Amir PASIC
MOSTAR IN BOSNIA AND HERCEGOVINA
Mostar, and its historical section, the Old Town, is used as a case
study for the rebuilding of the cultural heritage of Bosnia and Hercegovina.
Bosnia and Herceciovina is in the heart of Europe. It has shared a similar
history with Mediterranean European countries. Illyrian rule was replaced
by Roman rule in the 3rd century B.C. and finally, a process of symbiosis
was completed by the Roman-Slavic entity in the 7th century AD.
There, on the Neretva river, the Roman Empire was split into Eastern
and Western Empires. Five centuries later, in the 11th century, Christianity
was divided into Catholic and Eastern Orthodox sects. From the 17th
century, the Neretva river was the west border of Islam.
Since the 12th century, Bosnia was an independent country with a Slavic
population. From the middle of the 15th until the end of the 19th century,
Bosnia and Hercegovina was a part of the Ottoman State.
Slavic tribal communities gradually underwent a transformation which
led to the later feudal system. Since the 12th century, Bosnia was an
independent country. Slays in Bosnia were not unified from the religious
point of view: the so-called Bosnian or Bogumil Church, based on religious
heresy and derived from Christianity, was dominant. There was also a
sizable Catholic Church settled in Central Bosnia and a small group
of Orthodox along the eastern Bosnian border.
For a long time prior to the arrival of the Ottomans, Bosnia was a meeting
place of different, indeed, at times mutually opposed cultural elements:
Greek and Latin alphabets, Byzantine and preRomanesque artistic traditions,
Romanesque and Gothic styles, the Orthodox-Christian faith and Catholicism.
Creative interrelation of all these elements, which took place during
the several centuries of the independent Bosnian state, gave rise to
a series of valuable cultural assets for which Bosnia came to be known
well beyond its borders: in religion, it was the Bosnian Bogumil Church,
the tombstones; in the domain of literature, it was Bosnian Cyrillic
and Glagolithic scripts; in graphic arts, it was the uniquely Bosnian
book illuminations.
From the ethnic point of view, the Bosnians are Slays who live in Bosnia
and speak the Bosnian language. The majority of people living in Bosnia
and Hercegovina, by their origin, upbringing and education, relate to
Islamic culture and civilization--mirrored not so much through religious
manifestations as through a complex spiritual physiognomy. Because of
the large number of Muslims in Bosnia and Hercegovina, this physiognomy
has also affected the non-Muslim inhabitants and the environment of
Bosnia and Hercegovina.
Architecture is symbol of a tolerance. During the Ottoman rule in Bosnia
(1463-1878), under these social conditions, a specific Islamic Ottoman
Bosnian culture, which has been preserved till today, was developed
especially through Architecture. Architectural heritage gives us clear
images of tolerance in Bosnia.
A small group of architectural creations with monumental characteristics
was built following a pattern that developed and was standardized in
Istanbul and several other centers. A much larger group, consisting
of the shops in the bazaars, the mosques in the mahalas and the private
houses, while sharing basic features of Islamic Architecture, manifested
marked regional characteristics produced by specific environmental and
cultural factors.
Architecture is the best witness of the common life of Muslims, Christians,
and Jews: mosques, churches, and synagogues existed side by side signifying
that in Bosnia, Catholic Croatians with their Western European culture,
Eastern Orthodox Serbs with their elements of Byzantine culture and
Sephardic Jews continued to live together with Bosniak Muslims for more
than four centuries.
Mostar is an administrative, economic and cultural center of the south
region of Hercegovina. The region had about 350,000 inhabitants according
to the last census. (April, 1991). The area of the municipality was
inhabited by 130,000 people. The urban area, located in the central
valley on the Neretva river had about 70,000 people at this time.
Mostar was established by the Ottomans in the second part of 15th century,
around a strategic crossing over the Neretva river.
From 1474, when the settlement with the name of Mostar was first mentioned,
throughout the several centuries of the Ottoman-Islamic presence, an
Ottoman-Islamic urban milieu was formed, where the commercial and residential
areas were kept strictly apart. The market (carsija), located at a river
crossing, was a vital part of the city.
The market attracted craftsmen and merchants of every known kind. There
were three squares and many small streets connecting them, with each
street designated for a particular craft. Craftsmen were organized in
associations (esnaf) much in the same way that they still are in certain
European countries. Christians and Jews lived and worked in the bazaar
together with Muslims and shared with them an almost identical life-style.
