From the BBC:
"Srebrenica children seek harmony in music"
It could be an ordinary school trip.
Scores of children explode out of the buses and scramble for seats in the cafe
while their teachers hand out sandwiches and soft drinks. Some make a move for the table-football game, as the room fills with juvenile
chatter. But for anyone who knows the awful recent history of the Bosnian town of
Srebrenica, this is a truly remarkable outing. It is the place the children gathered in the cafe call home - and now they
are hoping to show the world that it could be something other than a symbol of
ethnic hatred. All of them wear colourful T-shirts, emblazoned with the letter "S" - not
just the initial letter of their hometown, but of Superar, the name of the music
school they all attend in Srebrenica. When they sing together in the choir, there are no ethnic divisions between
the Serbs and Bosniaks among them - just harmony. Now they have travelled to Bosnia's capital, Sarajevo, for the first public
performance of their song, Love People - and the excitement is palpable. But the performers brush off suggestions that the very existence of an
ethnically-integrated choir from Srebrenica should be considered remarkable. "It doesn't really matter if we're Muslims or Serbs," says 14-year-old Samra
Ahmetovic. "People can ask the question, but it isn't really important." Sitting next to her, 13-year-old Nikolina Gruijicic chips in. "So many years have passed since war - and things have changed in our towns.
People are making more of an effort to respect each other." For many years, the children of Srebrenica have been the recipients of
charity - but now they are offering their help to youngsters affected by the
floods which swept through Bosnia, Serbia and Croatia in May. They have recorded a version of Love People with a number of well-known
singers from the countries that once made up Yugoslavia - and hope to attract
donations to music schools in flood-affected areas. Samra believes that - devastating as it was - the natural disaster actually
contributed to reconciliation. "With the floods, you just helped people who were in trouble," she says. Superar's choirmaster, Ismar Poric, agrees. "When people came together they forgot about the barriers. It was a hard
time, but people got together like they did before the war."
Ismar has been running the Superar choir and music school in Srebrenica for
three years, providing constructive leisure activities in an area which
previously offered few options. "I was a refugee in Germany during the war - I know how it feels to be
neglected. I feel an obligation to help the children," he says. Now more than a hundred youngsters go to after-school classes at Superar -
and Ismar is not shy to admit that his motivation goes well beyond the music.
"In one way, the country is poisoned by nationalism - but the children are
not. Their parents were in the war and told them stories. But we try to bring
them together - put different ethnic groups together so they can learn about
each other." Crucially, the children's enthusiasm for the music school has also forced the
older generation to socialise across an ethnic divide that had previously been
hard to breach. Every time they went to see their children perform or pick them up from
practice sessions, there was an opportunity to talk to people they might
otherwise have viewed with suspicion. Superar's patron, Austrian humanitarian Doraja Eberle, chuckles as she
remembers a small but crucial change that made all the difference. "When we started the school, the Serb parents were on the left side and the
Bosniak parents on the right. Then somebody said: put a coffee machine in the
middle - they all love to drink coffee together and smoke. So this was what we
needed - a coffee machine and an ashtray."
With the ice broken, the families could relate to each other in a way which
was not defined by their ethnicity. "They said it's the first time we can be proud of our children together."
Doraja says she hopes that when people hear the word Srebrenica in future,
they will think first of its music school - and that aim is shared by its
choirmaster, Ismar Poric. "Srebrenica is famous for the massacre," he says. "But it's time to move on
and make a beautiful, inspiring story." The children of the Superar choir have certainly written a promising opening
chapter.
^ It is a good start to trying to end the years of ethnic hatred that started with the Bosnian War and the massacres and still continues today. Of course it seems easy for those that either weren't alive during the war or were too young during it to forgive what the other sides did (it was neighbor against neighbor.) I remember being in Mostar and different people (I don't know who was Muslim, Serb or Croatian) coming to help lift the wheelchair without even being asked and not wanting anything afterwards (except the "Thank you" I gave them in Croatian/Serbian/Bosnian - luckily it was the only word I learned.) ^
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-28678705
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