A single event can characterize an entire era: think of D-Day in the Second World War, or Martin Luther King’s “I have a dream…” speech during the American civil rights movement. The same goes for how a single massacre can represent a whole genocide.
Just as Auschwitz instantly leaps to mind for most people thinking of the Holocaust, the Srebrenica massacre was the culmination of the Bosnian War in many ways. One of the best books that I’ve run across about Europe’s largest post-WWII massacre is “Srebrenica: Record of a War Crime” by Jan Willem Honig and Norbert Both.
Honig and Both outline the events which resulted in the deaths of 7 000 unarmed Bosnian Muslim men in mid-July 1995 at the hand of Serb “soldiers.” Although it was written just a year after the massacre and so lacks much of the hindsight of more recent publications, “Srebrenica” is still an excellent resource that glaringly highlights both the ineptitude of the United Nations for providing global security and the weaknesses of the obsolete concept of peacekeeping that allow countless innocents to be butchered before the eyes of the world.
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment