Detailed review by fizzytom
fizzytom
Gateshead, United Kingdom95%
In spite of many months of fierce attack plucky Sarajevo managed to defend itself, thanks mainly to an 800 metre tunnel that connected the city with "Free Bosnia".
How the exact location of the tunnel was not discovered by the Serbs is a miracle. It runs under Sarajevo Airport which, although it was designated a neutral zone, was often closed due to heavy shelling. The Serbs knew roughly where the tunnel was but were never able to pinpoint it exactly. The tunnel was no secret; everyone knew of its existence. Food, fuel, medical supplies and arms: all were brought through the tunnel.. Without it Sarajevo would have fallen. The tunnel was the only way the Bosnian defence forces based in the city could get round the arms embargo. It was the Bosnian capital’s only lifeline.
You might well ask why the tunnel was not used to evacuate the city, at least to free civilians who weren’t actively involved in the defence of the city. Quite simply, the tunnel was a useful propaganda tool. The government recognised that only by highlighting the plight of the Bosnian people trapped inside the besieged city could they hope to win the support of the international community and so they placed a heavy restriction on the number of people allowed to leave. Getting to use the tunnel was almost impossible; you needed written permission and obtaining it was not only a slow process but a dangerous one too as you’d have to venture outside of your house and make your way (usually under fire) to offices in the city centre to make your request. It was not unsual for people to pay quite large sums of money to buy a ticket through the tunnel.
A steady stream of aid made its way into Sarajevo through the tunnel on the backs of soldiers and other volunteers. At times the tunnel was knee deep in water and the volunteers would bump their heads on the beams of the low roof. As I walked, bent over, through the 20 metres or so that still exist, I couldn’t help but feel deep admiration for those people who trudged the whole way time and again, knowing that without these goods, the suffering of Sarajevans would be even greater.
The house under which the city entrance of the tunnel sits is now
a museum. It’s in a small village on the edge of the city, just within sight of the airport.
You can visit the museum independently and can access it using public transport in combination with a short walk. It’s easier to take a taxi from the centre. We visited as part of an organised tour from the Tourist Information Office.This turned out to be a good way of visiting the tunnel museum because, while travelling there, our guide identified all the landmarks we passed which put into context the dangers of getting to and from the site of the tunnel.
We parked up opposite the house and climbed out of the minibus. In spite of the proximity of the airport it’s a very quiet area; if you have ever been to Auschwitz or the battlefields of northern France you might know the strange feeling that you get: peaceful but uneasy, idyllic yet quite horrifying at the same time. It’s hard to put into words but the feeling is quite palpable. The house is like many of the houses in the area but while those have largely been repaired and re-rendered, this one has not so it’s pock-marked façade looks quite disturbing.
First we went into a small room where we watched two videos; one about the tunnel, from construction to use, and the other a montage of clips from the siege of the city. Neither were narrated, they didn’t need to be: the horror was only too easy to comprehend. Afterwards we got some time to wander around the exhibits ourselves before our guide came and explained more about them. There were examples of the aid packs that were sent by the International Red Cross; they were originally ration packs for soldiers but Sarajevans were now the recipients and had to make do with these meagre rations every now and again. Other food stuffs did come through the tunnel but often ended up in the hands of black marketeers and were sold at the central market to those who could afford it. To afford it many people sold family heirlooms but to sell them they had to risk their lives to get to the market. This was the ONLY place in the city you could buy and sell things, local markets no longer operated. In two of the bloodiest events of the war the market was shelled on two occasions resulting in the loss of a total of 105 lives (but many more injuries); many of those who died on that day had already managed to avoid death on Sniper Alley on their way to market.
Other exhibits included a chair built to be put on the rails in the tunnel to enable Izetbegovic (who was wheelchair bound) to pass through the tunnel, army bergens filled with weights to give you an idea of what the volunteers carried through the tunnel (women would carry one such bag, men carried one on their back and one in front of them around their neck). One one wall of the main exhibition space are photographs of international statesmen and celebrities who have visited the tunnel museum, pictured with members of the Kolar family and handwritten notes of appreciation and support. The museum does not have official status and receives no money towards its running costs from either the local or national government so it relies on admission charges, donations and international press coverage to encourage more visitors to come.
The main aspect of a visit is experiencing what it’s like down in the tunnel. Only a short section can be walked (the remainder of the tunnel collapsed a few years ago) but it’s enough to know that it’s narrow and the roof is low. Although the tunnel was dry it smelled very earthy and I can imagine it would become quite overpowering after a while. I read an account that said sometimes it could take almost two hours to get through the tunnel when carrying two packs and wading through a foot of water, weak with hunger and exhaustion.
When we had passed through the section of tunnel we gathered in the garden around a map that showed how Sarajevo was surrounded and how the tunnel joined the city with Free Bosnia. Our guide's English wasn’t as good as other people I’d met in town but he conveyed a sense of the horrors of the war and the reality for those working the tunnel quite brilliantly.
Before we left we were given a few minutes to look at part of the exhibition in the space around the entrance to the tunnel. Here there were lists of the names of the people who had died as a result of the siege; about eleven thousand people in total, many of them civilians,and approximately 1,500 of them children. There were a few things to buy but nobody seemed inclined to take home "souvenirs".
Sarajevo is a wonderfully scenic city, packed full of fascinating sights and I wouldn’t really say that the Tunnel Museum is one of them. I found it very interesting but the Bosnian War is a subject I’m very interested in. If you get talking to locals in Sarajevo you will find plenty of people willing to talk about their experiences of the war and you can learn just as much about the siege of Sarajevo from them as you can from visiting the museum. On the other hand, what the Kolar family is trying to do is very important and the more people that visit the museum, the more likely the project is to secure the funding it needs to keep it open so that future generations can learn what happened in Sarajevo.
Admission - 5KM (Approximately £2.40 in Sept 2009)
Tours through the Tourist Information Office leave the city at 11.00am and 2.00pm and run daily so long as there are at least three customers. The cost is 12 Euro per person which includes admission to the museum.
The museum is open daily between 9.00 am and 5.00pm, but may be open longer into the evening in summer; check with the Tourist Information Office in the city centre.
Tunel Dobrinja- Butmir9