 |
 |
|
Introduction:
Is reconciliation among groups with terribly
strained relationships possible? Louise Diamond, founder of Peace-Tech, talks about a transformative inter-ethnic dialogue that took place in Bosnia.
| |
This rough transcript provides a text alternative to audio. We apologize for occasional errors and unintelligible sections (which are marked with ???).
Inter-ethnic Dialogue in Bosnia
Louise Diamond
President and Founder of Peace-Tech
| |
 |
A: There was a moment in Bosnia where we were
asked to go to Bosnia after the Dayton Accords were signed when I was at IMTD.
It was the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe that asked us to
come and they said, "Look we are responsible for the democratization
process. We know there has to be dialogue and we don't know how to run
dialogue." We convened some of the first dialogue that happened after the
war between the primarily three different ethnic groups. Of course there are
more than three, because there is a whole group of people who are mixed and
don't identify with one another. It was very tense because it was the first time
in years that people had talked to someone from the other side in a friendly way
and not at the end of a gun. There was a lot of feeling, passion and pain. There
was a really archetypal moment. There was an older Bosniac, Muslim woman who
kind of archetypically was every mother who had ever sent a son to war, every
woman who had ever lost a husband to war. A kind of earth mother suffering,
grieving, and saying, "What have you done to the men in my life?"
There was also a young Serbian soldier who insisted upon us calling him an
ex-soldier, because he said he had to fight, he didn't want to. He was at heart
a poet, and he was very young and very slight. They started our three, four, or
five day workshop quite at odds with each other. She was quite angry with him.
All she saw when she saw him was a Serbian soldier. She knew what those fellows
had done with her family and her people.
There was a certain moment in the
workshop when we were doing some exercise where he refused to take part. He went
off in the corner and he sat by himself and he came back and joined the group
and said, "I didn't want to do that. I didn't want to recreate the war,
talk about the war, instead I wanted to write a poem." So he read a poem,
and I don't even remember what was in the poem but it was very heart felt about
the pain of the war on all sides and so much suffering unnecessarily, and this
melted this woman's heart. Something changed for her in that moment, and they
became fast friends. They spent the rest of the workshop with their arms around
each other. You would never see one without the other. We went back to Bosnia
after three months and then again six months later, and we asked people who had
been in that workshop, "What stands out for you, what do you
remember?" 95% of them said that they would never forget that woman and
that man, and the statement of reconciliation that had happened between them. It
was personal for the two of them, but for every one else in the room and at a
larger level it was totally symbolic of the archetype of the soldier who really
didn't want to kill people and the mother who suffered, the victims of war.
Women and children are primarily the victims in war, especially in Bosnia, and
that they could touch each other's hearts... It was very beautiful.
...
Q: In the situation with the dialogue in Bosnia how do you begin to
convince people to talk about these horrific things that have been happening to
them over the past few years with the events so fresh, what is the incentive for
them to come together and talk.
A: First of all I am not sure that you do convince people to come and talk
about these horrific things. You invite them to come and talk about what ever
you need to talk about. You structure the events in such a way that it is
possible. For instance shortly after the war there were many people who were
eager to rebuild the bridges and that has been my experience in any society,
that there are always people who want to build peace locally. If you can find
them or just put out the call that it is available they will show up. You start
with the people who are ready and want to do it any way and they will let you
know you take them down a path that they don't want to go.
We did a big project with youth in Bosnia, 18-28, and we thought it was a
leadership program, we thought it was going to give them the opportunity to talk
about the war. They were teenagers or young children during the war and guess
what, they refused to talk about it in the sessions, in our workshops, they said
no we don't want to talk about it, it is too raw, we have suffered enough, we
don't want to relive it, we certainly don't want to relive it with those folks
in the room. In one on one and in small groups, of course that is what they were
talking about it. As they made friends, as they felt safe in their own way, on
their own time they were initiating these conversations with others. It
was really interesting to me at one point we had this first batch of folks come
to US and took them on a wilderness canoe trip in the border waters in the
Northern waters of Minnesota.
Here are these groups of Muslim Croat Serbs, young
people stuck together in a canoe for three or four days camping out on these
islands, with only the food they could carry with them, and they had to talk to
each other, they had work together, you have to cooperate, you have to build a
fire, cook the food, clean the dishes, set up the tents. They were thrown
together in a way that required their cooperation. At one point I was sitting
with my group, there were several different groups on different islands at
different times, and I was sitting not directly in the group. I heard them start
this conversation about the war and about what they experienced and I kind of
came forward to see if I could facilitate or help in any way. They kind of
looked at me but they started looking at me and talking in the Serb-Croatian
language, in the local language. They made it very clear, "This is not
about you lady. It is ours." I left, it was true, it is their work and it
is their story.
Q: They were able to talk to about it without strangling each other
or throwing each other over the canoe?
A: We didn't lose anybody. I don't know what they said and even if I had
heard it I couldn't have understood it.
|
 |
 |
 |