The Worst War You Never Learned About

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Johnny Harris is an Emmy-winning independent journalist and contributor to the New York Times. Based in Washington, DC, Harris reports on interesting trends and stories domestically and around the globe, publishing to his audience of over 3.5 million on KZread. Harris produced and hosted the twice Emmy-nominated series Borders for Vox Media. His visual style blends motion graphics with cinematic videography to create content that explains complex issues in relatable ways.
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Пікірлер: 17 000

  • @johnnyharris
    @johnnyharris Жыл бұрын

    hey next week's video is one of my favorites I've ever made and it's live right now (I publish all my videos a week early on Nebula). It's about how we mapped Antarctica. Go check it out: nebula.tv/videos/johnnyharris-mapping-antarctica-how-humans-did-the-impossible PS: a portion of you Nebula subscription goes directly to supporting us to make more videos!

  • @Arriss2121

    @Arriss2121

    Жыл бұрын

    👍

  • @domicreator

    @domicreator

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi, Johnny loved this vid, been following you for years and I am happy you did story on Balkan area, hope you do story about Croatia too. :)

  • @isiahfriedlander5559

    @isiahfriedlander5559

    Жыл бұрын

    By the way, would you please list the sources for this video, this topic always fascinated me, specially how the west practically forgot what happened

  • @goodbit11

    @goodbit11

    Жыл бұрын

    It's amazing how interesting maps are, considering how boring it sounds like they would be to study.

  • @jububoobaroo67

    @jububoobaroo67

    Жыл бұрын

    The US bombed Serbia which was the real atrocity.

  • @beardoswaggins739
    @beardoswaggins739 Жыл бұрын

    I lived in Bosnia during this war. Lost two uncles and remember heading to a giant meadow with my mum to identify her sisters husbands. It was a terrible conflict. My late father walked during bombing raids to UN bread lines to collect food and water and walked it back. He told me you never ran during a bombing raid because you didn't know if you'd run right into a falling shell, so you just walked, getting showered in debris and moving from building to building to avoid sniper fire. He had some really messed up stories about his experience. Thank you Johnny for shedding light on this, it really means to world to everyone who experienced this awful war.

  • @Yocole5

    @Yocole5

    Жыл бұрын

    Wow…incredible story about your father. Seems like he was such a strong man, I’m sure you’ve heard many stories!! Always cherish people that have seen more than you will in a lifetime❤️I hope he lived a long happy life looking back in these stories and awful times, thank you so much for sharing!

  • @Ben-rz9cf

    @Ben-rz9cf

    Жыл бұрын

    I talked to a Kosovan who worked for the UN during the Clinton administration. He told me stories about getting stopped at a Serbian road block and they told him they would rape his wife and basically told him they would give him a head start before they hunted him down and killed him. I thought it was crazy because this is the kind of stuff that so obviously goes against the geneva convention. A lot of Americans talk shit on Bill Clinton but anyone who lived through those wars is certainly grateful to him and it may have been the last time that american intervention abroad was truly benevolent.

  • @danielgomessilva8966

    @danielgomessilva8966

    Жыл бұрын

    Thx for sharing

  • @techbox2002

    @techbox2002

    Жыл бұрын

    Incredible story, thanks for sharing.

  • @jnetwork3232

    @jnetwork3232

    Жыл бұрын

    Takes “parents way to school” seriously

  • @portsouth
    @portsouth Жыл бұрын

    I had a professor, his name gave away that he was Bosnian so he was put into a labor camp cutting down trees mostly. After some time he was let go. Later he was taken to another labor camp and forced to dig trenches, he acted as a guard and escaped with a fake ID and lived in Belgrade until the war ended. He told us “And that was my first performance” and that that performance was the start for his love of acting, and the arts.

  • @milosmilosic2632

    @milosmilosic2632

    Жыл бұрын

    WHY CAN'T BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA BE A UNITARY MULTI-ETHNIC COMMUNITY...? Bosnia and Herzegovina was a multi-ethnic community in Yugoslavia - while the cohesive strength of the community came from self-governing worker (class...!) consciousness, which was: above all religious and national consciousness. In such circumstances: where the dominant form was social ownership of the means of production, and the main production relationship: SELF-MANAGEMENT, it was easy to build multi-ethnic relations and multiculturalism: which was reflected in film, sports and especially in music, where it manifested itself the most...! With the introduction of capitalist relations and private property as the dominant form in the economy, where PROFIT is the main driver of everything and not satisfying the NEEDS OF CITIZENS, political relations are radically changed, where the existing multi-ethnic and multicultural community is legally disintegrating, because this "new" is now based on : A MULTI-PARTY POLITICAL SYSTEM, where each ethnic group legally creates its own political party... And they are no longer bound by CLASS CONSCIOUSNESS and affiliation, but exclusively by NATIONAL or RELIGIOUS (both in politics, culture, economy, security and sports...!) Any attempt in such (bourgeois...) circumstances, to establish some kind of UNITARY COMMUNITY, inevitably leads to the domination of one nation and therefore to conflict within such an artificial (forced...) community, and finally, to the inevitable... - WAR...! I will prove to you with a very simple question, that Muslims from Bosnia are ESSENTIALLY the instigators of the war in BiH...! "If TOMORROW ALL SERBS from Republika Srpska were to collectively convert from Orthodoxy to Islam, would you - shoot them"...? Answer me....? If you have a "hertz"...? If you say: that you would not shoot the Serbs, if they collectively convert to Islam: THAT MEANS - THAT YOU did not like the multi-ethnic and multicultural Bosnia that existed in the SFRY and that you are: 100% responsible for the outbreak of war in Bosnia...! If you say: That you would still shoot at the Serbs... - it only means that you are a FASCIST society and a fascist TOTALITARIAN community, which does not know how to organize economic life in Bosnia and Herzegovina on the principles of democratic principles, and that is why you NEED ROBBERY of other peoples and their economic and financial resources. So...? Are you the instigators of war in BiH...? The answer is: YES...! Muslims are the instigators of war in BiH...!

  • @abdalrrahim

    @abdalrrahim

    Жыл бұрын

    @@milosmilosic2632 You sond just like every "peace keeper" I ever heard . Just admit it They are Christian so you veiw theme as the good guys regardless of evidence 🙄 Stop pretending to be unbiased. I am biased too but I don't lie about it

  • @0816M3RC

    @0816M3RC

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@milosmilosic2632 The Bosnian Serbs should be deported to Serbia.

  • @commandercody2224

    @commandercody2224

    11 ай бұрын

    ​​@@milosmilosic2632 your comment is too much bs for me to bother reading so ill just answer ur question at the begining. the reason it isnt as unitary as it was in yugoslavia is becouse the whole country was held together by Tito. as soon as Tito died in 1980 thing started going downhill and everyone started descending into extreme nationalism wich eventually lead to the wars (and this isnt me praising tito or anything im not the biggest fan of his at all its just the truth)

  • @mikevarga6742

    @mikevarga6742

    10 ай бұрын

    @@milosmilosic2632 holding socialist yugo together was not easy lol. Tito could be brutal and ruthless when he needed to be. So if u think having someone locked away or killed for an opinion is acceptable, then yea it was easy

  • @War_Zone360
    @War_Zone3604 ай бұрын

    I’m a survivor of this war and I also lost two uncles during the conflict and it’s amazing how useless UN is and was allowing thousands of people to be murdered. The world never seems to learn lessons and change foreign policy.

  • @allenramirez2778

    @allenramirez2778

    Ай бұрын

    They do say they're peacekeepers, at whatever the cost. They definitely wouldn't of survived though if they got involved in the fighting

  • @ANato_Channel

    @ANato_Channel

    Ай бұрын

    How useless is Alija after withdrawing Lisabon agreement

  • @muksimulmaad7413

    @muksimulmaad7413

    28 күн бұрын

    Mass tragedy happens Dont help Issue an apology the next generation 30 years later UN peacekeeping

  • @superloversonic5682

    @superloversonic5682

    26 күн бұрын

    Its like UN did not help in Bosnian war 😢😡🤬

  • @Benjimac379

    @Benjimac379

    25 күн бұрын

    As an American, the people who did care was the special forces that apprehended the war criminals that were responsible for the atrocities that were committed by those animals. We Americans have said this for years: THE UN IS A JOKE

  • @MiladJP
    @MiladJP13 күн бұрын

    Next to my apartment in Germany, there is a small pub. - Owner is Albanian, Customers are Croats, Serbian, Bosnian, Greek and Turkish. We all live in peace, we all celebrate together. They have left the battles of their fathers at home and decided to finally start again with love and joy for their shared food, often the language and culture. I am amazed every single day I pass this pub. It's called Arians Pub (named after the owners son Arian) and it is in Hamburg. The most amazing gathering of Balkan states.

  • @svendankic8589

    @svendankic8589

    12 күн бұрын

    Can you please tell me the name of a pub.I am going to Hamburg for euro 2024 so Im probably gonna go often to the fan zone

  • @MiladJP

    @MiladJP

    12 күн бұрын

    @@svendankic8589 Arian's Pub - Adress: Stellinger Weg 20, 20255 Hamburg They got many beers from Germany, France, Belgium, England. Really good inventory. Price is also good, compared to the touristic area.

  • @AlexD-mg9xb

    @AlexD-mg9xb

    11 күн бұрын

    @@svendankic8589 if you search Arian's pub, Hamburg on google earth there's only one result i think that's it

  • @daniraspahic2625

    @daniraspahic2625

    8 күн бұрын

    Dear MiladJP, this proves that every war is just a trick, becuase people naturally come togedher and help each other, thank you for sharing the same opinion as many of us in former Yogoslavia’s people.

  • @janap8019

    @janap8019

    6 күн бұрын

    Yes this is what is the truth not the people that are spreading hate and lies, because the war in Yugoslavia was manufactured, there is a French general he made confession before he died, Germany wanted to revenge serbs because of the ww and to split Yugoslavia because it was to powerfull, so they planted seeds into croats and muslims to turn against the serbs…and they waited for Tito to die…that was their plann and untill this day we all can see the truth that this confession was accurate…Germany untill this day isn’t satisfied they aren’t done with Serbia they want to kill the serbian soul to…but you can’t do that because we know the truth

  • @Whatupitskevin
    @Whatupitskevin11 ай бұрын

    They just found my coworkers brother body in a mass grave and has finally just been identified after being missing for decades. It was heartbreaking having a woman in her 60s crying on your shoulder.

  • @shonenjumpmagneto

    @shonenjumpmagneto

    11 ай бұрын

    *shoulder?

  • @Whatupitskevin

    @Whatupitskevin

    11 ай бұрын

    @@shonenjumpmagneto yes thank you voice to text will do that

  • @anna-gt2mu

    @anna-gt2mu

    9 ай бұрын

    S

  • @anna-gt2mu

    @anna-gt2mu

    9 ай бұрын

    A

  • @Staerkebombe

    @Staerkebombe

    9 ай бұрын

    *May Allah Almighty have mercy upon him, and give her pleasure, amiin yaa Hu*

  • @ekids.bassment
    @ekids.bassment Жыл бұрын

    I was part of that. We 'the dutch' were send on a mission with basic weapons and mostly transport vehicles and no tanks. Therefor my trust is gone in the UN and my government. Recently they apologized after 27 years. I was 19 and a lot of soldiers were around that age. So nowadays I'm really upset when people promote the army or war. It's all a game and we're just collateral. there is no bravery in war, just foolishness

  • @dbgoestotheinternet7609

    @dbgoestotheinternet7609

    Жыл бұрын

    War is hell. I detest warmongers. I tell my son never to listen to old men or women banging war drums. Won't be them in the fox hole. They preach in safety. F em. And F the corrupt media/politicians easing the way for bankers wars.

  • @beancole

    @beancole

    Жыл бұрын

    I've seen much bravery in war. Just not from those in governments.

  • @eruno_

    @eruno_

    Жыл бұрын

    there is bravery in defending the weak. Sadly Netherlands and UN failed at that and that shame will never go away.

  • @oreljumovic1731

    @oreljumovic1731

    Жыл бұрын

    There is bravery in war, you feel it when you defend the defenceless or you could have felt it if UN would truly stand behind its goals and intentions. Blood of Srebrenica is on UN's hands too

  • @heisenberg5361

    @heisenberg5361

    Жыл бұрын

    Unbelievable. They’ve arranged the conflict and sent some 19 yo soldiers to pretend they are trying to stop it. And then of corse, the American’s with the cavalry to save the day, Uranium bombs on schools and hospitals, bridges getting blasted while a train full of people is passing, planes dropping on cities full of civilians and all that.. Disgusting!

  • @Jiusolosurfavs
    @Jiusolosurfavs4 ай бұрын

    My mother and father are both Bosnians, my father escaped in the beginning of the war, my mom stayed for 1 or 2 years, having to escape through an underground tunnel, seeing much of the atrocities and death, she was 12.

  • @JamesHunt19761

    @JamesHunt19761

    Ай бұрын

    disii Lipaa moja Simpatična Bosankoo, a sto lijepo stoji crna bujna kosa, krasno, cime se zanimas inace, odakle su tvoji?

