat alliance alive.
The situation
became more serious in October 1992 when Croat
forces mattacked the Bosniak population in
Prozor. According to
Jadranko Prlić indictment, HVO forces
cleansed most of the Muslims from the town of
Prozor and several surrounding villages.
By 1993, when an
armed conflict erupted between the predominantly
Bosniak government in Sarajevo and the Croatian
Republic of Herzeg-Bosnia, about 70% of the
country was controlled by Republika Srpska.
Ethnic cleansing and
civil rights violations against non-Serbs
were rampant in these areas. DNA teams have been
used to collect evidence of the atrocities
committed by Serbian forces during these
campaigns.[45]
One single most prominent example is the
Srebrenica Massacre, ruled
genocide by the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia. An estimated 7,000 Bosnians were
killed by the Serbian
political authorities.
In March 1994,
the signing of the Washington Accords between
the leaders of the republican government and
Herzeg-Bosnia led to the creation of a joint
Bosniak-Croat
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, which
absorbed the territory of the Croatian Republic
of Herzeg-Bosnia and that held by the
Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The Federation soon liberated the small
Autonomous Province of Western Bosnia.
A
NATO bombing campaign began in August, 1995,
against the Army of Republika Srpska, after the
Srebrenica massacre. Meanwhile, a ground
offensive by the allied forces of Croatia and
Bosnia, based on the treaty in Split by Tudjman
and Izetbegović, pushed the Serbs away from
territories held in western Bosnia which paved
the way to negotiations. In December 1995, the
signing of the
Dayton Agreement in
Dayton, Ohio by the presidents of Bosnia and
Herzegovina (Alija
Izetbegović), Croatia (Franjo
Tuđman), and Serbia (Slobodan
Milošević) brought a halt to the fighting,
roughly establishing the basic structure of the
present-day state. A
NATO-led peacekeeping force was immediately
dispatched to Bosnia to enforce the deal.
The number of
identified victims is currently at 97,207, and
the recent research estimates the total number
to be less than 110,000 killed (civilians and
military), and 1.8 million
displaced. This is being addressed by the
International Commission on Missing Persons.
According to
numerous
International Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia (ICTY) judgments the conflict
involved Bosnia and the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia (later
Serbia and Montenegro)
as well as
Croatia.
The Bosnian
government charged Serbia of complicity in
genocide in Bosnia during the war at the
International Court of Justice (ICJ). The
ICJ ruling of 26 February 2007 effectively
determined the war's nature to be international,
though exonerating Serbia of direct
responsibility for the genocide committed by
Serb forces of
Republika Srpska. The ICJ concluded,
however, that Serbia failed to prevent genocide
committed by Serb forces and failed to punish
those who carried out the genocide, especially
general
Ratko Mladić, and bring them to justice.
Ratko Mladić was arrested in a village in
northern Serbia on 26 May 2011, being accused of
directly orchestrating and overseeing the
slaughter of 8,000 Muslim men and boys, amongst
other genocide and war crime charges.
The judges ruled
that the criteria for genocide with the specific
intent (dolus
specialis) to destroy Bosnian Muslims
were met
only in Srebrenica or Eastern Bosnia in
1995. The
court concluded that the crimes committed during
the 1992–1995 war, may amount to
crimes against humanity according to the
international law, but that these acts did
not, in themselves, constitute genocide.
The Court further decided that,
following
Montenegro's
declaration of independence in June, 2006,
Serbia was the only respondent party in the
case, but that "any responsibility for past
events involved at the relevant time the
composite State of Serbia and Montenegro".
Geography
Bosnia is located in
the western
Balkans, bordering
Croatia (932 km/579 mi) to the north and
south-west,
Serbia (302 km/188 mi) to the east, and
Montenegro (225 km/140 mi) to the southeast.
It lies between latitudes
42° and
46° N, and longitudes
15° and
20° E.
The country's name comes from the two regions
Bosnia and
Herzegovina, which have a very vaguely
defined border between them. Bosnia occupies the
northern areas which are roughly four fifths of
the entire country, while Herzegovina occupies
the rest in the south part of the country.
The country is
mostly mountainous, encompassing the central
Dinaric Alps. The northeastern parts reach
into the
Pannonian basin, while in the south it
borders the
Adriatic. Dinaric Alps generally run in
east-west direction, and get higher towards the
south. The highest point of the country is peak
Maglić at 2,386 m, at the Montenegrin
border. Major mountains include
Kozara,
Grmeč,
Vlašić,
Čvrsnica,
Prenj,
Romanija,
Jahorina,
Bjelašnica and
Treskavica.
