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flashback: I heard the sniper's shot before I saw Haris Bahtanovic fall
to the ground. He was walking through a park-turned-shooting-gallery behind
Sarajevo's Holiday Inn. A few men rushed into the open and dragged Bahtanovic
into a car that tore away. I wrote a story about this, about the odd way
you can cover a war by sitting in your hotel room, out of the line of
fire, and watch someone get shot. The next day, I found Bahtanovic in
a hospital. The bullet had smashed through his left arm and grazed his
ribs. I wrote another story and described the hospital's recovery ward:
"It's an ugly place. One man lost both legs, another lost his foot,
another has metal rods holding together what remains of his lower leg...."
With
that, the parallel tracks that my life and Bahtanovic's ran along for
24 hours forked into different directions. This is what happens in a war:
You are thrown from one place to another, from one state of mind to another,
as though a tornado has lifted you off the ground and carried you away.
The distance need not be great; from one town to another, one house to
another, one room to another, one hospital bed to another, and in each
there is a different world of agony or loss or hatred, a different story.
You move in this way until you become sick of it and leave or become addicted
to it and cannot leave or until the war breathes its last. Years go by,
and you may wonder what happened to the people whose lives you dropped
into, but you hesitate to make inquiries. It is like entering a deserted
house; you waver because you might find unpleasant things inside.
My
last trip to Bosnia had occurred in the middle of 1993, and by then I
had seen enough slaughter. Over the next five years, I never returned,
never tracked down the people I had written about--the Serb teacher running
an ethnic-cleansing office, the warlord swearing that Muslims were not
forced to leave his fiefdom, the Muslim doctor who had no anesthesia to
soothe the pain of his scalpel as he operated in Srebrenica. I didn't
lose interest in these people, or the many others I came to know and write
about, but the moment had passed when our lives ran parallel; I thought
there was little more to say about them that anyone wanted to hear, little
more to be learned from them.
Then,
last July, I found myself somewhat obliged to visit Bosnia, so I tracked
down these ghosts. As always, Bosnia had an ace up her sleeve. I became
attuned to the notion, hard to grasp back when the bombs were still falling
and men were being shot under my window, that, while people can be murdered
rather easily and towns can be flattened with the right artillery pieces
and cities can be conquered in due course, countries are rather hard to
kill. The apparent victory in elections this month of hard-line nationalist
Nikola Poplasen, who defeated President Biljana Plavsic, a moderate by
the unique standards of politics in Republika Srpska, is a major setback
for the U.S.-backed process of reconciliation, but it need not be a death
knell. The task of bringing Bosnia back to life will now be longer and
harder, but the forces that wish to destroy Bosnia are not as omnipotent
as they would like us to believe (this was also the case during the war);
and it is useful to keep in mind that there is a historical pattern, in
the Balkans as elsewhere, of war-torn nations collapsing, dead or nearly
dead, and rising again, perhaps weaker than before, but resurrected nonetheless.
There
should be no misunderstanding: Bosnia's troubles are as striking as the
mortar imprints on Marshall Tito Street in Sarajevo. With few exceptions,
refugees who want to return to territory controlled by a different group--Muslims
wishing to return to Banja Luka or west Mostar, Serbs wishing to return
to Sarajevo, or Croats wishing to return to Brcko--are unable to do so
despite pledges all sides made in the 1995 Dayton Peace Accord. Just a
few war criminals have been arrested by SFOR, the U.S.-led international
peacekeeping force. Bosnia's economy, such as it is, depends on foreign
aid. Government corruption is endemic. Mistrust prevails.
But
the news could be worse. The news could be that nobody wants to reknit
ties severed during the war, that armed checkpoints remain in place, that
you cannot drive or make a phone call from Sarajevo to Banja Luka, that
the international community is going to leave any day now, that the people
of Bosnia are aching to fight another war, that the politicians who led
them into battle are immortal and will remain in power forever. These
are the disaster scenarios, and they are not unfolding.
Take
a look, for example, at Visegrad. Throughout the ages, this town has been
a nerve center of conflict because it is near the border with Serbia and
the majority of its inhabitants were Muslim. As soon as war broke out
in 1992, the Muslims were "cleansed" from Visegrad, some of
them taken to a lovely sixteenth-century bridge over the Drina River,
where their throats were cut and their bodies thrown into the cold, green
water. I visited Visegrad in the summer of 1992 and walked through its
deserted streets and its looted homes. I met Momcilo Mirkovic, who called
himself "executive mayor" and wore a pistol at his waist. There
had been no cleansing, he insisted, no killings; the Muslims left voluntarily.
