The Strange Silence. Explaining the Absence of Monuments for Muslim Civilians Killed in Bosnia during the Second World War Cover Image
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The Strange Silence. Explaining the Absence of Monuments for Muslim Civilians Killed in Bosnia during the Second World War
The Strange Silence. Explaining the Absence of Monuments for Muslim Civilians Killed in Bosnia during the Second World War

Author(s): Max Bergholz
Subject(s): Political history, Government/Political systems, Victimology, WW II and following years (1940 - 1949), Post-War period (1950 - 1989), History of Communism, Fascism, Nazism and WW II, Politics of History/Memory
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: Bosnia-Herzegovina; silence; Muslims; monuments; mass killing;

Summary/Abstract: Newly available documentation from the State Archive of Bosnia-Herzegovina indicates that the majority of sites where Muslim civilians were killed during the Second World War remained unmarked as late as the mid-1980s. The existing scholarship, most of which argues that Yugoslavia’s communist regime sought to “de-ethnicize” the remembrance of all of the interethnic violence of the war, has failed to notice and explain this apparent bias against Muslim civilian war victims. This article seeks to answer the question of why so many sites in Bosnia-Herzegovina where Muslim civilians were killed remained unmarked after the war. It does so through the reconstruction and analysis of the wartime and postwar history of Kulen Vakuf, a small town located in northwestern Bosnia. The analysis of the dynamics of mass killing in the region reveals that the communist-led Partisan movement absorbed large numbers of Serbian insurgents who had murdered Muslims earlier in the war. The transformation of the perpetrators of the massacres into Partisans created a postwar context in which the authorities, to avoid implicating insurgents-turned-Partisans as war criminals, and the Muslim survivors, out of fear of retribution and a desire to move on, agreed to stay silent about the killings. The end result was the absence of monuments for the victims.

  • Issue Year: 24/2010
  • Issue No: 03
  • Page Range: 408-434
  • Page Count: 27
  • Language: English
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