Housing areas, mahalas, 32 in total, were situated outside and around
the bazaar, connected to it by a network (usually) of narrow streets.
Mahalas were traditional neighborhoods found in all parts of the Ottoman
State. They were residential areas with their own mosque, church or
synagogue, shops, schools, and other facilities needed in daily life.
Every mahale had its own communal spirit and mutual-aid system which
contributed to the identity of each mahale and to a high degree of social
cohesion. Every mahalla had its wealthy and poor inhabitants. In some,
the wealthy prevailed over the poor, in others the poor may have outnumbered
the better-off, but slum-like settlements were not known to exist. The
poorer inhabitants were always under the patronage of the rich neighborhood
families, so that extreme social differences were greatly neutralized.
It is very important to emphasize that there did not exist a religious
or ethnic division in mahale organization.
The family was the basic social unit of the Islamic-Bosnian community;
the family house was the basic structural cell of an urban settlement.
Houses were self-contained and detached with a courtyard and the garden
enclosed by a wall, particularly on the side facing the street.
The house was a dwelling complex composed of three parts: the house
per se: the courtyard (avliya), with a kitchen, wood-shed, toilet, stable,
pantry, drinking fountain, pergola, and often a flower garden; and a
vegetable and fruit garden, with a lawn, a small pavilion, and, possibly,
running water.
The main unifying feature of the various types of Ottoman houses in
Bosnia and Hercegovina is in the basic layout of functional units: two
or more multifunctional rooms on two floors, with flexible use--without
heavy furniture and with limitations as to seasonal occupancy, around
the common space, hail or hayat--one spatial entity, spread over two
floors with a connecting staircase, placed by the wall opposite the
open part of the hall.
The largest number of houses contain the same essential elements of
composition, structure, and volume, with variables reflecting the social
and economic levels of the house’s owners, and as realized by domestic
masters and by local building and materials technology.
This architecture aimed to bring men into a harmonious relationship
on all levels. First and most basic of levels was that of the room,
which provided essential privacy. The second was that of the housing
complex. The third was the area of the bazaar, and the last, fourth
level was that of the city, with its numerous aspects and possibilities.
A specific regional architecture of Mostar and Hercegovina, was thus
created, leaving behind a series of characteristic architectural achievements,
mostly modest by physical dimensions but of considerable importance
to the cultural history of its people.
Mostar after 1878. Austro-Hungarian troops occupied Bosnia and Hercegovina
in 1878. With them came a change in economic and social activities.
Everything that has happened since was a result of the introduction
of new capitalist relationships, while the confrontation of the two
adverse civilizations enhanced this encounter. It is not political and
religious antagonism that brought this up, but rather an entire perception
of life, which, for the Bosnian population stemmed from the religion;
the Bosnian cities were already undergoing changes from the transformation
of pre-industrial to industrial society. The Islamic religious perception
of the time (that defines the system of life and its values) found it
hard to accept these principles of social order--a minor note explains
that, prior to Austro-Hungarian occupation, the idea of a house for
rent was an alien concept to the inhabitants of Sarajevo; even those
that were poorest lived in a house of their own. This illustrates the
scale of changes that would transform the future likeness of the city.
The image of the Ottoman environment was changed, especially in the
city centers of Sarajevo and Mostar.
In Mostar, a large number of new constructions took place, varying in
character. The natural bulwark (hills around the city) was linked by
a series of fortifications and connected to the city by new roads. Military
camps, in the South, North and West, marked the boundaries of the city.
The new
government saw the city’s past and present on the East bank and its
future on the West bank.
Mostar was divided into eight zones, five on the East bank of the Neretva
river (Carina, Luka, Brankovac, Bjelusine, The Old City), and three
on the West bank. (Cernica, Prethumlje, Zahumlje).
The banks of the city were linked by three new bridges over the Neretva
river: The Czar Franz Joseph Bridge along Musala (1882), Carinski along
the North Military Barracks (1913), and the Mujaga Komadina bridge (1916),
200 meters far from the Old Bridge on the South.
A railroad and new roads connected the city with Sarajevo and the Adriatic
coast.
A stronger concentration of capital ensured the faster growth of the
city, similar to that growth initiated in the first half of the 16th
century.
