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Travesties
in the Balkans:
By Aleksandra Prodanovic Imprint (University of Waterloo), October 1, 1999 In 1991, my family and I fled our hometown of In another city, in a new school, we students had to write about our homeland. My essay made my teacher cry. I wished I could cry too. In 1993, my friend from In 1994, my aunt was killed. Kosovo Albanians slaughtered most of the
elderly Serbian men and women from her village in Slavonija ( In 1995, the Croatian offensive with air support from NATO, left 200,000 to 250,000 Serbs homeless in a just couple of days. It also left 15,000 of them dead, mostly children, women and the elderly. My relatives, too old to flee, were killed in their houses. My best friend here in My neighbour from For the past seven years, my family in My Internet pal from Kosovo recently fled his home, just like 180,000 other Serbs. During the NATO bombing campaign, Kosovo Liberation Army fighters killed his uncle. After the bombing, many of his relatives were also killed or forced to leave Kosovo even though they were under NATO protection. His grandmother was beaten and left lying on the street for dead, just because she spoke Serbian. He told me about a boy helping his father in the fields when they were attacked. The father was killed and the boy was badly wounded. He was rushed to a hospital where he was late found strangled in his bed. No investigation was conducted. He was a 14-year-old boy who happened to be Serbian. My friend also told me about a six-month-old baby from Prizren. On September 21, she was kidnapped and burned alive. The baby's only crime was that her mother did not want to leave Kosovo. "Serbs are getting what they deserve," I overheard a man say to someone while reading news about Albanians taking revenge on Serbian women and children. I still wonder if I can blame him for his ignorance and prejudice. On one hand, his opinion is based on rather one-sided media reports. On the other hand, even if everything said about Serbs is true, how is he any better than those he judges? However, there are some open-minded people who are interested in the different aspects of politics and war in the Balkans. If it weren't for them, our North American media would most likely convince me that with my Serbian background, I represent people who want to ethnically cleanse the world. Truth and civilians are the first casualties of war on all sides. Truth, like history, is determined by the winners. Civilians in most cases do not receive their justice. They live in the memories of those who loved them and maybe, on the consciences of those who killed them. So much has been lost. Some have lost their childhood. Some have lost their loved ones and all their belongings. Some live with people who judge them without knowing anything about them. They, like me, have learned the value of life through all they have endured and survived. They also cover their scars and bury the pain somewhere deep inside. The opinions expressed in this piece are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Imprint Publications.
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