The Bosnian Genocide: Europe’s Only Genocide Since WWII

Dive deep into the dark history of the Bosnian Genocide with this chilling documentary. Explore the context, atrocities, and aftermath of one of Europe's most tragic events. Brace yourself for a journey through the horrors of war and genocide.
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Пікірлер: 2 000

  • @cruisingscenesandtakingbea4197
    @cruisingscenesandtakingbea4197Ай бұрын

    "Never again.. except for all the times it will happen again. But after those... never again!"

  • @sentinel_Alphacentauri

    @sentinel_Alphacentauri

    Ай бұрын

    It's more like again and again and again...11,000+ civilians murdered in Ukraine by Putin , 30,000+ dead in Gaza and Israel

  • @dylan-5287

    @dylan-5287

    Ай бұрын

    These days we don't just ignore them, we literally fund them lmao.

  • @JoeC92

    @JoeC92

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@dylan-5287you'd think after the Holocaust, Rwanda, Bosnia and all the others we'd know a genocide right at the start but nope. The US is currently helping fund one in Palestine.

  • @TizBaz5

    @TizBaz5

    Ай бұрын

    @dylan-5287 do yourself a favor and watch the video. You will learn what an actual genocide looks like.

  • @dylan-5287

    @dylan-5287

    Ай бұрын

    @@TizBaz5 were gatekeeping genocides now? Certainly the scope can vary wildly.

  • @katexy7179
    @katexy7179Ай бұрын

    I'm Bosnian, and the worst thing about this war and genocide is about how fresh it all is. My mother's best friend is a woman who came from a Srebrenica concentration camp. She was there when she was only 17, and while she never tells anything, she's a skinny woman with a ton of health problems, most of which center around PTSD and female reproductive organs. She says often "whatever I've lived through, it would have been fine if any of my brothers or my parents survived". Another mom's friend is from Brcko, a small city northeast of Bosnia. She was in a concentration camp too, and, same as the previous one, has a ton of similar health problems. At least she has her brother alive, she says. Neither of them can have children. You will notice that most of the victims of the genocide are men, and it might confuse you. Indeed, most men killed, especially in Srebrenica, were young, capable men. These men, however, were wholly unprepared, had no weapons, and were indeed civillians. As to why mostly men were targeted? Well, see, in Bosnia and Serbia alike, back in the 80s and 90s, the family line would continue by the male children, while girls would be married off into another family line- and when she does marry, she takes the surname of the new family, and completely moves into that family, calling her husband's parents her own (yes this is patriarchy at its finest, and it's changing a lot nowadays, but back then this was the case in most families). "Purity" before marriage was a big concept as well. So basically the plan was: kill off all the men and boys so the family line doesn't continue, assaulting girls for the fun of it, but also if she becomes pregnant, how great, she'll bear a Serbian child. Boys as young as 12 were killed, and many were saved only because their mothers managed to pass them off as girls somehow. "Pure" girls also were preferred by the soldiers, so they favored unmarried women. Women typically married at the age of 17-20 back then, especially in more rural places. There are only rare accounts of what women went through in this war, because of the shame culture- and when I say rare, I only ever heard of 3-4 from the entire country. One thing that Simon didn't mention is how, after the Srebrenica genocide in particular, there was a huge action by Serb military forces to cover up their traces, so they took some trucks and tried to scatter around the mass grave sites, to make the bodies more difficult to find. Years later, when the excavations started to give the victims a proper religious burial, bones of one individual person would be found in multiple mass graves. Some people would be buried with only a few bones, the rest of the body never found. I'd still like to point out, as a Bosnian, I feel like it's a responsibility of mine as well, that very little of what modern day Serbia and Bosnian Serbs are is responsible for this. Yes, there are still plenty of criminals who were never convicted, but outside of that, Serbia is a beautiful country and Serbs are generally hospitable people. It feels like whenever we talk about this, we have to preface that there is a difference between violent criminals and normal people who live in Serbia today, but this has to be mentioned and repeated. Serbia does not equal evil.

  • @phaedrapage4217

    @phaedrapage4217

    Ай бұрын

    The little news coverage that made it all the way to Iowa deeply affected me. Seeing images of children who had never known a normal safe life especially. It made me wish I could scoop them all up in my arms and keep them safe. Thoughts like this still keep me awake at night if I don't take sleeping pills. All the little ones around the world who have never known what I took for granted growing up is so heartbreaking. I mean, the atrocities adults are subjected to disturb me as well but with the children it hits deeper, I guess. Hope that makes sense?

  • @robertharrington703

    @robertharrington703

    Ай бұрын

    I know you don't need patronising from me, but thank you for sharing this perspective.

  • @AncientRylanor69

    @AncientRylanor69

    Ай бұрын

    thanks

  • @AncientRylanor69

    @AncientRylanor69

    Ай бұрын

    thanks

  • @naj2120

    @naj2120

    Ай бұрын

    A woman taking her husband's family's name doesn't seem like patriarchy to me, or if it is it isn't automatically negative. The rest of that information is very important and interesting, so thank you for that also.

  • @Adam_Johns
    @Adam_JohnsАй бұрын

    Yugoslavia was such a shock in a modern Europe. The events that occurred were unthinkable only a couple years prior. I mean Sarajevo held the Olympics less the 8 years before it was besieged for years.

  • @gumpyoldbugger6944

    @gumpyoldbugger6944

    Ай бұрын

    It is, and the US and its peoples should take along hard look at those events, because they seem to be hell bent on repeating them.......

  • @MarcoGutierrez-pz4mb

    @MarcoGutierrez-pz4mb

    Ай бұрын

    The unfortunate effects of the Cold War Yugoslavia stayed afloat and was prospering until they stopped getting funds from the Soviet Union and the US which led to hyperinflation that led. To a shitty economy that led to the rise of nationalism

  • @MrTexasDan

    @MrTexasDan

    Ай бұрын

    @@gumpyoldbugger6944 Really? do tell. I suspect that the school you are protesting has failed you in that you clearly do not know the definition of genocide.

  • @marcbuisson2463

    @marcbuisson2463

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@gumpyoldbugger6944Not that I disagree, but it's always a bit surprising to see some advocates for western interventions in the middle east coming back.

  • @flaviusvespasian

    @flaviusvespasian

    Ай бұрын

    @@gumpyoldbugger6944 🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡

  • @NICOLAI_VET
    @NICOLAI_VETАй бұрын

    I saw it. Smelled it. My first deployment was to Bosnia in 1994. I've seen everything evil humans will do to. eachother. I've been deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan since. But my experiences in Bosnia has scarred me forever.

  • @shinren_

    @shinren_

    Ай бұрын

    So why deploy again to afghanistan and iraq? The same thing happened there but instead you guys were the bad guys

  • @NICOLAI_VET

    @NICOLAI_VET

    Ай бұрын

    @@shinren_ In Iraq and Afghanistan it was a shooting war. That's easy. Being a UN soldier and having to watch neighbours rape, burn and displace each other because of religion, ethnicity and ancient grievances is horrible.

  • @shinren_

    @shinren_

    Ай бұрын

    @@NICOLAI_VET grape happened in iraq too because of american soldiers villages got bombed that had nothing to do with the war a lot of atrocities commited in those countries too by the west

  • @AllBetzOff

    @AllBetzOff

    Ай бұрын

    @@shinren_yeah, you are right, but this is their perspective not yours.

  • @NICOLAI_VET

    @NICOLAI_VET

    Ай бұрын

    @@shinren_ Iraq and Afghanistan were failures. We should never have tried to push our way life down on the Iraqi or the Afghan people. But everything is crystal clear in hindsight. I fought the wars my government told me to. I have no regrets.

  • @FarkOSRS
    @FarkOSRSАй бұрын

    My dad was being loaded onto one of those school buses when one of the guards told him not to get on. It was his childhood best friend. he spent about 6 months in one of the camps until the UN came and liberated them. He was 6'5" and weighed 46kg when he was rescued. His family all escaped physically intact but still has the psychological scars to this day. I'm glad to see a video about this because not many people know about this horror. He is currently raising money for Ukraine and Palestine because he knows genocide first hand. If this video upset you then please do the same.

  • @TonyAncom

    @TonyAncom

    Ай бұрын

    I'm so sorry that your dad and your family went through that, my friend :/. I'm glad that they got out alive. I see that you play osrs, what level are you? If you need any help on osrs, feel free to respond, and we can connect on the game :).