As a result of increased demand for housing space, a new dwelling type
appeared--houses for rent--and a new business--real-estate speculation.
Both activities had great impact upon the quality of housing and of
urban space.
The changing character of housing business created a new class of real-estate
owners. They were not only a new social category, as landlords, but
also the most important capital owners and financiers.
Along with the reconstruction of the old city streets, new ones were
constructed under the heavy influence of Western Europe. The aim was
the establishment of a new transportation network (still in use today)
on the West bank of the Neretva river, that would enable a continual
economic growth.
The new railroad station was the most significant complex, and it became
the point of origin for the new Mostar. Along the railroad station,
new administrative, public and housing blocks were constructed. In 1885,
Mostar had 1,975 houses, 2,114 apartments and 12,665 inhabitants.
Intensive growth posed new communal problems for the city’s government:
the construction of new water pipes, modern city sewage, electrical
power line/network, street illumination, and the construction of new
roads.
Due to the increased demand for water in 1885, a new modern water supply
was built from the Radobolja spring, with a big tank and 53 outlets.
New water lines facilitated the development of a modern fire brigade.
The city gained a new power plant in 1911 and street illumination in
1894, replacing the 330 lanterns used before.
The important event for the city’s growth and development was the government’s
establishing of a cadastral and land office in 1891. These institutions
are still in use today.
The new government kept the main street and located some new facilities
there, as needed for that time. To the main street, whose basic line
is older even than the city, was given a natural orientation, that is
from South to North, parallel to the roads that connect the inland with
the sea, along the riverbed of Neretva river. The urban milieu of this
street was complete by the mid- 17th century.
Mosques, three in the Old Town, and 32 in the mahalas, two hamams, one
caravanserai, a clock tower, eight medreses, the Old Bridge built in
1566, two small bridges on the Radobolja river, two water supply systems,
two Orthodox churches, the Catholic church, several Christian schools,
and approximately 1,909 houses constitute the building heritage in 1878,
the last year of the Ottoman rule.
In the following four decades, with numerous interventions, the complete
urban milieu was transformed. Interventions can be examined in five
groups:
A. In Old Town area
On the Main street, the following buildings were built:
The military headquarters (today’s Municipality building), the municipality
hall, an administrative building with school complex, a new religious
school (Mekteb) with the reconstruction of Cejvan Cehaja mosque (1899),
a variety of houses and business buildings, the English consulate, Luka
school (1908), a tobacco factory (1880-1885), the Serbs’ primary school
designed by Djordje Knezic in 1909, the Lands Bank designed by Franc
Vancas in 1910;
Along the Sauerwald street, they built: the magistrate and police (the
building across the street from the Roznamedjijina Mosque), the Wencel
pharmacy, and the Ukraine cinema.
Along the Mejdan square: the Orient hotel, Officer’s casino, the County
Officer’s building. At that time, the hamam next to the Sinan Pasa Mosque
was eradicated (1884).
B. The Musala square was organized as a new central city square, with
several new structures: the Neretva hotel (1892), the school (1880),
the City Bath--Banla (1914), the Post-office building, the Fire Brigade
headquarters (1901), and the Bristol hotel (1906) across the new bridge.
C. A new city center was organized along the railroad station with the
Financial police building (with cafeteria on the first floor), the Wregg
hotel, Gymnasium (first part in 1898, second part in 1902), the Jubilee
elementary school (1905), The Courthouse and prison (1892), the apartment
house of Adam Mikacic, the courthouse with Land office, The Ice factory
(Ledara) in 1903, Municipal hospital (1889), and the School of Crafts.
D. Area with luxury houses--villas organized between the railroad and
Rondo, amongst which, Zahumka and Neretvanka in Liska street, (1905),
Fesner (1897) and three of Pesko’s houses (1900-1905) on the Rondo square
and Komadina on Setaliste street, stand out.
E. Facilities for the Catholic community were added in Pothum in the
vicinity of the St. Peter and Paul Church (1866): The Catholic school
of Merciful Sisters (1872), Hrvoje Theater (1887), and the Franciscan
monastery (1894).
Many drawings and designs, planned for construction by the Austro-Hungarian
monarchy, are kept until today. The most interesting one is the design
for a new bridge, the one that would bridge the Mejdan Square with the
right bank--over 20 m wide, with terraces and numerous stores. The idea
occasionally resurfaces.
