From the BBC:
“Bosnian children fight back
against segregation in schools”
"I am separated from my good
friend, Amra; we can only spend time together at weekends," 11-year-old
Asja Besirevic complains. You would
think her friend had moved to the other side of country. In fact, Amra is in
the same school building in the small, central Bosnian city of Jajce. Just not
the same school. This is a prime example
of the widespread policy known as "two schools under one roof", which
splits students based on their ethnicity. Here in Jajce, Bosniak Muslim students like
Asja enter through the door marked "Berta Kucera Primary School". There is a separate entrance for ethnic Croat
pupils attending the 13 September School. It is not quite a case of never the twain
shall meet. The children may cross paths in the atrium, which contains bulletin
boards for both schools and serves as an assembly and performance venue for the
Berta Kucera students. Adults intersect
as well. A Catholic nun passes a Muslim woman in a headscarf as she makes her
way into the 13 September section of the building. This gives a brief impression of
multiculturalism, but that is not how it feels to Asja. Two schools under one
roof: OSCE report on discrimination in education "I would like us all to be together and
mixed. To me, it's wrong they're dividing us and I'm really sad about it."
Why Bosnia's schools were divided
Jajce and much of the surrounding
area became a battleground in the 1990s, during the conflict between Croat and
Bosniak forces. Schools were sucked into
the struggle as ethnic leaders attempted to impose their ideologies in the
classroom. The Dayton Peace Agreement
brought an end to the fighting in 1995, but it baked in the ethnic divisions. It split Bosnia into the mainly ethnic-Serb
Republika Srpska and the Federation, which is mostly shared by Croats and
Bosniaks. The Federation embarked on the
"two schools" policy ostensibly to encourage displaced families to
return home. The concept offered
reassurance that children would not face indoctrination or discrimination at
the hands of people who had recently been the enemy. More than 50 schools were
split in this way. But it soon became clear that the system risked reinforcing
divisions. Western diplomats put pressure on the Federation to merge schools
but authorities refused. "You can't mix apples and pears," offered
one senior education official in justification. Indeed, rather than educate children together,
there have even been efforts to increase the segregation, although this has met
fierce resistance from the students themselves. Up the hill from Berta Kucera and 13
September, the vocational high school remains mixed, following a student-led
campaign to prevent segregation. "You're
brought up being taught that others are no good and you don't spend a single
hour learning about their culture, beliefs or values," says Ivica
Jukanovic, who was one of the leaders of the campaign. "Often, students
are taught to hate by their parents in their homes, because the parents went
through the war. If they're taught to hate others at home and then go to
segregated schools, they will know nothing but hate." Back at the primary
schools, children tear around their separate playgrounds, seemingly
unconcerned. But their head teachers hold strikingly different views on how
they should be educated in the future. "The
system as we have it now is a cancer, if you ask me," says Berta Kucera's
director, Fikret Cancar. "I'm waiting for the day when the whole system
will be reconstructed and united. I don't see this in the near future - but I
say to everyone who comes here: I'm waiting for the day." But his Croat counterpart at 13 September, Iva
Ladan, is far less enthusiastic about the prospect of a merger. Bosnia has
three different peoples with three different languages, who have the right to
express their cultural or ethnic identity "There is room for improvement,
but the decision has to be made at a high level," she says. The chances of
such a high-level decision seem slim. Bosnia's
ethnic political leaders have operated on a divide-and-rule basis for more than
two decades. That gives them every reason to perpetuate the
"two-schools" policy.
^ It does seem odd to continue to
have segregated education 24 years after the war. Back in 1995 it may have been
needed to help those that were directly involved in the violence, killings,
etc. to move on, but today this segregated education system seems to only help
add more tension and fuel on ethnicity. The adults (parents, educators,
politicians) continue to teach their children the fear and hatred for the other
ethnic groups even though their children were born after the war ended. That
only keeps Bosnia from moving forward and modernizing itself. While you should
not forget what happened to the victims or those that committed the crimes it
is not healthy to continue to constantly dwell on the past and to scare newer
generations into the old fears. I have been to Mostar (separated between Bosnian
Croatian Catholics and Bosnian Muslims) and the ordinary people I met there
were nice and very helpful. I would like to see Bosnians of every ethnic group
to help create a united and prosperous Bosnia. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-48760442
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