  • @ktmzuk

    @ktmzuk

    25 күн бұрын

    Raising money for hamas, not Palestine... those criminals steal the food from their own peoples mouths and medicine from their hospitals while the virtue signallers continue to pour money into hamas so they can continue the war and murder of innocent civilians.

  • @emilianozapata2530

    @emilianozapata2530

    13 күн бұрын

    😂😂😂

  • @petarn2204

    @petarn2204

    11 күн бұрын

    Second wife of my great-grandfather had 4 children, a Serbian woman. In spring 1942, in village near Prijedor city, all 4 children were brutally killed on her eyes by Ustashe Croat soldiers. Baby was taken from her arms and stick to bayonet. Most of people never made it to concentration camp, they were usually slaughtered in their villages (e.g. village Prebilovci). She survived a war, and lived and died in Belgrade after the war. She was deeply respected by our family.

  • @StenanStenanovic

    @StenanStenanovic

    7 күн бұрын

    Israel also sends money to Ukraine

  • @davidclubb8745
    @davidclubb8745Ай бұрын

    Simon, I was in Bosnia for a year with the U.S. Army at the end of the war. I saw the brutalism first hand. You are right, people are not taught what happened. I tell anyone who will listen.

  • @cmurph103

    @cmurph103

    Ай бұрын

    The testimonies of firsthand witnesses are essential to learning what happened and trying to learn from this history so we can try to avoid it again. I am glad you share your story. I hope you will write it down. History needs first-hand stories like yours. Thank you.

  • @LazarOrthodox04

    @LazarOrthodox04

    Ай бұрын

    Except they are not just taught about it they are taught that this is a fucking genocide

  • @strongmermaid4651

    @strongmermaid4651

    Ай бұрын

    You know we are heading in that direction again

  • @JohnBell-Hood

    @JohnBell-Hood

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@LazarOrthodox04 What genocide?

  • @joaocourinha8222

    @joaocourinha8222

    Ай бұрын

    Is the "palestinian genocide" video already in editing stage or is it better to wait for it to end first?

  • @randomperson6433
    @randomperson6433Ай бұрын

    A friend of mine lived through it. She’s one of the kindest souls I know despite the horror. So much respect for her and her people.

  • @JootjeJ
    @JootjeJАй бұрын

    I've know a number of Bosnians who made it to my country during and after the war. One of the craziest things is that a lot of the enemies were their former neighbours and friends. How can you ever feel safe again anywhere or trust anyone after that?

  • @anonymous-sg9ph

    @anonymous-sg9ph

    27 күн бұрын

    Yea that's what civil war means

  • @Western-imperalism

    @Western-imperalism

    26 күн бұрын

    I respect the Serbs

  • @nikolarosic5419

    @nikolarosic5419

    26 күн бұрын

    ​@@Western-imperalismwhy?

  • @Western-imperalism

    @Western-imperalism

    26 күн бұрын

    @@nikolarosic5419 protected europe from radical Islam, don't get emotional about it

  • @ehaaron

    @ehaaron

    26 күн бұрын

    Serbs were way ahead for their time. Respect to the Serbs for protecting and defending their culture from jihad.

  • @TheForeignGamer
    @TheForeignGamerАй бұрын

    I was born during the tail end of this war. My father was an officer, therefore not only responsible for many soldiers, but also my mother and their family. My parents brought me into this world despite the risks, and thankfully most of us survived. The Dayton Accords were signed shortly after my first birthday, and we were eventually able to resettle in the US, where a relative happened to already be living. My parents & other family members, friends, and many others within our local diaspora all wished to move on from the war, as it had irrevocably changed their lives. They always did their best to not only shield me and others of my generation from the horror and their trauma, but also preserving our culture/traditions as we navigated a strange new world. In fact, in the years since our cultural identity has never been stronger, and we've never forgotten what brought us to this point. Fortunately, most of us have since become citizens in our respective new home countries and have been able to forge brand new lives out of our shared suffering. I've been fortunate enough to visit my homeland multiple times throughout my life so far, and from what I've seen I'm happy to report that, while not perfect, things have been steadily improving over the past few decades. It's easy to forget that whenever war breaks out, the people who suffer the most are civilians, just like you. Having almost everything you know and love taken from you is something no one should have to live through. When I was a kid, I once naively hoped that that was going to be the last war in human history, because I fundamentally couldn't understand why someone would choose to kill others based largely on arbitrary factors, regardless of their justification. I still don't.

  • @Megan-sf5vf

    @Megan-sf5vf

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing your story

  • @teresabarnes-matych
    @teresabarnes-matychАй бұрын

    I had a good friend who had escaped Yugoslavia with her parents to Toronto. They were Jewish and she eventually relocated to California. Her name was Ruth and she made jewelry. I still have a necklace she made for me. Thank you for covering this horrific story. When will Humans learn to get along?

  • @sennadesillva

    @sennadesillva

    Ай бұрын

    Unfortunately we will all never get along completely but hating a person because they were born on a different patch of dirt than yourself is just something I will never understand. Even sillier here in america where even being born in the same hospital isn't enough, it just comes down to how dark your skin is. :(

  • @GhostNinja0007

    @GhostNinja0007

    Ай бұрын

    @@sennadesillva🎯 makes no sense to me either! “I’m better cause I was born here” It’s such a bull sh*t excuse but sadly it still happens, and sadly probably won’t stop anytime soon if at all.

  • @GhostNinja0007

    @GhostNinja0007

    Ай бұрын

    @rwxz75 Agree, but there’s a lot more to it for me. Grew up religious and got punished for every little thing they could find. But also think that *IF* there is a god he’s a pretty crappy one to allow all this horrible sh*t to happen over and over again…

  • @brandonlm0125

    @brandonlm0125

    Ай бұрын

    Disproportional wealth will always cause people to find reasons to “other”. It always comes down to who can get what and who has to lose for them to do so.

  • @60sSam

    @60sSam

    Ай бұрын

    Never. But no-one ever said we were actually smart either.

  • @megsley
    @megsleyАй бұрын

    I had a coworker about 10 years back who actually lived thru this and spent almost a year in a refugee camp. said he was lucky to be alive and happy to be in America.

  • @paddington1670

    @paddington1670

    Ай бұрын

    or basically any other country other than

  • @MrReymoclif714

    @MrReymoclif714

    29 күн бұрын

    @@paddington1670met a Serbian policeman once here in 1995 Vermont!!! He was…..intimidating to be sitting next to. He said it was……BAD OVER THERE!!!!

  • @Chikara199
    @Chikara199Ай бұрын

    We got many Yugoslavian refugees to Sweden during the 90's. To hear their stories is heartbreaking. Thank you for talking about these "less popular" conflicts!

  • @MonkeWithThaZa

    @MonkeWithThaZa

    Ай бұрын

    They are not refugees, Im from ex Yugo, its mostly criminals going to your gold jewelry shops and stealing them

  • @Chikara199

    @Chikara199

    Ай бұрын

    @@MonkeWithThaZa I disagree. Of cours you have the Yugo maffia and criminals too. But the once I have worked with were children when this happened and they are working hard to build a life here in Sweden.

  • @sci7zo

    @sci7zo

    Ай бұрын

    @@MonkeWithThaZa you sound terrible. be better

  • @MonkeWithThaZa

    @MonkeWithThaZa

    29 күн бұрын

    @@Chikara199 Thats also true, I spoke for majority, now people are not stealing just working today I was also speaking about the past.

  • @workphone2149

    @workphone2149

    28 күн бұрын

    ​@MonkeWithThaZa There are a lot of statistics showing how many and how fast the bosnian refugees were able to adapt to the swedish society, meaning language, work and education.

  • @revdev5511
    @revdev5511Ай бұрын

    "You wont be needing them anymore" sending chills down my spine

  • @rivervan
    @rivervanАй бұрын

    Thank you for covering this…a former teacher of mine was Bosnian and it means so much that you covered this 🩵.

  • @jonaspaulsson9912

    @jonaspaulsson9912

    Ай бұрын

    Dont expect any knowledge. If you want facts i recomend ”unfinest hour” by brendan simms

  • @ZoomZoomMX3

    @ZoomZoomMX3

    Ай бұрын

    Not sure what you fought over? Was it religions again? Language, just speak English. Colour BS again? Stop listening to old drunk uncles. Laws? Vote for changes and ask politicians if they support say abortion rights? Why the killing ... Get over the past make the world better.

  • @yankeedogg2212
    @yankeedogg2212Ай бұрын

    I was stationed in Germany 91-94. We knew about this stuff. Soldiers from my division got assigned to the UN peacekeeping force.

  • @multiyapples
    @multiyapplesАй бұрын

    Rest in peace to those that passed away. We must work to end genocides and never forget the genocides that are happening and have happened.

  • @Bigredfitnessmoshe

    @Bigredfitnessmoshe

    5 күн бұрын

    What genocides are happening? Sorry, not every war is a genocide. And just because you’re losing a war doesn’t make it a genocide.

  • @theconfused_fisherman
    @theconfused_fishermanАй бұрын

    Amazing how an individual killing an individual will get them life in prison but this guy only got 40 years for killing over 30k

  • @VersusARCH

    @VersusARCH

    Ай бұрын

    And how long should have Lyndon B Johnson and Richard Nixon been convicted to rot in prison for killing 2 million in Vietnam?

  • @Majra-or1zt

    @Majra-or1zt

    22 күн бұрын

    Yes

  • @ey67

    @ey67

    19 күн бұрын

    It's almost like Courts are corrupt. Kinda like our USA courts 😮

  • @nicoleshwartz6537

    @nicoleshwartz6537

    18 күн бұрын

    8:03 😅😅😮😮😅😮😮😅😅😮😮😮😅😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😅😮

  • @johnlemon1644
    @johnlemon1644Ай бұрын

    Literally trying to finish writing a final about this today, thank you so much.

  • @povijestpovijest9569
    @povijestpovijest9569Ай бұрын

    I was 3 years old when I became a refugee, my cousin and I together with our mothers had to flee during the night on a boat piloted by our grandpa, while our fathers stayed behind to defend the town.

  • @marywooten9248
    @marywooten9248Ай бұрын

    Over in North Carolina there are many Bosnian folks that came over as refugees back then. I've mostly met grandparents though, because their grandkids would need to translate for them at their appointments. The grandparents always seemed really stoic. Probably not very surprising.

  • @dakistle

    @dakistle

    Ай бұрын

    I had a Bosnian friend as a lad and would go to his family's parties. The old guys would drink Slivovitz and tell me horror stories in rough English.

  • @fhuuraliulfr5756

    @fhuuraliulfr5756

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah, same in Florida, I went to school with some Bosnian kids in elementary school.

  • @fhuuraliulfr5756
    @fhuuraliulfr5756Ай бұрын

    I actually went to school with some Bosnian refugees in the 90s, I think I was in 1st grade. At the time, I was too little to understand what had happened, though. So sad.

  • @Omidion

    @Omidion

    Ай бұрын

    If your only source of information about the whole thing is just this clip i'm sad to say that you still don't understand it, but if u whish to there are YT clips that explain the whole thing properly and objectively.

  • @lottaleissner497

    @lottaleissner497

    Ай бұрын

    Same here. In my class we had I think 3 Bosnians and 2 Serbs for a number of years. We got told they had to move to my country because of a war, and we had to be extra nice to them and help them learn our language, because some of their families had died. You could tell there was mutual fear between the children in the beginning, but they soon became friends. I found it the most natural thing in the world that they would; they came from the same place, spoke the same language, and all had lived thru something horrible. I was too privileged to understand why the grown ups made it such a big deal. Why wouldn't we all be friends?

  • @fhuuraliulfr5756

    @fhuuraliulfr5756

    Ай бұрын

    @@Omidion I never said it was, just giving my two cents on a video that had just uploaded.

  • @fhuuraliulfr5756

    @fhuuraliulfr5756

    Ай бұрын

    @@lottaleissner497 Aww, yeah exactly!

  • @tarikkantarevic845

    @tarikkantarevic845

    29 күн бұрын

  • @Ivo--
    @Ivo--Ай бұрын

    As a Dutch person, Srebrenica is absolutely known to us. A black mark in our history. I have friends who served in Dutchbat 3. We know.

  • @JootjeJ

    @JootjeJ

    Ай бұрын

    Same here.

  • @juliajs1752

    @juliajs1752

    Ай бұрын

    Srebrenica is pretty much synonymous with failure of the international community and mass executions in the name of genocide.

  • @Kaluranda

    @Kaluranda

    Ай бұрын

    As a kid during that time. Us dutchies learn a little about it in school. So no matter the age, at least we know and remember.

  • @keca.4324

    @keca.4324

    Ай бұрын

    I hope you know! It's a black mark in Dutch history indeed

  • @danilicious2308

    @danilicious2308

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@keca.4324 also a black mark in NATO history, because the US and France both refused to help the Dutch, even though they were very aware of what was going to happen.

  • @armincerim6869
    @armincerim68694 күн бұрын

    Thank you for a very accurate description of everything that happened. I am from Bosnia and survived the war as a kid. The only thing we all have to make sure is that the genocide denial is defeated - but unfortunately serbs are not ready to go through catharsis to what they did to Bosniaks. Genocide is a fact , and thankfully it was widely accepted as such in UN. In any case, tides have turned and now the situation is different and we're more prepared to defend Bosnia in case they try again to erase us from existence.

  • @user-xw7cn7vy6n
    @user-xw7cn7vy6n28 күн бұрын

    Hi Simon, I've been following your channels for a number of years but I never thought I'd see a segment on the Bosnian genocide let alone the Višegrad massacres. Me and my family are originally from there. I lost several family members and relatives in the genocide, the youngest was my cousin, few months younger then me. I was lucky, he wasn't. On their behalf, thank you for drawing attention to the Bosnian genocide.

  • @Nidzadrugar

    @Nidzadrugar

    21 күн бұрын

    Englishman preaching about genocide.

  • @milesduheaume203

    @milesduheaume203

    2 күн бұрын

    @@Nidzadrugar Would you rather he ignore it? It's called journalism.

  • @ahmedsalkan
    @ahmedsalkan25 күн бұрын

    Thanks for shedding some light on this tragic part of my country's history. Greetings from Bosnia!

  • @AcornElectron
    @AcornElectronАй бұрын

    I didn’t need to learn about it, I lived through it.

  • @testadalord01432

    @testadalord01432

    Ай бұрын

    My condolences man, hope you’re in a better place despite all you went through

  • @CM-lw3qf

    @CM-lw3qf

    Ай бұрын

    No one cares

  • @cruisingscenesandtakingbea4197

    @cruisingscenesandtakingbea4197

    Ай бұрын

    If you lived through it, it’s most important for you to learn about it. You may already carry a bias and you don’t know it.

  • @AngeliqueStP

    @AngeliqueStP

    Ай бұрын

    @@CM-lw3qf Crawl back to your hole, Smeagol.

  • @Likenobodybro

    @Likenobodybro

    Ай бұрын

    @@CM-lw3qf son,why don't you go help ur mumy with dishes or something,cuz,WHO TF GIVED U IPAD

  • @Savadais
    @SavadaisАй бұрын

    ''Europe’s Only Genocide Since WWII'' That's a very bold claim under current circumstances.

  • @HotEatTheFood

    @HotEatTheFood

    Ай бұрын

    This channel has always been Pro-Poorly disguised American military outposts pretending to be an ethno-state country

  • @JusufBideovic

    @JusufBideovic

    Ай бұрын

    Between 1945 and 1992 nothing resembling a genocide happened in Europe. The Ukrainian war is being fought much more "cleanly" than the Bosnian one, so in my opinion it doesnt qualify. And palestine / israel are not in europe.

  • @merisav4171

    @merisav4171

    Ай бұрын

    @@JusufBideovic how it does not qualify? russians are taking children to reeducate them, destroy schools and churches, claim ukrainians have no real identity and our language is just an accent. Also, Holodomor

  • @Savadais

    @Savadais

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@JusufBideovic That's because the Soviet Union and today's Russia don't keep any records. Russia fights clean? Civilian areas in Ukraine have been bombarded daily for the past 2 years. Now Russia has even law that any new-born children of non-Russian citizens in occupied Ukraine have to be taken by the Russian state immediately. Where do those stolen children end up? Nobody knows. No records are being kept. It's a bad idea to base truth on just ''Innocent until proven guilty''. Truth doesn't care about what we can or cant prove.

