DID YOU KNOW?  -- Three years before the 1995 Srebrenica Genocide, Serbs torched Bosniak villages and killed at least 3,166 Bosniaks around Srebrenica. In 1993, the UN described the besieged situation in Srebrenica as a "slow-motion process of genocide." In July 1995, Serbs forcibly expelled 25,000 Bosniaks, brutally raped many women and girls, and systematically killed 8,000+ men and boys (DNA confirmed).

15 May, 2011

TEARS FOR THE VICTIMS OF SERBIAN TERRORISM IN EASTERN BOSNIA

Are you ready to forgive?

Serbs slaughtered thousands of Bosniaks in and around Bratunac in 1992 at the very beginning of the Bosnian Genocide and more than three years before the July 1995 Srebrenica massacre. A collective funeral for 16 Bosniak women, men and babies killed by Serbian terrorists in May 1992 was held at a cemetery in Veljaci, in Bratunac near Srebrenica, on Thursday. Bosniak baby Adina Hajdarevic, who was only 3 1/2 months old when she was killed, was the youngest victim buried. With Thursday’s joint funeral, the fifth in a row, 218 Bosniak victims from Bratunac have been buried in the Veljaci graveyard. 

Don't forget. Teach your children. Serbs have never been our friends. Throughout history, Serbs (this includes Serbian civilians, military, government, and armed Serbian Nazi-collaborationist Chetnik thugs) have been raping, massacring and torturing our people in eastern Bosnia. Are you ready to forgive them after all they have done to us? May these photos refresh your memory -- and conscious.


A Bosniak woman searches for the coffin of her relative among coffins displayed during a mass funeral for Bosniak women, men and children killed by Bosnian Serb terrorists in Bratunac. On Thursday, May 12, 2011. thousands of Bosniaks attended at funeral of 16 men, women and children killed by Serbs at the beginning of the Bosnian Genocide in 1992. All of the bodies were found and exhumed from a mass grave, and identified by DNA method. (Photo: Amel Emric)


Bosniak men carry the coffin of their relative during a mass funeral for Bosniaks in Bratunac,near Srebrenica in eastern Bosnia, on May 12, 2011. Thousands of Bosniaks attended a funeral for 16 men, women and children killed by Bosnian Serb forces at the beginning of Serbian aggression on Bosnia and Herzegovina. All of the bodies were found and exhumed from mass grave sites and identified using DNA. (Photo: Elvis Barukcic)


A man carries a coffin during a mass funeral in the town of Bratunac May 12, 2011. The remains of 16 Bosniak men, women and babies, killed by Serb forces at the beginning of their campaign of ethnic cleansing in eastern Bosnia in 1992. Innocent victims were exhumed from the Redzici, Hrncici, Podcaus and Kamenica mass graves near Bratunac and buried on Thursday. (Photo: Elvis Barukcic)

Bratunac Mass Grave: Bosnian head of forensic team Murat Hurtic gesture as he shows original location where human bones were found in the eastern Bosnian town of Bratunac. Experts say they found a wartime mass grave after a truck driver unloaded gravel next to a construction site and discovered human bones in the pile. Prosecutor Emir Ibrahimovic said Wednesday the driver reported his finding end of May and led the authorities to the site near the nearby town of Bratunac where he uploaded the gravel. Meanwhile witnesses have come forward claiming that a significant number of Bosniaks killed after Serb forces took control of Bratunac at the beginning of the 1992-95 war were secretly buried in gravel pit. (Photo: Amel Emric)

A Bosniak woman cries over the coffin of her relative, during a mass funeral for Bosniak women, men, and children killed by Serbs in Bratunac. On May 12, 2011 tousands of Bosniaks attended a funeral for Bratunac massacre victims killed at the beginning of Bosnia's war in early stages of Serbian terrorist campaign of ethnic cleansing. All of the bodies were found and exhumed from mass grave sites and identified using DNA. (Photo: Elvis Barukcic)
Bosniak man Adis Hunic, reacts, during the burial of his relative Ardinel Kunic killed at age of 3 years, during a mass funeral for Bosniak women, men and children killed by Serbian terrorists in the Bratunac massacre at the beginning of Bosnian genocide in 1992. (Photo: Amel Emric)
Bosniak women cry near the coffin of a relative during a mass funeral for Bosniak women, men and children killed by Serb terrorists in Bratunac at the beginning of the Bosnian Genocide in 1992. Thousands came to pay respect to innocent victims on May 12, 2011. (Photo: Amel Emric)

Bosniaks pray during a mass funeral in the town of Bratunac May 12, 2011. The remains of 16 Bosniak civilians, killed by Serb terrorists at the beginning of the Bosnian Genocide in 1992 were buried during the burial ceremony attended by thousands. (Photo: Dado Ruvic)
A Bosniak woman cries near the coffin of her relative during a mass funeral for Bosniaks in Bratunac, eastern Bosnia, near Srebrenica, on May 12, 2011. Thousands of Bosniaks attended at funeral of 16 men, women and children killed by Bosnian Serb terrorists at the beginning of the Serbian campaign of ethnic cleansing in Bosnia, in 1992. All of the bodies were found and exhumed from amass grave and identified by DNA method. (Photo: Amel Emric)

Bosniak woman Edina Merdjic (2nd R), her son Damir Merdjic (R), sister Halida Merdjic (C) and Adisa Merdjic (L) cry by their father Avdo's coffin before a mass funeral in the town of Bratunac May 12, 2011. The remains of 16 Bosniak civilians -- men, women, children and the elderly -- killed by Serb terrorists during the Serbian campaign of ethnic cleansing, at the beginning of the 1992-95 Bosnian Genocide, were exhumed from the Redzici, Hrncici, Podcaus and Kamenica mass graves near Bratunac and buried on Thursday. (Photo: Dado Ruvic)
Bosniak woman Konic Safija (C), mother of a three-year-old boy who died during the war, and family member Sijakovic Mirsada (centre L) cry near a coffin before a mass funeral in the town of Bratunac May 12, 2011. The remains of 16 Bosniak women, men and children killed by Serbian terrorists during the campaign of ethnic cleansing, in the beginning of the Bosnian Genocide in 1992, were exhumed from the Redzici, Hrncici, Podcaus and Kamenica mass graves near Bratunac and buried on Thursday. (Photo: Dado Ruvic)