Overall, close to
50% of Bosnia and Herzegovina is forested. Most
forest areas are in Central, Eastern and Western
parts of Bosnia. Herzegovina has drier
Mediterranean climate, with dominant
karst topography. Northern Bosnia (Posavina)
contains very fertile agricultural land along
the river Sava and the corresponding area is
heavily farmed. This farmland is a part of the
Parapannonian Plain stretching into neighboring
Croatia and Serbia. The country has only 20
kilometers (12 mi) of coastline, around the town
of
Neum in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton.
Although the city is surrounded by Croatian
peninsulas, by the international law, Bosnia has
a
right of passage to the outer sea.
The major cities
are the capital
Sarajevo,
Banja Luka in the northwest region known as
Bosanska Krajina,
Bijeljina and
Tuzla in the northeast,
Zenica and
Doboj in the central part of Bosnia and
Mostar, the capital of
Herzegovina.
There are seven
major rivers in Bosnia and Herzegovina
- The
Sava is the largest river of the
country, but it only forms its northern
natural border with Croatia. It drains
76%
of the country's territory into
the Danube and the Black Sea. Bosnia and
Herzegovina is therefore also a member of
the
International Commission for the Protection
of the Danube River (ICPDR).
- The
Una,
Sana and
Vrbas are right tributaries of Sava
river. They are located in the northwestern
region of Bosanska Krajina.
- The
Bosna river gave its name to the
country, and is the longest river fully
contained within it. It stretches through
central Bosnia, from its source near
Sarajevo to Sava in the north.
- The
Drina flows through the eastern part of
Bosnia, and for the most part it forms a
natural border with Serbia.
- The
Neretva is the major river of
Herzegovina and the only major river that
flows south, into the Adriatic Sea.
Phytogeographically,
Bosnia and Herzegovina belongs to the
Boreal Kingdom and is shared between the
Illyrian province of the
Circumboreal Region and Adriatic province of
the
Mediterranean Region. According to the
WWF, the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina
can be subdivided into three
ecoregions: the Pannonian
mixed forests, Dinaric Mountains mixed
forests and Illyrian
deciduous forests.
Government and politics
Bosnia and
Herzegovina has several levels of political
structuring, according to the
Dayton accord. Most important of these
levels is the division of the country into two
entities:
Republika Srpska and the
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina covers 51%
of Bosnia and Herzegovina's total area, while
Republika Srpska covers 49%. The entities, based
largely on the territories held by the two
warring sides at the time, were formally
established by the Dayton peace agreement in
1995 because of the tremendous changes in Bosnia
and Herzegovina's ethnic structure. Since 1996
the power of the entities relative to the State
government has decreased significantly.
Nonetheless, entities still have numerous powers
to themselves. The
Brčko District in the north of the country
was created in 2000 out of land from both
entities. It officially belongs to both, but is
governed by neither, and functions under a
decentralized system of local government. The
Brčko District has been praised for maintaining
a multiethnic population and a level of
prosperity significantly above the national
average.
The third level
of Bosnia and Herzegovina's political
subdivision is manifested in
cantons. They are unique to the Federation
of Bosnia and Herzegovina entity, which consists
of ten of them. All of them have their own
cantonal government, which is under the law of
the Federation as a whole. Some cantons are
ethnically mixed and have special laws
implemented to ensure the equality of all
constituent people.
The fourth level
of political division in Bosnia and Herzegovina
is the municipalities. The Federation of Bosnia
and Herzegovina is divided in 74 municipalities,
and Republika Srpska in 63. Municipalities also
have their own local government, and are
typically based on the most significant city or
place in their territory. As such, many
municipalities have a long tradition and history
with their present boundaries. Some others,
however, were only created following the recent
war after traditional municipalities were split
by the
Inter-Entity Boundary Line. Each canton in
the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
consists of several municipalities, which are
divided into local communities.
Besides entities,
cantons, and municipalities, Bosnia and
Herzegovina also has four "official" cities.
These are:
Banja Luka,
Mostar,
Sarajevo, and
East Sarajevo. The territory and government
of the cities of Banja Luka and Mostar
corresponds to the municipalities of the same
name, while the cities of Sarajevo and East
Sarajevo officially consist of several
municipalities. Cities have their own city
government whose power is in between that of the
municipalities and cantons (or the entity, in
the case of Republika Srpska).