  • @stevebeer3324

    @stevebeer3324

    Ай бұрын

    @@JusufBideovic The war Russia is waging on Ukraine is not being fought" cleanly", -(are any wars?) There are now hundreds of thousands of war crimes that have been committed by Russians, and the rhetoric on Russian television is definitely genocidal with commentators declaring Ukraine does not exist that , Ukrainian culture does not exist, and speculating on what percentage of the Ukrainian population need to be exterminated in order to teach the rest obedience to Russia. Have a look at Russian Media Monitor by Julia Davis. She puts on the most popular Russian talk shows with subtitles. .

  • @stephaniebutler81
    @stephaniebutler81Ай бұрын

    A friend of mine is a Bosnian refugee. She’s one of the most amazing women I know.

  • @Mike-hu3pp
    @Mike-hu3ppАй бұрын

    You don't mention that this was a genocide based on religion. The Serbs wanted to rid the area of the Bosniaks (Muslim Bosnians) to "right the wrongs of the Ottoman empire". I met many young Albanian and Kosavar Muslim men in the early 2000's who were refugees (I was a young man at the time too) and the few stories that they'd shared were unbelievable and they also had a strong hate for Bosnian Christians. Hard young men and as I get older the more I see why.

  • @VersusARCH

    @VersusARCH

    Ай бұрын

    Then explain the fact that Serbs and muslims of Western Bosnia under Fikret Abdić were allies and that there was no war in Raška area of south of Serbia which has a large muslim population...

  • @EmergingEcho

    @EmergingEcho

    29 күн бұрын

    @VersusARCH Make a poll if any of the commentators has ever heard of Jasenovac

  • @jelenakg964

    @jelenakg964

    13 күн бұрын

    ,,kosovar muslim men" actually šiptari haha. Kosovo je Srbija

  • @MikeP2055

    @MikeP2055

    13 күн бұрын

    ​@@VersusARCHA few years ago I saw a piece on PBS about a school in Gaza where the children AND teachers were a mix of Palestinians and Jews. There will always be anomalies and outliers. With any luck, the anomalies and outliers will become the norm, and division and hostility will be severely frowned upon. ✌️

  • @mrEz87

    @mrEz87

    12 күн бұрын

    ​@@VersusARCHyou answered it yourself. They were armed, easier to commit genocide against the unarmed.

  • @TillerMicroSkiffs
    @TillerMicroSkiffsАй бұрын

    Our school resource officer was a peacekeeper. He was never the same after he saw this with his own eyes... please never again.❤

  • @xessenceofinsanityx
    @xessenceofinsanityxАй бұрын

    I went to school with a girl who survived this (actually come to think of it, I went to school with a lot of survivors of genocides...) As a child of divorce I was already well versed in not asking where someone's father was, it wasn't until my mum ended up talking to her mum that I realised why she had no male family members.

  • @VersusARCH

    @VersusARCH

    24 күн бұрын

    If the event in Srebrenica were a genocide she would not have survived it. Women, children and the elderly were evacuated by the Serbs to the Muslim held areas of Bosnia. It was the men of the fighting age who died. Some were prisoners who were massacred but many were killed in combat while trying to break through to the Muslim held town of Tuzla. The breakthrough column suffered heavy artillery barrage. Nobody is denying that a POW massacre is a war crime. But labeling it a genocide is twisting facts for propaganda purposes.

  • @nullv01d

    @nullv01d

    21 күн бұрын

    @@VersusARCH "iT iS nOt A gEnOcIdE bEcAuSe PeOpLe SuRvIvEd" Silence, chetnik!

  • @h-run1751

    @h-run1751

    13 күн бұрын

    ​@@nullv01d Ignore him. Just ignore him. You'll thank me later. He can't help himself. Its a doctrine to deny it. He was taught his whole life to deny it.

  • @dzonikg

    @dzonikg

    7 күн бұрын

    Was is it a genocide if only men in fighting age died? LIke similar stuff west do at Kosovo ,in Racak when 50 Albanian terrorist were killed ,West "tranform" them to "civlians" and it was reason NATO to attack Serbia but you go to Albania there is multiply statues off killed leader off that group with machine gun ,so that "civilian " has a statues with mashine gun in his hand

  • @sentinel_Alphacentauri
    @sentinel_AlphacentauriАй бұрын

    A very good friend of mine in Germany,survived these massacres as a toddler along with her parents,her grandparents and dozens of her relatives didn't survive

  • @iyazo
    @iyazoАй бұрын

    In the mid/late 90s, I remember my elementary school having an assembly about the genocide (speaking about tolerance, with a guest speaker who was a Holocaust survivor and an Afghani woman who had also fled from war who became a teacher/aid(?) at my school). There was a group of Bosniak women who had moved into the area at the time and enrolled their kids in my school. I had never really thought about the fact that they were all women with female children who had moved into my neighborhood in a small town on the East Coast US, but now I understand why that probably was; it's sick and incredibly sad. Unfortunately, the few kids I had met didn't really get along with anyone in the area, either. At the time, I had no idea what kind of horrors they could have possibly been through, and on top of that, they were often bullied for being Muslim or just "different" in general. I hope those ladies are all doing alright now. It's good to learn about what happened, horrible as it is, as I was too young to understand at the time.

  • @chadepperson8945
    @chadepperson8945Ай бұрын

    Torn on liking this video, great video but such a sad point in human history. One heartbreak after another.

  • @randomperson6433

    @randomperson6433

    Ай бұрын

    Simon often says something like “if you liked this or found it informative…” just for situations like this. You don’t have to feel like an AH for liking it. You appreciate the coverage. It raises awareness. Think of it that way.

  • @blackyout7824

    @blackyout7824

    Ай бұрын

    @@randomperson6433thanks random person

  • @lynnbrooklyn1332
    @lynnbrooklyn1332Ай бұрын

    I remember being in middle school and learning about it on the news. It’s amazing how often we say “never again” and it happens again somewhere else within a decade.

  • @bhesse9012
    @bhesse9012Ай бұрын

    I grew up in St Louis. We have a massive Bosnian population. Grew up hearing stories from my friends about the war.

  • @philagethechef
    @philagethechefАй бұрын

    90s kid here 1st time I ever saw real war on TV was the yugoslav wars I didn't know what was going on at the time but when I saw images of the bodies my ww2 veteran grandfather told me "this is why we don't need more wars and don't you ever forget that you're are not better than anyone else because they're different from you."

  • @NaimHrustanovic
    @NaimHrustanovicАй бұрын

    Thank you for this.

  • @DrRainbowBecca
    @DrRainbowBeccaАй бұрын

    I grew up on stories of this war from my grandpa who escaped yugoslavia as a child. Didnt realize it wasnt common knowledge until waaay later. Thank you for covering it!

  • @Budzjustin
    @BudzjustinАй бұрын

    I love these videos, I think it's important to learn about and remember these past tragedies..but man does it make me furious!

  • @samaravadi3
    @samaravadi3Ай бұрын

    I worked with a Serbian who was a kid when the war happened. He had some massive PTSD from it and never really got a chance to be a kid.

  • @havocgr1976

    @havocgr1976

    Ай бұрын

    Knew a Serbian woman that was a soldier back then, she removed her ovaries after the war when she came to my country, she said she didnt want to bring kids in this horrible world.She was so broken, worked as a bodyguard, 2 meters tall and muscular.

  • @shinren_

    @shinren_

    Ай бұрын

    How are serbian kids having ptsd? Its the bosnians that were in the middle of the war. I doubt serbian kids saw any of the war

  • @mtomic87

    @mtomic87

    Ай бұрын

    @@shinren_ There were Serb children in Bosnia, and attrocities on all sides. The vast majority commited by Serbs, for sure, but still thousands on civilians died on all three sides.

  • @BellumCarroll

    @BellumCarroll

    Ай бұрын

    @@shinren_ War crimes were committed on all sides. Former friend’s & neighbours killing each other.

