Serb
Orthodox church reopens museum destroyed by Croats
Thursday, June 08, 2006 9:29 AM
ZAGREB, Croatia-Thirteen years after its museum was blown up during
the 1991 Serbo-Croat war, the Croatian Orthodox Church put its icons, manuscripts
and other works of art on show Thursday at a new location in Zagreb.
"Like the Phoenix, this exhibit has now been reborn from the ruins of
the war," said Bishop Jovan, the head of the Orthodox Church in Zagreb.
He added that the "rich and painful history" of the works exposed there
should "serve the peace and the rapprochement" between primarily Roman
Catholic Croats and Orthodox Serbs.
Croats and Serbs fought a bloody war in 1991, when the minority Serbs
rebelled against Croatia's secession from the former, Serb-dominated Yugoslavia.
The war ended in 1995, when Zagreb recaptured the areas the rebels seized
in 1991.
As the war raged on, unknown attackers planted a bomb in the Serbian
Orthodox Museum in Zagreb, causing extensive damage to the building. Rescued
works of art had until now been kept in the church's vaults.
Croatian Culture Minister Bozo Biskupic attended the opening of the
new museum in downtown Zagreb, saying that the Croatian government "cherishes
the cultural achievements and heritage of all of its minorities."
Even though tensions between Serbs and Croats persist, relations have
vastly improved in the past few years. The Croatian government also is
trying to boost its protection of minority rights, one of the conditions
for its desired membership in the European Union.