As a result of
the
Dayton Accords, the civilian peace
implementation is supervised by the
High Representative for Bosnia and Herzegovina
selected by the
Peace Implementation Council. The High
Representative has many governmental and
legislative powers, including the dismissal of
elected and non-elected officials. More
recently, several central institutions have been
established (such as
defense ministry, security ministry, state
court,
indirect taxation service and so on) in the
process of transferring part of the jurisdiction
from the entities to the state.
The
representation of the government of Bosnia and
Herzegovina is by elites who represent the
country's three major groups, with each having a
guaranteed share of power.
The Chair of the
Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina rotates
among three members (Bosniak,
Serb,
Croat), each elected as the Chair for an
eight-month term within their four-year term as
a member. The three members of the
Presidency are elected directly by the
people (Federation votes for the Bosniak/Croat,
Republika Srpska for the
Serb).
The Chair of the
Council of Ministers is nominated by the
Presidency and approved by the House of
Representatives. He or she is then responsible
for appointing a Foreign Minister, Minister of
Foreign Trade, and others as appropriate.
The
Parliamentary Assembly is the lawmaking body
in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It consists of two
houses: the
House of Peoples and the
House of Representatives. The House of
Peoples has 15 delegates, two-thirds of which
come from the Federation (5 Croat and 5 Bosniaks)
and one-third from the Republika Srpska (5
Serbs). The House of Representatives is composed
of 42 Members, two-thirds elected from the
Federation and one-third elected from the
Republika Srpska.
The
Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina
is the supreme, final arbiter of legal matters.
It is composed of nine members: four members are
selected by the House of Representatives of the
Federation, two by the Assembly of the Republika
Srpska, and three by the President of the
European Court of Human Rights after
consultation with the Presidency.
However, the
highest political authority in the country is
the High Representative in Bosnia and
Herzegovina, the chief
executive officer for the international
civilian presence in the country. Since 1995,
the High Representative has been able to bypass
the elected parliamentary assembly, and since
1997 has been able to remove elected officials.
The methods selected by the High Representative
have been criticized as undemocratic.
International supervision is to
end when the country is deemed politically and
democratically stable and self-sustaining.
The Armed Forces of
Bosnia and Herzegovina were unified into a
single entity in 2005, with the merger of the
Army of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
and the
Army of Republika Srpska, which had defended
their respective regions. The
Ministry of Defense had been founded in
2004.The
Bosnian military consists of the
Bosnian Ground Forces and
Air Force and Air Defense. The Ground Forces
number 10,000 active and 5,000 reserve
personnel. They are armed with a mix of
American, Yugoslavian, Soviet, and European-made
weaponry, vehicles, and military equipment. The
Air Force and Air Defense Forces has 2,500
personnel and about 45 aircraft. All of its
aircraft are utility helicopters and basic
trainers. The Air Defense Forces operate
MANPAD hand-held missiles,
SAM missile batteries, anti-aircraft
cannons, and radar. Almost all of its
anti-aircraft equipment is of Soviet origin,
though it also operates some U.S. and Swedish
hardware.
Foreign relations
EU integration
is one of the main political objectives of
Bosnia and Herzegovina, it initiated the
Stabilisation and Association Process in
2007. Countries participating in the SAP have
been offered the possibility to become, once
they fulfill the necessary conditions, Member
States of the EU. Bosnia and Herzegovina is
therefore a potential candidate country for EU
accession.[60]
The implementation of the
Dayton Accords of 1995 has focused the
efforts of policymakers in Bosnia and
Herzegovina, as well as the international
community, on regional stabilization in the
countries-successors of the
former Yugoslavia. Within Bosnia and
Herzegovina, relations with its neighbors of
Croatia,
Serbia and
Montenegro have been fairly stable since the
signing of the
Dayton Agreement in 1995.
On April 23,
2010, Bosnia and Herzegovina received the
Membership Action Plan from
NATO, which is the last step before full
membership in the alliance. Full membership is
expected in 2014 or 2015, depending on the
progress of reforms.
Bosnia and
Herzgovina is home to three ethnic "constituent
peoples":
Bosniaks,
Serbs and
Croats. Tensions between the three
constitutional peoples remain high and often
provoke political disagreements.
According to the
1991 census, Bosnia and Herzegovina had a
population of 4,377,033, while the 1996 UNHCR
unofficial census showed a decrease to
3,919,953.
Ethnically,
according to the last official census data from
1991, 1,902,956 (43.5%) are Bosniaks, 1,366,104
(31.2%) Serbs and 760,852 (17.4%) Croats, with
242,682 (5.5%)
Yugoslavs. The remaining 2.4% of the
population – numbering 104,439 – consisted of
various other ethnicities. According to the 1996
UNHCR census, 1,805,910 (46.1%) are Bosniaks,
1,484,530 (37.9%) Serbs, 571,317 (14.6%) Croats
and 58,196 (1.4%) others and unspecified.