There is an interesting urban concept of a few public buildings and
entities, the Catholic cathedral on Rondo square, State hospital, in
place of today’s Hygienic Institute. The city map, with a guide from
1899, provides a variety of information on buildings’ locations within
the city.
The importance of the right bank with the railroad station as a new
center, has eased the pressure on the left bank and the Old town, thus
resulting in the preservation of the area around the Old Bridge. With
diminished interest, the number of interventions was reduced. The new
government permitted even motor vehicle traffic across the Old Bridge.
For traffic, the bridge deck was filled with gravel, thus elevating
the street level so that it could be used from the main street. This
compelled the shop owners to raise their shops’ entrance to a new level.
On the East bank, the town planner incorporated a rectangular street
scheme in the originally organic mahale urban milieu, thus, aiming to
solve traffic problems and to provide more room for new construction.
Generally, the Old Town area began slowly to die off.
After World War I, Architecture in Bosnia and Hercegovina followed movements,
mostly of West European provenance: Moderna, between two world wars,
Social-Realism after WW II and under the influence of the Soviet Union,
and the International Style in the Sixties, responsible for the large
apartment buildings in the suburbs.
While familiarizing themselves with modern developments in architecture,
Bosnian architects continued to cultivate the values of the Bosnian
building tradition. All of these movements influenced in part the area
of the Old town, which had been defined mainly in the 16th century.
In the last four decades before the current war, a great work was done
on the preservation of all types of monuments, aiming to preserve the
multicultural structures. Of all preservation and restoration activities
undertaken in that period, however, the most important are the large-scale
projects for the Bas-Carsija in Sarajevo, and the project for the Old
Town in Mostar.
In Mostar, The Stari Grad Institute, established by the government in
1977, undertook to develop an integrated concept of urban preservation,
trying to transform a passive office under municipality patronage into
an active office with a market sense.
Toward this aim, experience from similar projects all over the world
was collected, examined and tapped to create a plan for the restoration
and revitalization of the Old Town in Mostar.
Collaboration with the Republic Institute in Sarajevo and the Regional
Institute in Mostar were developed on a partnership basis, with very
good results. In the first three years, a collaboration was developed
with the Mediterranean Center for Building Heritage in Split and with
the Faculty of Architecture at the University of Sarajevo.
During the period of 1977-1992, the organization of preservation work
was in permanent transformation, aiming to find the best solutions for
the preservation of heritage for the people of Mostar.
Three main organization schemes are important:
The preservation policy took into account all issues related to urban
planning, development, infrastructure, economic, and social factors.
After a period in which public opinion was mobilized in favor of the
project (1 977-81), the condition of the structures to be preserved
was examined, basic technical documentation was provided, and an evaluation
of the actual steps to be taken in carrying out the project was made
for a number of competing proposals.
As a result of conservationist efforts after WW II, the Stari Grad Institute
prepared The Master plan for Reconstruction and Revitalization of the
Old Town in Mostar, accepted by the town council in 1990. This Plan
was an integral part of urban and regional planning processes. In the
Master Plan, evaluation based on complete survey and analysis, international
experience and republic legislation, formed the framework for intervention
proposals.
More than 200 different interventions were undertaken as parallel activities.
Restoration began with the Old Bridge complex, because of its symbolic
value for Mostar.
This was an appropriate beginning, satisfying the psychological need
for permanence. The area covered by the process grew larger, from 0.1
sq. km., in 1979 to 2.8 sq. km. in 1985, and finally, to 4.7 sq. km.
in 1 991. Programs, designs for different interventions, and the Master
plan were integral parts of the Stari Grad activities.
The conservation project for the Old Town received the Aga Khan Award
for Architecture in 1986.
1. The self-financing component of the urban preservation in Mostar
Incomes from the area under restoration were reinvested into the area
itself, under a public/private partnership. The basic resources were
the communal taxes collected in the Old Town and the rental revenues
of the business structures which were municipal properties.
The main property owners were: the government, through The Stari Grad
Institute (from 1989, Prostor-Stani Grad); government companies; religious
communities; private companies; and individuals.
Each newly restored square meter enlarged the rental base and generated
an amount of reinvested money. This process provoked interest in all
groups of owners, and opened different kinds of joint-investment projects.
