The Bosnian Student Project
10-year Reunion
By Doug Hostetter
In the fall of 1993, the height of the
war in Bosnia, the FOR began the Bosnian Student Project in
cooperation with the Jerrahi
Order of America, a Sufi Muslim relief and service organization
with headquarters in Chestnut Ridge, NY. The Bosnian Student
Project (BSP) was a nonviolent response to the genocide which
was perpetrated by Serbian and Croatian "Christians" against
Bosnian "Muslims" and others who were struggling for
a pluralistic, multicultural Bosnia. The Project challenged FOR
Local Groups as well as other Jews, Christians and Muslims in
the US to open their homes and schools to Muslim, mixed ethnic
and other Bosnian students unable to continue their education
due to "ethnic cleansing" or the war. By the end of
the Bosnian and Kosovar wars, the BSP had helped more than 160
students escape from the war zone and continue their education
in the US. The students were mostly Bosnian, but also included
a hand-full of Kosovar Albanian Muslims, and one Serb military
resistor who, when called up for military service in Kosovo,
escaped to Montenegro to accept a scholarship with the Bosnian
Student Project.

The Bosnian Student Project was the inspiration
and the logistical framework for bringing together qualified
Bosnian students in
need of an education with FOR Local Groups, host families, high
schools, colleges and universities willing to help these students.
Once a student was placed, the local network took on the responsibility
for the ongoing care of that student. As the wars in Bosnia and
Kosovo ended, the FOR closed the Bosnian Student Project office
in Nyack. Students continued their education, often with the
support of the FOR Local Groups, host families and other support
communities which had originally sponsored the student’s
coming to the US.
A few of the BSP students are still enrolled in graduate or
post graduate academic programs, but most have finished their
education and scattered. Some returned to their families in Bosnia
while others joined their families who had resettled in the US
after coming as refugees during the war. Other students got jobs
in the US, Bosnia, Europe or Asia. Several students reminded
me that this year was the 10th anniversary of the
beginning of the Bosnian Student Project, and asked if FOR could
organize a reunion for BSP students still in the US.
Although BSP students were now scattered
across the US and around the world, we used the network of
several dozen former students
and organizers with whom we were still in touch to get out the
word that a Bosnian Student Project reunion was happening April
9 – 11, 2004 at the FOR in Nyack, NY.
It was an exciting gathering of former
students, new spouses, organizers, host families and friends.
Several dozen students
now living in Bosnia, Europe or elsewhere sent letters of greetings
and updates on their lives and work, sometimes accompanied by
pictures of spouses and children. We shared old photo albums
and scrap books of clippings from the years of the project, 1993 – 1997.
Together we watched the three videos which were done on the Bosnian
Student Project as well as some early home-video of BSP students
who were hosted by Jerrahi Order families during a 1993 New Years
Eve celebration. Shaykh Tosun Bayrak, who first envisioned the
Bosnian Student Project, invited everyone to the mosque for dinner
Saturday night. For the many BSP students who attended HS in
Rockland County during the war, the mosque Saturday night dinner
was the one time during the week when they could always
count on finding at least a half-dozen other Bosnians.

One of the highlights of the reunion
was the several-hour informal meeting with Ambassador Mirza
Kusljugic, the Bosnian Ambassador
to the United Nations. Ambassador Kusljugic praised the students
for their academic and professional achievement, and thanked
the FOR for initiating the Bosnians Student Project which enabled
so many talented students to continue an education which had
been cut short by the Bosnian War. He pointed out to the students
that they are a unique "Bridge Generation" who carry
in their memories the pain of the war, but more importantly,
the knowledge of pre-war Bosnia. Students in the university in
Bosnia today have only childhood
memories of the war and pre-war
Bosnia, and the students who follow will have no personal roots to those important events which have shaped
today's Bosnia. Because
of the years spent in academic work in this country, BSP graduates are actually a double "bridge generation" as they also carry in themselves
the knowledge and deep understanding of both Bosnia and the United
States.
Ambassador Kusljugic acknowledged that Bosnia was not yet ready
or able to offer good jobs to students who had risen to the top
of their academic fields and chosen professions. Rather than
longing for jobs that do not yet exist in Bosnia, the Ambassador
offered to facilitate contact between BSP graduates and professionals
in their fields in Bosnia. These contacts and exchange visits
between Bosnian professionals in the US and their counterparts
in Bosnia could strengthen both groups. It would be a way for
Bosnian/Americans to keep in touch with their families, friends
and homeland while contributing to knowledge and professional
development of their counterparts back home.
Almost every participant at the reunion
took some time during the weekend to express to me their thanks
to the FOR for reaching
out to them during the dark days of the War in Bosnia and giving
them the opportunity to continue their education. Early
in the war a mother of two of the BSP students wrote
me, "When the entire world turned its back on the Bosnian
people, the Bosnian Student Project reached out and loved my
children."
Email: DougHostetter@earthlink.net