Springtime in the city of Sarajevo has seen an average of 10-13 deaths per day due to the Covid-19 virus. In a city of 344,000, healthcare workers and residents alike feel under attack. The population hasn’t witnessed a loss of life like this since it was under siege during the Bosnian War in the 1990s when 11,000 people died in Sarajevo alone. City cemeteries now have trouble keeping up with daily burials of those who have succumbed to Covid-19.
This is the deadliest period of the pandemic so far in Sarajevo, which is the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina, a country that became an independent republic after the Bosnian War in 1995. The nation’s constitution requires a three-member Presidency to represent each major ethnic group in the region: Eastern Orthodox Serbs, Bosnian Muslims and Catholic Croats. While the limitation of power for each ethnic group is intended to keep peace amongst them, many say it has made it difficult for the country to pursue aggressive measures in fighting Covid. The complicated structure has made it difficult to obtain vaccines and ventilators and residents have taken their frustrations to the streets in protest, even as their Balkan neighbors Serbia and Croatia have rolled out effective vaccine programs.
Pray for the residents, healthcare workers, and government officials in Sarajevo, as they long for an end to the pandemic. Pray for the Christian church, that it would be a bright light in dark times. Pray for the local Christians and the Pioneers there to boldly share the love and security of Jesus Christ in the midst of so much suffering and uncertainty.