Monday, September 17, 2012

Back from Bosnia (part 2)


Sarajevo is a city that is captivating and haunting and many other adjectives I can’t put my finger on. My first time around, I was fascinated with the city, but not as taken with it as I was with the people I met there. This time however, I fell in love. I wouldn’t say that it feels like home, but I definitely feel at home in it. There’s a plethora of charming hole-in-the-wall cafés (my favorite thing about any city) and in certain parts I feel like I’m strolling through a medieval town. But in the middle of all that, there are glaring reminders of a horrific war. A war that anyone over the age of 20 remembers and one the locals use as a ”before and after” reference point. I haven’t succeeded in learning much about the ”during” except that it’s when smoking became a national pastime. But I did succeed in getting a better grasp of what makes this place so special. And it has little to do with the cafés and everything to do with the people sitting in the cafés. 

As an American, one gets used to being verbally spat upon when traveling outside of the western world, so I usually just say I’m Swedish until I get a sense of how the person feels about the US (or until they realize my English is too good to be anything but home grown). However, when you go to Bosnia, saying that you are Swedish does not always warrant a positive reaction. Sweden played a very active role in the Balkans during and after the war, but depending on who you talk to, it’s not always remembered with generosity of spirit. Dusko Basic, a good-natured man I met back in March, works as a consultant for business and infrastructure at Novi Grad city hall, and he remarked, ”Asking Carl Bildt to fix Bosnia’s situation after the war was like assigning a 5-star Michelin chef to solve the hunger crisis in Somalia.” According to Dusko, what Bildt ended up doing in Bosnia after the war can be likened to taking Hitler out of Nazi Germany, but leaving the Nazi party to continue governing without him. When confronted with this, we Swedes tend to steer the topic of conversation to Zlatan Ibrahimovic, which usually works to lighten the mood. After all, football is almost always a happier subject of conversation than politics. But truth be told, it’s insane for an outsider to come in and create order out of that kind of chaos and expect it to work. I asked my friend Zoran what started the war, and he compared it to a marriage gone awry. The husband and wife just stopped getting along, and then the in-laws interfered which made everything worse. And then the marriage counselor tried to intervene, but how to pacify decades of resentment and hostility without a major undoing? Good luck. 

It’s amazing to me how people can still talk to each other after what has happened. Sure, it’s been nearly 20 years, but if the evident lack of remodeling of the physical structures around town is any reflection of the emotional scars that people still carry around, then I deem it a miracle. But I have never experienced war and therefore have no right to speculate. It’s just something I’ve thought about. Ironically, it’s in Sarajevo that I feel most inspired about...well....everything. The people I’ve come in contact with are truly amazing individuals and stellar examples of what it is to hope. 

Take Eldar Balta as one example. A medical student and project coordinator for Mozaik (www.mozaik.ba), Eldar is quickly becoming one of my favorite people. He’s smart, genuine, frank, and has a soft heart despite having survived communism, a war, and the not-so-smooth transition into a capitalistic democracy. He is now committed to bringing change to the dysfunctional aftermath that is Bosnia. He’s very honest about his frustrations with his own people, but I still perceive him to be unflinchingly optimistic about the future. He’s very proud of his city and loves to show it off. When asked why he is so fond of Sarajevo, he answers: ”It’s a city that allows for imagination. I can create my own world here. For example, the streets of Sarajevo transform into New York City during November’s annual Jazz Fest. It’s a city of paradoxes. The place that loves art and culture is the same place where people were killing each other just two decades ago.” He showed us the islamic burial grounds located in the middle of town where former president Alija Izetbegovic is buried along with hundreds, if not thousands of people who were killed in 1995. There was something eerie about walking through the white monument-like headstones and seeing the same year of death on all of them. Most of the buried were young too, in their 20’s and 30’s. It kind of brought me to a halt. But in the spirit of paradox, we later went to a quaint hole-in-the-wall café called The Goldfish to drink pivo (beer) and reminisce. It was like entering a cluttered attic that no one had touched in 150 years. Antique photos and relics covered every square inch of the place. Definitely a new favorite spot.

