Funding dispute shuts 124-year-old museum

Funding dispute shuts 124-year-old museum

SARAJEVO - Reuters

The museum has been closed since authorities could not agree on how to fund it. REUTERS photo

Bosnia’s 124-year-old National Museum sealed its doors on Oct. 4 because the divided country’s authorities could not agree on how to fund it, and hundreds of people gathered in support of what they see as a cultural symbol.

The museum complex in the center of the Bosnian capital has outlived the collapse of Austro-Hungarian empire, two world wars and the break-up of Yugoslavia.

But it has been scraping by on scarce government handouts since the Balkan country’s 1992-95 war ended, splitting Bosnia into two autonomous, rival regions. “Disgrace, disgrace,” shouted students who gathered in front of the museum, after its general manager Adnan Busuladzic symbolically nailed two wooden boards reading “Closed!” across its monumental gates.

Bosnia’s weak central government does not include a culture ministry that would take care of the institutions treasuring the country’s rich and centuries-old heritage, while the regions say that they are outside their respective authorities.

“We are seeking an institutional solution for the museum which can no longer stay open after its staff have received no wages and benefits for a year,” Busuladzic said, as several activists symbolically chained themselves to a pole inside the museum and pledged to remain there until it re-opens.

Museum needs $900,000


The 1995 Dayton peace deal that ended the Bosnian war has failed to provide clear direction about the authority over seven major cultural institutions which contain the shared heritage of Bosnian Serbs, Bosniaks and Croats. Each year, they have to apply for a $2 million grant from the central government, which is then shared among 20 museums, galleries and other institutions.

The National Museum, which opened in 1888 under the Austro-Hungarian empire, alone needs more than $900,000 to function.