  • @1389NS

    @1389NS

    10 күн бұрын

    ​@@JamesHunt19761 Kakvi su ovo Bosnci sve Japanci i Amerikanci ? I ti isto James... Koji ste vi?

  • @ahmedgamessa2

    @ahmedgamessa2

    20 сағат бұрын

    Name of tunnel your mom escaped is Tunnel of life-Tunel spasa

  • @simpleliving-bulgaria4787
    @simpleliving-bulgaria47873 ай бұрын

    My ex was a part of this. The stories he told were horrific. I will never forget the things he told me. Absolutely awful. Neighbour against neighbour. Neighbours that lived next to each other for decades became enemies.

  • @peterrhodes5663

    @peterrhodes5663

    16 күн бұрын

    I am English, with all the Slavic features, so blend in with that lot. I was in Mostar around 9 years ago. We were in a cafe, and the owner was totaling up the bill. I couldn't understand what he was saying, so asked him in Croatian to speak Hrvatski. We were on the Croatian side of the river, but the hatred in his expression upon hearing my request was unbelievable. That hatred goes back for countless generations. You can suppress it, but it is instilled in the kids. Just like religion. Both Sarajevo and Mostar still had the bombed out buildings, and other structures full if bullet holes from 30 years before. They can't be bothered to fix the damage. If anyone is interested in disaster tourism, Bosnia it's a good country to visit.

  • @The_right_path100
    @The_right_path10010 ай бұрын

    As someone who’s been in Bosnia during this mess I can assure you that war is very much scarier than anything I’ve ever experienced

  • @Ana_jugo

    @Ana_jugo

    7 ай бұрын

    I feel sorry wish you all the best

  • @dhzhbb

    @dhzhbb

    6 ай бұрын

    因为有穆斯林,所以有战争

  • @aleksandarcvetkovic5436

    @aleksandarcvetkovic5436

    6 ай бұрын

    Are you Bosnia native?

  • @vendetta4640

    @vendetta4640

    5 ай бұрын

    I feel sorry for the civilians. So unnecessary war. In the end all parties had to sit down and agree to a deal. I wish that deal would have come in 1991.

  • @aleksandarcvetkovic5436

    @aleksandarcvetkovic5436

    5 ай бұрын

    @@vendetta4640 How sorry exactly you feel? Enough to provide pictures of you protesting against war in Bosnia? Or showing copy of paycheck you sent Red Cross to help civilians?

  • @vedadfisic
    @vedadfisic Жыл бұрын

    As a young child, I spent the entire duration of the war in Bosnia. My mother, who was in her early twenties at the time, and I were constantly on the move, seeking shelter from the relentless bombings. I vividly recall waiting in line for aid from the Red Cross and having to flee from their bombs. One night, my father, who was also in his twenties and deployed on the front line, returned to us. However, my mother did not recognize him at first due to the hardships we had endured. Despite being a Bosniak, my father's best friends were a Serb and a Croat, which further emphasizes the tragic divide that the war had created. The aftermath of the war was also challenging for us. Food shortages were rampant, and my father's salary was paid in one bag of groceries per month instead of money. To supplement our food supply, we went on frequent fishing trips to a nearby river. These fishing trips are among the few memories from that time that I recall with a smile.

  • @woocheta

    @woocheta

    Жыл бұрын

    Nadam se da ste svi na broju i zdravo. Živio!

  • @Dobis86

    @Dobis86

    Жыл бұрын

    I grew up in Mostar at that time. Similar story but different, I hope you and your family are doing well these days. We made it out alive, brother.

  • @peter58peter

    @peter58peter

    Жыл бұрын

    u was not 'bosniak'. u were jugoslavian muslims.

  • @Inception1338

    @Inception1338

    Жыл бұрын

    I can't help but think of Hitlers strategy to destroy the east in order to make space for Germans...being continued here. The EU one Reich one Führer... It's sad.

  • @Zrillamarion

    @Zrillamarion

    Жыл бұрын

    Serbia.. oh yes. kzread.info/dash/bejne/eZ6i27Sdp7HRido.html

  • @SashaRomeo-cb1fr
    @SashaRomeo-cb1fr2 ай бұрын

    I'm really glad to see that someone of your breadth and capacity is working on this topic, it really shows how versatile you are.Thank U

  • @Amp1771
    @Amp17715 ай бұрын

    Thank you for explaining this I remember seeing this on the news a lot when I was a kid but never fully understood it. This was like watching one of those Metal Gear backstory vids.

  • @eskay5106
    @eskay5106 Жыл бұрын

    I remember being a 10 yr old in Pakistan and seeing a sudden surge of people who didnt look like me on the streets. A lot of Bosnians were airlifted to Pakistan during the war between 1992 and 1995. I saw mostly women. They were traumatized by what the war had done to them. Housed in refugee camps in Rawalpindi and Islamabad. I dont remember much more about them apart from the fact that they were great people who deserved better. Sending love and peace to the people of Bosnia and Herzegovina!

  • @libertas5005

    @libertas5005

    Жыл бұрын

    We had a Pakistani UN base in my hometown in the 1993, I met some of them in my school as I was a kid at the times during the siege. I still remember them playing Pakistani traditional songs on bagpipes (I'm not sure how you call those instruments in Pakistan). I guess it's part of the British heritage? In any case, Love to Pakistan from a Bosniak.

  • @kangtheconqueror8784

    @kangtheconqueror8784

    Жыл бұрын

    Pakistani war crime and atrocities in Bangladesh, 1971 should be addressed - a Bangladeshi muslim.

  • @4Everlast

    @4Everlast

    Жыл бұрын

    People did horrific stuff to each other in those days, absolute monsters that showed their true face in war especially Serbian Četnik's.

  • @shazanali692

    @shazanali692

    Жыл бұрын

    Yougoslavia is the perfect example of a shite storm

  • @iNeed2.p

    @iNeed2.p

    Жыл бұрын

    You guys did the same with Bangladesh before 1971 specially Hindu bangladeshis

  • @serdavosseaworth6115
    @serdavosseaworth61157 ай бұрын

    UN - United nothing.

  • @9kk99k9k

    @9kk99k9k

    2 ай бұрын

    TRUE

  • @hpillsbury06

    @hpillsbury06

    2 ай бұрын

    I was in Bosnia in 2003, and the international companies that were there to build up after the war did nothing but cause high unemployment with the younger people. Work for the Army as a contractor or starve.

  • @9kk99k9k

    @9kk99k9k

    2 ай бұрын

    @@hpillsbury06 Damn :C

  • @moa3605

    @moa3605

    2 ай бұрын

    Or ..Useless Nation's

  • @ryanoglesbee1075

    @ryanoglesbee1075

    2 ай бұрын

    USA should stop sending funds to the UN, and watch how quickly the whole thing crumbles

  • @DzevadTopcic
    @DzevadTopcicАй бұрын

    My father and some uncles were in the war fighting on the Bosnian side . I was born early 96 and we escaped to America when I was 4. I’m so grateful everyday that they made it out alive … but you can tell it changed them forever

  • @sodog44
    @sodog44Ай бұрын

    Crazy how Tito kept all this under wraps for as long as he did.

  • @WhoKnows-vq1um

    @WhoKnows-vq1um

    Ай бұрын

    Ummm. You know Tito died in 1980. He was one of the greatest leaders this planet has ever seen and the ultimate truth is the people under him and around him loved him. (Awards and decorations received by Josip Broz Tito - wikipedia page). After his death the Serbian monsters started to plan the Greater Serbia. When the Croatians saw that the Serbs were ethnically cleansing Bosnians they started operation Storm in 1995. The Croatians cleansed the Serbs that didn't want to leave Croatia and kicked out about 300,000 Serbs out of their country. Unfortunately the Bosnians were not prepared and were taken by surprise. My mother is from a village called Čarakovo which is about 4 kilometers away from Prijedor. She told me how a friend that lived in the same village and went to school with them (Serbian) was dragging other Bosnians from their homes and killing the men the first day the war started. Somehow the Serbs had a plan and all the necessary equipment, while the Bosnians had no clue and were surprised. You can read about the Prijedor ethnic cleansing - on wikipedia.

  • @memoraisedone4415

    @memoraisedone4415

    Ай бұрын

    Serbia never wanted bigger state no one from Serbia want that that is just BS.the army was protecting people from croats and muslims who wanted ethnically clear state.

  • @WhoKnows-vq1um

    @WhoKnows-vq1um

    29 күн бұрын

    @@memoraisedone4415Genocide In Bosnia - Holocaust Museum Houston type this into google. Bosnian war - Wikipedia, type this into google. Greater Serbia - wikipedia.. I'm in Prijedor (Bosnia) right now as I'm writing this. Prijedor ethnic cleansing - wikipedia... Take a walk all across the Balkans and ask who started the war and who suffered the most. It was the Serbs who started the war because of the Greater Serbia ideology and started to ethnically cleanse the muslims. Stop lying, facts are facts. Tyrants always want to be seen as victims.

  • @WhoKnows-vq1um

    @WhoKnows-vq1um

    29 күн бұрын

    @@memoraisedone4415 Stop lying. Genocide In Bosnia - Holocaust Museum Houston type this into google. Bosnian war - Wikipedia, type this into google. Greater Serbia - wikipedia.. I'm in Prijedor (Bosnia) right now as I'm writing this. Prijedor ethnic cleansing - wikipedia... Take a walk all across the Balkans and ask who started the war. It was the Serbs who started the war because of the Greater Serbia ideology and started to ethnically cleanse the muslims. Stop lying, facts are facts. Tyrants always want to be seen as victims.

  • @WhoKnows-vq1um

    @WhoKnows-vq1um

    29 күн бұрын

    @@memoraisedone4415 Stop lying. Genocide In Bosnia - Holocaust Museum Houston type this into google. Bosnian war - Wikipedia, type this into google. Greater Serbia - wikipedia.. I'm in Prijedor (Bosnia) right now as I'm writing this. Prijedor ethnic cleansing - wikipedia... Take a walk all across the Balkans and ask who started the war. It was the Serbs who started the war because of the Greater Serbia ideology and started to ethnically cleanse the muslims. Stop lying, facts are facts. Tyrants always want to be seen as victims.

  • @Em-tw1gz
    @Em-tw1gz Жыл бұрын

    As a Bosnian, who witnessed firsthand and survived these events, I can say that in this rather short video, Johnny , you painted the picture pretty well. It brings tears to my eyes. Thanks

  • @filipmilic7966

    @filipmilic7966

    Жыл бұрын

    As a Serb it saddens me how peoples lives were ruined by my country.

  • @e.k874

    @e.k874

    Жыл бұрын

    He said it was complicated story .. it’s not every time Muslims are the victims of crime ppl say it’s complicated

  • @heisenberg5361

    @heisenberg5361

    Жыл бұрын

    Don’t agree with you.

  • @Taurunum

    @Taurunum

    Жыл бұрын

    Yea he forgot to mention a lot of unimportant details for west. For example what mujahideens from Arabic countries were doing there when Nato, UN and USA were there also, and how mujahideens arrived, who bring them and how many left after. Also what he didn’t say is why someone who don’t want to be part of some country in this case Yugoslavia want to keep boarders created by same Yugoslavia communist regime. And why someone is allowed to separate from Yugoslavia and again others can’t separate from newly separated regions? What would happened in case that south USA states want to brake out USA to be independent and also not just that but to take boarders USA create as new boards of country plus to forbid any group that want to be part of USA to stay as part of it? Probably USA or any other country would stand still and watch that…There is a lot of questions he, i guess, miss not intentionally.

  • @e.k874

    @e.k874

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Taurunum he forgot to mention that th serbs were worse than the nazi's a genocide is not complicated

  • @Meatsweats_o_O
    @Meatsweats_o_O Жыл бұрын

    A lot Bosnians moved to St. Louis MO cause of this war. I hate the reason they moved here, but I love their community in the area. I've always worked with someone from Bosnia, they have always been fantastic, caring and loving people. Their stories have broken my heart countless times.

  • @libertas5005

    @libertas5005

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm Bosnian who lives in the US but I've never been to St. Louis. How is it nowadays, is it a nice place to visit? I'm thinking about a road trip across the Midwest this summer and was thinking of stopping by in St. Louis for some Bosnian food :)

  • @Meatsweats_o_O

    @Meatsweats_o_O

    Жыл бұрын

    @@libertas5005 St. Louis is a complicated little city. statistically we have high crime but it's concentrated to very small areas so it sways the stats very heavily. The area's with a higher concentration of Bosnian are safe and don't have any increased crime problems. South St. Louis is where a lot of Bosnian specific stores are, like Afton, Lemay, Mehlville, Bella Villa, Wilbur Park, Lakeshire. those neighborhoods would probably be a treat for you. Hell the population is high enough that they convinced MLS to build a stadium and we now have a soccer team, all because of our Bosnian population. I'm so damn glad I get to live in the same area as them. the US could and should do more for refugees, it's been nothing but positives for the last 30 years. they're the backbone to so many industries here. Every contractor and electrician I've ever hired has been a Bosnian, and they've never disappointed.