  • @shinren_

    @shinren_

    Ай бұрын

    @@BellumCarroll gee wiz i wonder who started it

  • @Unclesmokey314
    @Unclesmokey314Ай бұрын

    I live in St. Louis Mo and we had a HUGE Bosnian influx in the early 90s. I remember seeing signs that read "Urgently needed: Bosnian translators around Affton, Shrewsbury, South Side, and Bevo neighborhoods and a few yrs later the school I graduated from was almost 80% and had translators in every room. Good people, hard working and wonderful food culture!! Rakja is soooo yummy!! Most of the men I ended up working with in factories had the same story.... 8-10k slaughtered in their town/village. Every one I ever met had left family and friends behind either dead already or soon to be and that's the way it was. I was shown video of bullets striking the rear of a vehicle as one of my coworkers was fleeing his town. Totally fleeing under machine gun fire.. Never once heard any of the women speak of their tragedies, just the men. They have very much made their lives and futures her in STL and contribute wholeheartedly. I have befriended many in my different employments around town and I respect and regard them highly. The older ones have been through it so the young ones can have the lives they do and never know ethnic cleansing, bc we don't do that shit here in America. I feel for them in many ways for there is a distinct and general sorrow that comes with knowing the older ones and horrors survived.

  • @HarisHuskic-gp1ni

    @HarisHuskic-gp1ni

    Ай бұрын

    Bosnian refugee here born in 94 came to stlouis in 96 and has been home ever since. Thanks so much for the kind words we work hard and are appreciate of the free world we were given here. I went and fought in ukraine and got wounded. .

  • @Unclesmokey314

    @Unclesmokey314

    Ай бұрын

    @@HarisHuskic-gp1ni there is a fight to be fought here now too I'm afraid... they call it a "cultural revolution" it's just communism in disguise.

  • @random13627

    @random13627

    Ай бұрын

    @@HarisHuskic-gp1nihvala bogu da si ziv

  • @VersusARCH

    @VersusARCH

    Ай бұрын

    Getting cheap labor out of Bosnia was one of the reasons the West tacitly allowed the war to happen. It's a new, convoluted way of reducing labor prices (it used to be achieved with slavery a few centuries ago).

  • @cathjj840

    @cathjj840

    Ай бұрын

    US mostly outsources ethnic cleansing to foreign countries, except for that against our indigenous populations, of course, that we usually forget about, but there was also the massacre of the black community in Tulsa, OK in 1921.

  • @valeriestory7678
    @valeriestory7678Ай бұрын

    I went to high school with a girl whose family had fled Bosnia during these events. (I live in Tennessee, USA) She never talked about it. I think she just wanted to forget and move on. Thank you for bringing this terrible tragedy to modern attention. May we never forget.

  • @171-OC
    @171-OCАй бұрын

    I went to Bosnia in 1995 under the UN Blue Hats, We were a Force that had their hands tied behind their backs... At the end of 1995 the Dayton Peace agreement was signed and the UN was then removed and replaced with NATO. I worked under IFOR, the killings didn't stop ! We located so many mass graves... It was terrible, and yet those perpetrators all went free...

  • @JootjeJ

    @JootjeJ

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you for your service! 🫶

  • @AeroGuy07
    @AeroGuy07Ай бұрын

    While I lived in Denmark I met a young Bosnian guy who had come to Denmark as a child refugee. His parents had been killed. One of my friends, a crew chief on a Marine Black Hawk, was there pulling kids out.

  • @blablabla1044
    @blablabla104424 күн бұрын

    Days and weeks after the genocide, I still remember occasionally people showing up from the woods with horrific stories of how Serbian army hunted them like animals. You cannot even describe horror in their eyes. Not to mention stories of women who suffered in concentration camps, soldiers teasing them which one of their children they will kill next. There are 1st class nazis still in power in Serbia today, and EU makes deals with them. It is such a disgusting state of the affairs.

  • @clericaltotalitarian

    @clericaltotalitarian

    20 күн бұрын

    "genocide"

  • @TheMujkan

    @TheMujkan

    2 күн бұрын

    Theyre worse than nazis. At least german people recognized and accepted the horrific stuff their soldiers did and never came close to it again. Between serbian civilians this is seen as a great act of heroic deed and they refuse to accept they did anything wrong and would most surely do it again. There is one worse-than-nazi even in your replies, they cant hide their true genocidal colours and intentions.

  • @stefaneer9120
    @stefaneer9120Ай бұрын

    As I was a child during the Bosnian Genocide, the parents and my grandparents did knowing about this about the daily news and the newspaper and from refugee who can flee from Bosnia.

  • @stonks_n_chomps7556
    @stonks_n_chomps7556Ай бұрын

    Thank you for covering this. My dad served in Bosnia.

  • @synaestesia-bg3ew

    @synaestesia-bg3ew

    Ай бұрын

    He probably had committed many crimes

  • @paulshephard1907

    @paulshephard1907

    Ай бұрын

    @@synaestesia-bg3ew Bell-end! Lots of people served in Bosnia for the UN, albeit how useless it mainly was, which is what the original comment was about.

  • @danilicious2308

    @danilicious2308

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@synaestesia-bg3ew seems like something struck a nerve with you. You ok? Did your family commit these crimes?

  • @random13627

    @random13627

    Ай бұрын

    @@synaestesia-bg3ewubi se

  • @random13627

    @random13627

    Ай бұрын

    @@synaestesia-bg3ewubi se

  • @medusagorgo5146
    @medusagorgo5146Ай бұрын

    Oh, I knew about it. My company was deployed to Hungary and my platoon was stationed in Slavonski-Brod. Just about every day I pulled security on the Bosnian side of the bridge on the Sava river. We would also conduct patrols into Bosnia and around Croatia up to the Hungarian border. We dealt with the locals on both sides, it was interesting times.

  • @ML-my8qq
    @ML-my8qqАй бұрын

    As a Canadian who grew up close to a military base, I know dozens of people who went overseas to peace keep in Bosnia. The stories I’ve heard are amazing and disgusting.

  • @ehaaron

    @ehaaron

    Ай бұрын

    Serbs were way ahead of their time. they had to deal with jihad.

  • @zell863

    @zell863

    26 күн бұрын

    @@ehaaron I'm a Croat from Bosnia. There wasn't any jihad in Bosnia.

  • @ehaaron

    @ehaaron

    26 күн бұрын

    @@zell863 there would've been if it weren't for the Serbs.

  • @zell863

    @zell863

    26 күн бұрын

    @@ehaaron No there wasn't and there will not be. It is bs. If Bosnians want jihad they can make it today in Bosnia and they do not do it.

  • @dice5709

    @dice5709

    17 күн бұрын

    @@zell863 because they are nicer than Serbs anyway.

  • @ownagesniper1
    @ownagesniper1Ай бұрын

    Great video, very informative.

  • @rtyrsson
    @rtyrssonАй бұрын

    I've been following Simon for a very long time; and I've not heard him use the word "wicked" with such intensity (and so often) before in all my years of viewing.

  • @rickwilliams967

    @rickwilliams967

    Ай бұрын

    He laid it on strong huh?

  • @malkavianson

    @malkavianson

    Ай бұрын

    He knows how to use drama and tone for virtue signaling. Too bad Simon, like most westerners lack any sort of objectivity, research and intelectual honesty to back it up.

  • @clericaltotalitarian

    @clericaltotalitarian

    20 күн бұрын

    Exactly, because he's a BS western propagandist and a liar, but not to worry, these bullshit lies won't hold out forever.

  • @SpiffingNZ
    @SpiffingNZАй бұрын

    25 years in prison for heading a massacre is a god damn joke if you ask me.

  • @schokolade5540

    @schokolade5540

    26 күн бұрын

    @@Western-imperalism Russian Bot has arrived.

  • @Jhonny55270

    @Jhonny55270

    15 күн бұрын

    Average western bot​@@schokolade5540

  • @selma2778

    @selma2778

    Күн бұрын

    ​@@Western-imperalism Bot

  • @mringasa1848
    @mringasa1848Ай бұрын

    This all happened when I was in my late teens/early 20s. It was a real eye opener for me at the time. I just didn't understand how the hell people could do these things to each other. We're all human... Thanks for covering this topic. Perfect material for Into the Shadows, and I've been waiting for the neutral'ish overview from this channel. :)

  • @chrishubbard1442
    @chrishubbard144229 күн бұрын

    Thanks Simon. Clear, concise and important. Keep up the good work. Some people at least appreciate it.

  • @luishernandezblonde
    @luishernandezblondeАй бұрын

    I wonder why Serbs used memories of WW2 to inflict horror on Bosnians. The fact that many Serbs still evoked their past horror endured during the WW2 to justify for their actions in Bosnia is shocking.

