Chapter 3 Civilizing the Slavic Muslims of Bosnia-Herzegovina
Women in Bosnia and Herzegovina - Wikipedia
A thirty-six year old woman from Sarajevo, who has two children from her first marriage, told BIRN about how she married an Arab, to become his second wife. She says her new husband, who is 51, originally came to Bosnia for business, to open a small company in Sarajevo. They met, the woman recalls, when he came to her place of work. She says they joked and she noticed him looking at her. After a while, a mutual friend who is already married to an Arab introduced them.
By Sarah A. Once upon a time, in a land far, far away, there stood emerald peaks woven with crystalline rivers, hillsides garlanded with stone villages, and canyons joined by lofty bridges arcing toward the heavens. This enchanting realm even had a suitably enchanting name: Bosnia and Herzegovina, as melodious as Narnia, Utopia or Shangri-La, worlds that exist in the imagination, not on maps.
According to International Fund for Agricultural Development IFAD , women of Bosnia and Herzegovina have been affected by three types of transition after the Bosnian War : the "transition from war to peace", economic transition, and political transition. Bosnia and Herzegovina declared sovereignty in and independence from the former SFR Yugoslavia in Today Bosnia and Herzegovina is a multi-ethnic and multi-religious society - the population consists of: Bosniaks