  • @sanjaveljovic4006

    @sanjaveljovic4006

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Meatsweats_o_O I am from Bosnia moved here 1995 lived in Sarajevo witnessed all of it now in USA in Atlanta Georgia but visit St.Louis often as I have Bosnian friends there. Atlanta Georgia has a lot of Bosnians as well.

  • @nerzhul2455

    @nerzhul2455

    Жыл бұрын

    What a ridicuIous popagandish video. "Women were sent to prison camps", women were never sent to prison camps in Bosnia atIeast not by serbs. Another NGO weSStern stooge trying to stir the fire with aII the popaganda in the ongoing situation in Ukraine

  • @demibasan1714

    @demibasan1714

    Жыл бұрын

    my parents moved to swiss, i didnt knew theres a bosnian community in usa lol

  • @Xboxers
    @XboxersАй бұрын

    I can tell you in The Netherlands we definitely learned about this war and the horrific events that played incl. the overrunning of the Dutchbat safe-zone.

  • @Alexander-vo4gv
    @Alexander-vo4gv Жыл бұрын

    I find it absolutely insane that people outside of Europe aren't aware of the Bosnian civil war. I'm Scottish, and here in Europe it was massive news when it happened (I wasn't alive to see that though). I personally know people who fought there, such as my friend's father. Absolutely terrible conflict, let's hope it never gets repeated

  • @RoniForeva

    @RoniForeva

    Жыл бұрын

    I find it insane that people actually don’t know about this war. I’m Ghanaian from Africa and even i know about the war. I thought everyone did. Its one of the greatest Genocides in modern history along with the holocaust and the Rwandese genocide. I thought everyone knew this basic aspect of world history.

  • @vehboagovic7330

    @vehboagovic7330

    Жыл бұрын

    cista agresij

  • @tarikmuratovic8773

    @tarikmuratovic8773

    Жыл бұрын

    It was not a civil war but an agression on the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina!!

  • @DjordjeDjurkovic

    @DjordjeDjurkovic

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@RoniForeva This video Is copy pasting articles from Wikipedia. If you need info about genocide in Bosnia, then Norwegian documentary "Srebrenica town betrayed" is much better choice.

  • @RoniForeva

    @RoniForeva

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DjordjeDjurkovic thank you. No offense to this KZreadr but he didn’t really say anything outside the basic facts that most people that have a high level understanding of the war knows.

  • @mstyres00
    @mstyres00 Жыл бұрын

    Being in the military myself, I know a lot of old dogs that consider Bosnia a one way ticket to PTSD. Thats basically the only thing everyone got from that tour. Watching human beings being slaughtered and not being able to do anything about it

  • @KUsery42

    @KUsery42

    Жыл бұрын

    I was scrolling through the comments looking for this. My marine buddy was deployed there at the time and only opened up about it a decade later. iirc, he made a dark joke about calling it Operation Human Shield (ie we were just put there for watching awful things happen and being told not to do, or having to ask permission to do, what they were trained to do). I was aware it was a confusing geopolitical mess, but wasn’t there. So that’s the anecdote I have from someone who was there from the US military minus the gory stuff he witnessed/experienced. He said “We were basically dropped off unarmed and all alone to take shots for politicians”, or something like that.

  • @vanjamenadzer

    @vanjamenadzer

    Жыл бұрын

    @@KUsery42 That's because it was all orchestrated that way. Not the atrocities, but the war was allowed to happen, matter of fact was instigated. Just like today's Ukraine. Only people today have internet and are less gullible.

  • @panzerfist

    @panzerfist

    Жыл бұрын

    Yup my dad was there for NATO - this is what he told me

  • @mrnelsonius5631

    @mrnelsonius5631

    Жыл бұрын

    I went to Bosnia and Kosovo in 2001 as an AFE performer for troops stationed there. It was a heavy place even then. The conflict was over but the sheer scope of destruction and horror was palpable. I meet many troops who had been there when things were BAD. I was 19 at the time and the experience changed my outlook on many things. Grateful for our military men and women’s service.

  • @Pashaa417

    @Pashaa417

    Жыл бұрын

    Only thing that un forces in Bosnia did was just standing and watching all crimes all around you

  • @randallcraft4071
    @randallcraft40714 ай бұрын

    It blows my mind about about so many of these videos about conflicts that people have supposedly never heard of. I don't know if it has something to do with me being at advanced classes in high school or more likely being a national where we have huge Diaspora populations of former refugees, but this war was covered in my school and a good quarter of my class were Bosnian. We learned about Armenia as well and several other conflicts. I am always surprised other people dont know about some of these crazy things.

  • @camilliadelagarza4581
    @camilliadelagarza45815 ай бұрын

    Been there. Saw the scars on the streets and hearts. Such a complicated war. But aren’t they all 💔

  • @EvaD.Slayer
    @EvaD.Slayer Жыл бұрын

    My mother explained it like this...."just Imagine drinking coffee with your neighbour and the other day the neighbour completely ignores you and wants to kill you" People now are like"now it's all good we alle like each other now" no it's not, the hate within the people who experienced that will never go away. It's trauma, war brings nothing but trauma.

  • @worlddd7777

    @worlddd7777

    Жыл бұрын

    It a 100 year long hate, very complicated, started with Jasenovac, ended with Srebrenica

  • @dhzhbb

    @dhzhbb

    6 ай бұрын

    都是穆斯林的错

  • @_neXose

    @_neXose

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@worlddd7777it started way before Jasenovac and hasn't ended yet.

  • @worlddd7777

    @worlddd7777

    6 ай бұрын

    @@_neXose Yes, it started at beginning of 20 century actually

  • @sejozwak

    @sejozwak

    5 ай бұрын

    It started during ottoman era with Omer Paša Latas who was a serb who sold out his own religion just to gain power and to eliminate Bosniak elite and intellectuals @@worlddd7777

  • @Journal_Haris
    @Journal_Haris Жыл бұрын

    Never would I expect an episode on the Bosnian war. I recently travelled to Bosnia last month to report on what happened on the ground- and after visiting Srebrenica itself, seeing it as a ghost town, witnessing the hundreds of serb flags perched over the spots which the Bosniaks were massacred on and speaking with genocide survivors, I can safely say Johnny's video has done justice to this catastrophe, so from the bottom of my heart and those of Bosnia, thank you for covering this. May we learn from the lessons of this dark chapter.

  • @Oberarmin

    @Oberarmin

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes nationalism is really bad

  • @lafodlafa

    @lafodlafa

    Жыл бұрын

    @Zaydan Alfariz Bosnia is closer to another war than it's to being a member of European Union. It's sad state of affairs, but it's true. Right as we speak, the Serb side is provoking immediate political instability in the country with the refusal to honor the verdicts, and with the trying to take over jurisdictions from higher levels

  • @jamesardron

    @jamesardron

    Жыл бұрын

    Sadly Bosnian politics aren’t great. So it’s an incredible place with incredible people. But it’s a slower progress than their neighbours and they’re really struggling with inflation at the moment as well. With limited government support to help. I know a lot of people very frustrated and it’s very common for people to emigrate to Germany for better prospects. For many political issues it then feeds to the lack of regulation in place that is in line with EU needed to join.

  • @fra604

    @fra604

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@Zaydan Alfariz Bosnia recently got their candidate status accepted, so on paper they have the same status as Albania although Albania is closer

  • @SandyWolf-

    @SandyWolf-

    Жыл бұрын

    Sounds like what is going on now with Russia and Ukrainian???

  • @burnheretic3950
    @burnheretic39502 ай бұрын

    There is a urban exploring video that shows the Sarajevo winter Olympic games facilities. It captures this point in time quite well. Very sad and mournful feel to the overgrown and forgotten building that were state of the art at the time. Covered in old bullet holes and destroyed. Nature starting to cover it all again. Crazy to think of all the people that were once there before the war... (Country Urbex if I recall)

  • @slugfishh
    @slugfishhАй бұрын

    my dad was stuck in sarajevo when the war started, he was a soldier and later ended up working for the UN, till he was captured and held at gunpoint by someone he want to preschool with, and then traded alongside his colleagues for 2 barrels of oil, and was brought to the U.S where he met my mom. (who was also a bosnian refugee) I was born and grew up in the US dont even speak bosnian that well and grew up far away from most of my extended family, ive heard my parents horrible stories but I want to learn more about what happened and get more connected with my parents home country :( my aunt on my moms side was from srebrenica tho and both of her parents died in it, which i can hardly even imagine how that must have been.

  • @Chick2106

    @Chick2106

    Ай бұрын

    I'm so sorry to hear that, hope your family are doing well.

  • @yannickm.2648
    @yannickm.264811 ай бұрын

    I'm Congolese, but I have a few ex-Yougoslavian friends (Bosnia, Serbie and Croatia), what my Bosnian friends (and parents) told me about that war was horrific. It's strange how people who could live with each other, look a like, ear the same food...and still be able to kill each other. Fortunately, the war is over, but both side lost so much for...what? I hope to visit Bosnia one day, as I have met great people from that country.

  • @0816M3RC

    @0816M3RC

    11 ай бұрын

    These activities occur in Africa all the time.

  • @yannickm.2648

    @yannickm.2648

    11 ай бұрын

    @@0816M3RC but is that the subject?

  • @tubeysr

    @tubeysr

    11 ай бұрын

    Politicians gradually fill civilians with so much poison and hate, especially in the eyes of Nationalism or Religion, that a person loses his humanity, and becomes worse than a beast.

  • @the_northface

    @the_northface

    11 ай бұрын

    @@0816M3RC make a video about it.

  • @Shush959

    @Shush959

    11 ай бұрын

    There are many bad things that the ethnic groups mentioned in the video committed against each other before Yugoslavia was a thing. However many still lived relatively normal, but there was many things behind the scene because of this. And this type of thing is still common today. An example can be in the Central African Republic. Same thing with Muslims and Christians against each other. People live peacefully until some group manages to trick the majority into chaos.

  • @daandegier5208
    @daandegier5208 Жыл бұрын

    My mom is Bosnian, my dad is dutch, I’m born in the US My mom was an exchange student in the US when the war broke out, overnight her passport was worthless and at 18 she was a war refugee in the United States. It’s remarkable how I get emotional just by watching this video - even though I wasn’t even alive at the time - the sadness, it’s cross generational - that’s the real impact of war.

  • @huntermosely7420

    @huntermosely7420

    Жыл бұрын

    I can ever forget the Dutch peacekeepers watching silently as Bosnians were killed.

  • @marshmelows

    @marshmelows

    Жыл бұрын

    @@huntermosely7420 I can, they were barely armed and unmatched in numbers. Get real

  • @Zrillamarion

    @Zrillamarion

    Жыл бұрын

    Thats really cool. Only Dutch Bosnian i know is #johnnyx100

  • @marshmelows

    @marshmelows

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Youaretrapped yeah sure

  • @Antilluminati

    @Antilluminati

    Жыл бұрын

    ​​@@marshmelows they shouldnt have gone there in the first place. This was payback since the great Illyrian revolt. We never wanted to join your P. To the Edophile New World Freemasonic Order and kept resisting it multiple times throughout history. Pay attention you Spanish/Moroccan b to the astard.. you're watching a people of God resist your satanic leadership.

  • @BlushiSalah-zv5vb
    @BlushiSalah-zv5vb2 ай бұрын

    I remember in my teenage, My cousin had those VHS tapes that contained footage of the violence during this war, and it stuck with me till this day..Truly a Failure for humanity!

  • @BugHwi
    @BugHwi6 күн бұрын

    I just got assigned to cover this topic in class.... (well he just wrote "Former Yugoslavia Conflict") I was so confused by everything I read and this really helped! thanks!!

  • @muchachonextdoor5608
    @muchachonextdoor560811 ай бұрын

    I have a buddy who was a Delta operator. He went all over, Iraq, Mogadishu, and he said the worst things he saw, the most inhumane things, was during this conflict.

  • @faceofuganda9592

    @faceofuganda9592

    11 ай бұрын

    Want us to be buddy

  • @shonenjumpmagneto

    @shonenjumpmagneto

    11 ай бұрын

    Ah yes, The City of Iraq & The Nation of Mogadishu.

  • @Hellodumbbitchs

    @Hellodumbbitchs

    11 ай бұрын

    @@shonenjumpmagneto lol

  • @californiacombativesclub202

    @californiacombativesclub202

    11 ай бұрын

    So he was there for Black Hawk down and this

  • @marinavlajic9692

    @marinavlajic9692

    10 ай бұрын

    Layers

  • @ssjtalla23
    @ssjtalla23 Жыл бұрын

    This is a topic that is hard to put into a 15min video. It is very nuanced and complicated. I'm from one of the "safe zones", the town of Gorazde. The stuff my parents and my siblings went through is unimaginable. My fathers first wife was a Bosnian Serb, and she died from Serb shell right in front of my dad. Maybe I wouldn't have been born if there wasn't this war, but I would still take not being born over monstrosities that happened during that time and in my hometown. Sad part is, this country will probably never heal and go forward from this war. We are still stuck in it. We are still stuck 30 years in the past.

