>>213764838
As long as most Bosnians lived in rural areas, there were generally no relations, orthodox people sticked to other orthodox people, muslims to muslims. I think it's comparable to how catholic/protestant Hungarians and orthodox Romanians "coexisted" in Transylvania - generally they formed separate communities and didn't mix with each other too much.
"Relations" only appeared during mass migration to cities in the socialist era but again, it was more forced than something anyone genuinely wanted, and still it was more like interactions than deep relations - interfaith marriages were still rather rare, because of a huge cultural difference.
But truth is, these relations were mostly on the individual level, there was hardly any general "Serb opinion on Muslims" or "Muslim opinion on Serbs", it was more nuanced and depending on individual cases. These generalizations only appeared once Yugoslavia started to collapse.