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- <text id=93TT0247>
- <title>
- July 26, 1993: A City Without Hope
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 26, 1993 The Flood Of '93
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOSNIA, Page 44
- A City Without Hope
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By EDWARD BARNES/SARAJEVO
- </p>
- <p> Asif Imamajovic stands in the shrapnel-scarred doorway of the
- Bjelave orphanage, watching the chaos around him. More than
- 60 children, abandoned by their parents, fight, scream and run
- through the empty corridors of the three-story school. Though
- he is not on the faculty--most of the instructors have fled--Imamajovic says he is their mentor. "I teach them to steal
- and not to share," he says. "I teach them to survive. The city
- may die, but some of them will live."
- </p>
- <p> One of the children reaches over and pushes up the sleeve of
- the teacher's shirt. Just above the right wrist is a large tattoo
- of a spider, the mark of a criminal. The children are afraid
- of him. But, says one, "at least he helped. The other teachers
- did nothing but wait for the aid shipments, then steal the food
- and go home."
- </p>
- <p> Every day the children, in gangs of five or more, make their
- way to the city's main black market. In carefully choreographed
- routines they loot the stalls. Two boys approach a seller from
- the right, two from the left, and they begin to argue. While
- the seller is distracted, a fifth boy grabs a jar of jam or
- milk. Sometimes, when the hunger is bad, the boys will simply
- run up to a hawker, grab a handful of food and run. And sometimes
- they are caught. "The cops know we're only trying to survive,
- and they let us go," says Alen Berglerovic, the best thief in
- the school. "What can they do to us? We already live in a prison."
- </p>
- <p> Five weeks ago, the last frail supply links to Sarajevo were
- cut off. The city is essentially without fuel, without water,
- without electricity, without medicine and with barely enough
- food to last another week. No longer do residents talk of the
- future. There is only today, and today, for everyone, is a grim
- struggle for survival. "It has never been this bad before,"
- says Rosa Tutundzic. "I used to have hope, but I can no longer
- believe we will be saved. It will just go on until we are dead."
- </p>
- <p> The city's agony has moved the U.S. to dispatch 30 military
- aircraft, including A-10 attack planes and helicopter gunships,
- to Aviano Air Base in Italy. Without being specific, a Pentagon
- spokesman said the deployment gives NATO the muscle to take
- action in Bosnia to protect U.N. forces struggling to deliver
- humanitarian aid "if the U.N. gives the signal." The allies,
- he said, are agreed on the mechanism and procedures, and the
- targets have been selected. "We know how to do the job," said
- the official. "The ball's in Boutros-Ghali's court."
- </p>
- <p> Tutundzic, 69, is standing in the mud on the banks of the Miljacka
- River, where scores of people have come to collect water. She
- is crying. Clad in a black skirt and green woolen jacket, with
- her hair tied back with a ribbon, she has dressed as if she
- might be going to lunch with friends. To get there she walked
- along the airport road dubbed Snipers' Alley, and she does not
- flinch at the crack of rifle fire and the occasional thud of
- exploding shells. "I have seven people at home, and my friend
- was supposed to meet me here to help me carry water, but she
- hasn't come," says Tutundzic. "No one else can help me. My two
- sons are wounded, and my husband is an invalid. I no longer
- know what to do."
- </p>
- <p> Around her people fill their jugs and bottles, trying to carry
- enough water home to get through the day. Every drain spout
- in the city has a collection bucket under it, and when rains
- come, the buckets are jealously guarded by old men and women
- grateful for water that does not have to be dragged up the city's
- steep hills. "It is all we do. We look for water. We look for
- wood. We try to feed the family, and then we begin the process
- all over again," says one woman who has struggled up the embankment
- with a 10-gal. jug.
- </p>
- <p> Back in the orphanage from their market raid, the children live
- a modern version of Lord of the Flies. The school was once home
- to more than 170 children, but last winter the U.N. agreed to
- evacuate them. All those ages three to 14 were taken out by
- convoy and sent to Denmark. The older children say they would
- have gone too, but one of the convoys was attacked and two children
- were killed, so the U.N. stopped the evacuation.
- </p>
- <p> The children left behind are on their own. "We are without parents,
- without love, without anything," says Sanala Beslija, 19. "Our
- lives are stupid things." She fights back tears. Virtually every
- one of the children has been robbed or brutalized by the others
- in the corridors. Several of the older girls say the boys have
- raped them. Most have sealed their rooms to protect themselves
- from the others. During the day they will play together and
- steal together, but in the terror of the night, they often turn
- on each other.
- </p>
- <p> Alen came to the orphanage when he was two, and has been there
- for the past 13 years. He shares his room with three others
- and keeps his stolen food in a night table. The door is always
- locked, and one of the boys always stays inside to make sure
- the purloined food is not taken by someone else. The room is
- bare but for two beds, the night table and three blankets. One
- of the windows is shattered and the other held together by tape.
- Alen calls himself Deutschemark "because that is all I believe
- in," he says. "I will tell you more for Marlboro cigarettes."
- </p>
- <p> Mithat Alagic lives with his wife and seven children in a one-bedroom
- apartment with walls blackened by soot from a wood stove. Alagic,
- 36, was groundskeeper for the Sarajevo football team for 15
- years before the war, but has not worked since the fighting
- began. His family survives on dwindling supplies from the U.N.
- "It just isn't enough," he says. "All we get is some flour,
- rice and oil. The children are sick all the time." He supplements
- the U.N. rations with grasses, mostly broadleaf weeds from surrounding
- hills that look a little like cabbage but, according to the
- children, taste much too bitter. They dip small pieces of bread
- into the unpalatable grass soup, eating only enough to stop
- their gnawing hunger.
- </p>
- <p> Alagic's wife Mirsada, 39, wipes away a tear. She will not meet
- the visitor's eyes because she is mortified at the state of
- their lives. The house isn't clean, the children are always
- hungry, and the last of the food is almost gone. She says she
- has only one wish, which she prays for every day: "I want to
- survive."
- </p>
- <p> The wood stove in the living room provides the only warmth on
- cold days. The seven children huddle together under a thin,
- frayed blanket. Sometimes they play word games, but mostly they
- just sit and listen to a car radio hooked up to an old battery.
- The most popular song of the day is "Soldier of Happiness."
- It goes:
- </p>
- <p> I am a soldier of happiness
- </p>
- <p> I don't like bullets
- </p>
- <p> You can kill my summer
- </p>
- <p> But my spring will survive
- </p>
- <p> If a bullet should shoot me
- </p>
- <p> Please don't cry
- </p>
- <p> Put a smile on your face
- </p>
- <p> It is not too bad when you die for your town.
- </p>
- <p> Dulic Muhamed is commander of one of the Bosnian army's diversion
- units: his 100 or so men make feints at Serb positions, giving
- other troops the chance to surprise the enemy. He says he continues
- to fight "because there is nothing else left to do."
- </p>
- <p> At home for a few hours' rest, Muhamed visits friends at the
- last restaurant still open in the city. He used to own a restaurant
- in Stuttgart, and being in this one helps soothe his nerves,
- even though there is very little food on the tables. Muhamed
- has just buried his 19-year-old son Rihad. "We cannot hold out
- much longer," he says, but laments that there seem to be no
- choices except slow starvation or fighting to the death. "We
- have nothing left," he says. "This is now a city without hope."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-