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Kosovo

Alliance workers entered Kosovo after the war there in 1999.

Since 2004, our team has been based in the city of Gjilan, a city of more than 70,000 people in southeastern Kosovo. Just five known believers in Jesus lived there in 2000.

In cooperation with an existing national church partner, our workers have opened a community center aimed at building relationships with Gjilan residents. English classes, computer training, a bookshop, an Internet café, a coffee shop and occupational therapy are among the many services offered to the community. A growing church currently meets at the center.

Macedonia

Our international workers entered Macedonia in partnership with the Evangelical Church of Macedonia in 1999. Efforts today include work with a partner church in Skopje, the capital, as well as in Bitola and other towns throughout the country.

Balkans map

Field Office Information

C&MA Field Entry in 1998

Field Director:
Mailing Address:
c/o Carolyn Gibson Miladin Popovich 12
1000 Skopje, R MACEDONIA
Phone:
011-389-2-3065-156
Email:
balkancma@yahoo.com
Website:

National Church

Partners with the evangelical churches of Bosnia Hercegovina, Kosovo, and Macedonia

Team Initiatives

  • N/A

14 International Workers in Balkans

Photo of Celine Bower Celine Bower

  • 4 years of service

Photo of Brenda Knopp Brenda Knopp

  • 9 years of service

Photo of Mark Mindek Mark Mindek

  • 9 years of service

Photo of Rebecca Mindek Rebecca Mindek

  • 9 years of service

Photo of Lisa Ramsey Lisa Ramsey

  • (CAMA)

Photo of Jeff Singfiel Jeff Singfiel

  • 7 years of service

No Getting Used to It

2006-08-22 12:00:20.0

There she was, lying on her side on a piece of cardboard. In front of her was a small baby’s bottle half-filled with juice and a box for people to drop in money. She must have been about 18 months old. She was sleeping so soundly that I had to look hard to see if she was breathing, knowing that it's likely she was drugged. Nowhere to be found was an adult.

Believe it or not, sights like this are "normal" here in the city and always stir up a plethora of conflicting emotions inside—anger toward a mother who would do this to her child; compassion and heartbreak for the state of need and helplessness in knowing what to do.

I'll never forget one day when the temperature was more than 100 degrees. Two children were "sleeping" on a piece of cardboard in the scorching heat, with no shelter or water, while another begged for money. In other places in town, beggars will carry their drugged infants in their arms (or sometimes dolls—pretending that they're infants) and weave in and out of traffic begging for money. Children also approach cars at stoplights to wash windows with dirty water and rags, whether you want them to or not. They hang on the car windows until they receive a meager contribution.

I was in one car where a child stood in front of the car with hands on the hood, as if to stop us from driving forward. I've also seen the children hang on foreigners’ legs, begging for money while another tries to pick their pockets. Still others will “dumpster dive” regularly to get cardboard and other recyclables or food that the rest of the community has cast off. In many ways, these souls seem like the "cast offs" of the community.

As Alliance workers in the Balkans, this is the situation that we face daily, no matter where we live. Do we walk on by? Do we give money? Do we give food? People say that giving money only perpetuates the problem. Yet Jesus said to give to everyone who asks of us. How can I walk by? How can anyone?

Jesus would talk to them. He would meet them where they're at. He'd touch their hearts because He knows them. He'd offer to them Living Water and the Bread of Life. He'd introduce them to the Father. But I don't even know their language (different ethnicities speak different languages in some areas of the Balkans). When I do give water, juice, or bread, do they know that it's given in Jesus' Name? Is it enough?

These are not questions that I think I'll ever be able to answer. But there was something about that little “sleeping” baby that tore even deeper into my heart than usual. I do help as the Lord leads, but at times like the other day, it's just so hard to take it in. It's something that I'll never get used to,though, perish the day that I do.

By an Alliance worker in the Balkans

Demographics

Population
Bosnia Hercegovina Population--4,025,476 Infant mortality rate--21.1/1,000 Life expectancy--72.8 Kosovo Population--2,200,000 Macedonia Population--2,045,262 Infant mortality rate--10.1/1,000 Life expectancy--73.7
Capital City
Bosnia Hercegovina: Sarajevo (581,500) Kosovo: Pristina (500,000) Macedonia: Skopje (587,300) pop.
Geography
Bosnia Hercegovina About half the size of Kentucky, Bosnia Hercegovina (19,741 sq. mi.) consists of mountains covered with thick forests in the north and rugged, flat farmland in the south. Kosovo About the size of Maryland, Kosovo (4,203 sq. mi.) has lowlands in the central area around the capital, with mountains elsewhere. Macedonia Slightly smaller than Vermont, Macedonia (9,928 sq. mi.) is a mountainous country with small basins of agricultural land.
Languages
Bosnia Hercegovina Bosnian, Croatian, Serbian Kosovo Albanian, Serbian Macedonia Macedonian, Albanian, Turkish, Serbo-Croatian
Ethnicity/Race
Bosnia Hercegovina Bosniak--48%; Serb--37.1%; Croat--14.3%; other--0.6% Kosovo Albanian--88%; Serbs--7%; other--5% Macedonia Macedonian--64.2%; Albanian--25.2%; Turkish--3.8%; Gypsy--2.7%; Serb--1.8%; other--2.3%
Economy
Bosnia Hercegovina Per capita income--$6,500 Inflation--1.1% Unemployment--44% Macedonia Per capita income--$7,100 Inflation--0.4% Unemployment--37.7%
Government/Political Climate
Bosnia Hercegovina Emerging federal democratic republic. Bosnia Hercegovina’s declaration of sovereignty in 1991 was followed by a declaration of independence from the former Yugoslavia. Bosnian Serbs responded with armed resistance aimed at partitioning the republic along ethnic lines. In 1995 the warring parties signed a peace agreement that ended three years of civil strife. Macedonia Parliamentary democracy; gained independence from Yugoslavia in 1991.The undetermined status of neighboring Kosovo, implementation of the Framework Agreement--which ended the 2001 ethnic Albanian armed insurgency--and a weak economy continue to be challenges.
Religion
Bosnia Hercegovina Muslim--40%; Orthodox--31%; Roman Catholic--14%; other--14% Macedonia Macedonian Orthodox--70%; Muslim--29%; other--1%

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