In Sarajevo there are several bread pantries.  Bread of St. Anthony- Kruh Sv. Ante is one of these soup kitchens.  Servicing roughly 1000 people per day, it is not the largest kitchen, but it nevertheless plays a key role in the city.  One bread pantry services roughly 3000 individuals, ensuring they have food and clean water.  Most do not serve as overnight venues, like many homeless shelters in the U.S.  The soup kitchens are less conspicuous and as a result, the poverty does not stand out in the same way it does in the States.  
Homeless
 
 
 
This woman is sitting diagonally from the Holiday Inn munching on a bit of bread from one of the local soup kitchens.  As Majo Dizdar points out, during the war information about events in Sarajevo were broadcast from the Holiday Inn.  This may be one reason that it was one of the less shelled buildings in the city.
 
In the city, many of the homeless inhabit cars and corners of parks.  They reside in whatever location they can during the night, and then go out in the day foraging for food and things to sell.  Many of the most impoverished families are not those seen on the street corners begging.  Some send the children out to pan-handle but, for the most part, the city does a good job of caring for the less fortunate.