Over the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina (1992-1995), the city of Mostar saw heavy fighting between Croat and Bosniak troops. Nowadays, three decades later, the former front line still remains an invisible scar dividing the city into two halves: Bosniaks to the east, and Croats to the west. Unlike the post-war period, today it is common for its citizens to cross over to the part dominated by the other community. Nonetheless, mutual mistrust persists. Misgivings between communities, fuelled by the nationalist political class, are often instilled in schools. “My brother lives in the western part o…