According to 2000 data from the
CIA World Factbook, Bosnia's three largest
ethnic groups have the following percentages -
the Bosniaks (48%), the Serbs (37.1%) and the
Croats (14.3%).
Majority of the population spoke
Bosnian language. There is a strong
correlation between ethnic identity and
religion in Bosnia and Herzegovina: Muslims
constitute 40% of the population,
Orthodox 31%, Roman Catholics 15%, and other
groups, including mostly non-religious, 14%.
Large population
migrations during the Yugoslav wars in the 1990s
have caused demographic shifts in the country.
No census has been taken since 1991/96, and
political disagreements have made it impossible
to organize one. Nevertheless, a census has been
planned for 2012.
As almost all of the post-war
data is simply an estimate, a census would be a
statistical, inclusive, and objective way to
analyze the demographics of Bosnia and
Herzegovina. Most sources, however, estimate the
population to be about four million,
representing a decrease of 500,000 since 1991.
The last official
estimate by BHAS (Agency for Statistics of BiH)
for 2011 shows a decrease of the population to
3,839,737.
Other BHAS estimation of
population done on 30 June 2009 is 3,842,566.
|
Rank |
City name |
Division |
Pop. |
|
1 |
Sarajevo |
Federation of Bosnia
and Herzegovina |
300,855 |
|
2 |
Banja Luka |
Republika Srpska |
238,353 |
|
3 |
Tuzla |
Federation of Bosnia
and Herzegovina |
99,543 |
|
4 |
Zenica |
Federation of Bosnia
and Herzegovina |
93,233 |
|
5 |
Bijeljina |
Republika Srpska |
78,960 |
|
6 |
Mostar |
Federation of Bosnia
and Herzegovina |
68,392 |
|
7 |
Prijedor |
Republika Srpska |
43,307 |
|
8 |
Brčko |
Brčko District |
38,968 |
|
9 |
Bihać |
Federation of Bosnia
and Herzegovina |
37,511 |
|
10 |
Doboj |
Republika Srpska |
31,794 |
Bosnia faces the
dual problem of rebuilding a war-torn country
and introducing market reforms to its formerly
centrally planned economy. One legacy of the
previous era is a greatly overstaffed military
industry; under former leader
Josip Broz Tito, military industries were
promoted in the republic, resulting in the
development of a large share of Yugoslavia's
defense plants but fewer commercially-viable
firms.For
the most of Bosnia's history, agriculture has
been based on small and inefficient privately
owned farms; food has traditionally been a net
import for the republic.
The war in the
1990s caused a dramatic change in the Bosnian
economy. GDP
fell by 75% and the destruction of physical
infrastructure devastated the economy.
While much of the production
capacity has been restored, the Bosnian economy
still faces considerable difficulties. Figures
show GDP and per capita income increased 10%
from 2003 to 2004; this and Bosnia's shrinking
national debt being positive trends, but
high unemployment and a large
trade deficit remain cause for concern.
The national
currency is the (Euro-pegged)
Convertible Mark (KM), controlled by the
currency board. Annual inflation is the
lowest relative to other countries in the region
at 1.9% in 2004.The international debt was
$3.1 billion (2005 est) – the smallest amount of
debt owed of all the former Yugoslav republics.
Real GDP growth rate was 5% for 2004
according to the Bosnian
Central Bank of BiH and Statistical Office
of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Bosnia and
Herzegovina has one of the highest
income equality rankings in the world,
ranking eighth out of 193 nations.
According to
Eurostat data, Bosnia and Herzegovina's PPS
GDP per capita stood at 31 per cent of the EU
average in 2010.
Overall
value of
foreign direct investment (1999–2008):
- 1999:
€166 million
- 2000:
€159 million
- 2001:
€133 million
- 2002:
€282 million
- 2003:
€338 million
- 2004:
€534 million
- 2005:
€421 million
- 2006:
€556 million
- 2007:
€1.628 billion
- 2008:
€1.083 billion
From 1994 to
2008, €5.3 billion were invested in the country.