  • @Parabellum-oe3sw

    @Parabellum-oe3sw

    Ай бұрын

    Every genocide I know of was committed from a position of a victim. The Germans killed Jews because they supposedly were the victims of international Jewry, the Turks committed genocide on Armenians because they supposedly wanted to protect themselves from Armenians working for the Russians, the Soviets committed genocide on Ukrainians to supposedly defend themselves from kulaks, fascists etc. No aggressors sees himself as the aggressor but the victim

  • @fascistmonke

    @fascistmonke

    23 күн бұрын

    Justify what? All we did was protect ourselves. Oh, and also, a little massacring on the side. Happens, it’s war. But genocide? Absolutely not.

  • @Ivan-gp4tr

    @Ivan-gp4tr

    18 күн бұрын

    ​@@fascistmonkeWhy cry about WW2 then? It was also just defense from Croatian side by your logic. Its war, it happens.

  • @milutinpetrovic7775

    @milutinpetrovic7775

    15 күн бұрын

    ​@@Ivan-gp4trYou can't compare ww2 with Bosnian war in ww2 after Germans occupied Yugoslavia Croats wanted to kill 1/3 of Serbs 1/3 to expel and 1/3 to assimilate and then Serbs started making uprisings. Bosnian war started because Croats and Bosnians wanted independence from Yugoslavia and Serbs from Bosnia wanted to stay in Yugoslavia or to be independent. Then war and war crimes started happening and all sides did them.

  • @Ivan-gp4tr

    @Ivan-gp4tr

    15 күн бұрын

    @@milutinpetrovic7775 But why Croats wanted to do it? Im not excusing them. But you were constantly through out history claiming their land, and all together just claiming that they are in fact Serbs and that they have not the right for their country. Plus many other provocations. There was a reason for their crimes, (im not saying its justified, its not), but they didnt do it because they were bored...

  • @blacksoul3812
    @blacksoul3812Ай бұрын

    As a current student im grateful my school has taught us students about this horrifying event and other genocides Never again

  • @MrTexasDan

    @MrTexasDan

    Ай бұрын

    What are the other genocides your school is teaching?

  • @Cardan011

    @Cardan011

    Ай бұрын

    Never again? Do you even pay attention to what’s happening in world right now? Or it’s selective “never again “?

  • @MrTexasDan

    @MrTexasDan

    Ай бұрын

    @@Cardan011 What happenings are you referring to?

  • @Cardan011

    @Cardan011

    Ай бұрын

    @@MrTexasDan you know what I am talking about, don’t be coy. You have internet look it up. I know it’s hard to go against your programming, look at more sources than Daily Wire.

  • @MrTexasDan

    @MrTexasDan

    Ай бұрын

    @@Cardan011 Ok, well I'll say what you find so hard to say. You think the war on terrorist Hamas is a genocide. I know why you don't say it ... even you believe it is too dumb a statement. You really should learn the definition of genocide. You insult the memory of true genocide victims.

  • @tomislavblazevic2742
    @tomislavblazevic2742Ай бұрын

    Thanks for reminding the world.

  • @FlixTV101
    @FlixTV10114 күн бұрын

    Great victory for Bosnia and Herzegovina yesterday, as UN approved annual commemoration of 1995 Srebrenica and declares an international rememberance day, even tho Serbia tried everything to sabotage and prevent it from happening. They havent changed a bit in the last 30 years.

  • @YaMuthasOnion
    @YaMuthasOnionАй бұрын

    Everyone likes to think that these atrocities are a thing of the past, when humanity was younger... Nope. This happened at the same time that I, and probably a few of you, was coming home from school and worried about playing the new Sonic game. I didn't even learn about this till my last year of high school, which was almost a decade later. Absolutely disgusting and reprehensible

  • @havocgr1976

    @havocgr1976

    Ай бұрын

    We had a band made a song back then in my country, one of the lyrics was "you watch all this in the news while you eat".

  • @YaMuthasOnion

    @YaMuthasOnion

    Ай бұрын

    @havocgr1976 To quote another song, 'it's sad, but true.' It's like even if you did hear about it on the news, it'll be presented in a way that greatly downplays the severity of what's going on. They'll also attempt to dehumanize & retard the intelligence of not only the perpetrators, but the victims as well. That way, it seems so distant and removed from us that most people don't question their leaders or politicians about their inaction on the issue, nevermind their culpability in the crimes. Someone smarter than me once said, 'All that's necessary for evil to triumph, is for good men to do nothing'. Well, here's your case-in-point

  • @niallcampion78

    @niallcampion78

    Ай бұрын

    Yes and the Nazis were gassing and burning millions of people in ovens a mere 33 years before I was born and I used to play sonic in the 90’s as well. This is not ancient history this is almost current in the long arc of time.

  • @VonW0lf3N5t31N
    @VonW0lf3N5t31NАй бұрын

    My Uncle was a Canadian peace keeper during the war. His stories were horrible. I was only 12 when he told me them but I never forgot. He told me in one place they found the Serbs hung bodies on meat hooks in a smashed out butcher shop window. Another guy put heads in between his handlebars on his motorbike and would drive around... Looking back, I think I was too young to really understand what it takes to do this to another human. Thank you for covering this.

  • @MisterPlanePilot
    @MisterPlanePilotАй бұрын

    For five years I used to work with a group of Bosnians and Croatians. Those that were adults in the 90s are the strongest people I've met. For one of these people whom I'm very close to, who was and is still like a mother to me, she smokes packs of cigarettes a day or she will be killed by anxiety. She has massive work ethic though, and does what she needs to provide for her children. She didn't talk much about when she lived there, and those stories she did tell send shivers down your spine, rivers literally running red with blood, bodies rotting in fields, spending weeks in the forest foraging for food. She also gave birth to her first child during this. But now she's settled down in America with her family and is beyond grateful for what this country has given to her. Her and her husband employed full time, her daughter an engineer in her 20s, she's proud and grateful. She'll give you the shirt off her back even if it meant her pain. Those times bred very strong people, and I feel for what they went through.

  • @alexpotts6520
    @alexpotts6520Ай бұрын

    You randomly touched on it in the intro and now I'm desperate for a video on the Harrying of the North, a topic I know basically nothing about.

  • @williamwilson6499
    @williamwilson6499Ай бұрын

    We have one going on now courtesy of Israel. I was in Bosnia in 1997 as part of SFOR. It wasn’t a hot war at that time but it wasn’t peaceful either. The damage inflicted on the towns was severe…lots of fresh graves in the Muslim areas.

  • @BCSoHappy

    @BCSoHappy

    Ай бұрын

    That is simply not true.

  • @VersusARCH

    @VersusARCH

    Ай бұрын

    The war ended in 1995.

  • @EmergingEcho

    @EmergingEcho

    29 күн бұрын

    William, I am glad that the Anglo-Saxon world has always sided with their Muslim brothers.

  • @dzonikg

    @dzonikg

    7 күн бұрын

    And where were the graves off 30 000 Serb civilians killed?

  • @buy_large_mansions
    @buy_large_mansions5 күн бұрын

    The 1992 Bosnian independence referendum which returned a 99.71% result in the aye direction, clearly a legitimate poll.

  • @gregmatthews2510

    @gregmatthews2510

    Күн бұрын

    Both Gibraltar and Falklands have had referendums with similar figures

  • @rogerpenske2411
    @rogerpenske2411Ай бұрын

    Lots of Bosnians here in Phoenix.

  • @danb.5779

    @danb.5779

    Ай бұрын

    It really is a surprising number isn’t it. My Gf is Bosnian and thru her I’ve met about 30 more and then we discovered about 6 families live in my complex… was shocked how many are around, funny enough so was she.

  • @farisomerovic307
    @farisomerovic30712 күн бұрын

    Thank you for making this video

  • @daveacbickford
    @daveacbickfordАй бұрын

    Thank you for making this video, some of my earliest memories as a young Australian were watching the Yugoslav wars unfold on the News, starting when I was about 6. It was chilling watching and hearing of what was happening, such brutality was hard to comprehend as an Aussie, we're often so sheltered and in the early 90s as Europe went through the seismic shift of the Eastern Bloc transforming, such change was truly alien to Aussies. Fortunately our country has proudly welcomed and sheltered many who've fled many conflicts, including the Bosnian War. I've been fortunate enough to meet and know many people from all the former Yugoslav countries who've come to Australia, in particular we have thriving communities of Croatian and North Macedonian descent, and they've all been amazing people, who're happy to share their culture and form part of the patchwork of cultural influences in Australia. May we never see anything this brutal, ever again. Anywhere.