The balance of the rent had a very important role in controlling and
stimulating the inherent dynamic of the place.
A combination of different coefficients, indicating the quality of the
street zone, the position in the street, the relationship between structure
and street, the value of the structure, and the purpose, gave the rental
coefficient for the each room. In this way, it was possible to subsidize
unprofitable uses which were still important to the entire project.
Thus, the amount of income rose from $50,000 US in 1978 to $2,000,000
US in 1989. During the same period, the rate of growth of income was
preserved at the level of 60% per year, while the annual inflation rate
increased from 60% to 300%.
In the Old Town, there were structures which had been constructed oven
the past six centuries. Due to this fact, the value of the lots was
often greaten than the value of the buildings. In such cases, the financial
burden was distributed from one structure to the whole area, and the
building owner could receive a real financial compensation for his property.
2. Balance between the mix of the people and uses of the space
Balance of uses in the Old Town is in direct relationship with the uses
in the city. The Old Town continued to perform the main functions of
the city center in the well preserved structures: a municipality hall,
the main mosques and churches, the City theater, the Museum of Hercegovina
region and the Symphonic Orchestra.
The Old Bridge complex and bazaar with more than two hundred different
shops and more than fifty restaurants, and the hotel Ruza formed the
commercial and touristic center of Mostar and the wider region, with
more than half a million visitors per year.
Houses, public buildings, monuments and urban design are only part of
the social and cultural organization of the society--a physical framework
for social activities.
This is the cultural heritage we preserved for the citizens of Mostar.
The citizens of Mostar had a key role in the preservation process. They
participated in the legal decision-making procedure for each program
in the framework of the project, and also as owners and users of the
structures in the area under the urban preservation process.
Different programs aimed to balance their movements in daily, weekly,
and seasonal life.
The project emphasized communication between people through stimulating
interchange and personal identification with the community, and motivated
all levels of the society to participate in on to understand the preservation
processes.
Mostar, the project tried to integrate the past with the collective
contemporary consciousness, to keep a sense of continuity and permanence
within a context of change.
This aspect was very much emphasized in Mostar and in Bosnia and Hercegovina,
where several cultural concepts founded on the different religious and
ideological bases coexisted in close contact or even intermingled.
3. The educational component was integrated into the Mostar project
with goals to identify the essential features of the cultural heritage
and to develop an applicable method for the preservation of building
heritage. In the first stage, a survey of The Old Bridge zone with two
hundred structures was taken during the student holidays campaign. In
the second stage, the staff, together with young experts and students
made a survey and designs for the entire Old Town and for other monumental
structures within the territory of the Mostar municipality. As a result,
25 very useful final projects, 12 Master theses and four Ph.D. theses
were produced at the universities concerning different aspects of the
preservation process.
From 1988 till 1991, in collaboration with the Aga Khan’ Program for
Islamic Architecture, four international summer workshops were organized
as the preliminary phase of an international and multidisciplinary graduate
program for historic preservation, scheduled to become operational in
September 1996. 44 graduate students and 28 professors from 12 countries
attended the program during the original four year period.
The general education level was developed through newspapers, TV and
radio programs, public conferences and exhibitions as a permanent pressure
on public opinion.
The idea of including cultural heritage courses in schools and kindergarten
programs was, unfortunately, not realized.
The above-mentioned components explain the integrated method of preservation
applied in Mostar in the period from 1978 till April 1992. Generally
speaking, this methodology integrated social and physical preservation
through five aspects:
economic, based on different economic aspects and social concerns;
conservationist, giving primacy to the quality, cane, and meaning of
the physical heritage; political, comprising a conceptual view of the
role of planning in political struggles;
cultural, providing preservation of the characteristics of historically
existing populations and culture; and empirical planning, using social
and attitude surveys to discover the wills of people.
In the period of 1988-1992, the methodology determined in Mostar was
successfully extended to cover the whole urban area of Mostar, as well
as several other towns (Bihac, Pljevlja and Pocitelj).
War in Bosnia and Hercegovina
The last several years in Bosnia and Hercegovina have been a time of
killing, ethnic cleansing, and destruction.
Genocide on Untermenschen people--Bosniaks with Muslim faith, aimed
to reach Lebensraum proportion for our own great nation, lead by psychopathic
creators of the Big Lie, and resulting in more than 200,000 people killed,
more than half a million wounded, and more than one million refugees.