The top
investor countries (1994–2007):
- Austria
(€1,294 million)
- Serbia
(€773 million)
- Croatia
(€434 million)
- Slovenia
(€427 million)
- Switzerland
(€337 million)
- Germany
(€270 million)
- Italy
(€94.29 million)
- Netherlands
(€63.52 million)
- United Arab
Emirates (€56.70 million)
- Turkey
(€54.81 million)
- All Other
Countries (€892.54 million)
Foreign
investments by sector for (1994–2007):
- 37.7%
Manufacturing
- 21% Banking
- 4.9%
Services
- 9.6% Trade
- 0.30%
Transport
- 1% Tourism
Communications
The
Bosnian communications market was
fully liberalised in January 2006.
There are three
landline telephone providers,
although each one predominantly
serves a partile services are
provided by three operators, with
nationwide services. Mobile data
services are also available,
including high-speed
EDGE and
3G services.
Oslobođenje
(Liberation), founded in 1943, is
one of the country's longest running
continuously circulating newspapers.
There are many national
publications, only some of which
include the
Dnevni Avaz (Daily Voice),
founded in 1995, and Jutarnje
Novine (Morning News) in
circulation in Sarajevo.
Other local
periodicals include the Croatian
newspaper
Hrvatska riječ and the Bosnian
magazine
Start, as well as the weekly
newspapers Slobodna Bosna (Free
Bosnia) and BH Dani (BH
Days).
Novi Plamen, a monthly
magazine, is the most left-wing
publication currently. The
international news station
Al Jazeera maintains a sister
channel that caters to the
Balkans region,
Al Jazeera Balkans, broadcasting
out of and based in Sarajevo.
Additionally, the country is the
most liberated in terms of
freedom of the press in the
region, ranking 43rd
internationally.
Tourism
According to an estimation of the
World Tourism Organization,
Bosnia and Herzegovina will have the
third highest tourism growth rate in
the world between 1995 and 2020.
Lonely Planet,
in ranking the best cities in the
world, ranked
Sarajevo, the
national capital and host of the
1984 Winter Olympic Games, as
#43, ahead of
Dubrovnik at #59,
Ljubljana at #84,
Bled at #90,
Belgrade at #113, and
Zagreb at #135.
Tourism in
Sarajevo is chiefly focused on
historical, religious, and cultural
aspects. Bosnia has also become an
increasingly popular skiing and
Ecotourism destination.
More
recently Sarajevo was nominated one
of Top 10 cities to visit in 2010 in
the 2010 edition of Lonely Planet's
"Best In Travel".
Bosnia and Herzegovina remains
arguably one of the last
undiscovered natural regions of the
southern area of the Alps, with vast
tracks of wild and untouched nature
attracting adventurers and nature
lovers. The central
Dinaric Alps are favored by
hikers and mountaineers, containing
both Mediterreanean and Alpine
climates.
Whitewater rafting is somewhat
of a
national pastime, with three
rivers, including the deepest
river canyon in Europe, the
Tara River Canyon.
Tourist attractions
Some
of the tourist attractions in Bosnia
and Herzegovina include:
-
Sarajevo
The "Olympic City". Scientific,
cultural, tourist and commercial
center of Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Called the "European Jerusalem".
-
Shrine of Our
Lady of Međugorje
(with an Annual Youth Festival),
the Catholic pilgrimage site of
a famous
Marian apparition;
-
Mostar,
"City on Neretva", "City of
Sunshine", the UNESCO site of
Stari most and old town
Mostar;
-
Višegrad,
the UNESCO site of the
Mehmed Paša Sokolović Bridge;
-
Banja Luka,
the "Green City" with various
cultural sights like Kastel
fortress and Ferhadija mosque;
-
Bihać
and the river
Una with its waterfalls and
the
Una River, within Una
National Park;
-
Jajce,
historical city of the Bosnian
Kings, also famous for being the
city that hosted the foundation
of Yugoslavia and its famous
waterfalls;
-
Prijedor,
Old City Mosque (National
heritage),
Kozara National Park and
Bosnia's largest World War II
monument at Mrakovica;
-
Tuzla
Birthplace of Meša Selimović and
the "salt lakes" of Tuzla.
-
The
Neretva river and the
Rakitnica river canyons in
Upper Neretva;
-
The
Trebižat river and its
waterfalls
Kravice and
Kočuša;
-
The
Buna and its spring
Vrelo Bune with the
historical town of
Blagaj;
-
The
Lower Tara river canyon, the
deepest canyon in Europe;
-
The
Perućica
ancient forest, one of the
last two remaining primeval
forests in Europe, and the
Sutjeska river canyon, both
within
Sutjeska National Park;
-
Počitelj
historical village;
-
Mount
Bjelašnica and
Jahorina, sites of the
XIV Olympic Winter Games;
-
Neum
on the coast. City on the
Adriatic shore of
Bosnia-Herzegovina.