  • @jasenbertrand
    @jasenbertrandАй бұрын

    Strangely enough, as an American, I knew about this as a child and how all governments just looked the other way.

  • @jonaspaulsson9912

    @jonaspaulsson9912

    Ай бұрын

    They did not look the other way. They helped serbia

  • @blackwatertv7018

    @blackwatertv7018

    Ай бұрын

    NATO literally went to war with Serbia and bombed into the dark ages cause it was doing this.

  • @MrTexasDan

    @MrTexasDan

    Ай бұрын

    @@jonaspaulsson9912 Um, no.

  • @jonaspaulsson9912

    @jonaspaulsson9912

    Ай бұрын

    @@MrTexasDan really? What do you call upholding an illegal arms embargo on Bosnia while serbia had all the weapons they needed? Didnt that in fact help serbia? What do you say about sending un troops to Bosnia so the serbs had potential hostages thus making it very easy for serbia to attack srebrenica since nato could not bomb them. In the spring of 94 swedish un troops took over the siege of sarajevo following the markale massacre. The serbs regrouped to Gorazde and attacked in april killing a 1000 people. Moron

  • @jonaspaulsson9912

    @jonaspaulsson9912

    Ай бұрын

    @@MrTexasDan so you are not familiar with the arms embargo or the un troops?

  • @Paarthurnax83
    @Paarthurnax83Ай бұрын

    Bosnian here, got out in 97 to Sweden. Can just say that no side can say they won, everyone lost someone. Lost my father in 94 and recovered his bones in 2015 thx to forensic team from US. And people still suffer by coruption down there. All in all war is sh*t.

  • @theenclave5816

    @theenclave5816

    Ай бұрын

    Sorry about your loss, couldn’t even begin to imagine what it’s like losing a parent whilst fleeing from your very home all whilst not understanding why people would want to commit such unspeakable actions against other people over ethnic differences.

  • @VersusARCH

    @VersusARCH

    Ай бұрын

    Americans and their European allies won. They put Bosnia under their own military occupation (under the guise of UN peacekeeping) and turned it into a source of cheap and labor imports a new market for their exports, and they earned some money by covertly exporting arms and goods at inflated prices to the warring parties. All the while barely losing a soldier in the process since the locals, whom they helped antagonize against rach other, mostly fought each other.

  • @erolmitevski3729

    @erolmitevski3729

    Ай бұрын

    @@VersusARCHrepublica Srpska was part of the conspiracy. They were on the side of the deep state and were ordered to massacre as many Bosniaks and Croats as possible

  • @Nerevar1991

    @Nerevar1991

    29 күн бұрын

    @@VersusARCHOh just shut up

  • @ODGreenZa
    @ODGreenZa16 күн бұрын

    I live in south africa. I was in school in the early 90s and i recall a massive influx of Bosnian and Yugoslavian people. I made friends with lots of them and they told me of the horrors their families experienced. Some really sad stories. Thank you for the upload

  • @meeeka
    @meeeka18 күн бұрын

    Thank goodness you are covering this. It was a hugely unspeakably wickedness.

  • @yugoslaviaist
    @yugoslaviaistАй бұрын

    I was 12 years old when it started in Slovenia and Croatia. We lived in Bosnia, my grandfather was a colonel in the YPA, and I remember him sitting in his chair in the living room, smoking cigarettes with Tito’s big portrait on the wall saying something like “This will set us back 100 years, and we all deserve no better, we voted for the people who will cause everything what was built from rouins to turn back to rouins, those in power are no different then those who voted for them”. Not long after, he retired from the army with the help of a doctor that was a family friend and he wrote that he is not fit for service anymore, and not long after that the shells started falling on our town. We luckily had a house in the village and that is where I spent most of the war with my grandparents, grandpa was broken that the army in which he served for 30 years was shooting at him and his family, sadly he did not live to see the end of war, he started drinking heavily and died in early 1995, watching him turn from someone that was respected and greeted in the street by everyone to a drunk was something that will haunt me forever. By the time war was over I had not seen my parents for over 2 years, and it was so strange for the first time, I could not believe it was them, they looked different from the outside, and even more from the inside. So many things I could write, like how I forgot how chocolate tastes, how since we got our clothes from donations, I was always thinking how did the person wearing the shirt that was on me looked like, did they have a family and were they happy… In one of the packages I even got a picture from the people who sent it, they were two boys (brothers) from somewhere in England, one was named Matthew, they even wrote the adress on the back and I wanted to write them a letter as soon as the war was over and thank them for the toys and clothes, but sadly the picture got lost somewhere in the house, and I don’t go there often, it’s too hard for me to re live those memories… but whoever they are, I wish to thank them, in the darkest of days that photograph was a reminder that normal life countinues somewhere behind all those burning towns and villages, and that it will return if I was patient enough. No matter the side, my heart goes out to everyone whose experiences were like mine, and there are probably millions, may it never happen again to anyone, older people forget that first victim of war is childhood. God bless you all.

  • @ehaaron

    @ehaaron

    Ай бұрын

    god lives in Croatia.

  • @kontanaizumi
    @kontanaizumiАй бұрын

    "Only" There have been at least 3 that I know of, ethnic conflicts will never leave us

  • @cassee2179

    @cassee2179

    Ай бұрын

    Which ones are coming to mind for you?

  • @jonaspaulsson9912

    @jonaspaulsson9912

    Ай бұрын

    The war in Bosnia was not an ethnic conflict. Sarajevos defence was led by an ethnic serb

  • @zurielsss

    @zurielsss

    Ай бұрын

    @@jonaspaulsson9912ding ding ding, our first denier of Serbs being racist

  • @kontanaizumi

    @kontanaizumi

    Ай бұрын

    @@cassee2179 there are multiple displacements that happened most notably the Polish, Ukrainians, and Germans directly after WWII were expelled from eastern Europeans territories, were relocated from their homes, or outright killed during the mass transfer. it really depends on your definition of genocide but if you go by the UN these all count as them. yeah citing wikipedia isn't great but you can look this up on there under WWII evacuation and explusion, but these all happened post WWII.

  • @cassee2179

    @cassee2179

    Ай бұрын

    I took the title to mean genocides that didn't happen as an immediate result of the conflicts of WWII, so that's why I was curious. I know there were multiple during and immediately following that eruption, but I wasn't aware of anything in Europe that wasn't connected directly to it.

  • @hardy_boehm
    @hardy_boehm18 күн бұрын

    I have watched probably a hundred videos across your different channels, covering many evil actions, but this is the first where I could see your (perfectly understandable) rage. Thank you for choosing to cover this nonetheless!

  • @janap8019

    @janap8019

    16 күн бұрын

    If you want the truth, this is not the truth….before Srebrenica 30.000 serbs women children, grandparents, fathers were killed butchered, massacred….in Srebrenica only bosniak soldiers were killed….serb army evacuated the women children and older also young men that didn’t want to stay and fight….the bosniak didn’t have mercy for serbian women or children….that is the truth….but Bosniak with the help of Germany nazi regime with the US Bill Clinton did everything to cover the atrocities committed by the Muslim to fulfill the agenda from Croatia and Germany

  • @katdavies8137
    @katdavies813721 күн бұрын

    My best friend & her family immigrated to Canada in 1998 from Bosnia. I never understood just how horrific the situation was over there. I heard stories but my brain could never comprehend just how bad it was.

  • @JunikiSan1
    @JunikiSan1Ай бұрын

    prepare yourself for hell in the comments - from deep denial and justifictions.

  • @aegis6485

    @aegis6485

    Ай бұрын

    Unfortunately, every genocide has that.

  • @havocgr1976

    @havocgr1976

    Ай бұрын

    For example if I recall Chomsky still denies the genocide was real.

  • @Pai3000

    @Pai3000

    Ай бұрын

    Not many so far. But you tried...

  • @f-86zoomer37

    @f-86zoomer37

    Ай бұрын

    @@havocgr1976 it's sickening someone like him does that, especially given that he only denies it because he wrongly believes the far right, fascist, ultranationalistic yugoslav government was the same type of ethnopluralistic, socialist Yugoslavia under Tito.

  • @havocgr1976

    @havocgr1976

    Ай бұрын

    @@f-86zoomer37 Yeah he is pretty much lying to defend something that wasnt there in the first place.