The masters of destruction take pleasure in expounding their motives;
their task makes them proud. City haters and city destroyers haunt our
lives. One of the motivating forces behind the rise and fall of civilizations
is the battle between city lovers and city haters, a battle waged in
every nation and every culture. For the city destroyers, “urban” is
synonymous with dignity, sophistication, the unity of thought and word,
word and feeling, feeling and action, and it must be done away with
altogether.
From whatever depths of misguided national spirit and on whatever morbid
principles they base their approaches, their idea is to destroy anything
that existed before them.
Sarajevo, Mostar, Foca, Banja Luka, Gorazde, Bihac, and many other cities,
towns and settlements have consequently been flattened. More than two
thousand structures with monumental characteristics, and every museum,
library and archive were reduced to rubble.
Destruction in Bosnia and Hercegovina was culminated in Mostar when
the Old Bridge was ‘killed’. The Stari Most (Old Bridge) was built in
1566 by Mimar Hayreddin.
The word mostar means bridge-keeper: between the life of the people
of the city and the bridge there is an intimate, age-old link. Their
destinies are so intermingled that they cannot be imagined or recounted
separately.
The bridge that had seen so many wars and survived so many years, no
longer exists. After thousands of shells from Serbian artillery beginning
in April 1992, and then again from Croat attack beginning in May 1993,
the crime was completed on November 9,1993: the Old Bridge in Mostar
was finally brought down.
One of the building miracles of 16th century Europe, the crowning achievement
of an extraordinarily creative era of Islamic culture, was gone. The
Stari Most had contained the meaning and the spirit of all Bosnia and
Hercegovina: the essence of the bridge was of meeting and joining together;
the country, like the bridge, could be divided only by destroying it.
The Croatian journalist Slavenka Drakulic wrote in the Observer “I’ve
heard that people in Mostar, even adults, cried when they saw that the
bridge had fallen. I believe the reports, for I have seen people who
are not from Mostar cry as well. An elderly journalist, a lawyer, a
singer, who wept for the first time since the war started. Not so long
ago, the newspapers published photos of a massacre in the Bosnian Muslim
village of Stupni Dol. One picture showed a middle-aged women with a
long, dark knife-cut along her throat. I don’t remember anyone crying
over that photo or others like it. And I ask myself: Why I feel more
pain looking at the image of the destroyed bridge than the image of
the woman? Perhaps it is because I see my own mortality in the collapse
of the bridge, not in the death of the woman. We expect people to die.
We count on our own lives to end. The destruction of a monument to civilization
is something else. The bridge, in all its beauty and grace, was built
to outlive us; it was an attempt to grasp eternity. Because it was the
product of both individual creativity and collective experience, it
transcended our individual destiny. A dead woman is one of us--but the
bridge is all of us forever.”
Bosnia and Three Europes
The first Europe, established with a center in Rome, lasted from the
1st to the 4th century A.D.
This Europe had elements of tolerance, and syncretism of civilizations
as its cultural model: it was a place of life in diversity, and Bosnia
was an integral part of it.
Between the fourth and the seventh centuries, inflamed by wars with
the Barbars, Germans, Slays, Avers, and others, the Europe of tolerance
and life in diversity disappeared.
The second Europe came into existence with the establishment of the
Frankish Kingdom, that proclaimed itself a successor of the Roman Empire.
Despite its significant historical role, it failed to revive the civilization
of cultural tolerance. Instead, it constituted a model that suited Christianity--based
on religious or cultural unitanism that did not tolerate any other cultural
concept in Europe at that time. This idea was the basis of the Crusades
and the historical extinction of the Jews and Muslims from Europe. The
foundation of everything that would haunt Europe ever since--ethnic
and religious autocracy and long-lasting ethnic and religious wars--is
a product of this age.
Despite the exalted technological and scientific progress, the ideas
of xenophobia, ethnic, religious and racial hatred were set, and they
have triumphed in the 20th century.
Bosnia was the only exception in the whole of Europe. On the foundations
of the earlier history and high standards of tolerance, the original
Late-Hellenic multilateral culture through syncretism of early Christianity,
late Byzantine and early Slavic cultural and religious traditions, was
preserved from the 11th century onward; this was transformed into a
dual religious and cultural situation in the Bosnian domain, and it
acted as a contact zone between the Catholic Europe of the West and
the Byzantine East. The rise of the Neo-Manichean Bosnian church strengthened
this multilateral character of Bosnia.
