Amica
Well-Known Member
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Hi/salaam--
Amos, I think you are right. It is extremely offensive to have rewarded the war crimes by establishing the "Republic of Serbs" within Bosnia & Herzegovina.
Radarmark, if you are thinking about numbers, then perhaps yes it is over the top to compare Serb war atrocities and Nazis. After all, the Nazis murdered 6 million Jews (among millions of others non-Jews) which would be equal to all 4 million people living in Bosnia and Herzegovina, plus half of that. However, the tactics the Serbs used in the recent war were the same:
1) extermination of whole families, not just in Srebrenica but also in other towns (Prijedor, Foca, Kozarac, Bijeljina, etc.--google and see).
2) Mass rape--regardless of who the people were (children, women, men).
3) Destruction of religious objects. In my hometown of Banja Luka (where there we no active war activities) all 16 mosques were either damaged or completely destroyed.
4) Ethnic cleansing--there were 500,000 non-Serb people (Muslims, Catholics, Jews, Roma) living on the territory of today's RS. Today, only 2% of that population has returned to their homes.
5) Discrimination--non Serbs were forbidden to work during the war in areas under Serb control. To this day, non Serbs very rarely are able to find employment in the region. Only political positions that really hold no power at all. And even that is due to European Union's pressure.
According to unofficial statistics, there are at least 20,000 people still considered missing. 17 years after the war stopped, people are still unearthing mass graves. Reported are 25,000 cases of rapes. Rape camps, both for male and female victims, were not uncommon.
Rabbi Schneier of New York City seemed to have understand what people of Bosnia have suffered. He actually came and visited Srebrenica this past Wednesday, 7/11/2012. Turns out, he is a good friend of Bosnia's grand mufti Ceric. Listening to his speech, I felt like there was someone who actually knows what Bosnian people went through. The rabbi himself lost all his family in Holocaust. When he said that he understood the pain of the survivors, people looked at him. And one could tell that there is a mutual understanding among them. Among Srebrenica survivors there are women who lost everyone in their family: husbands, sons, brothers, fathers, etc.
Amos, I think you are right. It is extremely offensive to have rewarded the war crimes by establishing the "Republic of Serbs" within Bosnia & Herzegovina.
Radarmark, if you are thinking about numbers, then perhaps yes it is over the top to compare Serb war atrocities and Nazis. After all, the Nazis murdered 6 million Jews (among millions of others non-Jews) which would be equal to all 4 million people living in Bosnia and Herzegovina, plus half of that. However, the tactics the Serbs used in the recent war were the same:
1) extermination of whole families, not just in Srebrenica but also in other towns (Prijedor, Foca, Kozarac, Bijeljina, etc.--google and see).
2) Mass rape--regardless of who the people were (children, women, men).
3) Destruction of religious objects. In my hometown of Banja Luka (where there we no active war activities) all 16 mosques were either damaged or completely destroyed.
4) Ethnic cleansing--there were 500,000 non-Serb people (Muslims, Catholics, Jews, Roma) living on the territory of today's RS. Today, only 2% of that population has returned to their homes.
5) Discrimination--non Serbs were forbidden to work during the war in areas under Serb control. To this day, non Serbs very rarely are able to find employment in the region. Only political positions that really hold no power at all. And even that is due to European Union's pressure.
According to unofficial statistics, there are at least 20,000 people still considered missing. 17 years after the war stopped, people are still unearthing mass graves. Reported are 25,000 cases of rapes. Rape camps, both for male and female victims, were not uncommon.
Rabbi Schneier of New York City seemed to have understand what people of Bosnia have suffered. He actually came and visited Srebrenica this past Wednesday, 7/11/2012. Turns out, he is a good friend of Bosnia's grand mufti Ceric. Listening to his speech, I felt like there was someone who actually knows what Bosnian people went through. The rabbi himself lost all his family in Holocaust. When he said that he understood the pain of the survivors, people looked at him. And one could tell that there is a mutual understanding among them. Among Srebrenica survivors there are women who lost everyone in their family: husbands, sons, brothers, fathers, etc.