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During the last week of October, WSCF-US joined students and leaders from the WSCF-Europe region of the global WSCF in Sarajevo for a peacebuilding training. A central aspect of WSCF's mission is to connect movements of young Christians and give exposure to the realities of life around the world. The Frame the Future series brought together representatives from student Christian movements in Finland, the UK, Austria, and Germany, and from partner organizations in France, Georgia, Lebanon, Brazil, Colombia, and Azerbaijan. By Deidre Allen (she/her), WSCF-US Student Leadership Team I was recently honored to represent the World Student Christian Federation-US in Sarajevo, Bosnia in Europe as a member of the Student Leadership Team. We attended Frame the Future, a youth peacebuilding conference held by the World Student Christian Federation-Europe. With young leaders from many countries in Europe and beyond, we learned different methods and practices, such as the difference between discussion and dialogue and understanding that people will have different definitions of these based on their region or context. It was important to practice being open to learn or see things in a different light and viewpoint. In 1984, the city of Sarajevo hosted the Winter Olympics that brought the world together for winter sports. Almost ten years later in 1992, there was a war that broke out in this same city that killed many Bosnians. This war lasted until 1995, and there was a genocide of Bosnian Muslims. The World Student Christian Federation-Europe region hosted their conference in the city of Sarajevo so we could learn more and bring awareness to others about the war from thirty years past and what peacebuilding and storytelling can look like. In memory of the genocide and torment that took place in Sarajevo, one of the things on this trip that stood out to me was discovering the meaning behind the concrete roses throughout the city. These roses were formed from craters left by daily explosions during the war. The areas were filled in with red resin to symbolize the scars, bloodshed, hope, and resilience from the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina. While taking a group tour with a Bosnian native we learned the history of the city and one of these Sarajevo concrete roses was pointed out. There appeared to be a fresh blood stain on the concrete, yet it was from a recent rainfall. It was as if the ground was continuing to cry out and display its war scars many years later. This symbolic statement of the concrete roses really made me pause and think of all the innocent lives lost during this three- and half-year war. A Sarajevo Rose glistening from the rain.
As a Black American Christian, another thing that resonated with me during our tour of the city was how the people are identified by their religion and not the color of their skin. There are three major religions with which Bosnians identify: Orthodox Christianity, Roman Catholicism, and Islam, which is the largest religious group in the region.
Using race categories to identify populations creates a further separation between individuals and communities, then continues to strip them of their cultural and spiritual identities. I believe there is a better way to view and appreciate a person, based on their faith versus an ever-changing label placed on a person or communities based on their skin tone. I am grateful for the opportunity to experience the beauty of Sarajevo, from the mountains that surround the city, to the rich history of resilience, seen in our visit to the Tunnel of Hope that supplied the residents with food and other materials during the war. May God continue to bless the city of Sarajevo and surrounding areas and those who reside there and visit.
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