Oman Daily Observer

Bosnian museum of wartime childhood aims to go global

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SARAJEVO: In just a year, a small Bosnian museum dedicated to the experience of growing up during the Balkan wars has opened its doors, won a best European museum prize and decided to go global.

The War Childhood Museum in Sarajevo, a trove of memorabili­a from Bosnians whose childhood was traumatize­d by the 1990s war, has started collecting personal items from children affected by other wars, such as those in Syria and Ukraine.

The idea was born out of the experience of the museum’s founder, Jasminko Halilovic, and has become a long-term project to create the world’s largest archive on the impact of war on children.

“Speaking about the war from a child’s perspectiv­e is the most powerful anti-war message,” 27-yearold Halilovic said. He said that giving away personal items also helped children cope with the trauma of war.

The Bosnian 1992-95 war was Europe’s bloodiest diest since World War Two. The museum has collected more than 4,000 exhibits s donated by children n who endured it, and d over 150 hours of a video deo archive of oral history tory i nt e r v i e ws. Halilovic said the items from m other conflicts cts could be put t on display next year. ear.

Among the artifacts is a perfume bottle donated d by 10-yearold Syrian girl l Yehya from Homs. It belonged onged to her father, who was killed going to work, and its scent used to bring back memories in Lebanon, where she found a refuge. “The notion that we have such museum in Bosnia opened a window of hope to the Syrian children in Lebanon that the war in Syria will also come to an end and they could make something similar,” Amina Krvavac, the museum’s E Execut xe cutive ive Director, said.

The museum’s current exhibit showcases around 50 items hanging from the ceiling, such as a bright blue “dress of spite” worn by a Sarajevo girl to defy snipers, or ballet shoes in which another danced “to disconnect from reality”, set on simple white pedestals against a minimalist grey backdrop.

The Council of Europe this week picked the museum for its annual prize among 40 candidates as “a truly inspiring example of a grassroots initiative”.

The judges praised its potential to become “a powerful self-sustained model of civic initiative” and said it offered an example that could be replicated in war zones worldwide.

The project encountere­d political obstructio­nism, a protracted struggle to secure adequate space and lack of institutio­nal support until it turned to a combinatio­n of crowdfundi­ng, internatio­nal aid and voluntaris­m.

 ?? LURING VISITORS: — AFP ?? People look at illuminate­d art installati­ons in Lyon, during the 19th edition of the Festival of Lights (Fête des Lumières). The Festival of Lights marks each year since December 8, 1852.
LURING VISITORS: — AFP People look at illuminate­d art installati­ons in Lyon, during the 19th edition of the Festival of Lights (Fête des Lumières). The Festival of Lights marks each year since December 8, 1852.
 ?? LARGER THAN LIFE: — Reuters ?? A beached whale installati­on by the Belgian art collective ‘Captain Boomer’ lies on the bank of the river Vistula in Warsaw, Poland, on Friday. The installati­on is a part of a promotion for the quarterly magazine “Przekroj”.
LARGER THAN LIFE: — Reuters A beached whale installati­on by the Belgian art collective ‘Captain Boomer’ lies on the bank of the river Vistula in Warsaw, Poland, on Friday. The installati­on is a part of a promotion for the quarterly magazine “Przekroj”.
 ?? — Reuters file photo ?? A robot toy is seen at the Bosnian War Childhood museum exhibition in Zenica, Bosnia and Herzegovin­a.
— Reuters file photo A robot toy is seen at the Bosnian War Childhood museum exhibition in Zenica, Bosnia and Herzegovin­a.

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