Country: Bosnia Herzegovina
City:
+(387 33) 217-665, 217-670, 217-680
Organizer
International Forum Bosnia's Centre for Interfaith Dialogue
Location
IFB meeting hall (ul. Sime Milutinovi?a 10/III)
Email
[email protected]
The event the following day, February 5
th, was a public presentation and
discussion of Safet HadžiMuhamedovi?’s new book Waiting for Elijah: Time and
Encounter in a Bosnian Landscape (New York: Berghahn, 2018). The discussion
took place at the IFB meeting hall (ul. Sime Milutinovi?a 10/III) at 18:00 hours.
Safet HadžiMuhamedovi? is a leading young social anthropologist from
Sarajevo, who is now teaching at the University of Bristol and the SOAS of the
University of London. He has done field work in Bosnia, the Lebanon, and a number
of other places around the world. His new book Waiting for Elijah: Time and
Encounter in a Bosnian Landscape is a study of a mixed rural community in Bosnia
that was radically affected by the war of the 1990s. The traditional structures that
brought together Serb Orthodox, Muslim, and Roma groups into a complex social
whole were torn apart by war, with the Muslim and Roma groups subjected to mass
violence and expulsion. Only a very few have returned and attempted to recreate the
social patterns of the pre-war period. This has proved a difficult process. Safet's
fieldwork was conducted with this group and their Serb Orthodox neighbours. It
examines their past and new social realities through their current experiences and
memories of the ritual and festival year and how it bound the disparate elements of
their communities into a greater social whole. His study thus opens up new ways of
approaching the plurality inherent to Bosnian society, a plurality that has long been
subject to politically motivated and violent deconstruction. Key to this deconstruction
is the stereotypical and ideological denial of any overarching Bosnian framework.
Applying current anthropological approaches to the study of Bosnia's social pluralism,
Safet HadžiMuhamedovi? demonstrates clearly the subtle, but undeniable presence
in interlocking levels of personal and collective identity of recognisably Bosnian
patterns of social and cultural complementarity and cohesion. This forms a Bosnian
whole that embraces all its parts. In this way, his study makes visible aspects of
Bosnian social and cultural interaction that often remain implicit and are therefore
often ignored and denied by superficial or ideological motivated observers. At the
heart of his approach and of his findings is the reality that Bosnian society is
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________
Sarajevo, Sime Milutinovi?a 10, tel: +(387 33) 217-665, 217-670, 217-680, fax: +(387 33) 206-484, e-mail:
[email protected]
www.forumbosna.org
essentially interreligious and that none of the constituent groups is an independent or
self-sufficient social reality. They rely on each other for their mutual self-constitution
as part of a whole that is greater than and informs each of its individual parts.
The book was presented by Nirha Efendi?, Curator at the National Museum in
Sarajevo, Desmond Maurer, chair of the IFB Centre for historical studies, and Vahid
Tanovi?, chair of the IFB Centre for technology and economic development, and
moderated by Nerin Dizdar, a leading Bosnian social and political analyst and
commentator. While the author was regrettably not able to be present, some of his
key informants and interviewees were, and they also discussed the research process
and what the book meant for them and their community.