276 114 227MB
English Pages [423] Year 1998
) )
I I
)
oltE FAiltLY'f
troRY
OF THE WAR IN BOf NIA ((c(
CHUCK f UDETIC
@ PENGUIN BOOKS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Chuck Sudetic covered the collapse of Yugoslavia and the war in Bosnia lor The New York Times from 1990 to 1995. He studied English, iourqalism, and Slavic languages at Ohio State University and Indiana University and was a Fulbright scholar in Yugoslavia during 1984 and 1985. His story on the Srebrenica massacre for Rolling Stone magazine was a finalist for a Nationai Magazine Award in I996. His articles have also appeared inThe Economist, Das Magazin (Z,uich), arrd Transitions Magazine (Prague). He lived in Belgrade for eight years before the Milo5evi6 regime refused to renew his journalistic accreditation and forced him to leave the country. He now lives in Montreal.
Praise f.or Blood andYengeance Chosen as a New YorkTimes Notable Book of 1998 and as a Book of the Year by PublishersWeekly andTheWashingtonPost
"A narrative so rich and strong it not only describes the crime but dares to explain
itanddoessowitheloquenceanddignity....Magnificent...ahugecontribution to the literature of the Bosnian
war."
-The
New York Times Book Reyiew
"Richly documented and enthralling. . . Blood andVengeance reads like a great
novel."
-San
Francisco Chronicle
"The triumph olBlood andVengeanca is that it can make an American reader howl and cower in just the same way as those Muslim widorvs. Sudetic has produced a book that simultaneously provides a historical panorama . . . and a minutely observed account of how the conflict ravaged a single family." Chicago Tribune "Dozens of books have come out about the Yugoslav wars but there must be plenty of readers who deep down are still baffled as to why Yugoslavs did this to themselves. Blood and Yengeance is the book for them. . . . This ii one of the best books in English to come out of the Bosnian conflict so far." Economist
-The
"This exploration of a familyt experience during the Bosnian war provides unique and harrowing insight ir.rto Bosnian Serb-Muslim relations. . . . Extraordinary . . . rich in illuminating detail . . . Sudetic's tale of one family's struggle for survival is an essential and lasting contribution.' Kirkus Reyiews, starred review
"Brilliant . . . shows in rich detail how the forces of historicai propaganda and suspicion produced a bloody rhythm of attack and retribution in Srebrenica and its surrounding York Review of Books
villages."
-New
"Of all
the- reporters who covered the Bosnian war, none saw more clearly, dug more deeply or reported more acutely than Chuck Sudetic. Now with Blood ani Vengeance, he has done nothing less than write the defining narrative of the Bosnian conflict. It is an extraordinary achievement."
-David Rieff "world
leaders told us the Bosnia genocide was too complex for outsiders to do much about it when it was happening. Chuck Sudetic tells quite a different story in
this fiercely reported and chilling book. Thking us across history with one Muslim family, a family he is related to, he unravels the complex and makes it not only clear
but
intimate.'
Sydney Schanberg
"Chrrck Sudetic's writing shoves you onto the lront line of Europe's most recent-and most avoidable-war from page one and doesn't letyou liave. you will live and breathe Bosnia until the very last page. This is a book that desperately needs to be
read."
-Sebastian Junger
I
To my father and mother i Liilii, i Sari, i Azri od Glogonjskoga rita do Parme do Brajton Bida i Senjaka, pa i skroz nazad
)
\
CONTENr'
ielik
Family Tree xu
N4ain Characters
xf PBOLOGUE xxix
P.qnr
Olr
DYING EMPIRE', DEADI.Y MYIHJ 7
Panr
f wo
FROM THE BONE' OF PRtNCf T.AZAR TO THE WELI--FED DEAD 73
Plnr f Hnrr .KAD TAD, KAD IAD . . . , 135
Penr
Fovn
THE MAP WAR 65
yiii
Contents
Panr Frvr A PLACE 'ATE215 Panr NDON'T
'HOOI
trx
THE PIANO PLAYERT
I I
I
251
EPILOGUE t995 729
t996 BB 1997
)49 I!
Sources
t t
363
Bibliography )79 Acknowledgments
I
l8t Index I
385
Photographs appear following page r9o. Maps appear on pages x-xi,2,3, 116, 166, z5z.
0
When I'm asleep, dreaming and lulled and warm,They come, the homeless ones, the noiseless dead. While the dim charging breakers of the storm Bellow and drone and rumbie overhead, Out of the gloom they gather about my bed. They whisper to my heart; their thoughts are mine.
