Sarajevo: My Experience.
Hello and welcome once again to the Blog section. (The other sections will one day appear, I’m sure.)
Sarajevo was a really interesting trip, and the first few days I was there I really immersed myself in the Sarajevan culture.
It started off with a tour from the Hostel’s son, Arijan “Call me AK” Kurbasic, who really has a great story to tell about the history of the city – about the mosques, the churches, the synagogues, as well as the Franz Ferdinand, the World Wars and the time as part of the former Republic of Yugoslavia and the war in 1992-1995 which has left such a large impact on the city. If you’re ever in Sarajevo for a couple of days, I would heartily recommend a tour from AK, he’s a really nice guy, tells a great story and knows the best places in the city to visit.
We walked past the beer factory (I’ll talk about the brewery in more detail later on – great beer, great food), to the Franciscan Church, then past Franz Ferdinand’s old house, to the site of a school children massacre at the hands of the Serbs in 1993. We looked in a mosque, walked along the river to the site of Franz Ferdinand’s assassination, and all the while listening to AK’s story unravel, empowering us with all this knowledge about what the city has been through and why it has turned out like it has. We went to one of the traditional cafes in Baš?aršija, the old Ottoman part of town with its beautiful cobbled streets, and to a more modern bar for a Sarajevsko beer. Fantastic.
Later on in the day, I adventured around the city, trying to find the Holiday Inn hotel… Only in Sarajevo would that be a tourist attraction – it’s where the journalists stayed during the war. I remember watching a documentary a few weeks ago about the photographer Robert King (the documentary was called Shooting Robert King); he’s a fantastic photographer and renowned for his war correspondence the world over. I’m happy I got to the Holiday Inn in Sarajevo, and I had a Coca-Cola, just as Robert King did 17 years ago.
I walked along Snipers Alley, walking past countless mortar imprints in the ground – some were filled in with the red acrylic, and this changes the name of a mortar imprint to a Sarajevo Rose. These roses highlight where somebody was killed as a result of the mortar going off, and everywhere you go in Sarajevo you can find roses. Both the ones on the floor, and the rose flowers, in every colour shape and size. Some of the roses get walked over on a regular basis, and so get covered in dust – taking them from blood red to a dusty grey, the same as the rest of the pavement. AK told us – and we later saw – that when it rains, the dust and dirt is washed off the roses and they become bright red once again, as if the rain is a tear from the heavens and those who lost their lives as a message not to forget what happened in Sarajevo some 15 years ago. Why are the roses red? Red is the colour of blood, pain, sin and anger, but also of love and sacrifice, of warning and serves as a perfect reminder of why we should work and play together, not fight and cause conflict between cultures.
Another day I went for a really really really long walk up the other side of the valley from the Hostel I was staying at. It was awesome. It was about 38 degrees, really humid – just fantastic summer weather. However, I didn’t have with me any sun cream and I may have got a little burnt. However, venturing just outside of the city I got to see some rare views of rural Bosnian life, animals and farms, and the views from the surrounding mountains.
I went to the Tunnel Museum. A tunnel museum, I hear you ask? Well, during the war, the whole of Sarajevo was under siege and the only way for goods, food and eventually weapons to get into city from Free Bosnia (the area in Bosnia not under siege from the Serbian forces was through a tiny tunnel under the runway of the airport. The airport was being guarded by the United Nations and would not allow safe passage of food, goods or weapons as they could not be seen to influence the war, so a group devised a plan to construct a tunnel and transport contraband.
I quite literally walked and took photos while I travelled, if you would like to see more photos, check our my Flickr photoset: here
Going anywhere on your own can be a scary experience, and going to a city not many people would dream of going to, was a little nerve-wracking at best. I had some fantastic times while I was out there, and I would definitely recommend going somewhere alone to anywhere – not just Sarajevo. You meet loads of new people, you learn about other cultures and you learn a lot about yourself. Plus, you get away from the world of work – and that’s always a welcome relief, no?
I would love to visit Sarajevo again I am going to visit Sarajevo again, there’s so much more the city has to offer. Next time, though, it would be nice to go with someone I know – even though meeting lots of new people was fun, it did get a little lonely at times! Other travellers who stayed at the hostel have recommended lots of other places in Eastern/Southern Europe, so I’d definitely like to see about going to lots of places in one big adventure at some stage in the future. I’ve tried persuading my friend Joe, but I’m not sure he’d actually come… Are you interested in going travelling for a month or two? It would be awesome.
If you have any questions about my time in Sarajevo, or would like to know about anything, please please please write me a comment and I’ll get back to you as soon as possible.
I am going with work to Bordeaux tomorrow for two weeks, but I will try and update a few blog posts while I am away to keep you all informed.
Much love,
Graham x

























