Bosnian Muslims
mark 600 years of Islamic occupation of Bosnia
Friday, July 27, 2007 8:05 PM
AIDA CERKEZ-ROBINSON
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina-Bosnian Muslims celebrate 600 years of
Islam in their nation Saturday with a concert of spiritual music, a prayer
for peace, and a gentle reminder to Europe: not all of the continent's
Muslims are of immigrant origin.
"Recently we have noticed that Europe is obsessed by the immigrant Muslims
from the East," said Mustafa Ceric, head of the Bosnia Islamic Community,
the official institution of Bosnia's Muslims. "This is an opportunity to
remind that there are indigenous Muslims in Europe."
"By celebrating 600 years of Islam here we want to naturalize Islam
in Europe," he said, adding that Bosnia's Muslims have illustrated how
Islam can be harmonized with a European way of life.
Sarajevo is a good place to send a message of peace, since the last
century started and ended with a with a war in Sarajevo, Ceric said.
The 1914 assassination in Sarajevo of the crown prince of the Austro-Hungarian
empire triggered World War I. And genocide was carried out on Bosnian Muslims
in Srebrenica during the 1992-1995 Bosnian war.
Islam arrived in Bosnia with the Ottoman occupation in 1463 and found
the local population split between Roman Catholicism, a dying indigenous
Bosnian Church, and Christian Orthodoxy.
Islam spread over the next 400 years of Ottoman rule, mostly thanks
to tax cuts and other benefits given to those who converted. It remains
the faith of almost half of Bosnia's population.
The Bosnia Islamic Community is now seeking to impose itself as a model
for several million European Muslims who have no organized authority to
guide them.
It believes that a lack of organized structure for Europe's Muslims
leaves them at the mercy of sometimes dubious imams who often preach radicalization.
"We live in a global world so we Muslims should be aware that global
security is our interest," Ceric said.
Ceric said that while he understood complaints by Muslims about being
rejected in Europe, Muslims also need to make efforts to fit in.
"Europe is not yet ready to accept Muslims the way they deserve but
unfortunately, the Muslims are also not living up to their responsibilities
in Europe," he said. "I think the Muslims are highlighting their presence
in Europe in the wrong way."
That's why the Bosnia Islamic Community has been campaigning for the
establishment of a Europe-wide organization for Muslims that would control
what is being taught in Islamic schools and mosques.
"I think we Muslims have no choice but to work for our presence in Europe
and to show that we are ready to accept the values of human rights, democracy,
transparency, accountability, the rule of law and all those values that
are also Islamic values," he said. |