Mike Yardley’s journey through Sarajevo reveals a city’s resilience against the backdrop of the breathtaking Balkans.
The Balkans are a compelling, battle-hardened pocket of Southeastern Europe, fractured by epic conflicts over the ages. But Sarajevo has seen it all. Just 30 years ago, as Tito’s Yugoslavia fell part, so did basic humanity. Sarajevo found itself trapped in the longest siege of any city in modern history, during which Serb forces, underpinned by the brute strength of the former Yugoslav army, rained fury down on a defenceless city from the wrap-around mountains. This was vividly brought to life, with raw and authentic local context, on my riveting two week-long Balkan Adventures Trafalgar Tour. It’s the bullet holes you first notice, when arriving in Sarajevo. Buildings hit by mortar shells still bear those scars, like the weeping wounds of war. Another constant are the Sarajevo Roses, 200 petal-shaped craters in the pavement caused by shelling, which were embalmed in red resin as urban memorials, where at least three people were killed.
My grippingly compelling Trafalgar local specialist, Samra, remarked that dealing to the building scars is still a low priority for the city. 60 percent of Sarajevo’s buildings were destroyed in the siege. Our hotel was located in the heart of “snipers’ alley”, where building after building still sports battle wounds. It was on our way to the Tunnel of Hope, snaking underneath Sarajevo Airport, that Samra soberly remarked how her father is still “missing”. Like many other Bosniaks, he was most likely a victim of ethnic-cleansing and consigned to a mass-grave. A friend of Samra’s was notified last month that two of her missing uncle’s bones had just been positively DNA-identified from a mass-grave.
A stand-out Sarajevo experience is to encounter the Tunnel of Hope. Furtively built under the airport runway during the city’s siege, it took more than six months to dig this 900 metre long tunnel, providing the only connection with the outside world. Just over a metre wide and 1.5 metres in height, this secret corridor enabled the beleaguered city to secretly regain access to telephone lines, food, weaponry and oil supplies. It was never discovered by Serb forces. Outside the tunnel, a gallery of grim black and white photos starkly portray Sarajevo’s bleakest days.