Zoran Puljic is another one I’ve come to admire. This man joined the Bosnian army at the age of 18, even though his father was a Serb and his mother a Croat. Two years and three wounds later, he fled to Germany (it took him three weeks to get there) where he lived for two and a half years before returning to Bosnia (via Spain). He is now the director of Mozaik, an incredible organization that funds and manages development projects around Bosnia (currently 279 of them!). He is über educated, travels all over the world on a regular basis, was awarded the Schwab Foundation’s Regional Social Entrepreneur of the Year in 2010 and is definitely the kind of person that I feel extremely lucky to have met, and even more so now that we have become friends. Hearing him talk about his work, I would never guess that he was once a scared soldier carrying a gun. He, like Eldar, speaks about the future with hope. He’s not afraid to dream big and he’s got a vision for his country that inspires me to think bigger about my own role in the world. I’m trying to persuade him to write a memoir, because his story is absolutely the kind I want to read. 

Danka is a petite, brusque, chain-smoking and very lovable English teacher at the Gimnazija Dobrinja (a high school) where my students just did a week-long exchange. She never married and never had kids (she has enough at school, she says) and she too has led quite an incredible life. During the 1980’s she worked as a translator in Baghdad and remembers it as being quite a beautiful city. Not the shell-shocked place it is now. I can imagine she likens Baghdad to what Sarajevo was before the war, and the place it is now. Sarajevo was once a lovely and vibrant European city if the pictures from before WWI are telling the truth. An eclectic mix of Austro-Hungarian, Moorish and Ottoman architecture, it is a city where one can find an orthodox church, a synagogue, a catholic church and a mosque within the same neighborhood. It’s enough to walk a few blocks downtown to notice the extreme religious diversity. Before the war, people of these faiths had co-existed rather peaceably for centuries. It’s tragic what war will do to people’s faith. Jonathan Swift once said, ”We have just enough religion to make us hate, and not enough to love one another.” Zoran says that he lost a lot of faith in organized religion during the war. When people start grabbing their guns, religious rhetoric gets thrown out the window and people turn into monsters. All pretty thoughts of peace and love are forgotten. I think it’s a shame that people commit such atrocities in the name of God. I often imagine Him looking down at us and sadly shaking his head as if to say, ”You guys have totally missed the point.” 

I’ve been back in Sweden for a few days now, but my head is still in Sarajevo. I was unprepared for the way it’s burrowed itself so deeply in my mind and heart. The more I see, the more I realize I don’t know anything. I don’t understand what drives us to kill each other. I don’t understand how we can recover from such moral depravity. But somehow we pick ourselves up and keep walking. The soul is resilient, but it’s also fragile. I wonder if the lack of ”cosmetic surgery” around Sarajevo isn’t so much due to lack of funding as it is an honest acknowledgement that the bullet holes on people’s hearts aren’t going away, so neither should the ones on the buildings. 

These boots were made for walking


Who am I and what do I want? Two questions I’ve been pondering lately (as a kind of precursor to that ever looming mid-life crisis...?). Anyway, the ideas I had when I was 19 are not at all the ideas I have now and I like to think that it’s because I am maturing, but I doubt it. I think it’s simply due to the fact that the more places I live and the more people I meet, the more I realize what I don’t want to be. 

In two years I turn 30. THIR-TY. And I’m already freaking out. I don’t think it’s because I’m afraid of aging (although further reflection on that subject might prove me wrong). I think it’s more of a realization that my life does not fit the model of stability I consider the age of 30 to demand. I don’t have a permanent job position, I don’t know how long I want to live in my current geographical location, and I am not in a committed relationship. I am essentially living one year at a time, which does little to create the stability that I desire and avoid simultaneously. I mean, if I really wanted to be ”stable”, I would resign myself to pursuing a teaching degree so that I could stay on at the school and job that I (currently) love. I would also settle into a more ”permanent” living situation (in other words, get rid of all the second-hand furniture I bought almost two years ago when I first moved here and invest in stuff I actually like). But every time I think about doing this, something in me vetoes the idea. As much as the uncertainty about the future irks me, the idea of settling down and living a ”normal” life is about as appealing to me as becoming a vegetarian. Just not something I want to do. 

So who am I and what do I want? The picture keeps changing, but here’s what I’ve understood so far: 

I am a big picture, give-me-the-headlines kind of girl. Details stress me out. I like simple and uncomplicated. I don’t follow trends, I don’t like clutter and I hate reading user manuals. I don’t want to own a bunch of stuff, because the more stuff you own, the more money you have to dish out on insuring the stuff you own, and I’d rather travel. The gadgets that my friends are going crazy for right now (think Apple) may make life easier on some level, but they absorb your time and mental energy in a really unsettling way and I don’t want to lose my appreciation for things like face to face communication, pen and paper, and that every elusive attention span. I can understand it’s fun to have toys, but the way I see it, those things just trick you into staying mentally in the same place. 

