Bosnia opens library housing ancient Islamic manuscripts
The oldest item in the library is an Arabic-language handwritten manuscript dating to 1106
Bosnia opened Wednesday a new library to house its ancient Islamic manuscripts, which were saved from destruction during the 1992-1995 war by residents who hid them in eight different locations.
The Gazi Husrev-beg library houses more than 100,000 items, the oldest being an Arabic-language handwritten manuscript dating to 1106.
During the 1990s inter-ethnic war in Bosnia and siege of Sarajevo, the collection had been hidden, with 500 of the most valuable manuscripts and books locked up in a bank vault.
To eliminate the threat that the items could one day be lost, “all manuscripts are digitized and copies are saved at three different places around the world,” said Ahmed Alibasic, who chairs the library’s management board.
About 60 percent of the collection is in Arabic while 30 percent is in Turkish.
“The knowledge is a gift from God and our task is to transfer it,” Bosnia's grand mufti Husein Kavazovic said at an official opening ceremony, attended also by Qatar's Minister for Religion and Islamic affairs Ghaith Bin Mubarak Al-Kuwari.
Qatar donated some $8.8 million (6.5m euros) towards the construction of the library, which is named after one of Sarajevo’s founders who had constructed the first library in the Bosnian capital in 1537.
Bosnia was part of the Ottoman Empire from 1463 to 1878 and more than 40 percent of its 3.8 million inhabitants are Muslims.
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