-
Doboj
and its 13th century fortress;
-
Stolac,
the
Begovina neighborhood and
Radimlja tombstones;
-
Visoko,
city of Bosnian Kings and the
site of the alleged
Bosnian pyramids;
-
Tešanj,
one of the
oldest cities in Bosnia with
its old town;
-
Bijeljina,
known for its agriculture and
ethno village Stanišić.
-
Lukavac
- Modrac Lake (Jezero Modrac)
the largest artificial lake in
Bosnia and Herzegovina
-
Travnik
- The birthplace of
Ivo Andrić and site of old
town Travnik
-
Ostrožac Castle
- 16th century castle built by
the Ottomans and a second
addition added by the Habsburg
familiy.
-
Gornji Vakuf
- Mountain Vranica & Kula Mehmed
bega Stočanina
Education
Higher education has
a long and rich tradition in Bosnia and
Herzegovina, the first classifiable
higher-education institution having been
established a school of
Sufi philosophy by
Gazi Husrev-beg in 1531, with numerous other
religious schools following suit over time. In
1887, under the Austro-Hungarian Empire, a
Sharia Law School began a five-year program.
In the 1940s the
University of Sarajevo became the city's
first secular higher education institute. In the
1950s post-bachelaurate graduate degrees became
available.
Severely damaged during the war, it
was recently rebuilt in partnership with more
than 40 other universities. There are various
other institutions of higher education,
including:
University "Džemal Bijedić" of Mostar,
University of Banja Luka,
University of Mostar,
University of Tuzla,
American University in Bosnia and Herzegovina
and the
Academy of Sciences and Arts of Bosnia and
Herzegovina, which is held in high regard as
one of the most prestigious creative arts
academies in the region.
Also, Bosnia and
Herzegovina is home to several private and
international higher education institutions,
some of which are:
Primary schooling
lasts for nine years. Secondary education is
provided by general and technical secondary
schools (typically
Gymnasiums where studies typically last for
four years. All forms of secondary schooling
include an element of
vocational training. Pupils graduating from
general secondary schools obtain the
Matura and can enroll in any tertiary
educational institution or academy by passing a
qualification examination prescribed by the
governing body or institution. Students
graduating technical subjects obtain a
Diploma.
Culture
Architecture
The architecture
of Bosnia and Herzegovina is largely influenced
by four major periods where political and social
changes influenced the creation of distinct
cultural and architectural habits of the
population. Each period made its influence felt
and contributed to a greater diversity of
cultures and architectural language in this
region.
Literature
Bosnia and
Herzegovina has a rich literature, including a
Nobel prize winner
Ivo Andrić and poets such as
Antun Branko Šimić,
Aleksa Šantić,
Jovan Dučić and
Mak Dizdar, writers such as
Meša Selimović,
Semezdin Mehmedinović,
Miljenko Jergović,
Isak Samokovlija,
Abdulah Sidran,
Petar Kočić,
Aleksandar Hemon, and Nedžad Ibrišimović.
The National Theater was founded 1919 in
Sarajevo and its first director was famous
drama-play writer
Branislav Nušić. Magazines such as
Novi Plamen,
Most and Sarajevske biljeznice
are some of the more prominent publications
covering cultural and literary themes.
Besides native
Bosnian literature there are many books which
cover the nineties Bosnian conflict written by
international authors. A few books worthy of
mention are:
and in novels:
- From Bosnia
with Love by Javed Mohammed, S: A novel
about the Balkans by
Slavenka Drakulić.
Art
The art of Bosnia
and Herzegovina was always evolving and ranged
from the original medieval tombstones called
Stećci to paintings in
Kotromanić court. However, only with the
arrival of Austro-Hungarians did the painting
renaissance in Bosnia really begin to flourish.
The first educated artists from European
academies appeared with the beginning of 20th
century. Among those are:
Gabrijel Jurkić, Petar Tiješić, Karlo Mijić,
Špiro Bocarić, Petar Šain, Đoko Mazalić, Roman
Petrović and Lazar Drljača. Later, artists such
as: Ismet Mujezinović, Vojo Dimitrijević, Ivo
Šeremet, and Mica Todorović amongst others came
to rise. After World War II artists like:
Virgilije Nevjestić, Bekir Misirlić, Ljubo Lah,
Meho Sefić, Franjo Likar,
Mersad Berber, Ibrahim Ljubović, Dževad Hozo,
Affan Ramić, Safet Zec, Ismar Mujezinović, and
Mehmed Zaimović rose in popularity.