I like throwing things away. I scour my closet a few times a month hoping to find something I can get rid of (a habit I cultivated in my late teens, much to my parents’ despair. They couldn’t understand why I didn’t want to keep my old dance trophies...). But it’s proved very useful when moving. Less stuff to pack. I want to stay mobile. I think I’d be happy with renting an apartment for the rest of my life. The beauty of renting is that it allows for the freedom to up and leave whenever you want. And that, my friends, is what I call quality of life. As the famous French essayist, Michel de Montaigne, once wrote, ”One should always have one’s boots on and be ready to leave.” Amen I say.* 

(* I should add a sidebar here and say that I do dream about living in a spacious villa by a lake, somewhere in Italy. This would be one of very few allowable exceptions to my rule of hassle-free, scaled-down living. The house would of course be accompanied by a red Mini Cooper and a Vespa.)

I realize that on some level I’ve ruined it for myself by moving around. By not staying in the same place for more than three years, I don’t allow myself to cultivate friendships that last a lifetime. I’ve grown used to being the new girl and always feeling out of the loop. No matter how comfortable I am with the locals and the language, there will always be cultural things that I don’t get, jokes I don’t consider funny, and history between friends that I will never be able to compete with. I will also never fully be able to express what I want to say in the exact way I want to say it in any language other than English. Since I left the States five years ago, I feel like I’ve lost nuances to my personality. I used to be the girl who dished out sarcastic comments all the time and made my friends and co-workers laugh. Now I have to work really hard at being funny, and most of the time I end up being lame instead (I have had occasional moments of brilliance, but very few and far between). It’s extremely frustrating and at times disheartening, but it is one of the unfortunate side-effects to the life I’ve chosen. I just have to resign myself to the fact that I will never be intellectually stunning or have sharp presence of mind. I’ve become terribly two-dimensional, but I do have a lot of heart, which I hope makes up for the lack of all that other ”color.” 

One thing I have been thinking a lot about is the thought of having children. Although I’m open to changing my mind, right now I really can’t reconcile myself to the idea. Nothing about being pregnant, giving birth and taking care of an infant appeals to me.  Whenever my friends who have kids describe the experience, they get all ”aw” and I get all ”ew”. I literally squirm in my seat. But I am a realist, so I do understand that if and when I do get married, I will most likely want to have a family with the lucky guy. But then I prefer to adopt. As I am not a sentimental person, I don’t feel the need or desire to produce my own offspring, but I am a practical person and since there are so many children who don’t have parents who want them, why not be a little efficient with our resources? It’s a shame the process is so freaking expensive and drawn out. Maybe I should put myself on a waiting list now so that when I really am ready, like 10 years down the road, everything will be set. 

When I was 19, I dreamt of a dashing career in TV journalism. When I was 20, I realized that wasn’t what I wanted at all. I’ve had time to change my mind several times over since then and just this week I think I’ve finally defined what my life project is going to be. But I don’t want to voice the idea here until I’ve made the first move. The thing is, I want a job that allows me to travel, one that challenges my mind and emotions and makes use of my life experience. Teaching has thus far done that, but like with everything else, I don’t want to do it for long lest I get bored, grow frustrated and/or lose focus. I am a passionate person, but I have yet to find something that I am truly passionate about, something that would compel me to commit long-term. But like I said, I think I’ve got something in the works...

If you’re familiar with the story of Mary and Martha in the Bible, you’ll know that I’ve always been more the Martha type. I am a woman of action. I hate talking too much about something, because the more we talk, the more we over-analyze and complicate matters. But I do recognize that I need to improve in the area of small talk. I think I unintentionally come off as brusque and impersonal at times, simply because I lack the social graces of beating around the bush. I’d rather skip that awkward dance and get straight to the point: I don’t care about how you’re feeling right now, and no, I do not want to see pictures of your cat or hear about how cute your baby was this morning while eating his oatmeal. I just want an answer to my question. Does that sound cold to you? The truth is, I really do want to invest more time in people, actually be mentally present, and not be in such a hurry that I don’t have time to stop and chat with a friend I meet on my way to that meeting. I want to be more relaxed and live in the here and now. I’ve been so good at living in the future that I’ve forgotten to cherish the present. This is definitely an area I need to grow in, but I do think I’m getting better at it. 

So. In two years I turn 30. I guess I still have some time to get my act together. I say bring it on.