--
I
returned to Visegrad in July. Mirkovic was easy to locate; an operator
provided his home number. He reluctantly agreed to meet at a cafe patronized
by beefy men with flashy rings, expensive watches, and sauntering demeanors
that indicated it had been some time since they were engaged in honest
work. I tried to act like an old friend, but Mirkovic was jittery, on
guard. He is no longer executive mayor; now he is a businessman, though
he didn't want to say what line of business. His eyes shifted from one
place to another, like those of a fugitive. His hair had gone gray since
I saw him five years before, and he was thinner. He put a pack of Marlboros
on the table and smoked one, then another and another, and, when he raised
his lighter to his cigarette, his hand shook. He asked how my drive from
Belgrade had been, and, when I answered that I had come from Sarajevo,
unfriendly territory, his comfort level nosedived.
"I
don't want to talk about politics," he said. "Only refugees."
I asked a few softball questions about refugees and returned to politics.
"I don't like politics," he stammered. "I left politics
two years ago, after Dayton." He cited "health reasons,"
refusing to elaborate further. I asked how he became "executive mayor"--I
assume he was installed after the town's Muslim leadership had been killed
or driven out--but once more he refused to talk about that era. "I
don't like to speak about politics.... I'm tired now. Perhaps our talk
can continue tomorrow." He looked at his watch and said he had a
meeting in a few minutes. I mentioned that SFOR had arrested a handful
of men accused of doing "bad things" in the war, and I asked
whether people were upset about this. I didn't use the touchy words "war
criminals" or "war crimes," but he knew I was asking whether
he was afraid of being arrested and sent to The Hague for trial. He began
to rise from his chair. "I am sorry," he said. "I have
a meeting at four. I must go. I must go."
Mirkovic
was frightened, not defiant, and this was encouraging. His role in Visegrad's
cleansing was, most likely, only on a political level, letting the death
squads do the dirty work. But, if his behavior is any guide, brand-name
warlords like Radovan Karadzic are not the only ones running scared in
Republika Srpska; even the small fry hear a clock ticking when they go
to sleep at night. It would be wrong, in the wake of Poplasen's apparent
victory, to refrain from trying to arrest more alleged war criminals.
More than ever, purveyors of hatred who have committed war crimes must
be brought to justice, though the risk of doing so, in SFOR casualties,
may now be greater than before. This is the price of our dithering.
--
Hoping
to take the pulse of more ordinary Bosnian Serbs, I arranged for a reunion
with another figure from the past, Vladimir Radjen. When our paths first
crossed in 1992, Radjen was cleaning up his street, which had been ransacked
during the cleansing of Visegrad. Windows were broken, doors were ajar,
even floorboards were ripped up. "We all lived in Visegrad like a
big family, the Muslims and Serbs," he said at the time. Five years
later, he does not doubt that he and his fellow Serbs have been led down
a dead end. Radjen, 42, now works in a grocery store that is so run-down
it not only has no name, there is not even a sign in front indicating
it is a grocery store. Across the street is a reminder of what had been
and what happened during the war--a patch of ground, covered with weeds,
where the town's mosque was located before it was dynamited into rubble.
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We
walked to a restaurant alongside the river and the bridge; a more historic
and charming spot would be hard to imagine, though there was a surreal
twist because the restaurant's stereo was tuned to the SFOR station. A
deejay with a British accent played songs designed to appeal to the musical
common denominator of fighting men and women from around the world--so
Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra, and the Spice Girls alternately sang in
the background as Radjen unfurled his woes. We sat 50 yards from a statue
of Ivo Andric, the Yugoslav writer whose majestic novel about Visegrad,
"The Bridge Over the Drina," earned him the Nobel Prize for
literature.
"Andric
... said there are times when clever men are silent and stupid men talk
and robbers become rich," Radjen began. "Everything he wrote
has happened in this war." Who was Radjen mad at? The nationalists,
he said, citing, first of all, Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic, Croatian
President Franjo Tudjman, and Alija Izetbegovic, leader of Bosnia's Muslims.
Then Radjen said he was mad at himself, too. I asked why. "Because
I was born and must live now," he explained. "I wish I had been
born later. I don't know what to do. But I have to be with my people."
He pointed to a row of stores across the street. Before the war, most
storekeepers were Muslim. "Now," he said, "everyone is
a Serb, but I don't know who they are."
There
were only two months left before the September national elections, but
Radjen's apathy was so great he not only had no idea for whom he would
vote, he didn't even know elections were to be held--expressing surprise
when I told him about it. Radjen said he would back whoever offered the
hope of prosperity to his down-and-out corner of Republika Srpska. He
probably ended up voting, as many Bosnian Serbs did, for the hard-line
nationalists who conned or frightened people into supporting them. This
is sad, but policymakers who may now wish to reconsider our engagement
in Bosnia should remember that, just as America played a major role in
deciding the course of the war, which was ended after President Clinton
belatedly agreed to bomb the Serbs, America can play a major role in deciding
the course of the peace. We are not at history's mercy; we can be the
shapers of it.
It
was in Banja Luka that I found an oddly hopeful sign about the direction
of things. I was looking for a teacher, Milos Bojinovic, who headed the
city's wartime Bureau for the Removal of Populations and Exchange of Material
Goods, which was in charge of the administrative side of ethnic cleansing.
