Tuesday, February 14, 2012


Serbia

Interview: Time For Serbs To Say 'We Knew What Happened' On Bosnian War Crimes

Author and sociology professor Janja Bec-Neumann (Courtesy Photo)

Serbia holds parliamentary elections on May 11 that are touted as crucial in determining the future of a country still deeply divided between European and nationalist, pro-Russian ambitions. On the eve of that vote, Gordana Knezevic, director of RFE/RL's South Slavic and Albanian Languages Service, speaks with Janja Bec-Neumann, a rare voice in Serbia calling for recognition that a "genocide" was perpetrated against Muslims in the 1992-95 Bosnian war. Bec-Neumann, who was nominated for the 2005 Nobel Peace Prize, teaches a university course about the massacres and is the author of a book, "Darkness at Noon: War Crimes, Genocide, and Memory."

TEXT SIZE - +

RFE/RL: What is your message to the students you teach and to readers of your book?


Bec: What is important for me -- and I think it's important for others as well -- is that we now have, after the wars, between 100 and 200 private and state universities in the region, and nobody has been teaching that course [on topics such as war crimes and genocide]. I'm the first one. I'm a woman, and I'm a woman from a patriarchal, very macho society; and it's not easy. The book "Darkness at Noon" is a document about these five years struggling, fighting, enjoying, crying, and all these things together.


RFE/RL: Could you please explain to whom your book is dedicated?


Bec: My book is dedicated to my child, Sarah Tahirovic. I'm not her biological mother; my husband and I met her in 1993 in a [Bosnian] refugee camp in Slovenia. She was 18 years old when we met her and she was looking after 10 younger children, aged 6 to 12. She became, as we called her, our war child. After the war, she went back to Bosnia, where she became an excellent student. She died on June 1, 2006. She became ill and it was all over within two days. After a few months, I said, "OK, Sarah, I will write this book."


RFE/RL: Most Serbs don't seem to be troubled by the fact that Vojislav Seselj, an indicted war criminal, is now a kingmaker in Serbia. A number of media reports said it was Seselj who masterminded the formation of a nationalist election bloc between the parties of Vojislav Kostunica and Tomislav Nikolic. Does that worry you?


Bec: I think it's sick to idolize someone like him, an indicted war criminal -- and there's evidence he committed very grave war crimes. He's not from Serbia, by the way, he's from Sarajevo and Herzegovina. It's absolutely disgusting.


RFE/RL: You've said that denying genocide is the last stage of genocide. Would you say that Serbia is currently in that last stage of genocide? What comes next?


Bec: Turkey's official policy is that the genocide against Armenians never took place. The vast majority of people say that people always kill each other during wars. Serbia, too, has the option of continuing to lie [and] deny. And that's not good, because the whole region is clearly paralyzed by this denial. But there's also still hope, a very small hope, that Serbia will depart from this position and pronounce the words, "We knew what happened." The next step would be, "We are ashamed," and, finally, "We are very sorry."


I agree with Marlene Dietrich who, when asked after World War II whether she was aware of what had happened in Germany during the Holocaust, said that all those who wanted to know knew. I don't know in which direction things will evolve. But nothing is going to happen spontaneously, because if we accept this silence and denial, we accept our collective guilt -- and thereby grant amnesty to the real perpetrators.

You Might Also Like

The Truth-Teller: Natasa Kandic, Urging Serbs To Face The Past

More than a decade has passed since the end of the Balkan wars, where international observers say ethnic Serb fighters were responsible for the bulk of atrocities in the region, particularly Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo. But despite the handover of major war-crimes suspects like Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic, Belgrade remains reluctant to face the sins of the past. Lawyer Natasa Kandic has built an unpopular and often dangerous career out of pushing her country to face the truth about its history. More

In Bosnia-Herzegovina, One Family, Three Armies, And A Lost Generation

Zoran Laketa knows what it's like to fire a gun and wonder if the soldier on the other side of the front line just might be his brother. Or his father. More

Jolie Earns Serbian Scorn For War Film

She’s known internationally as one of Hollywood’s highest-paid actresses; she’s won praise from governments and NGOs across the globe for her work as a goodwill ambassador for the United Nations; and she’s often reckoned to be the world’s most beautiful woman. But Angelina Jolie has been going by a few other titles lately in the Balkans nation of Serbia, where prominent media outlets have taken to describing her as an American propagandist and all-around "jerk." More

Most Popular

               
 
 
 
 
Being Discussed Now

U.S. Hearing On Balochistan Raises Hackles, Awareness In Pakistan

Latest Comment (6 total)

Saleem: If successive Pakistani governments have failed to deal with the 'Balochistan problem' then ... More

UN Rights Chief Scathing On Syria

Latest Comment (2 total)

Chechen: "Moscow also has had a deal since 1971 with Syria "
Sorry that was ... More

U.K. Releases Radical Cleric On Bail

Latest Comment (1 total)

Martin : Modern Europe has deteriorated to such grotesque that its end has to be ... More