  • @Homer-OJ-Simpson

    @Homer-OJ-Simpson

    Жыл бұрын

    For a 16 min video, this was really good. But there is so much detail that it could easily be a one hour video. This was a big story even in the US throughout the 90's. This and the collapse of the USSR are two foreign news I probably remember the most in the 90's.

  • @pepefrogic3034

    @pepefrogic3034

    Жыл бұрын

    This is mindbogling spin. Milosevid died during his trial, he was never convicted of anything and would by all acounts not have been convicted of genocide. No mention of the largest ethnic cleansing in the war, of entire Serbian poputation of Krajina, in Oluja that he mentions. Srebrenica did have armed muslims, plenty of them who fled through the woods and were captured, and for years were killing Serbs around Srebrenica, in christmas massacre and many other. No mention of that at all, in fact he outright lies about that. So one sided, unseen level of bias on the topic, watch any other video about the war to see how much this is outright dishonest take.

  • @OmnifyMyAss

    @OmnifyMyAss

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pepefrogic3034 not the first time he does it. His video on Navalnyi was a fraud, most of his videos on Ukrainian conflict are inaccurate onesided bullshit. He's good for creating a palatable, easy to believe stories and he's being used for that by third parties, no doubt

  • @Homer-OJ-Simpson

    @Homer-OJ-Simpson

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mayamodraf the video literally mentions atrocities / war crimes committed on all sides. It then mentioned that the UN or whatever human rights group is mentioned in the video said what the Serbs did was just worse.

  • @andyc9902

    @andyc9902

    Жыл бұрын

    Never get rid of your guns

  • @mumumumey
    @mumumumey2 ай бұрын

    I'm so so happy this came up on my recommended because I was just learning about genocides in history class and this was one of the mass genocides we were learning on, but seriously this should be taught more in schools because I never knew about this before.

  • @noicsutak1584
    @noicsutak15848 күн бұрын

    It would be awesome if you could include month/year markers in the corner of the screen for the major events in summaries like these - these are really great explanations but I think including specific timelines as the events are being explained could make these videos even more cohesive.

  • @SandmanOFC
    @SandmanOFC Жыл бұрын

    When I visited Bosnia with my family, my dad showed me a vhs tape taken on an old camcorder. The video was taken by a close friend of my dads. He was inside his house, filming as the bombs fell just a couple hundred feet away. They were targeting farms and food stores in the area, trying to starve out the inhabitants. After the bombing subsided he left the house and ran over to a shed nearby. My dad was outside the shed, laughing from shock. He then pointed towards a massive hole in the ground just a couple yards away. A shell had landed a mere 20 feet from the shed, knocking my dad off his feet. If he had been just a bit closer, he would have been blown to bits, and I would not be here today. It a miracle he survived the war with all his limbs intact. As this was not the only near death experience he's told stories about.

  • @noahedelson3618

    @noahedelson3618

    11 ай бұрын

    George Washington used that same tactic to wipe out the Native Americans in New York. He was called "Town Destroyer" or Conotocaurius. Its the same nickname that was given to his genocidal grandfather. We also used that tactic in Russia at the end of WW1 in 1918/19, starving the Jews and Slavs (Bolsheviks) during their civil war. Did the same in the Philippines, set up death camps- nearly a million died around the year 1900. Also the same in Iraq, another million civilians killed in 2003, accordng to the ORB estimate. That was "shock and awful"

  • @roxyfoxy4251

    @roxyfoxy4251

    10 ай бұрын

    Your country is accustomed to living off slaves, with servants bowing down to them. That is the main difference between Russians and you. Russians have neighbors, partners, friends... a wide range of collaborators depending on the status of their relationship, suitable or not for certain joint actions to some extent. Russia's joint actions with a partner are based on certain needs. This doesn't mean that Russia is incapable of doing something on its own, but sometimes it's nicer to work with a friend or someone more experienced and learn from them. The eventual gains from that joint action are distributed proportionally to the strength/efforts of both partners. The one who has done more and is stronger receives more, while smaller partners receive less due to their smaller capabilities and efforts, according to agreed-upon contracts... and not a millimeter less than the agreed-upon agreement. In the West, you have allies, and you are all similar or speak a similar language. Most of you had colonies and slaves everywhere. That connects most of you as something common. You do love slavery; it can be felt even if you have changed the form of servitude. You have been looking down on the rest of the world for far too long. Instead of being our sincere guides towards something better and friends we wanted to have and admired, you decided to deceive us, enslave us, and use us as disposable material for your colored revolutions to divide us among ourselves, to destroy our countries and heritage, to change our history in elementary school textbooks. You destroyed us with lies and deception. You killed humanity and everything sacred that was within us for the sake of your profit. That's what sets you apart from the Russians, and that's why you have a problem with Russia.

  • @SirMo
    @SirMo9 ай бұрын

    I survived the Siege of Sarajevo. I myself was shot and I lost many of my neighbors and friends. I was 15 years old when the war started. One important part the video doesn't cover is the fact that the international community put a weapons embargo on us. So we couldn't even defend ourselves. Europe watched us get slaughtered and killed for years.

  • @HappyGuy-cn9po

    @HappyGuy-cn9po

    7 ай бұрын

    🫡

  • @andre1987eph

    @andre1987eph

    5 ай бұрын

    As an American I remember this war vividly from the news coverage in the 90s. I was amazed at the bravery and ingenuity of the Sarjevo people who were under siege and their ability to manufacture devices in their apartment basements to defend themselves.

  • @VersusARCH

    @VersusARCH

    5 ай бұрын

    They put an arms embargo so that they could be the only ones selling you arms. The reason Srebrenica was attacked (with the subesquent massacre of able bodied men) was that it was supposed to be a demilitarized UN safe haven, but was in reality armed (with UN troops blessing) and staging raids against the surrounding Serbian villages in order to force the Serbs to keep the troops around it, thus weakening the main fronts.

  • @SirMo

    @SirMo

    5 ай бұрын

    @@VersusARCH That's actually untrue. Srebrenica enclave was disarmed. They gave all their hunting rifles and whatever weapons they had to the UN. So they posed no threat whatsoever. Also men and boys were executed.

  • @VersusARCH

    @VersusARCH

    5 ай бұрын

    @@SirMo Untrue. They handed over some old weapons for show but kept enough in posession to stage raids commanded by Naser Orić (who was conviniently airlifted out of the enclave by UN helicopter prior to the Serbian attack). And it was with "UN" troops' (European NATO troops really) blessing. They were there to channel the conflict in the direction desired by their US overlords.

  • @308Nomad
    @308Nomad11 күн бұрын

    Thank you for sharing this story John. I Grew up in this war as a kid, actually in the Center of bosnia and felt this war close to me and my family. Honestly the story is quite true, but we will NEVER know the real story behind this war and WHO actually started it. (it might be one of the most complicated ones) God bless you all . I wish there was peace on this planet

  • @xmcerer
    @xmcerer4 ай бұрын

    I first became interested in this war when I found Roman Bartetzko’s Quora account, followed him, and read about his experiences in the Kosovo Liberation Army and Croatian Defense Council. Being an American, I never really heard about this war before, and reading Roman’s answers about the conflict really opened up my mind. So, here I am at 7am after staying up a full night learning about this war.

  • @qerimm7462

    @qerimm7462

    3 ай бұрын

    Glad to hear that you learn about an important part of europes history!

  • @nuraH1
    @nuraH1 Жыл бұрын

    As a Bosnian and someone who survived this horrible war I thank you from the bottom of my heart for this episode ❤💙💛. P.s. Fun fact: Bosnia is often called The Heart Shaped Land.

  • @jioboy2676

    @jioboy2676

    Жыл бұрын

    They will pay for what they have done...its a matter of time. Wont forget ....Wont forgive

  • @theunbeatable6598

    @theunbeatable6598

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm sorry for what happened in Bosnia, I love Bosnian people and hope you guys stay well. Are u still in Bosnia?

  • @nuraH1

    @nuraH1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jioboy2676 Yes. They will stand before God for their actions, no doubt about that

  • @nuraH1

    @nuraH1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@theunbeatable6598 Yes I am, and I'm encourage you to visit Sarajevo, you will not regret it ;)

  • @theunbeatable6598

    @theunbeatable6598

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nuraH1 Definitely, its on my list for sure In Sha Allah. How are u guys holding up?

  • @danijelazivic3159
    @danijelazivic3159 Жыл бұрын

    I almost died twice because there were not enough doctors to save me in Rijeka, Croatia (doctors went to Bosnia to save lives), where I was hospitalized because my appendix spilled during a seaside holiday in August 1995. After a month, my mother fought to have me transferred to Ljubljana in our country Slovenia, and they barely wrote me a discharge paper because they thought I was going to die during the ambulance transport. I stayed in Ljubljana for another month, my weight was half off and I was left with a large scar running vertically down the right side of my entire abdomen. Compared to that and what happened in Bosnia it's not even remotely the same, because worse stories have been written on the other side of the border. But I am glad that I survived and that makes me appreciate my life even more. I love watching your videos and your approach to how you tell a story, you always choose a juicy subject for which I always think to myself how blindfolded we are. Thank you for your contribution to our community!

  • @nijazburzic7337

    @nijazburzic7337

    Жыл бұрын

    ej živjo danijela res mi je žal slišat o tvoji situaciji res sočustvujem. Jaz sem mel tudi svoje probleme kot bosanc pa je bilo težko objasnit mojim slovenskih prijateljem kako je biti v družini, ki je šla čez tako klanje. Tako, kot ti sem zelo hvaležen, da zdej živim v Sloveniji in da nisem rabil odraščat v ruševinah vojne. Upam, da si zdej dober in da živiš življenje večinoma pozitivno.

  • @diego89132

    @diego89132

    Жыл бұрын

    I send you a hug!!

  • @EldaMengisto

    @EldaMengisto

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm glad you're still with us today!

  • @Saiputera

    @Saiputera

    Жыл бұрын

    This is why democratic Marxist socialism's is bad, it divided the nation into separate ethnicity group and cause wars and conflict! Yugoslavia shouldn't have form in the first place.

  • @daypandanightowl

    @daypandanightowl

    Жыл бұрын

    Bok Danijela, drago mi je da si i dalje s nama 🙂 Ja sam rođen 89. u Rijeci i koliko se sjećam u Rijeci se taj rat nije toliko osjetio, ali opet bio sam dijete pa vjerojatno nisam ni bio svjestan puno toga. Stari mi je doktor, on je bio u Ogulinu i Delnicama za vrijeme rata. 96. smo se preselili u Otočac jer je stari dobio posao tamo. Tu se rat puno više osjetio jer je nedaleko bio front. Sjećam se tada kao klinac da je Srbin bila najveća uvreda koju si mogao nekom reć, ja tada naivno dijete mislio sam da Srbi ne postoje već da je to pogrdan naziv za Jugoslavene. Kad sam malo porastao nisam mogao shvatiti kako odrasli ljudi koji su nas kao djecu učili da budemo dobri, da se ne svađamo, da se ne tučemo uzmu puške i pucaju po svojim dojučerašnjim sunarodnjacima, prijateljima, komšijama samo zato jer su pripadnici drugog plemena (nacije)??? Ne ponovilo se, u ratu nema ništa dobro, ništa...

  • @cornett446
    @cornett4463 ай бұрын

    My parents met in the US Army in Germany on leave from Bosnia. They said that the people were very thankful for the Americans stepping in and helping them. My dad told me he was stationed on a mountain and there were orphans that lived there. He said his favorite part of being over there was giving those kids soda, candy and playing soccer with them.

  • @SuperDjavol

    @SuperDjavol

    2 ай бұрын

    bosnian started war. actualy usa started it against serbia. soo dont talk bulshit!

  • @arm1nho104

    @arm1nho104

    2 ай бұрын

    I am sorry that I need to tell you the true, but USA is our enemy as much as Serbia is dude. First they put embargo on us, imagine doing emabrgo on people who are unarmed... crazy right? Then when we finally started to get on out feet, when we got into Banja Luka, guess what? USA stopped us and said that they are going to bomb us if we keep progressing...

  • @Karowskiii

    @Karowskiii

    2 ай бұрын

    u just saw video, don't act delusional, watch it again if you couldn't grasp it first time@@SuperDjavol

  • @markodimitrijevic7171

    @markodimitrijevic7171

    2 ай бұрын

    fr@@SuperDjavol

  • @007zuba

    @007zuba

    2 ай бұрын

    America start War, and they coming like saviors 😂

  • @CDNR711
    @CDNR71114 күн бұрын

    I was a Canadian UN peacekeeper and served there 92/93/94 and 2002/03. This was a difficult video to watch as I had a ringside seat to the siege of Sarajevo. You have to include Croatia this video as the UN didn’t see a difference between the war in either region. Both OP STORM/LIGHTING had a knock-on effect into BiH. My War, I Miss It So.