-Siegfried
\ I
Sassoon "Sick Leave," ryr8
rRiha6
B,anj a
a
B
o
Luka
SN AND
HERZEI Mostar a
Bijeljinar
\
a
T[rzla
Srebrenica
]VINA a
Sarajevo
a
MAIt{ CHARACTER'
Abdi6, Fikret (AB-deetch, FEE-kret)-A communist-era director of an agricultural enterprise who was responsible for a $5oo-million financial scandal. Leader of a N4us]im faction in northwestern Bosnia. i\4uslim member of the Bosnian presidency after
r99o elections. Carried on trade with the Serbs and Croats before forming a private army and rising against the mostly Muslim army of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Ahmetagi|, Fehim (AH-met-ag-eetch, FAY-heem)-Grandson of Mullah \4edo Ahmetagii. Survivor of Zvekara killings in r94r. Ahmetagi6, Hussein-creat-grandson of N4ullah Medo Ahmet agi(.. HodL.a at K'pusovi6i mosque until the late r98os. Left after dispute over water with Branko MitraSinovii.
Ahmetagi6,Ibro (EE-bro)-Son of N4u11ah Medo Ahmetagii and father of Fehim Ahmetagii. Survivor of Zvekara killings in r94r. Ahmetagi6, Meho (l\4AY-ho)-Grandson of N4ullah N4edo Ahmetagii, survivor of Zvekara killings in r94r.
Ahmetagi|, Mullah Medo (MED-o) Self+aught Muslim holy man from Mahoviii, a hamlet iust down Mount zvijezda from Kupusoviii. Staunch supporter of the Serbian monarchy after world War I. District president during the period behveen the hvo world wars. Said to have received the star of Karadfordje, the highest medal awarded by the Serbian king. Burned alive by Serbian chetniks during worid war II with his wife and other family members.
Akashi,Yasushi-special Representative of Secretary-General Boutros-Ghali to the UN military force in the former Yugoslavia lrom December 1993 to October 1995.A staunch opponent ofair strikes. Almir, Hodia (Al--meer)-A N{uslim faith healer from
a
village near Tuzla.
Andrii,Iyo (ANN-dreetch, EE-vo)-Nobel Prize-winning
novelist who wrote about Bosnia. Born in the town of Travnik to Catholic parents, and lived in vi5egrad under the care of a Muslim woman. Wrote the novelBridge ontheDrinaaboutlife in Visegrad from the building of the famous stone bridge to the beginning ofWorld War I.
xvi
MainCharacters
Annan, K_of -Head of peacekeeping operations for the UN during most of the Bosnian war. Later elected secretary-general of the UN. A1'di6, Aviliia (AHV-deerch, AHV-dee-ya)-Farher of Hiba Glik, the wife of Huso celik. Former member of the SS's Handzar Division, a quasi-military unit used as a special police in Yugoslavia from 1943 to the end of the war. Avdi6, Husniia (HOOS-nee-ya)
-The
morher of Hiba
Glik.
Bayezid, sultan*The son of sultan Murat. Fought at the Battle of Kosovo, where his father was killed. B ed irofi6,
Ramiz (beh-CHtrER-o-veetch, ROM-eez ) Acting commander of the Muslim military forces in Srebrenica after Naser orii's -departrire from the safe area in the spring of 1995. Former head of the communist national guard in Srebrenica.
Bildt, carl-Former prime minister of sweden. co-chairman of the International Peace
conference for the former yugoslavia after the departure of David owen in
1995.
Bouhos-Ghali, Boutros-Secretary-general of the uN during the Bosnian war.
Brankwi6, Diurilie (BRAHN-ko-veetch, fooR-iry)-A serbian despot who ruled
over Srebrenica twice in the fifteenth century. Married to a Greek woman named ]erina, often referred to as Jerina the Damned.
Briquemont, Francis-'lhe Belgian general who commanded the UN military force in Bosnia from Ceneral Morillon's departure in 1993 to early 1994. July
Broz, losip-See Tito.
iavkuii6,Haitiird-(cHAHv-koo-sheetch, ha-lEE+ah)-Daughter of Hasib Gvku5ii. Friend of Sead Glik and boyhood lore of Miran Lukif. From the village of Kapetanoviii, just below Kupusoviii.
dvkuii6,Hasi6 (HAH-seeb)-Farher Lived in Steyr, Austria. Friend of the
of Hadzira Gvkusii and friend of Huso
Lukii family.
Glik.
&vkuii6,Ismef (EES-met)-Husband of Latifa criiL. Llved in Kamenica, a hamlet about an hour's walk from Kupusoviii toward the northwest on Mount zvi4ezda.
*t;t
, ,+it
Glik.
?ry!, Molln,
"
(Kozi6) (cHELeek, AyE-ka)-wife of Hasan
Aydo (AHV-doe)-An older brorher of Huso Austria.
(*lik, ndin(ED-een)-son olPaja andzlariiacrrik.
Glik. Mother of Huso
Glik. Bor., in
ry37. Lives
in
Born in 1994 in Srebrenica.
i,elik, Esad (ESS-ahd)-An older brorher of Huso Gllk. izlik,Gordana(GoRE-dahn-ah)-FormerlyGordana inlaw. Married Hamed Celik ln 1989.
