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Oral history interview with Hatidza Polovina, 2019 January 7

Overview of the Collection

Interviewee
Polovina, Hatidza, 1974-
Title
Oral history interview with Hatidza Polovina
Dates
2019 January 7
Quantity
1.16 gigabytes, (2 audio files (WAV, 1 hr., 48 min., 16 sec.))
Collection Number
SR 12319
Summary
Oral history interview with Hatidza Polovina conducted by Elizabeth Mehren and Sankar Raman on January 7, 2019, for The Immigrant Story. Polovina discusses her marriage to Abdulah Polovina and her experiences as a Muslim in Bosnia during the Yugoslav Wars.
Repository
Oregon Historical Society Research Library
1200 SW Park Avenue
Portland, OR
97205
Telephone: 503-306-5240
Fax: 503-219-2040
libreference@ohs.org
Access Restrictions

Collection is open for research.

Languages
English
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Biographical Note

Hatidza Polovina was born in Divic, Bosnia, in 1974. She attended a madrassa in Sarajevo. The Muslim men in her village were forcibly removed by the Bosnian Serb Army of Republika Srpska during the Yugoslav Wars. Her father and older brother were tortured and killed; their bodies were identified in a mass grave in Srebrenica in 2007. After her father and brother were taken, her remaining family fled to Austria, where her younger brother had been living for several years. While in Austria, she worked with an organization to help refugees. In the midst of war in 1994, she returned to Sarajevo to marry Abdulah Polovina. The couple would later have five children. The Polovina family emigrated to the United States in 2001, and they settled in Seattle, Washington. In 2015, the family relocated to Portland, Oregon.

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Content Description

This oral history interview with Hatidza Polovina was conducted by Elizabeth Mehren and Sankar Raman on January 7, 2019. The interview was recorded for The Immigrant Story, an organization that documents and archives the stories of immigrants and refugees in the United States. Abdulah Polovina was also present.

In this interview, Hatzida Polovina discusses her marriage to Abdulah Polovina and her experiences as a Muslim in Bosnia during the Yugoslav Wars. She talks about her early life in Bosnia, including her education, and practicing Islam in a communist country. She describes the atrocities committed against Bosnian Muslims during the war, including her father and older brother, and talks about escaping to and living in Austria. She then describes returning to Sarajevo to marry Abdulah Polovina, and talks about making a life in the middle of a war zone. She speaks about her Islamic faith. She then talks about emigrating to the United States and about adjusting to life in Seattle, Washington, and in Portland, Oregon. Polovina and Mehren discuss the reasons behind the many genocides around the world in recent decades. She speaks further about her education at a madrassa in Sarajevo. Polovina closes the interview by talking about social conditions in Bosnia at the time of the interview.

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Use of the Collection

Preferred Citation

Oral history interview with Hatidza Polovina, by Elizabeth Mehren and Sankar Raman, SR 12319, Oregon Historical Society Research Library.

Restrictions on Use

Joint copyright for this interview is held by the Oregon Historical Society and The Immigrant Story. Use is allowed according to the following statement: In Copyright – Educational Use Permitted, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/

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Administrative Information

Acquisition Information

Gift of The Immigrant Story, June 2021 (RL2021-057).

Preservation Note

Access to audio recording is provided online in OHS Digital Collections.

Related Materials

Oral history interview with Abdula Polovina, by Elizabeth Mehren and Sankar Raman, SR 12318, Oregon Historical Society Research Library.

Bibliography

An article about Hatidza Polovina, "Love in the Midst of Mayhem" by Elizabeth Mehren, was based on this interview and published on The Immigrant Story website at https://theimmigrantstory.org/love/.

Names and SubjectsReturn to Top

Subject Terms

  • Bosnian Americans--Oregon
  • Muslims--Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Yugoslav War, 1991-1995--Atrocities--Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Yugoslav War, 1991-1995--Personal narratives, Bosnian

Personal Names

  • Polovina, Abdulah, 1973-
  • Polovina, Hatidza, 1974-

Form or Genre Terms

  • interviews
  • oral histories (literary works)

Other Creators

  • Personal Names

    • Mehren, Elizabeth (interviewer)
    • Raman, Sankar (interviewer)

    Corporate Names

    • The Immigrant Story (Hillsboro, Or.)
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