At the village of Lukomir, a remote village in the high mountains |
We swam at the falls of Kravice |
The fort above the walled town of Počitelj |
Derelict concrete building destroyed by war: ancient symbols, shell-hole from the 1990s. |
Bosnia and Herzegovina was also part of the former Yugoslavia federation, of course, and was the area worst-hit by the appalling civil wars and genocidal slaughter of the 1990s. Nowadays it is divided administratively between a Serbian (Orthodox) area, and a Bosniak (Muslim) + Croat (Catholic) area. Politically it's in a sad way - religious tensions, corruption, lingering war-damage both physical and mental. But our Bosnian guide was optimistic that things will improve as the younger generations slowly take power from the entrenched old guard. Here's hoping.
Sarajevo: on this spot started World War 1. Some places just can't catch a break. |
I actually found Sarajevo one of the most beguiling cities I've ever been in. Here's the old Ottoman trading area:
And here's the Austro-Hungarian area, which is just like any European city-centre:
You can step from one to the other in two paces. Everything changes - the paving, the skyline, the smells, everything. Most peculiar. It's like teleportation from one continent to another!
A cultural contrast in coffees, at the Viennese Cafe |
We arrived on the first night of the Islamic festival of Ramadan. We went up the hill to see the mosque lights go on when they fired the mortar signalling sunset. Several local people handed us turkish delight and special Ramadan bread - it was really touching.
We went, of course, to the town of Mostar - famous for its medieval bridge that was destroyed by Croat forces but rebuilt in 2004 from the original designs.
"Don't Forget Srebenica" says the banner - it was the annual mass burial that week |
It's still a divided city, and a bit of a tourist-trap, though very beautiful.
I climbed this minaret ... in a thunderstorm. Some atheists are just asking for it! |
The medieval necropolis at Radimlja. Adherents of the local Bosnian Christian church came under persecution as heretics and Bogomils by the papal Inquisition, and so, unsurprisingly, took the first opportunity to bail out of the Catholic church and convert to Islam in the 15th Century. |
And finally I proudly include another dessicated piece of saint: Queen Helen of Anjou (13th Century), who founded the first girls' school in Serbia.
Bosnia's fascinating and beautiful. And HOT. I'd like to go back and see more one day. I didn't get long enough there, or in Montenegro!
I never really considered it a place I'd like to go - but it looks so beautiful!
ReplyDeleteIt is, it's lovely. Mediterranean meets the Alps :-)
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ReplyDeleteAll makes me wish I didn't hate traveling quite so much.
Gosh, I enjoy your blog. Porn. Writing advice. Travel. What haven't you got?
ReplyDeleteLovely travel photos. You visit the most interesting places.
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