  • @miguelmelo7697
    @miguelmelo76977 ай бұрын

    I had a teacher who served as an UN peacekeeper and the stories he told us were chilling

  • @ggoddkkiller1342

    @ggoddkkiller1342

    7 ай бұрын

    It is really a shame dutch government never apologized for that incident, never even accepted any responsibility! Their whole purpose of being in Bosnia was defending innocent civilians but i guess it wasn't for dutch soldiers rather they were tourists playing UN peacekeepers, what a shame truly...

  • @petralozancic6713

    @petralozancic6713

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@ggoddkkiller1342 yep, seen what they did, or better to say didn't do in Vukovar. While they were chit-chating with the serbs to stop attacking the hospital, the other serbs took people away from there just to commit genocide later. Truly sad

  • @3october1993

    @3october1993

    7 ай бұрын

    @@ggoddkkiller1342 The UN is worthless. It needs to be abolished. All it does is make things worse.

  • @napobg6842

    @napobg6842

    7 ай бұрын

    @@ggoddkkiller1342 So they were supposed to shoot at the Serbs who were 7-8x more?

  • @Pollicina_db

    @Pollicina_db

    7 ай бұрын

    @@petralozancic6713 Ovčara was truly horrible, they even killed a french men, I think he’s name was Jean Michel Nicolier

  • @stirlingmasters46
    @stirlingmasters46 Жыл бұрын

    My father served in the 90s in Bosnia with the Canadian forces. He’s ruined mentally now mostly because of what he had seen and done over there

  • @williamwilson6499

    @williamwilson6499

    Жыл бұрын

    He lied to you.

  • @majuscule8883

    @majuscule8883

    Жыл бұрын

    The Canadian government of Brian Mulroney and his war minister, General Lewis McKenzie have an important role in the Horrors that your father had seen. General McKenzie went directly to Bosnia, claiming to come to help secure release of Muslim female prisoners, but he took advantage of the teenage Muslim girls. He was always pro Serbian and he belittle the massages made by the Serbians and urged Westen counties to not go to the help of the Muslims.

  • @majuscule8883

    @majuscule8883

    Жыл бұрын

    Plus even after the Serbians were defeated, Americans and Canadian soldiers committed sexual crimes against women. Many Canadians soldiers went to Bordellos organized by the Serbs , who forced Muslim girls to prostitution.

  • @timdyer5903

    @timdyer5903

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@williamwilson6499genocide happened in Bosnia. Rape, murder, ethnic cleansing. Bosnian serb atrocities.

  • @pindol69

    @pindol69

    Жыл бұрын

    Wich is why Serbia deserves to be hated

  • @staylucidbaby
    @staylucidbaby6 ай бұрын

    I would love if we paid more attention to the mental health impact the war had on the people who survived. Im from Bosnia and am surrounded by people who were civilians or fought in the war. Even though we are chill people who love a good laugh, I notice the trauma in the people who survived it. I wish we talked more about this part - the people who were severely traumatized started having kids and almost no one got psychological help to deal with the brutality they witnessed. Generational trauma is no joke and a legit thing, I was born 5 years after the war and had haunting war nightmares throughout my childhood. I pity the people who lived to tell the tale, they should have gotten more support after the war ended. Once I encountered a map of schizophrenia by country, and Bosnia was marked with red which indicated that many people there are impacted by the illness. I doubt that this is a coincidence. My mother even said (she was 12 when the war started) that the adults came back from the war completely "insane" and passed the trauma down to their kids. I hope we manage to move past this, but this is unlikely as kids are being raised in nationalist homes so it will take us a long time to recover. I also hope that another war doesnt break out, we can feel the tension. The air here smells of war

  • @SophieLeung-du9we
    @SophieLeung-du9we2 ай бұрын

    Two maths teachers at my school(one of them currently teach me)were from Bosnia and their father had been sent to concentration camp during the war. This resulted in them seeking refuge in the UK as refugees from political violence, and myself being an immigrant from HK to UK in 2019 (you probably know what happened), I realise my situation is a lot less worse and can not imagine the trauma the brothers experienced (remember they were only in their early to late teens when they left the country). Remember Srebrenica

  • @pilsnerd420
    @pilsnerd42010 ай бұрын

    I remember in middle school a third of my class was made up of kids from former Yugoslavia. All of them had different ethnic backgrounds but they ended up forming a comradeship and became good friends because they all hated the war in general. None of them blamed anyone except the rich classes making life miserable for everyone else. I learned a lot of Serbian/Croatian swearing while at that school.

  • @tongobong1

    @tongobong1

    10 ай бұрын

    These people all speak the same language and have the same blood - genes. Serbs, Croats and Bosnians are actually brothers - old Balkan Europeans that used to live there long time before Indo-Europeans came and despite they speak a Slavic language they are not Slavs by genes unlike us Slovenians or Poles, Russians, Ukrainians... It is crazy that some of the worst wars happened between genetically very closely related nations. The latest example is current Ukrainian war.

  • @belmordok3661

    @belmordok3661

    10 ай бұрын

    @@tongobong1 You know sh.t. We might have similar languages, but definitely not the same. Besides, just because Norgewian, Swedish, Danish, Finish and even German might seem similar, they are not the same. Also, we have genetical differences (different haplogroups). So, keep your Yugoslavia bs to yourself. Never again with that cr.p!

  • @doedoewski1939

    @doedoewski1939

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@tongobong1 Genetic studies confirm Croatians and Serbs are indeed Slavic.

  • @moebunkbedsmoeproblems

    @moebunkbedsmoeproblems

    10 ай бұрын

    zdravo pečko ;)

  • @nevermindmeijustinjectedaw9988

    @nevermindmeijustinjectedaw9988

    10 ай бұрын

    said noone ever wtf have you ever even met someone from the balkans? they're like cats and water or dogs and fire lol as someone who actually went to school and sports clubs with an actual majority of serbs, bosniaks and albanians (ghetto part of town), the hatred among eachother was absolutely brutal. no need to get into details, i'm getting the feeling from other comments around here that youtube is particularly strict about the comment guidelines here. but let's just say there were tons of fights as you know it from american hoods, but they were also actual children, like not even into the double digits in age. almost all of them did terribly in school, were held back for a year or two, still did badly often and mostly became construction workers or went into similar trades like mechs. as a non-balkan native but who came from a neighbouring neutral country, so much closer to their homes than where we all lived at that point, i had no big issues with them at all. sure, there was casual violence everywhere, but the racism stayed within their groups. it took me many, many years to since have met two actual balkanians who never participated in any of this and did well for themselves. one was born rich and never actually lived in the ghetto but the rich part of town, couldnt tell you where he was from as i lost contact to him entirely. it probably helps that he's part of the lgbt, as those are also despised in the balkans. the other one is actually my best friend, met him in high school, but he's only half serbian and half non-southern slav and they came here just when my parents did (when the iron curtain fell) and "only" lived in the second worst ghetto of the capital, unlike me, whose entire childhood played only in the proper hood. anyway, so he's a high achiever engineer now, but i dont think he even has any other balkan friends. maybe some random ones here and there bc we know so many people, but i'm fairly confident the three of us only did decently well in life bc we distanced ourselves from the vermin. and i dont mean to insult any nations here, but what i've witnessed with my own two eyes were literally just vermin out to get eachother over scraps. just criminals of the worst kind and they started young, very young.

  • @nerminmujkic2671
    @nerminmujkic2671 Жыл бұрын

    60% of my family was killed during this war. I could have grown up with Cousins, uncles and aunts. Saddest part is, the country and the people in it cannot recover properly due to the corrupt politics and nationalism. Thank you for this video, bringing some attention back to this beautiful country!

  • @bojantenja

    @bojantenja

    11 ай бұрын

    Žao mi je zbog tvoje porodice. Po tvojoj poruci vidim da shvaćaš da problem nije u jednom narodu, nego u nacionalizmu sva tri entiteta. Na žalost, tako će ostati još dugo, dok nas sve ne poveže neka veća nesreća....ili dok se sve to ne raspadne, jer očito ovako nešto ne može da postane bez pritiska iz vana.

  • @danrook5757

    @danrook5757

    11 ай бұрын

    Get ready for another outbreak, the next generation has grown up

  • @b.med.34

    @b.med.34

    11 ай бұрын

    It was terrible agresion of Croats and Serbian politics, their presidents Milosevic/Tudjman, they wanted divide undivated Bosnia-Hercegovina. Saddly this kinde of politic is even today actual in politics of Serbo-Croatia! Result is: " You guys can NOT do that ultranational job, ok!" 😊

  • @sib1ca

    @sib1ca

    11 ай бұрын

    dont care

  • @sib1ca

    @sib1ca

    11 ай бұрын

    @@b.med.34 sorry to break it to you but if u have a country and somebody in that country declares independence, they are breaking it

  • @AngelHaycock
    @AngelHaycock2 ай бұрын

    I've read several books on this subject, (the Civil War in the former Yugoslavia). I had friends who came to my home city of Portland Maine. To escape the war and consequent financial ruin and all-around devastation that followed its end. It's most definitely the worst civil war on European soil in the 20th century. I wrote a fictional short story about a young Croatian man. Who came to the U.S. for a better life. I've also written other pieces and prose on the war in the former Yugoslavia.

  • @ElderGodBurrito
    @ElderGodBurrito Жыл бұрын

    When I was in high school we were tasked with writing about “forgotten wars/ war crimes.” I had just rewatched the movie Behind Enemy Lines which I would say loosely covers the bloodily conflict. After watching the film I remembered my assignment and decided it was time to learn more about it. Needless to say just after finishing up my report to the class there was a noticeable thickness in the air and the class was awfully quiet. Most of my classmates just covered the basic facts in their assignments while I went down a rabbit hole of the worst parts of humanity. I was quite depressed after it was all done, I think we all were and none of us ever lived it.

  • @benjamintaylor3934

    @benjamintaylor3934

    Жыл бұрын

    You did a good thing, with your assignment: you made people step outside of their normal comfort zone, thinking about something different. Everyone learned that day. Well done 👍

  • @funwithgum926

    @funwithgum926

    Жыл бұрын

    Humans are disgusting creatures and when you really think about it we are all capable of violence like this with the right push, could be a friend, your neighbor, or even you. I may not b religious but the one thing I pray for every day is to bring forth the apocalypse and wipe humanity off the face of the earth.

  • @Bleilock1

    @Bleilock1

    Жыл бұрын

    Apparently us croats and serbs have even made hitler shudder when he was informed how we do things down here

  • @paavobergmann4920

    @paavobergmann4920

    Жыл бұрын

    I watched the Awfulness unfold on the evening news and was horrified. I had classmates from literally all the different ex-yugoslavian republics. A few years later, there was a movie, "No Man´s Land". It´s bitter. But well made. But it left me very silent for a couple of days.

  • @boosta3094

    @boosta3094

    Жыл бұрын

    Long live the relations between Croatia and the Holy See! Long live the Catholic Church! Long live catholic Croatia 🇭🇷🇻🇦🇭🇷✝️

  • @7marshal7
    @7marshal711 ай бұрын

    I'm from Sarajevo and I was a part of the war there. You can't put into words what happened. The fact that the city was blockaded in 1425, that thousands of children died, that the sports fields where I played football as a boy were converted into cemeteries says it all.

  • @jamesabergas5320

    @jamesabergas5320

    10 ай бұрын

    In 1425?

  • @Cveja91

    @Cveja91

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@jamesabergas5320 1425 days city of Sarajevo was blocked,surounded with tanks and snipers by Serbian army.

  • @jamesabergas5320

    @jamesabergas5320

    10 ай бұрын

    @@Cveja91 thank you

  • @johnconnor1583

    @johnconnor1583

    10 ай бұрын

    @@Cveja91 1425 days? Do you know how many years that is?

  • @belmordok3661

    @belmordok3661

    10 ай бұрын

    @@johnconnor1583 Do you know how to count or the Terminator fried your brain?

  • @mukac
    @mukac25 күн бұрын

    you are spot on with this video --thanks to telling the truth 🙏good bless you

  • @clayjadhav4742
    @clayjadhav47426 ай бұрын

    we learned this in IB (International Baccalaureate) and man it was a new experience for me as a history learner

  • @georghauer7811
    @georghauer7811 Жыл бұрын

    Great video. I can highly recommend traveling to Bosnia. It offers a great combination of culture, nature and amazing food. And all of it very affordable. Check out Sarajevo, Mostar, Blagaj, Stolac, Bijeljina, Trebinje, Travnik and Visegrad - they are all incredibly beautiful places. But Bosnia doesn't need pity. It needs tourists. That's how Croatia recovered so quickly after the war.

  • @JayHey2323

    @JayHey2323

    Жыл бұрын

    Tara River on the border of Montenegro and Bosnia is the most beautiful place I've ever been to.

  • @AlexH4774

    @AlexH4774

    Жыл бұрын

    @louiciousthewerewolf4819 not Slovenia?

  • @vedranpiljic9550

    @vedranpiljic9550

    Жыл бұрын

    We did not recover fully, it is only beautiful on the coast, not on the land, where people live in misery which is not shown at all in the media

  • @peter58peter

    @peter58peter

    Жыл бұрын

    Ha? Croatia recovered? From what? How? Why r croats leaving croatia, then???

