Portugal · 28 October 2024 · 3 min
Lisbon, Portugal, 28 October 2024 – Center for Peace and Multiethnic Cooperation Mostar today honoured His Highness the Aga Khan with its Peace Connection Award.
The Peace Connection Award was established in 2004 to recognise individuals and organisations that demonstrate a strong commitment to peace, cooperation and understanding worldwide. Previous recipients include Nelson Mandela, Mohamed ElBaradei and António Guterres.
“His Highness’s entire life has been dedicated to a humanitarian mission to preserve the highest values of humanity,” said Safet Orucevic, Director of Center for Peace and Multiethnic Cooperation Mostar and former Mayor of Mostar from 1994-2001. “This Award is a symbolic gesture of our gratitude for your support of our city and people in the most challenging times.”
The Center for Peace and Multiethnic Cooperation also conferred the Mostar Charter of Peace on the Aga Khan Trust for Culture (AKTC) for its efforts in the restoration of Mostar between 1998 and 2004.
Prince Rahim Aga Khan accepted the awards on behalf of his father, His Highness the Aga Khan, at a presentation ceremony at the Diwan of the Ismaili Imamat in Lisbon.
The awards are presented every year to mark the anniversary of the reconstruction of Stari Most, the 16th-century Ottoman bridge that connects the two parts of the city of Mostar in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The bridge is a prime example of Balkan Islamic architecture. Commissioned by Suleiman the Magnificent in 1557, it was designed by Mimar Hayruddin, a student and apprentice of the renowned architect Mimar Sinan.
After it was destroyed during the 1992-1995 Croat-Bosniak war, a coalition formed to rebuild the bridge, comprising UNESCO, the World Bank and the World Monuments Fund, which also partnered with AKTC to oversee the restoration of Mostar's historic city centre.
“AKTC worked on a detailed conservation and development plan for the old city,” explained Prince Rahim. “It undertook conservation of four historic buildings in the neighbourhoods flanking the Old Bridge complex on both sides of the Neretva River, in an effort to re-establish their physical and operational integrity. Together with the Old Bridge, these structures form an integral and essential part of Mostar’s historic townscape, fostering peace, stability and opportunity.”
The project culminated in Mostar’s inclusion on the UNESCO World Heritage list. Today, Stari Most and the city of Mostar are powerful symbols of peace and tolerance, representing the resilience of the communities and their commitment to rebuilding connections across cultural and religious groups.
“Today, more than ever, the world needs that spirit of pluralism and inclusiveness embodied in the reconstruction of the Mostar Bridge, which we are proud to have been a part of,” said Prince Rahim.“The Awards presented to us today are a most welcome encouragement to continue working in favour of peace among communities in different parts of the world that share the unwavering value of pluralism.”