Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bosnia and Herzegovina is a small country (just over 20,000 square miles). Like Iowa, it
is a land of rolling plains and hills bordered by two rivers. Unlike Iowa, Bosnia occupies a
small area on the Adriatic Sea and includes some mountainous regions. Major cities are
the capital, Sarejevo, and Zenica, and Banja Luka, where most citizens reside. Before the
1990s wars, Bosnian and Herzegovina was a highly multicultural society with 40% inter-
ethnic marriages. TOP
Bosnia and Herzegovina represent a unique cultural crossroads and first emerged as a
political entity in the 10th century. Religiously, Judaism, Orthodox Christianity, Roman
Catholicism, and Islam have put their stamp and their conflicts over the region. Politically,
Greco-Romans, Ottoman Turks, Slavs, and Austro-Hungarians have exerted their
influences and rule from the 10th through the 21st centuries. After the end of the First
World War, the Geneva Treaty separated Bosnian and Herzegovina from the Hapsburg
Empire and united them with Croatia and Slovenia as well as Serbia into the Kingdom of
Serbs, Croats, and Slovenians. In 1941, Bosnia and Herzegovina came under the control
of Croatia and fought against the fascists in World War II. After the war, Bosnia and
Herzegovina became a republic within the Yugoslav Federation. In 1992, after the
disintegration of Yugoslavia following the 1990 elections, Bosnia and Herzegovina was
internationally recognized as an independent country.
From 1992 until just recently, however, war raged among the region's Orthodox Catholic
Serbs, Roman Catholic Croats, and Bosnian Muslims. Hundreds of thousands of people
were killed and displaced as a result of the war. Refugees fled to camps in Switzerland and
Germany, and tens of thousands came to be resettled in the United States, particularly in
Illinois, Iowa, and Missouri. TOP
Bosnians in Iowa
Today Iowa is a new home for more than twelve thousand Bosnians. Between 6,000 and
7,000 are settled in Des Moines and Ankeny. Approximately 4,500 live in the Cedar
Valley Area, in and around Waterloo. Smaller Bosnian communities exist in Iowa City and
Davenport, where folks gather mostly around sport and cultural clubs. It is hard to find a
large company in Des Moines or Waterloo that doesn't have an employee who speaks
Bosnian. Bosnian books can already be seen on bookshelves in libraries, schools, and
bookstores. Bosnian music, dances, and food are well known. And there are Bosnian
stores, restaurants, and coffee bars in both Des Moines and Waterloo. Although it is
impossible to totally recreate one's traditions in a new country, people make adjustments
and substitutions and eventually change from Bosnians to Bosnian Americans.
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Cultural Roots
Not surprisingly, Bosnian food, music, dance, and handcrafts all demonstrate the influence
of traditions from Central Europe, the Balkans, and the Middle East. Turkish cilim (rug)
weaving techniques, European crocheting and knitting, Middle Eastern and Balkan dance
and music, and a blend of cooking and baking methods make it clear that Bosnia was and
is a multicultural society. Social customs such as leaving oneís shoes at the entrance to
private homes and mosques reflect Islamic practice, while the traditional greeting of
friends and relatives with a light embrace and kisses to both cheeks seems more European.
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Bosansko Sijelo (Bosnian Coffee Party) "Coffee time is a really special time, if you come to our home and you're not offered a
cup of coffee, well that is something wrong." — Aldijana Radoncic
One cannot enter a Bosnian house without being offered coffee, which like British tea,
means a small meal and not just coffee! Elaborate homemade pastries, talk, singing, and
women's handcrafts are all a part of the more elaborate and very social women's get-
together. Bosnian coffee itself, which is made like Turkish coffee (grounds are boiled and
allowed to settle) and served with lump sugar and slightly sweet candies, is strong, thick,
and served in small cups like espresso. Coffee parties provide a time to sit down, rest, and
catch up on local events and family matters. TOP
Food
Bosnian food particularly shows a range of multicultural roots. Considered part of the
womanís sphere, cooking is at the core of family and social life. Based on its method of
preparation, food is divided into three groups: ìgrilledî food (beef & lamb), ìcookedî dishes
(stuffed peppers, stews, hot-pot), and soups as well as baked foods (breads and pastries).
Eating meat, Bosnians believe, ensures good health. And like many Eastern and Central
Europeans, Bosnians cannot imagine a meal without baked goods. Other typical foods are
cevapcici (ground beef or lamb mixed with spices, shaped into little sausages, and grilled),
bosanski lonac (a slow cooked stew of meat and vegetables, cooked and served in its
distinctive vase-shaped ceramic pot), sarma (grape or cabbage leaves filled with ground
meat, rice, and spice mixtures), and pita (a sweet or savory strudel-like pastry filled with
combinations of meat, cheese, or fruit), which is served with kimac, a slightly fermented
and thickened cream. TOP
Dance and Music
Music and dance are part and parcel of Bosnian social life. As in many Eastern bloc and
European countries, folk music and dance are taught to children in school; young adults
are encouraged to study folk dance and music at university. Folk festivals and
competitions between performing arts groups were a major part of Bosnian life, and
amateur groups called Cultural Art Societies were common throughout the republic.
Required to perform the dance, music, and song of Bosnia, Croatian, and Serbia, they
were often not permitted to specialize in the traditions of only one group.
In Iowa there are two folk dance groups, Sevdah in Des Moines and K.U.D. Kolo in
Waterloo. The adult leaders of both of these groups encourage their students to study the
language, song, music, and culture of their former homeland as well as the traditional
dance.
Bosnian musicians in Iowa can be heard in bars and at social events. The bands play social
dance music, and young and old join in traditional line dances that weave their way around
the dance floor. There is usually a minimal barrier between audience and band, so patrons
enthusiastically join in with the singing of popular and traditional songs. TOP
Crocheting, Weaving, & Knitting
All Bosnian women learn to make fine and intricate crocheted lace and to knit either in
school or from their mothers, aunts, and grandmothers. No Bosnian house is complete
without its lacey doilies, which rest on the backs and arms of couches and chairs, on
shelves under knick-knacks, and atop the family television. Crocheting lace is extremely
time consuming, so lace pieces are generally created for family and very close friends;
rarely does anyone sell this precious gift of time and self. Slightly less common as a
handcraft is knitting, which is generally used to create socks and mittens in geometric
patterns that resemble those of Scandinavia and Germany. Cilim (rug) weaving is
definitely becoming an endangered art. As refugees, very few Bosnians were able to take
precious family cilim with them when they fled their homeland. Since the end of the war,
travel back and forth has been possible again, however, and traditional cilim, tightly woven
of fine wool, can more frequently be seen in Bosnian American homes. TOP