As of the 15th century, the Ottoman Empire and Islamic cultural-religious
complex played a key role in Bosnian history. This new momentum had
only strengthened and further developed the primary and original multilateral
nature of Bosnia. This quality was emphasized by the birth of a new
urban way of life, with arts and crafts and trade, exchange and openness
of society, whose core was based upon an inherent respect for the principle
of this civilization and cultural model--as opposed to upon religion,
race or nationality. Islam has, in fact, completed the creation of this
model. Islam did not destroy, exterminate on restrain anything in Bosnia.
On the contrary, everything continued to live and thrive in its original
and natural form. With the historical settlement in Bosnia of Spanish
Jews, having been expelled from Christian Europe, the inherent character
of multilateralism and diversity was further emphasized in Bosnia.
Such a Bosnia survived the second Europe only to indicate the birth
of a third, the one that is esteemed today. Europe, born after the bloodstained
wars of the twentieth century, the Europe of people, communications
and cultures, and not of national borders and states.
A centuries-old confrontation with Bosnia is repeated in its bloodiest
and most genocidal form, the last countdown before a third Europe is
born.
MOSTA R 2004 WORKSHOP
Second Stage
Istanbul, July 24-August 18,1995
Amir PASIC
PROJECT SUMMARY
Phase two of the urban preservation of the Bosnia and Hercegovina project
consists of a studio work during the Spring semester at several universities,
and the workshop focuses on the reconstruction of the Old Town in Mostar.
The Workshop is to be held in Istanbul from July 24 to August 18,1995.
The second workshop aims to summarize the results of the works of the
Mostar 2004 project in the period of August 1994-August 1995 and to
continue the research and design for the Old Town in Mostar, through
43 different projects and through a general urban concept of the city.
During 1994-1 996, technical studies and working drawings will be completed
for the Old Bridge plus several adjacent complexes in the Mostar Old
Town, as a first step in the reconstruction process.
INTRODUCTION
Within the international architectural educational community there is
great interest in assisting the reconstruction of Bosnia, whose rich
multicultural architectural heritage has been a persistent target of
the current war in Bosnia and Hercegovina. This interest is based on
an underlying premise that the speedy reconstruction of Bosnia’s architectural
heritage is a basic prerequisite to the national healing process.
The identification of self with place, as exemplified by architectural
symbols as they existed in times of normalcy is an integral part of
the human psyche the village square, the local mosque, church, synagogue,
or, for example, the famous bridge built in Mostar in 1566 over the
Neretva river.
When such objects of self identity are destroyed, much of the human
spirit goes with it; Architectural Heritage is deeply intertwined with
a persons sense of identity, existence, and belonging to a particular
place and time.
One is often not aware of this connection until that heritage is destroyed,
leaving the psyche rudderless in a disintegrating world. In such a climate,
the speedy reconstruction of the familiar symbols of architecture becomes
essential to the national healing process, signaling the return to a
more civilized environment where self and place can once again be reunited.
PLAN OF ACTION
To prepare for the process of reconstructing Bosnia’s multicultural
heritage, it is here proposed that an international educational supporting
effort precedes and parallels the actual physical reconstruction through
a three-phased process. The International Multidisciplinary Program
for Urban Preservation of Bosnia and Hercegovina will engage the attention
and participation of an international community of architectural professionals,
educators, historians and students, in conjunction with their Bosnian
counterparts.
GOALS AND OBJECTIVES
1. Preservation of the thousand year building heritage of the multicultural
Bosnia and Hercegovina.
2. Development of an integrated process of urban preservation for Bosnia
and Hercegovina through the formation of a practical system of education
over the next decade.
3. Establishment of an international network of prominent schools and
cultural organizations for urban preservation to assist and support
the rebuilding process.
Phase 1: Mostar 2004, a pilot workshop for the rebuilding of a multicultural
Bosnia and Hercegovina, Istanbul, July 25-August 25,1994 (see enclosed
Workshop report).