  • @salkokumkidcudi
    @salkokumkidcudi25 күн бұрын

    Simon, thank you for covering this topic, the stories of the Bosnian war are not known to many. As a Bosnian I could not stop crying watching this video. All the best to you.

  • @khironkinney1667
    @khironkinney1667Ай бұрын

    I don't know what it is about this story I've watched you Simon choke down some of the most disturbing stories humanity has ever seen in a variety of contexts. Everything from war, murders, to serial killers. For some reason this story had me bawling my eyes out. I love your work these stories must be told

  • @Rachelpinter
    @Rachelpinter29 күн бұрын

    I used to work with a woman who lived in Bosnia during the war. She left shortly after, but she didn't talk about it much but tell she was still suffering from it. We all tried to shield her from certain things such as loud noises. We worked in a nursing home and when a resident passed away and were being brought out for the final time we would tell her to stay off the floor for a bit. Seeing the resident bring brought out would trigger her.

  • @sandman1989
    @sandman1989Ай бұрын

    I grew up during the war in Bosnia. I witnessed a lot of horrible things that even now is hard to talk about, my dad was captured and taken to a concentration camp and for years we didn’t know if he was even alive and years later after his release we managed to Australia but even today it’s hard with people telling me it didn’t happen or it wasn’t that bad because the media only reports on what happened in Srebrenica which was horrendous but that was happening all over Bosnia and even today a lot of places in Bosnia are Serbian run. Just recently my auntie had to go and try to identify her husband and she only managed to because of the shoes he was wearing when the serbs came and took him she even told me that she tried to give him a jacket but the serbs said hes not going to need it where hes going.

  • @AngeliqueStP

    @AngeliqueStP

    Ай бұрын

  • @lazytommy0
    @lazytommy0Ай бұрын

    people are horrible to eachother whenever they get the chance. distasteful and saddening. to quote shakespeare : "Hell is empty, and all the demons are here"

  • @tomgu2285

    @tomgu2285

    23 күн бұрын

    Yep

  • @sararaven
    @sararavenАй бұрын

    My mother worked at a restaurant run by a Serbian family at the time this was all getting really bad. I remember hearing updates on how their family was doing and it was terrifying.

  • @fishbed3805
    @fishbed380510 күн бұрын

    I have family in bosnia and i know that many of the survivors know about more stories like these that were never documented because they are still afraid to talk about it. Dont forget this was only 30 years ago

  • @HarisHuskic-gp1ni
    @HarisHuskic-gp1niАй бұрын

    Thank you Simon thank u so much for narrating this.

  • @zachjason1751
    @zachjason1751Ай бұрын

    'Quo Vadis, Aida?' is a really good movie from the perspective of someone who is living through the genocide. I have a lot of Bosnian friends and its a movie they all highly recommend

  • @VersusARCH

    @VersusARCH

    Ай бұрын

    The atrocities committed in Bosnia by all sides combined, while terrible, do not amount to a genocide. It's a term used for propagenda purposes.

  • @blackyout7824

    @blackyout7824

    Ай бұрын

    @@VersusARCHthey were targeting ethnic groups what else would you call it.

  • @obrtotube
    @obrtotube18 күн бұрын

    Simon, thank you.

  • @AlicesonHarvey
    @AlicesonHarveyАй бұрын

    can we please have more videos aboult recent history, this was a interesting video , i have learned so much aboult what happened here

  • @SuperKendoman
    @SuperKendomanАй бұрын

    I hope that Helge Meyer and his Ghost Camaro helped the people get the supplies and food that they needed in Yugoslavia , when nobody wanted to go such a war torn place, one man still had compassion for his fellow humans

  • @someone56243
    @someone56243Ай бұрын

    Feels weird to hit the like button, but it's important to know this stuff

  • @borissmolic6505
    @borissmolic6505Ай бұрын

    Im from Bosnia and being half Croatian half Serbian , had to leave the city of my birth as it was majority mussos so same stuff happend from all involved

  • @skylineXpert
    @skylineXpertАй бұрын

    Had a few bosnian colleagues at work & when I read that some generals where at court for their action at the war at the ICT. They where happy to see justice done.

  • @VersusARCH

    @VersusARCH

    Ай бұрын

    "Justice" leveled only against those who opposed US interests in the region...

  • @AnimeShinigami13
    @AnimeShinigami13Ай бұрын

    In middle school I had a classmate from Albania, I wanted to know why his parents came here. All the grownups ever said was there was a war and they wanted to keep their son safe. Never knew just how bad it was.

  • @VersusARCH

    @VersusARCH

    Ай бұрын

    There was civil unrest in Albania in 1997 in which 2-3000 people lost their lives. US was installing their puppets to rule the country in order for the country to provide arms to Albanian separatist minority in the neighboring FR Yugoslavia in order to destabilize the country and force it into US sphere of influence.

  • Ай бұрын

    I remember this being on the news, when I was a kid. It's horrifying that younger generations aren't learning about this in school.

  • @clericaltotalitarian

    @clericaltotalitarian

    20 күн бұрын

    It's a good thing they aren't learning western lies in school.

  • @CindyandRicoTheCoonhoundCross
    @CindyandRicoTheCoonhoundCrossАй бұрын

    Holy crap that was chilling.

  • @karenshadle365
    @karenshadle365Ай бұрын

    I was aware of that war, but i never heard about the massacres. Living in the US, I got the daily newspaper,watched the nightly news and thought i was well informed. Well, I now see I wasn't. Thank you,Simon.

  • @aleksandarmicke1996

    @aleksandarmicke1996

    Ай бұрын

    You still aren't if this is the only video you watched as it is pretty one-sided, which is a bit surprising for one of his videos because they are mostly objective.

  • @dorissonbass

    @dorissonbass

    Ай бұрын

    @@aleksandarmicke1996 And what would the 'other side' be of genocide?

  • @anniikka

    @anniikka

    Ай бұрын

    @@dorissonbass Propaganda. Serbs have created a lot of propaganda over the years to justify what they've done. It's very much along the lines of what Russians have used to justify the original invasion of Crimea in 2014 and the 2022 invasion, which means it's a few facts embellished into complete fiction meant to hide just how evil it all really was.

  • @VersusARCH

    @VersusARCH

    Ай бұрын

    Labeling 30,000 Bosnian muslim civillians killed in a country of 4 million people during 4 long years of war a genocide and ignoring 10,000 Serbian civillians killed during the same period is nothing but propaganda. More people got killed (both proportionally and in absolute terms) in shorter time in Gaza (population only 2 million) in the last year than in Bosnia in 1992-1995. Where is the genocide resolution proposal about that? Where is US intervention against Israel? Ah yes - unlike the Bosnian Serbs, Israel is a US ally so the US-controlled media portrays it differently...

  • @random13627

    @random13627

    Ай бұрын

    @@aleksandarmicke1996jebem ti boga there is no other side look at beograd and look at sarajevo you won’t see bullet holes in buildings but you will i’m bosnian land, mrs tamo

  • @tougakun
    @tougakunАй бұрын

    I can confirm that is was as Nightmarish as it sounds as my brother was assigned to a UN investigation team after the war they went around digging up these mass graves to confirm war crimes and the horror he saw still gives him nightmares to this day.

  • @ekvinto
    @ekvintoАй бұрын

    Both my father and mother lived through the war in Sarajevo. My father was on the front lines for the first few years. My uncle got his insides blown out to the point of losing much of his intestines and a kidney, barely surviving. My grandfather and great-grandfather were in concentration camps, both barely surviving. I was born right after the war and lived for 26 years on Grbavica (neighborhood in Sarajevo), which was under Serb control for most of the war. I know many people from Bosniak, Croat, and Serb communities that suffered, had to flee, fight, get injured, and had their family members and friends die. In a war, most, if not all, feel wronged, scared, and even justified in their actions. It is what happens afterwards that determines what people are actually like. Everyone committed crimes and I do not believe they can be compared in any sense. Yes, genocides are a special category of evil, but even one innocent human dying should be a tragedy and travesty, never to be repeated again. Looking at the current situation, it is sad knowing the war will start again in Bosnia and Herzegovina, sooner than later.

  • @kathleensiegrist2647
    @kathleensiegrist2647Ай бұрын

    I worked with a young man from Bosnia, he his father twin brother and sister escaped and settled here in Tucson, I left that store got transferred to another, wondered what became of him. His name is Hamsa

  • @KR-bn4bg
    @KR-bn4bg24 күн бұрын

    Stories like these just infuriate me.