  • @hameheroj4030

    @hameheroj4030

    Жыл бұрын

    Bosnia needs stable politacl system and security, that is what was goven to Croatia by the west christian civilisation and not to Bosnia because we are muslims. You see, Croatia became the member of NATO, EU, Eurozone, Schengen... Bosnia never gets any of these oportunities. The politicians in Croatia are not less corruot then these in Bosnia, but as I said, one of them are christians and the other one predominant muslims which never gets the oportunity to develope themselves to atract investitions, tourists, poeple to live and work in...

  • @sarahobaidi5333
    @sarahobaidi53338 ай бұрын

    First I heard about the war when I was a young interpreter during a UN mission. Bosnian women were telling the stories of sexual violence they suffered at the hand of soldiers and some were in front of their children. There were rape camps for women. I was not able to sleep for several days after hearing about the details of such atrocities. My heart goes out to all the women who suffered such violation and protected their children and went on to look for their men after the war. More people should learn about this war as it confirms how ethnically motivated conflicts arise and tear apart diverse societies.

  • @amehu

    @amehu

    4 ай бұрын

    Ethnically motivated comes only after CORRUPTION has happened, and major players (Western and Russian rich) have bought local politicians to divide and conquer. Yugoslavia left in so much debt after president Tito died. Debt collectors figured out to destroy the country and then install own "peace makers" and corporations to benefit in rebuilding process.

  • @user-ev2kr7km7j

    @user-ev2kr7km7j

    4 ай бұрын

    Same thing happened to each side, but some of the spokespersons were "cancelled" as the US needed an excuse to get involved (which was their original plan, as the CIA stirred up the conflict) and rob all of the countries of their national resources.

  • @miodrag0078

    @miodrag0078

    3 ай бұрын

    faik west

  • @generalmartok3990

    @generalmartok3990

    3 ай бұрын

    @@miodrag0078 What are you going to do about it?

  • @babuka4720

    @babuka4720

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@miodrag0078jesi kupio novi traktor?

  • @573998
    @5739983 ай бұрын

    I live in Belgrade Serbia 🇷🇸 and love all in the Balkans. Many of my friends lost retrieves on all sides. This brings tears to my eyes

  • @Justin-pm7vv

    @Justin-pm7vv

    2 ай бұрын

    Then why tf your country attacking and killing them

  • @JASXN888

    @JASXN888

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@Justin-pm7vvit's not just 1 country that it's fault, ur not from there so u have no right to talk about it, good day

  • @maciejpiotr

    @maciejpiotr

    29 күн бұрын

    @@Justin-pm7vv bullshit

  • @user-hh1it7rf2n

    @user-hh1it7rf2n

    25 күн бұрын

    @@Justin-pm7vvit’s because countries was weakening of coarse they would

  • @AELINIC

    @AELINIC

    25 күн бұрын

    @@Justin-pm7vv bosnian army shelling croatian hospitals was a regular, same with civilian gatherings, so no, bosnia is not "innocent"

  • @Heretic3000
    @Heretic30005 ай бұрын

    I had never heard of this war until I read Safe Area: Gorazde by Joe Sacco. A very interesting and informative read for those who like graphic novels and world history.

  • @macnosmutano4849
    @macnosmutano4849 Жыл бұрын

    If you're interested in learning more I definitely suggest watching "The Death of Yugoslavia". It was made by the BBC around the mid-90s so they were able to interview all of the big players in the conflicts. It is such a good series.

  • @DillonWaffles

    @DillonWaffles

    Жыл бұрын

    I just finished that last week. It’s an absolute must watch.

  • @yespls4184

    @yespls4184

    Жыл бұрын

    Amazing documentary.

  • @Journal_Haris

    @Journal_Haris

    Жыл бұрын

    100% highly recommend

  • @mr.fishmanman

    @mr.fishmanman

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks a Lot Man

  • @Malcolm1993

    @Malcolm1993

    Жыл бұрын

    Just checking to see if anyone else has posted about this! The finest documentary I have ever seen, unbelievable first hand accounts with almost all indicted in the ICTY war crime tribunal. Must see for anyone interested in this subject

  • @theformerkaiser9391
    @theformerkaiser9391 Жыл бұрын

    This war is the reason why there is a surprisingly large Bosnian population in St. Louis, which I live across the Mississippi River from. While it is beyond tragic they had to leave their country to begin with, I am glad they were able to find a new home here.

  • @boosta3094

    @boosta3094

    Жыл бұрын

    Never forget how they stabbed us croat Catholics in the back after saving them from extinction. The Muslims are now oppressing us in Bosnia

  • @DAMfoxygrampa

    @DAMfoxygrampa

    Жыл бұрын

    I have a Serbian friend who did his undergrad degree in st Louis. I wonder if he went there because of that

  • @jonathanbien3685

    @jonathanbien3685

    Жыл бұрын

    South County.

  • @afghanstan4551

    @afghanstan4551

    Жыл бұрын

    Some relocated to Jacksonville, Fl as well.

  • @dogfrosinos70

    @dogfrosinos70

    Жыл бұрын

    Lots in fort wyane indiana too

  • @hunttomuchwolfe
    @hunttomuchwolfeАй бұрын

    Yogo m76 ammo is amazing it got a workout in this conflict as sniping it's crazy how f up the fighting

  • @Dreyan77
    @Dreyan7716 сағат бұрын

    Great video, but one correction - Slovenia didn't go to war. It's called 10-day war, but there were no battles, just couple of ambushes. Riots are more dangerous than slovenian war.

  • @Ikbeneengeit
    @Ikbeneengeit Жыл бұрын

    I visited Bosnia and the people were very generous and kind. It is damaged and there are still bullet holes in buildings that aren't repaired yet. The train to Mostar is beautiful and cost just €2.

  • @Saiputera

    @Saiputera

    Жыл бұрын

    This is why democratic Marxist socialism's is bad, it divided the nation into separate ethnicity group and cause wars and conflict! Yugoslavia shouldn't have form in the first place

  • @pav_5190

    @pav_5190

    Жыл бұрын

    And you still have legs?

  • @7HMCR7

    @7HMCR7

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pav_5190 clown

  • @pav_5190

    @pav_5190

    Жыл бұрын

    @@7HMCR7 why, i literally talked with persons from there and its actually common to activate a random mine

  • @elvirfale6675

    @elvirfale6675

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m from Mostar .. glad u enjoyed your visit kind sir

  • @kathleenkulp240
    @kathleenkulp240 Жыл бұрын

    As a former history teacher, I appreciate so much the way you research and present this information. Does it ever feel heavy in your heart as you report on the horrors of war and the devastation we visit on each other?

  • @johnnyharris

    @johnnyharris

    Жыл бұрын

    The short answer is yes. I used to do all the research and editing on my own and that was heavy looking at all the footage. I have a team now which means we split the work and hopefully minimize the exposure. But ultimately it’s important to bring this stuff to light

  • @FitraRahim

    @FitraRahim

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@johnnyharrisI haven't watched your video in full yet, but I hope you mention how the cowardly Dutch army let & surrendered thousands of Muslims in genocide in exchange for their safety.

  • @Contractor48

    @Contractor48

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johnnyharris man up Johnny Harris. Stop being a cissy.

  • @Bobogdan258

    @Bobogdan258

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Contractor48 Yeah man, it's just a little genocide, it's no way it would have any mental impact on a man's psyche, what is PTSD?

  • @splashafrica

    @splashafrica

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@Bobogdan258 check his name

  • @goatfather5711
    @goatfather57112 ай бұрын

    The forgotten wars are the most brutal ones, It's sad it took UN 5 years to see the real evil going on, by then the damage had been done.

  • @solitudare
    @solitudare6 ай бұрын

    Dear Johnny, this is a very good summary of the war. It takes a lot of grinding to understand all the twists and turns, but you got it. Understanding that this video format doesn't allow for elaborations on details, and that it was not supposed to show the horrors of the war, I should still say, as a genocide survivor from Srebrenica, it was unimaginably evil and barbaric. The bodily remains of my father, who was separated from in front of me, were excavated 17 years after he was murdered. His body was pieced together, albeit incomplete, from six different mass graves. About a month ago, we had news in Bosnia of a body of a man murdered in Srebrenica, excavated from beneath a fountain in a private yard of a Serb orthopedist, who took the body back in 1995., transported it for "study" hundreds of kilometers away, and finally covered it with a fountain in his yard. We are still experiencing the horrors of the war.

  • @JamesKerLindsay
    @JamesKerLindsay Жыл бұрын

    This was a very good overview of what was an extremely complex conflict. But it seems bizarre to think that this is a forgotten war. The collapse of Yugoslavia and the war in Croatia and Bosnia defined the first half of the 1990s. But I’m now getting students who weren’t born when 9/11 happened. I find it fascinating how particular events are ‘remembered’ across generations and others aren’t.

  • @croatianwarmaster7872

    @croatianwarmaster7872

    Жыл бұрын

    My earliest political memory was the invasion of Iraq in 2003. I was born in in 1998.

  • @peter58peter

    @peter58peter

    Жыл бұрын

    lies r everywhere.

  • @inzayan1d289

    @inzayan1d289

    Жыл бұрын

    Why not forgeten professor ; because the muslims have been executed by US And NATO.

  • @d-south4093

    @d-south4093

    Жыл бұрын

    It is bizarre, but ask 100 people in the general public about Bosnia or the Balkan conflict, and maybe 10% have any clue.

  • @gensunasumus101

    @gensunasumus101

    Жыл бұрын

    Was not a good overview at all.

  • @medicaldoctor3995
    @medicaldoctor3995 Жыл бұрын

    I visited Bosnia last summer and really loved the place and its vibes!! It was really disturbing to see the remaining physical damages throughout the old buildings and to know what these people had been through, i deeply relate to bosnians as we experienced almost the same story in Syria! But the difference is that our wound is still bleeding and the criminal is wandering around.

  • @lps_nine

    @lps_nine

    Жыл бұрын

    I went in November to Tuzla and Sarajevo and it's my favorite trip so far. Everyone was so kind to me and my friend. We could definitely feel marks of the war left in the country, which is something that I've been lucky to not have experience as I'm from Sweden. It's made me think a lot about how lucky I am to live in a country that has experienced very little conflict over the past century and unfortunately how uncommon that is in our world. I can not even imagine what pain that must be.

  • @medicaldoctor3995

    @medicaldoctor3995

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lps_nine totally agree! I visited sarajevo, mostar, konjic, blagaj, pocitelj and kravica waterfall and i had a rafting trip in Neretva river which was an amazing life experience! Btw i was told that the majority of refugees sought asylum in Germany and sweden

  • @freespiritable

    @freespiritable

    Жыл бұрын

    Serbians think like Russians, they love criminals and pushing the limits. They have huge egos and think less. Had they wanted a better future the Balkan would have been so forward now. But they let Russia play them for their own interest so the region left behind.

  • @Saiputera

    @Saiputera

    Жыл бұрын

    This is why democratic Marxist socialism's is bad, it divided the nation into separate ethnicity group and cause wars and conflict! Yugoslavia shouldn't have form in the first place

  • @bigmz8215

    @bigmz8215

    Жыл бұрын

    Hey man whose the bad guy in terms of the war happening in Syria it’s hard to pinpoint it could you tell me?

  • @AdamB12
    @AdamB1221 күн бұрын

    My dad befriended a Bosniak at his work years ago (around 1999) and some of the stories he told about escaping Bosnia were quite harrowing.

  • @Strahinja.p1235
    @Strahinja.p1235Ай бұрын

    I know that this video came out a long time ago but can you make a video about NDH during WW2

  • @aexaofficial
    @aexaofficial11 ай бұрын

    Three of my half siblings died in this war. Something this video fails to mention is that the Bosniaks fought back for years despite being under an internationally upheld embargo. Most ABiH (Army of BiH) military personnel were fighting with outdated weapons, some dating back to the first and second world war. I’m alive today (born just after the war) by pure chance. There was a countless number of times where both my parents faced death and barely escaped, and unfortunately the scars are still felt today. My only words of advice to those reading this is call out fascism when you see it, and make them feel shame for their lack of regard for humanity. Because the ideology that took the lives of my family doesn’t deserve a place in modern history.

  • @aren624

    @aren624

    7 ай бұрын

    Sorry your lose. As Turkish full support Bosnia, we don't forget bosnian genocide

  • @Ajlaisanovic

    @Ajlaisanovic

    4 ай бұрын

    Sad that a genocide is happening to the Palestinian people right now yet the western world remains quiet

  • @Glaze_119

    @Glaze_119

    3 ай бұрын

    @@aren624but you forget the armenian genocide.

  • @hrvatapesnya2173

    @hrvatapesnya2173

    3 ай бұрын

    Crazy what the orthodox have done to the Muslims?

  • @andydufresne9593

    @andydufresne9593

    2 ай бұрын

    Say thanks to Izetbegovic for the war your family has experienced.

