The vanishing Catholics of Bosnia
  
http://www.catholicregister.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2907&Itemid=849

Written by Erica Zlomislic, Catholic Register Special

Bosnian Bishop Franjo Komarica

Bosnian Bishop Franjo Komarica greets 
parishioners at Toronto’s Our Lady Queen of Croatia parish.
(Photo by Erica Zlomislic)

HAMILTON, Ont. - He’s a Catholic bishop who has 
had his life threatened several times, seen his 
flock forcibly displaced, endured the bombing of 
his churches and the ransacking of sacred objects in his diocese.

Yet none of this has deterred Bishop Franjo 
Komarica (pronounced Franyo Komaritza) from his 
spiritual vocation and recent mission ­ insisting 
that the international community help Catholics 
who were expelled during the 1990s war in 
Bosnia-Hercegovina be permitted to return to their homes.

“We are in a very difficult situation,” says 
Komarica, who was nominated for a Nobel Peace 
Prize in 1994. “Many Catholics want to come home 
but local and state authorities, under the 
permission of the international community, are 
making it impossible for people to return.”

The 63-year-old bishop visited southern Ontario’s 
Bosnian-Croat Catholics from March 15-23 at the 
invitation of Hamilton’s Holy Cross parish pastor Fr. Marijan Mihokovic.

Many of the people the bishop encountered in 
Ontario were from his diocese. He calls it one of 
the most widespread dioceses in the world, 
referring to the parishioners expelled from the 
region who now live across Europe, North America and Australia.

The bishop uses an analogy to explain the situation of Bosnian Catholics.

“It’s like Quebecers coming to Toronto and 
kicking out all the residents while telling them 
this is now our city. Further to this, the 
Torontonians would have no recourse or protection 
under the law or country. It’s unjust.”

Komarica says Bosnian-Croat Catholics are denied 
basic human rights compared to Bosnian-Serbs and 
Bosnian Muslims, and that is a major obstacle to 
their safe return. He says in many cases the 
state refuses to provide traditionally Catholic 
areas such basics as electricity, water and other infrastructure.

“Why are we Catholics not considered equal 
citizens of Bosnia-Hercegovina?” he asks. “Why do 
we not have the right to live like equal citizens 
in our homeland and not like slaves?”

Before the war, the bishop’s diocese of Banja 
Luka in north-western Bosnia had 120,000 
Catholics. Today, there are only 37,797. That 
number continues to dwindle. Where the war forced 
people to flee the violence, a new wave of 
émigrés is fleeing economic and political 
turmoil, leaving a diocese primarily populated with the elderly.

  “The oldest faith tradition in Bosnia, 
Catholicism, will be wiped off the map in a matter of years,” says Komarica.

The bishop’s shrinking diocese is also divided 
politically. It falls between two “states” 
created with the signing of the Dayton Agreement 
in 1995 ­ a Bosnian-Serb entity known as 
“Republika Srpska” and a combined Bosnian-Muslim 
and Bosnian-Croat entity called the “Federation 
of Bosnia-Hercegovina.” Both entities are within 
the Republic of Bosnia-Hercegovina and have 
structures of government and representation in 
which the Bosnian Croat-Catholics are outnumbered and outvoted.

“When Catholics ask elected politicians to help 
them with building schools, bridges, roads and 
infrastructure, the residents are told to go to 
me,” says Komarica.  “I am not the government and 
am pleading for the state to care for its 
citizens regardless of ethnicity or religious affiliation.”

The diocese, with the assistance of the Bishop’s 
Conference of Bosnia-Hercegovina and Caritas, the 
Catholic agency for aid and development, has 
assumed many Catholic projects rejected by the 
state. They have built schools, health clinics, a 
senior’s facility and have provided food, school 
supplies and clothing. The bishop’s residence has 
been transformed into a clinic and ambulance 
service. There is also a plan to start a diocesan radio station.

“I am appealing to Catholics of all cultural 
traditions to please help us promote western 
principles of democracy and equality here,” says 
Komarica. The bishop says he needs both financial and political aid.

Although the Dayton Agreement ended the fighting, 
the bishop says the peace accord rewarded war 
criminals and legitimized ethnic cleansing while 
punishing the victims of the war. Before the 
agreement was signed, Catholic opponents said it 
would legitimize ethnic cleansing perpetrated by 
Serb forces in the 1990s and lay the foundation 
for another war in the region.  One local 
politician recently said to the bishop, “While I 
am alive, not one Catholic will be allowed to return to this region.”

Bosnia-Hercegovina’s pre-war Catholic population 
numbered 830,000; today only 454,074 remain in 
the entire country. The number of historic 
churches, shrines, rectories, cemeteries and 
monasteries destroyed during the war is more than 
1,000. In the bishop’s diocese, eight priests and 
one nun were murdered during the war.

(Zlomislic is a Toronto freelance writer.)


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 From the depths of my misery, I adore Thee and I give Thee thanks.
Thy holy Name was invoked over my cradle to be my profession of faith,
my plan of action,
and the only goal of my earthly pilgrimage.
Grant, O most Holy Trinity, that I may ever be inspired by this faith,
and may carry out this plan with perseverance,
so that, when I have reached the end of my journey upon Earth,
I may be able to fix my gaze upon the blessed splendors of Thy glory.
Amen
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