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#1
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The Scream of Tuzla ![]() The Tuzla Kapija Razija Dedovic - 16, Muslim Alma Brguljak - 20, Jewish Senada Hasanovic - 26, Muslim Fahrudin Ramic - 26, Muslim Pera Marinovic - 26, Christian Savan Mustacevic - 29, Christian Edhem Sarajlic - 20, Muslim Adnan Beganovic - 15, Muslim Asmira Bakalovic - 9, Muslim Suzana Dusic - 14, Christian Almasa Cerimovic - 20, Jewish Amir Dapa - 4, Jewish Amir Duzel - 31, Jewish Vesna Kurtalic - 18, Christian Edisa Memic - 19, Muslim Sanja Cajic - 18, Christian Nedim Rekic - 28, Muslim Mustafa Vukovic - 23, Muslim Adnan Hujdurovic - 15, Muslim Edina Ahmetasevic - 21, Muslim Amira Mehinovic - 16, Muslim Franc Kantor - 24, Christian Asim Slijepcevic - 20, Christian Sandro Kalesic - 3, Muslim Edin Hodzic - 31, Muslim Indira Boric - 36, Christian Sulejman Mehanovic - 18, Muslim Damir Kurbasic - 14, Muslim Ilinka Tadic - 12, Christian Selma Nuhanovic - 23, Muslim Edin Mehmedovic - 20, Muslim Nihad Sisic - 20, Muslim Amir Cekic - 21, Muslim Indira Okanovic - 15, Christian Ilvana Bosnjakovic - 26, Christian Admir Alispahic - 24, Muslim Jasenko Rosic - 18, Christian Damir Bojkic - 28, Christian Samir Mujic - 29, Muslim Rajif Rahmani - 23, Muslim Almir Jahic - 18, Christian Lejla Bucuk - 17, Muslim Azur Mujabasic - 22, Muslim Azur Vantic - 24, Muslim Suzana Abuismail - 25, Muslim Semsa Hasicic - 20, Muslim Senahid Salamovic - 26, Muslim Nenad Markovic - 19, Christian Hamdija Hakic - 48, Muslim Petar Stjepanovic - 25, Christian Elvis Alagic - 18, Muslim Lejla Atikovic - 13, Muslim Armin Sisc - 20, Muslim Rusmir Ponjavic -17, Jewish Alem Hidanovic - 20, Muslim Zada Dedic - 21, Christian Vanja Kurbegovic - 21, Muslim Jelena Stojcic - 18, Christian Hasa Hrustanovic - 25, Muslim Ago Hadzic - 20, Muslim Selma Causevic - 6, Muslim Nesit Mujanovic - 21, Muslim Adrijana Milic - 17, Christian Samir Cirak - 19, Muslim Muri Fatusic - 11, Christian Elvir Murselovic - 24, Muslim Adnan Saimovic - 28, Muslim Jasminka Sarajlic - 23, Muslim All of these people whose names are listed above have many things in common. They were all Bosnians, and they were all Slavs. They all lived in the same northeast Bosnian city, Tuzla. They went to the same schools, hung out at the same cafes. They also all went downtown, to the kapija (central street) on May 25, 1995 - the Day of Youth in Bosnia - to celebrate highschool graduation with graduates with friends. They were also all killed by a single shell - one, single bomb - launched from a Serbian position several kilometers away. As the parents of Tuzla collected the pieces of an entire generation wiped out in garbage bags, news of their 'success' reached the soldiers and they fired more shells into the city. They continued to do so throughout the night, and during the funerals several days later. It took an entire issue of the local newspaper to list the photographs and names of those killed. The children were not burried in the individual Muslim, Roman Catholic, Orthodox Christian, and Jewish neighborhood cemeteries. Their parents decided instead to bury them all together in a special cemetery solely for that purpose. "They would have wanted it that way." was the most common sentiment, and indeed - it was probably true. Tuzla is today the most diverse city in Bosnia and Herzegovina. During the war, it was the only city in the country that did not elect nationalist or otherwise extremist parties. It was the only city that accepted refugees of every religious background. It was the only city which was not near, or involved, in any of the fighting. And still they attacked. Today, through the actions of those who survived and the parents of the victims, Tuzla is one of the most prosperous cities in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It consistently comes out on top in polls about quality of life and satisfaction with life. It's schools are not segregated, its - by all accounts - a religious utopia of sorts. That's the power of the religious tolerance and that was their miserable failure. The soldiers can take lifes, they can take infrastructure, but they cannot take souls and nor could they shake the centuries-old tradition of diversity. So we won, in every way we could have won. That's the moral of this thread. Take it, wrap it away, put it in your heart, and never forget. And please, remember them in your prayers.
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Shake it up, shekerim (sweetie)!
BRAVO KENAN, BRAVO TURKEY! Voda (Water)! BRAVO ELITSA, BRAVO BULGARIA! |
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#2
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Frubals.
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Jesus did not come into this world to make bad people good. He came into this world to make dead people live - Ravi Zacharias ![]() I wasn't born again yesterday - A.S.A. Jones
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#3
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When will our thirst for blood end?
May God have mercy on us all!
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"Scully, one of these days, we're going to look back on this moment and laugh." - Fox |
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