Ars Aevi a museum of contemporary art that
includes works by renowned world artists was
founded in Sarajevo.
Music
Typical Bosnian and
Herzegovinian songs are ganga, rera, and
the traditional
slavic
music for the folk dances such as
kolo and from Ottoman era the most
popular is
sevdalinka. Pop and Rock music has a
tradition here as well, with the more famous
musicians including
Dino Zonić,
Goran Bregović,
Davorin Popović,
Kemal Monteno,
Zdravko Čolić,
Edo Maajka,Hari Varesanovic and
Dino Merlin. Very popular are also the
numerous
Slavic
Metal bands, performing an interesting
combination of upbeat tempos and traiditional
tunes. Among them Silent Kingdom, Emir
Hot, D'n'K, Toxicdeath,
Agonize and Irina Kapetanović,
often performing with folk metal musicians from
other neighbouring slavic countries like
Stribog (Croatia), Svarica
(Croatia/Bosnia) and
Arkona (Russia). Also, it would be
unfair not to mention some of the talented
composers such as
Đorđe Novković, Esad Arnautalić,
Kornelije Kovač, and many pop and
rock bands, for example,
Bijelo Dugme,
Indexi,
Plavi Orkestar,
Zabranjeno Pušenje, who were among the
leading ones in the former Yugoslavia. Bosnia is
home to the composer
Dušan Šestić, the creator of the current
national anthem of Bosnia and Herzegovina
and father of singer
Marija Šestić, composer
Saša Lošić and pianist
Sasha Toperich. In the villages, especially
in Herzegovina, Bosniaks, Serbs, and Croats play
the ancient
Gusle. The gusle is used mainly to
recite epic poems in a usually dramatic tone.
Cinema
Notable Bosnian
film-makers are Hajrudin Krvavac-Šiba,
Emir Kusturica (known for the
Palme d'Or-winning 1985 film
When Father Was Away on Business, among
others), Mirza Idrizović, Aleksandar Jevđević,
Ivica Matić,
Danis Tanović (known for the
Academy Award– and
Golden Globe–winning 2001 film
No Man's Land),
Ademir Kenović,
Benjamin Filipović,
Jasmin Dizdar,
Pjer Žalica,
Jasmila Žbanić, Dino Mustafić,
Srđan Vuletić, Aida Begić, among many
others.
Sports
Bosnia and
Herzegovina has produced many athletes. Many of
them were famous in the Yugoslav national teams
before Bosnia and Herzegovina's independence.
The most important
international
sporting event in the
history of Bosnia and Herzegovina was the
hosting of the
14th Winter Olympics, held in
Sarajevo from the 7th to 19 February 1984.
Some notable local Olympians were:
-
Rome,
1960:
Tomislav Knez and
Velimir Sombolac (football),
-
Tokyo,
1964:
Mirsad Fazlagić (football),
-
Munich,
1972:
Abaz Arslanagić,
Milorad Karalić,
Nebojša Popović, Đorđe Lavrinić,
Dobrivoje Seleć (handball)
-
Moscow,
1980:
Mirza Delibašić and Ratko Radovanović
(basketball)
-
Los Angeles,
1984:
Zdravko Rađenović,
Zlatan Arnautović (handball) and
Anton Josipović (boxing).
The
Borac
handball club has won seven
Yugoslav Handball Championships, as well as
the European Championship Cup in 1976 and the
International Handball Federation Cup in 1991.
The
Bosna basketball club from Sarajevo were
European Champions in 1979. The
Yugoslav national basketball team, which
medaled in every world championship from 1963
through 1990, included Bosnian players such as
Dražen Dalipagić and
Mirza Delibašić. Bosnia and Herzegovina
regularly qualifies for the
European Championship in Basketball.
Jedinstvo Aida
women's basketball club, based in Tuzla, has
won the 1989 European Championships in Florence.
The Tuzla-Sinalco
karate club from Tuzla has won the most
Yugoslav championships, as well as four European
Championships and one World Championship.
The Bosnian
chess team has been
Champion of Yugoslavia seven times, in
addition to club ŠK Bosna Sarajevo winning four
Chess Club Cup : 1994 in
Lyon, 1999 in
Bugojno, 2000 in
Neum, and 2001 in Kallithea Elassonos. Chess
grandmaster
Borki Predojević has also won two European
Championships: Under-12 years
Litochoro (Greece) in 1999, and Under-14
years
Kallithea Elassonos (Greece) in 2001, and in
2003 won World Championship Under-16 years
Halkidiki (Greece). The most impressive
success of Bosnian Chess was his runner-up
position in Men´s Olympiads of 1994 in
Moscow, featuring Grandmasters
Predrag Nikolić,
Ivan Sokolov,
Bojan Kurajica and
Emir Dizdarević.
