By MATTHEW BRUNWASSER
VITEZ, BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA — Every morning at the local grade school formerly known as Brotherhood and Unity, the Catholic Croat children head to the right, and the Bosnian Muslims head to the left.
The Croats study in the school’s cheerful looking main building, which was recently renovated. The Muslims attend class in the crumbling, dingy annex next door.
The school ended up behind the Croat line during the 1992-95 war that killed some 100,000 people. It has remained there ever since. Continue reading “Bosniaks and Croats, Divided in Class and at Play”