Todorovii. The authort sister-
i-clik, Hamed (HoMM-ed)-Husband of Gordana Todorovii, son of Huso Glik.
Main Characters xvii Left Kupusoviii to work as a fruitpicker near Belgrade in 1987. Left Yugosiavia in to 1992. Lived in Austria for a year before reioining his wife and children and moving Canada in 1993.
i.Uk,glbo
(7odi6) (HEE-bah)-Wife of Huso
61ft.
h4other of Hamed, Sead, Paia,
and Sanela.
(nltk, ttuibo (HOOY-boh)-A co1le,mp9rjry.of Mullah SrUr., Glit . The father of Salih Celik and great-grandfather of Huso Crlik'
(nlik,Huro(HOO+o)-Son
of Hasan and Ajka
Glik.
Husbar,d of Hiba 61ik. Fath.r
of Hamed, Sead, Paia, and Sanela Crlik.
i-elik, lusuf (YOO-soof)-The first cousin of Huso Giik's children. Found Chetnik knife inside a cave beside the
Glik
house.
61ft. Married name is Latifa Gvku5i6. dlik,Mir"o (MEER-za)-Son of Paia andZlatiiaGlik. Bo* in ViSegrad in r99o. (nllk, Munoh saban (N4ooLah sHAH-bahn) -A stranger who bought Kupusoviii
cruk,rot6o(lah-TtrA-fah)-sister
of Huso
with bags of gold ducats after the occupation of Bosnia byAustria in 1878. Built next to Juz-bin s mosque.
a
house
Glik n"d grandnrother of Huso R".r",rrried into the Kupus family after her husband,s death during world war I. Died near Srebrenica during world war II.
inlik,Nom(NAH-zah)-Third
Gtit
.
l"t
Saban to marry Salih
wife of Mullah Srbr.,
6lik.
inllk, poio(Pltr-ah)-The youngest son of Huso and Hiba Glik. Husba., d of Zlatiia Glik r"d father of Edin and Mirza. inl;k, So6h(SAHJeekh)-The grandfather of Huso 61ik. Mairied Mullah Srba,,'s third wife, Naza. Killed during World War I near Srebrenica'
(rllk,
Sollt (SAHJeekh)-A brother of Huso Glik. Named after his grandfather killed during World War I. Left the family after World War II and moved to Croatia.
iulik, Soliho (sa-LEE-ha) - See Muratagii, Saliha' ahksanela (sah-NELL-ah)-Married name Sanela Halilovii.
Youngest child and
only riaughter of Huso and Hiba Crlik. Wife of Muhamed Halilovii' Son of Huso and Hiba Glit . L.ft f"pusovi6i after returning the Adriatic coast of Croatia in a shipyard as a laborer until on from the army. Worked on a merchant ship' Now iiving in Canada' laborer as a taking a position
(-elik,
Sead(SAY-ahd)
-
i.llk,ZtoUio(ZlAl-ee-yah)-Wife
of Pala
Glik.
I\4other of Mirza and Edin. From
OdZak.
Chirac, lacques-President of France. Shifted French policy toward Bosnia in 1995. Churkin,VitalT-Russia's special envoy to the former Yugoslavia in 1993 and 1994. AFrench general who replaced General Wahlgren UN military forces in the former Yugoslavia in July 1993' Cot,
lean-
as
commander of the
\
xviii
Main Characters
de I'apresle,
Bertrand-AFrench general who took over the UN military forces after General cot's departure in 1994. Lieutenant General Rose,s superio, r., ih. uN military chain of command. devere Ha1es, Gu7-British deputy to Lieutenant Generar Briquemont of Bergium in 1993. Offered to remove Naser Orii from Srebrenica. Deli6,Rasim (DELL-eetch, RAS-eem)-commander of the mostly Musrim army of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Deli6, sead (DELL-eetch, SAy-ahd)-commander of the Bosnian army,s Tuzla. Corps.
Deronii|,Miroslav (DARE-ohn-eetch, MEER oh+iav)-The
head of the Serbian De-
mocratic Party in Bratunac. Participant in the roundup of Muslim men in Bratunac in r99z' Head of the civilianAffairs committee of Srebrenica after the townt fall in r995. Dudi6,16ro (DUDE-eetch, EE-broh)-The commander of the zgznd Brigade in Srebrenica. Respected by Muslim men as a fighter and as an officer who worlld not take unnecessary risks.
(DUKE-eetch, RAI-koh)-Head of a mining company in the vilrage of Financed the Serbian Democratic party. Friend oiRadoua.,'K aradLi6.. Eagleburger, Lawrence*The u.S. deputy secretary of state under the Bush adminiskation' Reputed to be washington's most knowreigeable person on yugosravia. En6, Anilieliia (AlR-eetch, ann-JElLee-yah)-The morher of Nego and Golub Erii. went to Belgrade and obtained an audience with Tito to beg hiir to commute her
lu!