In the last part of the book, Hehir’s narration is both dreamily hopeful and realistically somber. He dreams about what he had seen and heard in Srebrenica, how those who died rise from their graves then embrace under the rain of Srebrenica flowers, as a sign of the triumph of life and love. Immediately after this, in the last chapter, the tone of the narration becomes gloomy and suffocating. Before Hehir’s eyes, Mustafa appears crying, he sees the UN base, the Dutch colonel drinking Mladić’s wine while the latter laughs and shouts “women and children on the left, men on the right.” Everything seems to crack and break, but no one listens, until the author wakes up and wakes us from his nightmare.
Above all, “The Flowers of Srebrenica” is a book about not forgetting. As historian Alexander Etkind rightly says, “If we fail to bring justice to crimes against humanity, fail to understand what happened, fail to mourn the crimes, then we find ourselves in the post-disaster.” In such a world, the past haunts us, divides us and kills the future.
Over two decades after the ethnic cleansing and genocide in Bosnia, there is a common tendency to deny crimes against humanity in the Balkans, to revise history and present the facts in an alternative way. Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić has personally taken to leading the genocide denial campaign in the Balkans. Some in the West have also fallen into this apparently repetitive trap. Not long ago, the Austrian writer Peter Handke, who has long denied the genocide in Srebrenica, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.
Despite the genocide in the Balkans, the convictions by the International Tribunal for War Crimes in the former Yugoslavia and thousands of articles, reports and books on the massacres at Srebrenica, it seems that forgetting is an incurable disease even for societies with strong historical memory. “The Flowers of Srebrenica” is an attempt to deconstruct our understanding of crimes against humanity, the past and a future where the dead are not forgotten.
Hehir and Frankum wrote a book about the importance and power of places concerned with the remembrance of tragedy. You cannot remember massacres like Srebrenica without realizing the true scale of the genocide against Bosniaks. The authors have carved a narrative for the future, so that the past can be understood and not repeated.
Feature Image: Atdhe Mulla / K2.0.