Skip to content
עברית
Français
Deutsch
Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs
Israel’s Global Embassy for Research-Powered Diplomacy
Menu
Home
About Us
About Us
Our Experts
Board of Fellows
Our Building
Programs
Palestinian Authority Accountability Initiative
Initiative to Expose “Apartheid Antisemitism”
Black American-Israel Leadership Initiative
Arab-Israel-India National Security Partnership
Africa-Israel National Security Partnership
Defensible Borders for Israel
Jerusalem in International Diplomacy
Combating Delegitimization and BDS
Anti-Semitism in Canada
For Students and Interns
Past Programs
Publications
Authors
Major Studies
Analysis
Jerusalem Issue Briefs
Jerusalem Viewpoints
Strategic Perspectives
Global Law Forum
Special Reports
Daily Alert
Jewish Political Studies Review
Post-Holocaust and Anti-Semitism
Daniel Elazar Library
Major Knesset Debates
Israel’s Wars
Maps
Jewish Environmental Studies
Survey of Arab Affairs
Jerusalem Letter
Homeland Security Portal
Jerusalem Studies
ebooks
Other Special Features
Videos
New Videos
YouTube
Audio Archive
Conferences
Blog
Support Us
Contact Us
Search for:
Home
Current:
Bosnian Jewry
Tag:
Bosnian Jewry
Bosnian Jewry: A Small Community Meets a Unique Challenge During the 1990s War
September 16, 2007 |
Ivan Ceresnjes
During wars, Jewish communities often become scapegoats and victims of the combatants. In the war in Bosnia-Herzegovina in the early 1990s, the opposite happened. The Jewish community in the country’s capital Sarajevo extended humanitarian services indiscriminately to people of all religions and was respected by the three warring parties, Muslims, Orthodox Serbs, and Roman Catholic Croats. At present, six Jewish communities remain in Bosnia-Herzegovina with a total of a thousand members.