  • @maledives7915
    @maledives791511 ай бұрын

    I escaped from bosnia and had a big wish to see our old family house. Also i visited my now 79 old neigbour last week. We were crying as we were talking about good times before the war and she told me her son got shot dead during the war, we were crying as it happened yesterday. Its 30 years ago and our hearts still bleeding

  • @mattihp
    @mattihpАй бұрын

    Heard a lot about this war. Grew up in Sweden and it was unavoidable to hear about it

  • @Sleepy1988
    @Sleepy198819 күн бұрын

    If you want to know about the war which shattered Yugoslavia in detail, look up “The Death of Yugoslavia”, a BBC documentary done in the last days of the war in Bosnia, with interviews with all the major people involved and quite a few more minor figures.

  • @ANato_Channel

    @ANato_Channel

    18 күн бұрын

    If you want to know about war watch "weight of chains" which perfectly goes into whole conflict and doesn't hide anything

  • @icibinbataII
    @icibinbataII9 ай бұрын

    Part of my family lived all the time in Sarajevo during the war. There were mixed marriages. My Croatian cousin was married to a Serb and on the Serbian side of Sarajevo. Her brother (Croat) was on the Bosnian/Croat side. Both had to shoot and did not know if they were shooting at their own family at the time or not. Yugoslavia was such a cool country and to this day I can't really explain how something like this could happen. I fled to Germany in 1991 when I was 14 years old.

  • @SiPakRubah

    @SiPakRubah

    8 ай бұрын

    The only reason why this happened is because there was no such ruler like Tito after he passed, only he has the power to keep a country in one piece and his charisma too

  • @DD-qw4fz

    @DD-qw4fz

    8 ай бұрын

    @@SiPakRubah Tito , you mean that Balkan version of "banana dictator" living like royalty while everyon else was getting bread crumbs, a failure of an economy that was never self sustaining, with the secret police killing ppl daring to defy "the great leader" ...no thanks, it was a prison of nations, doomed to fail. No relationship based on force of terror and lies ever lasts...

  • @warcriminal3414

    @warcriminal3414

    8 ай бұрын

    nationalism and tribalism is evil that is why it's a sin to follow tribalism

  • @demibasan1714

    @demibasan1714

    8 ай бұрын

    @@Youaretrappedlmao ☠️ smoke less or smoke more

  • @demibasan1714

    @demibasan1714

    8 ай бұрын

    @@Youaretrappedtito was a general and made himself a name, + he just kinda took over. there was noone to pick and choose u fool.

  • @yohighness
    @yohighness Жыл бұрын

    I went to secondary school in Hong Kong in the early 2000s with a Bosnian girl whose family endured this war. She would appear visibly shaken when she told us her personal stories of the war. She was often moody. She would recoil whenever someone touched her, and in hindsight I now realise that she was suffering from PTSD.

  • @jaykim8851

    @jaykim8851

    Жыл бұрын

    The boarding school I went to from 2002-2006 had a European exchange student who grew up in Sarajevo during the war. Her parents recorded the day the siege of Sarajevo started. I remember watching it with a bunch of other boarding students. Keep in mind...this was also around the same time the US invaded Iraq so seeing live coverage of war was starting to become normalized.

  • @michaelh7125

    @michaelh7125

    Жыл бұрын

    @cavachoncx3 Indeed, but not a Bosnian

  • @peter58peter

    @peter58peter

    Жыл бұрын

    She did not tell u the truth. If she did exist; she could be only Jugoslavian? SHe's recoiling cause; she has no clue who or what she is?

  • @peter58peter

    @peter58peter

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jaykim8851 usa invaded Iraq? And; who invaded Jugoslavija?

  • @jaykim8851

    @jaykim8851

    Жыл бұрын

    @@peter58peter the video explains the history of what happened in this area. Use your eyes and ears bruh.

  • @dariomilkovic4848
    @dariomilkovic48483 ай бұрын

    thanks for putting this out there.

  • @mirzasacic2557
    @mirzasacic25577 күн бұрын

    Thank you for making this documentary

  • @ersanmemic
    @ersanmemic Жыл бұрын

    As a Bosnian, I can only say: Thank You, Johnny, for sharing and educating the world about the Bosnian War. Many people still deny the facts you showed (and many others too) and the biggest problem by far is that deniers are raising deniers which is harming the country and the entire region.

  • @rudysmith1552

    @rudysmith1552

    Жыл бұрын

    Comment form Western Europe

  • @rudysmith1552

    @rudysmith1552

    Жыл бұрын

    I wonder who’s going to resettle the Balkans after of the south Slavs leave

  • @hehe-pt6yb

    @hehe-pt6yb

    Жыл бұрын

    He did not mention that well before the war in Bosnia officially started, there was ongoing fighting within Bosnia, but it was only between Serbs and Croats, and it was directly linked to the ongoing war in Croatia. Serb and Yugoslav forces were using Bosnian territory to attack Croatia and when doing so they were attacking and killing Croats of Bosnia and Herzegovina. One such incident was attack on the village of Ravno, when Yugoslav army attacked and destroyed Croat village in Herzegovina, on their way to attack Dubrovnik, Croatia. After this incident, Croats in Bosnia demanded central Bosnian government (mostly led by Muslims) to do something, however, Bosniak president, Alija Izetbegovic, publicly stated on television; "this is not our war, we will not interfere" Afterwards, Croats of Bosnia realized they cannot rely on Bosnian government for protection (which they helped vote to power), and had to form their own state within a state, that is, Herzeg-Bosnia. So Croats were practically back-stabbed by Bosniaks at the start of the war, as they did not want to fight the Serbs. In early 1992 when the war in Bosnia officially started, Bosnia was mostly and most effectivelly defended by Croats, who were better organized and prepared for the war. As such, if not for Croats of Bosnia it is very likely the Serbs would have managed to conquer much more of Bosnia in the early stages of the war, and perhaps win the war at the start.

  • @GrigRP

    @GrigRP

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rudysmith1552 Cry more, Serb.

  • @Mirsab

    @Mirsab

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@hehe-pt6yb interesting

  • @irmafox2216
    @irmafox221611 ай бұрын

    I was a child during the war. My dad was put in a concentration camp, Manjaca. We were forced to flee our town, which was and still is predominantly Serbian. I am Muslim and have no hate towards anyone and don’t wish the experience of a war to anyone. However, I am deeply disappointed and saddened by the world’s silence as so many heinous crimes were committed against so many innocent people.

  • @servant-of-the-federation

    @servant-of-the-federation

    11 ай бұрын

    😮😢

  • @Bell_plejdo568p

    @Bell_plejdo568p

    11 ай бұрын

    The world wasn’t silent it was just the hipcorticsl west, except América they actually cared

  • @Bell_plejdo568p

    @Bell_plejdo568p

    11 ай бұрын

    This take which is rare

  • @alistuzlak

    @alistuzlak

    11 ай бұрын

    They even spit in our face by calling it genocide in Ukraine while they enjoy concerts and McDonalds and Theater. Calling it the first war in europe since ww2.

  • @brokenarrow5590

    @brokenarrow5590

    11 ай бұрын

    The world was even silent when muslim ottomon massacre millions of Christian Armenian, Greek and Asyrains

  • @nikolaiwillett9001
    @nikolaiwillett90015 ай бұрын

    It’s crazy how complicated this conflict is this is just a super simple overview; I encourage everyone to watch the 90s bbc documentary of it; it has all the leaders and other primary sources who lived it who give in depth interviews on it. If you just type bbc Yugoslavia documentary you’ll find it. It’s lengthy but very well worth it truly.

  • @philipmohlin3887

    @philipmohlin3887

    2 ай бұрын

    try watching the avoidable war instead

  • @dariuszdudka1991
    @dariuszdudka199110 күн бұрын

    I think another story worth mentioning is that Croats and Bosniaks were not interested in allying with each other, they were simply, forced to enter a pact of convenience, but only after they fought a simultaneous bloody war of the same time. A lot of Croats were expelled by the Bosniaks and vice versa, long before the Serbs committed the horror of Srebrenica. So literally it is not just sad, but also tragic.

  • @zainsalhani4705
    @zainsalhani4705 Жыл бұрын

    My girlfriend is Bosnian. Did not learn about the Bosnian genocide until I got to know her and her family. I was able to relate to her mothers struggle as a Syrian. An insane let down by the whole world. Thank you for making this episode

  • @jo_kil9753

    @jo_kil9753

    Жыл бұрын

    yeah my ex girlfriend was bosnian aswell, her parentsa are refugees from the war.

  • @AntiFurry_Jihad

    @AntiFurry_Jihad

    Жыл бұрын

    God save Bosnia & kosovo ☪️!

  • @adampatel3132

    @adampatel3132

    Жыл бұрын

    Having girlfriends is haram get married.

  • @osowiecwalking9434

    @osowiecwalking9434

    Жыл бұрын

    @@adampatel3132 mind ur own business .ur existance is haram for us lol.

  • @tecategpt1959

    @tecategpt1959

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@adampatel3132 is that what you took from this? Lmaooooo actual cognitive dissonance

  • @HatidzaOmercausevic
    @HatidzaOmercausevic Жыл бұрын

    As a Bosnian baby born during the war in 1993, in Mostar - thank you. We say that the war hasn't really ended, it's just led differently now. But newer generations that are growing up are different and hopefully can bring unity to the people of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

  • @brunobastos5533

    @brunobastos5533

    Жыл бұрын

    Balkans will probably never be in peace

  • @kategoried7501

    @kategoried7501

    Жыл бұрын

    @@zHaste lol hell no

  • @kategoried7501

    @kategoried7501

    Жыл бұрын

    @@zHaste Yes, Croatia is among the safest countries in europe with low crime rate but Bosnia, Albania and Serbia are different world, you can't compared these three countries with Croatia or Slovenia. And also Croatia and Slovenia are not balkan.

  • @RobertLesac

    @RobertLesac

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kategoried7501 Croatia is most certainly a balkan country. Also, while the crime rates are indeed higher in Bosnia and Serbia, they are still nowhere near the US. For 2020 the US murder rate is 7.5 times higher than in Serbia.

  • @julius43461

    @julius43461

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@kategoried7501 You have no clue what you are talking about. All those countries are safer than the US. I'm in Serbia and I don't even lock my house at night. We see burglary and murder as things that happen in movies and tv shows. The only US states off the top of my head that might be comparably safe are perhaps Maine and Vermont. Geographically, most of Croatia and Serbia are in the Balkans, and a good portion of Slovenia. Culturally I guess it's debatable, but you could say the same thing about most countries in the Balkans, especially Greece. Actually the region and eastern Europe as a whole are the best proof that poverty does not equal crime and murder. Social contract and rule of law are more important than wealth. BTW I went to Albania as a Serb last summer, and I felt as safe as in Serbia.

  • @juanelorriaga2840
    @juanelorriaga28405 ай бұрын

    I was in my last year oh HS in 1994 and I had teacher who stoped the normal history and we really spoke about the Bosnian war she really had us look at every side of the war look through the eyes of the Serbs,Croats,etc def a great teacher

  • @risbolensky3921
    @risbolensky39214 ай бұрын

    All I know that US Admin. actively worked to abolish Lisbon agreement at the beginning of 1992 which effectively led to Bosnian war. Especially then US ambassador Peter Galbraith. Same scenario that the US did later in Ukraine

  • @belimalone7930

    @belimalone7930

    24 күн бұрын

    Do you have any good youtube video about this topic? Thanks in advance

  • @halvorseneirik
    @halvorseneirik Жыл бұрын

    My wife and I just drove through this area last week from Greece, through Albania, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, and Slovenia. We were googling along the way to try to understand more about this region, because it's extremely complicated. Growing up in Norway I remember the news in the early 90's about Sarajevo and Bosnia, but we were never told the greater extent of the conflicts in the Balkans. Thanks for helping to shed light on this.

  • @garkocrnic4707

    @garkocrnic4707

    Жыл бұрын

    why not Serbia,,its same nice and beautiful ,maybe more than others,and you even eat or drink for free because you are stranger..People dont know,but there love all turist or who ride throgh contry..big mistake for not see Serbia,have beautyful people and land..don't listen what other say,see yourselfe..next time

  • @halvorseneirik

    @halvorseneirik

    Жыл бұрын

    @@garkocrnic4707 we drove through Serbia in January. Can't be everywhere at once :)

  • @patrik302

    @patrik302

    Жыл бұрын

    Why didn't you come say hi in Slovenia we would welcome you

  • @venom2k2

    @venom2k2

    Жыл бұрын

    Nice seeing you here! You photographed my friends wedding (Marianne and Christer) in Bodø 2019 :)

  • @halvorseneirik

    @halvorseneirik

    Жыл бұрын

    @@venom2k2 that was a fun one! :)

  • @IKNFLY666
    @IKNFLY666 Жыл бұрын

    There are a lot of Serbians and Croatians Australians living in Sydney, including in my class. One day our Design and Technology teacher, who was an Aussie bogan, asked two of my classmates insensitively: “Do you guys hate each other? Cuz you’re like Serbian, and your Croatian?” My two classmates were like W.T.F.

