Some life stories cannot fit within the borders of one country. Dr. Mohammad Mosleh’s story is one of them. He was born in Palestine and gained professional experience in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Today, he does not choose which country he loves more, as both are equally part of him.
He arrived in Tuzla as a young medical student, far from his family, language, and everything familiar. He came with dreams and fears shaped by years in unfamiliar surroundings. He learned a new language, adapted to a different system, and gradually paved the way to the medical profession.
Today, as a doctor in Zenica, he has years of experience and hard work behind him, but also a belief that a man is worth as much as he is ready to help someone else. That is why his professional path is not only a story about medicine, but also about persistence, sacrifice, and belief that effort finds its purpose in the end.
Although he has achieved a lot, he is not hiding that he is still waiting for a specialization opportunity. He is not talking about it with a sour taste in his mouth, but with the patience he acquired during his student days. He believes that knowledge has no limits and that every other step is an opportunity to help people.
But his life is not defined solely by his degree and white coats. It is marked by a feeling of belonging, which he found in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Friendships support, and hospitality he experienced here left an indelible mark.
At the same time, Palestine remains his first home, a place he returns to in his thoughts. This is why he is deeply moved by the support between the two nations. He said he will never forget moments when he saw the Palestinian flags on the streets of Bosnia and Herzegovina, or scenes from Palestine where symbols of Bosnia and Herzegovina are found among the ruins.
In a time of divisions and increasingly visible differences, Mosleh’s story is a reminder that humanity and solidarity are often more powerful than geography, politics, and borders. It is a reminder that one can belong to two places without feeling like a stranger.
Maybe because his life story is not just a story about a Palestinian doctor in Bosnia and Herzegovina, but gratitude, belonging, and bridges that appear among people when they recognize a human in one another, Federalna writes.