I found him at home at two-thirty on a weekday afternoon, drunk. For two
hours, he spoke in slurred words about how he had been a humanitarian
helping Muslims and Croats get out of town. It was alcoholic rubbish.
I learned much more when I visited his school. A bulletin board at the
entrance listed after-hours activities, like the photo club, acting club,
and so forth. Someone had improvised a few new offerings. One was titled
"Chetnikism," a euphemism for Serbian nationalism. The instructor
was listed as "Dr. Seselj," the most notorious warlord. The
time, "Nonstop." The place, "Greater Serbia." Another
improvised activity, "Butchery."
These
jottings had been on the board for some time; nobody cared enough to erase
them. I mentioned this to a friend in Sarajevo, Igor Baros, and he responded
as though I had announced that Karadzic had been captured by SFOR. "That's
a great sign," he said. "It's better than anything the politicians
agree on. It shows they think these things are jokes. Their people died
for nothing." True enough, but, as Baros knows, the Serbs remain
a long distance from accepting the full truth. They still view themselves
as victims and don't want their old neighbors to return. It would be hopelessly
naive to suggest that their view will change in a few years, but it would
be needlessly pessimistic to suggest that refugees will never be able
to return to their homes. It is between those poles--a few years and never--that
changes will occur.
--
Nedret
Mujkanovic is a human metaphor for healing the wounds of war. When the
conflict began, Mujkanovic was finishing his work as a surgical intern
in Tuzla, and the Bosnian army decided to send him, through Serb lines,
into the besieged enclave of Srebrenica, which had just a few doctors,
and none with surgery experience. In Srebrenica, Mujkanovic often operated
by candlelight, under fire, with no anesthesia. He lost precise count
but thinks he performed 1,400 operations in nine months. He amputated
legs and arms, pulled shrapnel out of stomachs and heads, and so on. I
first ran into him at the Tuzla airport in 1993, when he was evacuated
from Srebrenica by U.N. peacekeepers. A day later, I spent three hours
listening to his horrifying tales of battlefield surgery in a medieval
operating theater. He embodied much of what I admired about Bosnia: in
addition to Muslims, he operated on captured Serb soldiers and protected
them from the retribution that many people in Srebrenica desired.
Five
years later, I walked into Sarajevo's Holiday Inn, which has been restored
and now looks just as ugly as it did before the war, and met Mujkanovic
in the lobby. I had remembered it as a cold and grubby place filled with
weary journalists. But now the guests are aid officials, businessmen,
politicians, and--amazingly--some tourists. Mujkanovic looked ten years
younger than the last time we had met, and once more he had a surprising
tale to tell.
As
the war wound down, he decided to become a plastic surgeon, but plastic
surgeons in Bosnia were unfamiliar with state-of-the-art practices or
anything close to them. So Mujkanovic got in his car and drove the tortuous
route to Zagreb, where, without the benefit of any introduction, he presented
himself to a plastic surgeon in the Croatian capital and asked to be trained.
The surgeon agreed. After a few months, Mujkanovic went to Slovenia, where,
once again, he presented himself to a renowned specialist in the field
and, once more, asked to be trained. Over the next two years he visited
Austria, Italy, and Britain to further his expertise before finally returning
to Tuzla
"I
knew the war would finish sometime but that medical problems would continue,"
Mujkanovic told me, speaking the good English he had learned in the last
five years. "For the young population, during the war a scar on the
face ... made them feel more important, but now it's a problem. They are
coming everyday into my department, and they want to have corrections.
During the war, they were very proud to have the scars, but now they want
to remove them."
For
the past two years, he also has been a member of the parliament--this
is why we met in Sarajevo, where the parliament was in session--but he
does not plan to serve another term. "I don't want to be in politics,"
he said. "I have my job, and my job is beautiful." Mujkanovic
is thoughtful, knows his country well, and knows what will be needed for
recovery. I asked whether Bosnia will survive. He was silent far longer
than I expected. "I think it will be okay because America wants it
to be okay," he said slowly. "It's very important that America
is here. I believe in America. I don't believe in the English or French."
Of
course, not even America's best efforts can enable Bosnia to return to
life as it was before or even come close to it. Too many historic buildings
have been destroyed, too much of the country's multi-religious fabric
has been torn beyond repair. And there are too many roads in Bosnia like
the narrow lane I followed one morning. The road, heading out of town,
tracked alongside a lovely creek that nourished an oasis of trees and
grass and birds. It led to a building Sarajevans know by the name of Jagomir.
Inside the renovated building, behind a locked door, under the watch of
a white-cloaked orderly, I found the young man who had been shot under
my window at the Holiday Inn. Haris Bahtanovic, whose trembling hands
are as soft as an infant's, thinks aliens have implanted a device in his
head, and he thinks Sylvester Stallone is his father. He has been institutionalized
since he was felled by that sniper. A doctor who cares for him at Jagomir
Psychiatric Hospital shook her head from side to side when I asked for
a prognosis. Bosnia may recover in some way, but Haris, it seems, shall
not.
--end--
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