Phase 2: Establishment of an International Support Group
Time: 1994-1995 academic year
Program: Several universities in Europe, the United States, and the
developing world will offer studio design courses to students through
their regular curriculum on topics related to the reconstruction of
the built environment of Bosnia. Background documentation for the studio
will be shared. Whenever possible, Bosnian students and faculty will
be involved through inter-university exchanges.
A committee of individuals representing participating institutions will
be formed to coordinate academic and other activities related to the
project.
This committee will define the participants’ inter-relations, budget
and policy.
This phase will end with a second summer workshop to run from July 24-August
18, 1995.
Phase 3: Broadening the Support Network of International Cooperation
Time: 1995-1996 academic year.
Program: As a result of the work completed through the Summer 1994 workshop
and the studio courses offered at a number of universities during the
1994-1995 academic year, a documentation packet will be put together
on Mostar including maps, surveys, visual documentation, bibliography
and suggested studio problems. This packet will be distributed to schools
of architecture around the world who may wish to offer similar studio
courses through their curriculum, particularly those with established
conservation components. In future years, similar packets on other Bosnian
cities might be prepared and distributed to maintain high interest around
the world in Bosnian reconstruction. The studio on historical aspects
of Bosnia’s architectural heritage will continue throughout the years.
Founder: Bosnian authorities and private individuals with the collaboration
of the International Support Group.
Time: September 1996
Type of school: To aid the reconstruction process, a practical school
of conservation will be established, based on high international standards
and on a combination of classroom work with practical work in the field.
The reconstruction of Bosnia’s multicultural heritage will become the
laboratory for the practical application of an educational curriculum
covering all periods of Bosnia’s architectural heritage.
An active exchange program with architectural schools around the world,
particularly schools with a conservation component, will form the basic
element of the curriculum. Throughout both short-term summer workshops
or during school semesters, students from other schools may come to
Bosnia for practical, applied work experience while contributing to
the process of reconstruction.
The first phase of this educational endeavor has been the Pilot Workshop
on Mostar’s Old Town, held in Istanbul from July 25-August 25, 1994
and entitled Mostar 2004. (The number 2004 refers to the year when the
restoration of the Old Town in Mostar will hopefully be completed).
The second phase of this endeavor will be a workshop to be held in Istanbul
from July 24-August 18,
1995.
Objectives
One of the project’s goals is to gather students and professionals from
architectural schools in Europe, North America, the Middle East, Asia
and Africa, including a multicultural team from Bosnia itself, to work
in cooperation and unity in preparation for the rebuilding of Mostar
Old Town, a town that for five hundred years exemplified a place where
people of many cultures and beliefs could live and work together in
peace.
It also represents the second stage in the formulation of a larger,
international support network to provide moral and financial support,
as well as advice, expertise and opportunities for both collaboration
and educational exchange in the reconstruction process. Perhaps more
important, the presence of an international element of concerned architects,
students and planners can function as a buffer between three ethnic
communities learning to work together again.
The end product of these workshops combined with studio works will be
the preparation of an urban restoration plan and a methodology for the
first stage in the restoration plans in the restoration of Mostar Old
Town. This restoration plan and methodology should be used in the actual
restoration plans for Mostar Old Town.
The workshop also seeks to draw attention to the destruction of cultural
monuments in Bosnia and Hercegovina and to the importance of their reconstruction.
The ultimate goal, of course is to provide a useful case study for other
towns in Bosnia and Hercegovina destroyed in the current war and for
all other towns of the world which are under a permanent process of
destruction.
Bibliography:
1.The Mostar 2004 Workshop Report ‘94, IRCICA, Istanbul 1994.
2.Islamic Architecture in Bosnia and Hercegovina by Amir Pasic, IRCICA,
Istanbul 1994.
3.Stari Most in Mostar by Amir Pasic, IRCICA, Istanbul 1995.
4.The Master Plan of Reconstruction and Revitalization of the Old Town
in Mostar, Mostar 1990, by Amir Pasic et al, English Version, IRCICA
1995.
5.Bosnia: A Short History, by Noel Malcolm, Mc Milan, 1994,
6.Why Bosnia? Writings on the Balkan War, edited by Rabia AIi and Lawrence
Lifschultz, Pamphleteer’s Press, 1993.
7.The Muslims of Bosnia and Hercegovina, edited by Mark Pinson, Harvard
University Press, 1994.
8.The National Question in Yugoslavia, Origins, History, Politics, Cornell
University Press, 1984.
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