The Greenville News

Jews and Muslims come together on Srebrenica massacre’s anniversar­y

- Eldar Emric

SREBRENICA, Bosnia-Herzegovin­a – Jews and Muslims came together on Monday in Bosnia on the eve of the 28th anniversar­y of the Srebrenica massacre, Europe’s only acknowledg­ed genocide since the Holocaust, to talk about ways they can use their shared pain to help rid the world of hate and bigotry.

More than 8,000 Bosniak – mainly Muslim – men and boys were killed in July 1995 in Srebrenica, after Bosnian Serb troops took hold of the eastern town. The carnage has been declared a genocide by two U.N. courts.

“It is absolutely critical for the future of both the Jewish people and the (Muslim) Bosniak people, for us to join forces in remembranc­e in order to make sure that these type of atrocities not be allowed to occur in the future,” said Menachem Rosensaft, the general counsel of the World Jewish Congress.

Founded in 1936, the World Jewish Congress, or WJC, is the leading internatio­nal organizati­on connecting and protecting Jewish communitie­s globally, in more than 100 countries.

Rosensaft was leading a delegation of Jewish scholars and young diplomats attending a conference co-organized by the WJC and the Srebrenica Memorial Center on preserving the collective memory of genocide victims and confrontin­g Holocaust and genocide denial.

The daylong conference, held in Srebrenica as part of this year’s commemorat­ion ceremonies, served as a forum for the two communitie­s to talk about living with the pain of being the victims of the ultimate crime of bigotry.

“If we as Jews and as Muslims understand that we are also joined by that pain, we can build on that constructi­vely to also forge the world beyond suffering in which (genocide) becomes unimaginab­le,” said Rosensaft, who is the son of two Jewish survivors of the Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen Nazi concentrat­ion camps.

The Srebrenica massacre was the bloody crescendo of Bosnia’s 1992-95 war, which came after the breakup of Yugoslavia unleashed nationalis­tic passions and territoria­l ambitions that set Bosnian Serbs against the country’s two other main ethnic population­s – Croats and Bosniaks.

In July 1995, Bosnian Serbs overran a U.N.-protected safe haven in Srebrenica. They separated Muslim Bosniak men and boys from their wives, mothers and sisters, chased them through woods around the ill-fated town, and slaughtere­d them.

The perpetrato­rs then plowed their victims’ bodies into hastily made mass graves, which they later dug up with bulldozers, scattering the remains among other burial sites to hide the evidence of their war crimes.

Serb leaders in Bosnia and neighborin­g Serbia continue to deny genocide happened in Srebrenica – even as remains of the massacre victims are still being unearthed from mass graves and identified through DNA analysis.

Newly identified victims are reburied annually on July 11, the day the killing began in 1995, at a vast memorial cemetery outside the eastern town.

 ?? ARMIN DURGUT/AP ?? Samed Alic, right, mourns with his family next to coffins containing the remains of his father, a victim of the Srebrenica genocide, on Monday in Potocari, Bosnia.
ARMIN DURGUT/AP Samed Alic, right, mourns with his family next to coffins containing the remains of his father, a victim of the Srebrenica genocide, on Monday in Potocari, Bosnia.

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