  • @raidermaxx2324

    @raidermaxx2324

    Жыл бұрын

    its a legit question. Considering Serbians are still butthurt to this day, at NATO and Bill Clinton for intervening in the genocide.

  • @ajlukelepuke

    @ajlukelepuke

    Жыл бұрын

    WTF indeed. They're not Serbs and Croats anymore. They're Australian FFS....

  • @m1lst3r89

    @m1lst3r89

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol wild story. Although I read once that Serbs and Croats were into altercation in Ozland. It was I think during or after some tennis match.

  • @danikanti2330

    @danikanti2330

    Жыл бұрын

    I came here from Sarajevo loving all people from Former Yugoslavia . After 30 years here we are still best friends . We lived for almost 50 years together but when nationalist are in charge you kind of are in midle of all of this . We lived in the same buildings , went to same schools and many of us were brought up to think about as a same people .

  • @heyhej1

    @heyhej1

    Жыл бұрын

    My buddies who are Bosnian Muslim, Croatian Catholic and I (Serbian Orthodox) were constantly poked by the Highschool faculty during the 90's here in the states....." Geee...you guys should hate each other, how come you're good friends.."... meh....idiots will always be idiots no matter where you live.

  • @christianprehn7919
    @christianprehn79196 ай бұрын

    puhh..... as a german with friends from croatia bosnia and serbia it is crazy to see this. im born in 87.... so i have grewn up as a kid - watching on television each day war scenes from yugoslavia war. when i was first time in sarajevo in 2015... it was so .... i cried. i couldnt hold it back now that i have been living in croatia and visited serbia so often... it is crazy..

  • @Kragothe
    @KragotheАй бұрын

    As a british soldier i was deployed to bosnia as part of the nato force in january 1996,the peace felt very fragile.

  • @Bosnian1212
    @Bosnian121211 ай бұрын

    Never got to meet my grandma, grandpa, and other grandpa. Most my family died in this war, I’m so sad things had to be this way.

  • @danijelmarinkovic1264

    @danijelmarinkovic1264

    7 ай бұрын

    That’s very sad to hear Many Serbs also lost their family members as well in the war

  • @bow9413
    @bow94139 ай бұрын

    as being bosnian, this war should be taught more in school. Honestly, its just completely slept on !

  • @imrancamdzic9017

    @imrancamdzic9017

    7 ай бұрын

    Most of school organize many trips to people and commanders that explain to us what happened

  • @hunterhealer8022

    @hunterhealer8022

    7 ай бұрын

    I remember during childhood hearing about the war and about Slobodan Milosovic. About the ethnic cleansing that has happened. Both of my parents went into tears when they learn about what happened to Bosniaks.

  • @sejozwak

    @sejozwak

    7 ай бұрын

    not true@@imrancamdzic9017

  • @comradericefarmerhao2269

    @comradericefarmerhao2269

    7 ай бұрын

    If schools gonna teach them then there should be all sides of view of the war

  • @hunterhealer8022

    @hunterhealer8022

    7 ай бұрын

    @@comradericefarmerhao2269 definitely. They should put in view of Serbs as much as WW2 for Nazi Germany.

  • @blacknapalm2131
    @blacknapalm213127 күн бұрын

    09:40 *"We are here to protect you we are from the U.N"* must be some of the scariest words in any language.

  • @ivonag85
    @ivonag85 Жыл бұрын

    I was a kid, 7yr old, living in Croatia. Remember everything, my dad was in for from the first day. To this day i cannot hear a loud noise or a plane flying over. I freeze in fear. War is my biggest fear. Driving through Bosnia is alway sad because the war is very much still visible there. 💔

  • @milosmilosic2632

    @milosmilosic2632

    Жыл бұрын

    WHY CAN'T BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA BE A UNITARY MULTI-ETHNIC COMMUNITY...? Bosnia and Herzegovina was a multi-ethnic community in Yugoslavia - while the cohesive strength of the community came from self-governing worker (class...!) consciousness, which was: above all religious and national consciousness. In such circumstances: where the dominant form was social ownership of the means of production, and the main production relationship: SELF-MANAGEMENT, it was easy to build multi-ethnic relations and multiculturalism: which was reflected in film, sports and especially in music, where it manifested itself the most...! With the introduction of capitalist relations and private property as the dominant form in the economy, where PROFIT is the main driver of everything and not satisfying the NEEDS OF CITIZENS, political relations are radically changed, where the existing multi-ethnic and multicultural community is legally disintegrating, because this "new" is now based on : A MULTI-PARTY POLITICAL SYSTEM, where each ethnic group legally creates its own political party... And they are no longer bound by CLASS CONSCIOUSNESS and affiliation, but exclusively by NATIONAL or RELIGIOUS (both in politics, culture, economy, security and sports...!) Any attempt in such (bourgeois...) circumstances, to establish some kind of UNITARY COMMUNITY, inevitably leads to the domination of one nation and therefore to conflict within such an artificial (forced...) community, and finally, to the inevitable... - WAR...! I will prove to you with a very simple question, that Muslims from Bosnia are ESSENTIALLY the instigators of the war in BiH...! "If TOMORROW ALL SERBS from Republika Srpska were to collectively convert from Orthodoxy to Islam, would you - shoot them"...? Answer me....? If you have a "hertz"...? If you say: that you would not shoot the Serbs, if they collectively convert to Islam: THAT MEANS - THAT YOU did not like the multi-ethnic and multicultural Bosnia that existed in the SFRY and that you are: 100% responsible for the outbreak of war in Bosnia...! If you say: That you would still shoot at the Serbs... - it only means that you are a FASCIST society and a fascist TOTALITARIAN community, which does not know how to organize economic life in Bosnia and Herzegovina on the principles of democratic principles, and that is why you NEED ROBBERY of other peoples and their economic and financial resources. So...? Are you the instigators of war in BiH...? The answer is: YES...! Muslims are the instigators of war in BiH...!

  • @TykoBrian7

    @TykoBrian7

    11 ай бұрын

    @@milosmilosic2632 take your meds

  • @australiaprisonisland9156

    @australiaprisonisland9156

    10 ай бұрын

    @@milosmilosic2632 'Muslims are instigators of war in Bosnia Herzegovina'. He who partakes in the murder of innocents irrespective of religious/political affiliations has committed the gravest of sins. Justice is always served whether in this life or the next. It is impregnated in the minds of those who suffered, not necessarily the victim either but extended members of the family and community. It exists in their thoughts, and thoughts have ramifications because thoughts are an energy field that you can't see. Much like gravity and a magnetic field. Even the death of a physical individual does not kill the thought and those who harbour the greatest revenge harbour the greatest thoughts.

  • @zelimir1002

    @zelimir1002

    10 ай бұрын

    Just another biased video.... Not a single mention of the biggest genocide in entire history of Southeastern Europe, done by Croats during ww2. Which was hidden and suppressed in Yugoslavia in after war period by communist regime and Vatican clergy..... which actually was a reason behind all hate and destruction.

  • @igorivanov299

    @igorivanov299

    10 ай бұрын

    War is still a visible reminder in Croatia, especially in Vukovar.

  • @fhincey
    @fhincey Жыл бұрын

    My family are Croatians from Sarajevo. They lived near the Željo stadium. Gladly, my mother and grandparents were able to leave right before the siege started because my grandfather saw it coming. My stepfather wasn't so lucky. He lived through the entire siege, where he lost his father to a granade that also hit him. Almost half of my family experienced the siege first hand. And that's just one of so many affected places. I was born post-war in Germany, and I think it's so important to make the public more aware of all the things that happened in this region because almost nobody knows anything about it outside ex-yu countries. I appreciate this video a lot!

  • @polca4love

    @polca4love

    Жыл бұрын

    Younger people outside of the Balkans do indeed have little knowledge. But i'm quite sure most people over 30 in Europe still remember. I unfortunately still have to do a little mental focus to remember that Jokic and Djokovic have nothing to do with this.

  • @krishanuA

    @krishanuA

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@polca4lovePS: I first came across these years in a Frederick Forsyth book: Avenger.

  • @bezimeni0477

    @bezimeni0477

    Жыл бұрын

    @@polca4love well that is a problem, you all still think we are murderers even though it was 30 years ago. People forgot what Germans did 20 years after it happened, but we still get beaten into a pulp in media after 30 years to the point that you feel better if you don't say where are you from.

  • @polca4love

    @polca4love

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bezimeni0477 It's unfortunate that i have to do some mental exercises, not only because the two mentioned people have nothing to with that, but because i developed a bad prejudice against serbs, and while not unreasonable, it's never fair to apply such thing to an entire population, specially in a conflict as convoluted as the Balkan Wars. Now, if you think people has forgotten what the germans did, i'm sorry to inform you that you are sorely mistaken. There was simply another enemy, and tiredness of war, but even today people do may forgive, but not forget. Expect the same with Yugoslavia.

  • @GK-tx2vp

    @GK-tx2vp

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah…. No. This is not making awareness… this is hatred towards a people. And it’s getting old. People are better informed today and this kind of reporting is now laughable. Serbs are Gods people like everyone else. They fought ultra nationalist, Germany nazi supporting Croatians, and cowardly Bosnians who instigated conflict by attacking Yugoslav armed forces in hopes of a response that they could then film and cry to the world about it!!! Not to mention they imported alqueida/isis type militants to fight in Bosnia. The same groups that Fucked the US 10 yrs later. CIA puppets turned against them 10 yrs later! War is ugly and all sides are responsible…. But don’t hide from your peoples highlights please🤣🤣🤣

  • @chimaubochi5698
    @chimaubochi56982 ай бұрын

    One of my former college classmates was from Bosnia. She immigrated to the US in 2002. In Fall 2012, while we both attended UC Santa Cruz and took the Disability, Technology, and Society class, I remember her stating that she lived in Oakland, CA. I think her name is Yaya

  • @PrviOPG-Catalhoyuka
    @PrviOPG-Catalhoyuka4 ай бұрын

    My father, a member of the Croatian army, fought as a scout in the war in Bosnia in the front lines, and behind the front lines during the war...In the beginning with the Bosniaks against the Serbs, then against the Bosniaks until the intensity of the fighting with the Serbs calmed down...after that again with Bosniaks against Serbs, all in three years in the same combat unit, which speaks volumes about the senselessness of the war in Bosnia. At the same time, there were several hundred thousand refugees from Bosnia, a third of the occupied Croatia, mixed with Croatian refugees in all possible accommodations. Also, at the same time when my father was at war with Bosnia, in the apartment where we lived in Split (Croatia), there were refugees: a family of a mixed marriage of a Serb and a Bosniak woman from the area of Visoko (BiH) and their two children, to whom we made our home available while were waiting for a visa for the USA...Strange times and they did not repeat themselves

  • @pault989
    @pault989 Жыл бұрын

    Having just visited Bosnia for the first time and seeing the scars of this war still visible all over the country, this video was very informative. I must also say that Bosnia is one of the most beautiful countries I have visited as well as the people being some of the most amazing, hospitable and friendliest that I have come across. I can highly recommend it!

  • @peter58peter

    @peter58peter

    Жыл бұрын

    video is a complete lie. Could u, for record, point out one accurate 'information'?

  • @massimopecile9666

    @massimopecile9666

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks to the bombing of the nato

  • @truthteller2711

    @truthteller2711

    Жыл бұрын

    @@massimopecile9666 nope nato stopped the genocide

  • @Kordunasica.

    @Kordunasica.

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks,hvala 🤌🙏🇧🇦🫡

  • @bbeomjoonbwlofc9683

    @bbeomjoonbwlofc9683

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much❤

  • @ThatDudeinBlue
    @ThatDudeinBlue Жыл бұрын

    It always blows my mind how many people don’t really know just how intense this conflict was and how it wasn’t that long ago. But then people ask me to explain it and I’m like “oh man…how do I even begin about this?” Definitely one of the hardest conflicts to break down even for anybody who loves history. Amazing job.

  • @jurgenbebja8615

    @jurgenbebja8615

    Жыл бұрын

    I didn't know you were interested in this stuff... amazing!

  • @gilbertosantos2806

    @gilbertosantos2806

    Жыл бұрын

    Never knew you shared an interest in History too, you have my respect.

  • @ninab.4540

    @ninab.4540

    Жыл бұрын

    I was a baby when this was new but I was taught about it in basic history lessons

  • @timnarre

    @timnarre

    Жыл бұрын

    People also seem to forget to talk about the successful military intervention of the war.

  • @jonaspaulsson9912

    @jonaspaulsson9912

    Жыл бұрын

    You kidding? Easiest thing to explain in the world. Serbias president/dictator wanted to create a greater Serbia so he attacked Croatia and Bosnia. The europeans helped him by slapping bosnia with an illegal arms embargo and un troops that were potential hostages and gave serbia leverage on nato so they could attack, kill and rape the people of Srebrenica. When serbia was attempting the same thing on Bihac Croatia and Bosnia teamed up and kicked Serbias ass. To bad the USA pressured Bosnia to the stupid partition of Bosnia. Replika sepska must go.