Middle-weight
boxer
Marijan Beneš has won several Championships
of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Yugoslav
Championships and the European Championship.[83]
In 1978 he won the World Title against
Elisha Obed from the Bahamas. Another
middle-weight boxer,
Anton Josipović won the Olympic Gold in Los
Angeles, 1984. He also won Yugoslav Championship
in 1982, the Championship of the Balkans in
1983, and the Belgrade Trophy in 1985.
Association
football is the most popular sport in Bosnia and
Herzegovina. It dates from 1903, but its
popularity grew significantly after World War I.
At the local level,
FK Sarajevo (1967 and 1984),
Željezničar (1972) have both won the
Yugoslav Championship. The former
Yugoslav national football team has included
a number of Bosnian players, such as
Josip Katalinski,
Dušan Bajević,
Miroslav Blažević,
Ivica Osim,
Safet Sušić,
Idriz Hošić and
Mirsad Fazlagić.
Today, the team
of Bosnia and Herzegovina has modern footballers
like
Edin Džeko,
Zvjezdan Misimović,
Vedad Ibišević,
Emir Spahić,
Asmir Begović,
Miralem Pjanić,
Sejad Salihović and others. The independent
Bosnia and Herzegovina national football team
has not qualified for a European or World
Championship but has played twice in the
play-off stages. For all time matches:
Bosnia and Herzegovina national football team
results (1995-2011).
Bosnian national
teams have struggled to draft the best national
players. Many players born in Bosnia and
Herzegovina choose to play for other countries
because of their ethnic identification and
because of higher salaries offered by other
teams. For example
Mario Stanić and Mile Mitić were both born
in Bosnia and Herzegovina, but play for Croatia
and Serbia respectively. Other internationally
famous players from Bosnia and Herzegovina, who
have made similar choices, are:
Darijo Srna,
Mladen Petrić,
Neven Subotić,
Vedran Ćorluka,
Zlatan Ibrahimović (born and raised in
Sweden, his mother a Croat, his father a
Bosnian),
Marko Marin,
Zoran Savić,
Vladimir Radmanović,
Zlatko Junuzović,
Aleksandar Nikolić,
Savo Milošević, and
Zdravko Kuzmanović.
Bosnia and
Herzegovina was the world champion of
volleyball at the 2004 Summer Paralympics.
Many among those on the team lost their legs in
the Bosnian War.
Bosnian cuisine
uses many spices, in moderate quantities. Most
dishes are light, as they are cooked in lots of
water; the sauces are fully natural, consisting
of little more than the natural juices of the
vegetables in the dish. Typical ingredients
include tomatoes, potatoes, onions,
garlic,
peppers,
cucumbers, carrots,
cabbage,
mushrooms,
spinach,
zucchini,
dried beans, fresh beans,
plums, milk,
paprika and cream called
Pavlaka. Bosnian cuisine is balanced between
Western and
Eastern influences. As a result of the
Ottoman administration for almost 500 years,
Bosnian food is closely related to
Turkish,
Greek, and other former
Ottoman and
Mediterranean cuisines. However, because of
years of Austrian rule, there are many
influences from Central Europe. Typical meat
dishes include primarily beef and
lamb. Some local specialties are
ćevapi,
burek,
dolma,
sarma,
pilaf,
goulash,
ajvar and a whole range of Eastern sweets.
Local wines come from
Herzegovina where the climate is suitable
for growing grapes. Herzegovinian loza (similar
to Italian
Grappa but less sweet) is very popular. Plum
(rakija) or apple (jabukovača)
alcohol beverages are produced in the north. In
the south, distilleries used to produce vast
quantities of
brandy and supply all of ex-Yugoslavian
alcohol factories (brandy is the base of most
alcoholic drinks).
Leisure activities
Coffeehouses,
where
Bosnian coffee is served in
džezva with
rahat lokum and sugar cubes, proliferate
Sarajevo and every city in the country. Coffee
drinking is a favorite Bosnian pastime and part
of the culture. Bosnians are believed to be some
of the heaviest coffee drinkers in the world.
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BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA JEWISH
LINKS:
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JEWISH COMMUNITY OF BOSNIA AND
HERZEGOVINA:
-
HISTORY OF THE JEWS IN BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA
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SARAJEVO HAGGADAH
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SYNAGOGUES
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