The 17th day of remembrance of Europe’s worst genocide since Second World War, to bury their dead in the town whose name is now similar with genocide.
Some 30,000 Muslims visited a remembrance center in Srebrenica, Bosnia, on Wednesday to bury 520 newly identified victims – the remains of thousands of 8,000 Muslim men and boys massacred in July 1995 by Serb forces.
The yearly ritual was as grievous as ever.
Izabela Hasanovic, 27, passed the last minutes crying over one of the coffins before it was lowered into the ground.
“My father, my father is here,” she sobbed. “I can’t believe that my father is in this coffin. I can’t live with it!”
Another woman dropped on her knees next to a coffin, pressing her lips against the green cloth covering the wood.
“It is your sister kissing you. It is me,” she unvoiced to the coffin, caressing it with both hands until other people lowered it.
And then the valley resounded with the sound of dirt pounding on over 500 coffins from thousands of shovels as a voice read out the names of the victims and their ages from loudspeakers.
Among them were 48 teenagers as well as 94-year-old Saha Izmirlic, who was buried next to her son who also died in the slaughter. On the other side of her grave, an empty space is waiting for her grandson who has not yet been found.
Srebrenica was a U.N. protected Muslim town in Bosnia surrounded by Serb forces throughout Bosnia’s 1992-95 war. Serb troops led by Gen. Ratko Mladic overran the enclave in July 1995, separated men from women and executed 8,372 men and boys within just a few days. Dutch troops stationed in Srebrenica as U.N. peacekeepers were undermanned and outgunned and failed to stop the slaughter.
The bodies of the victims are still being found in mass graves throughout eastern Bosnia. The task has been made even more difficult by the fact that the perpetrators dug up mass graves and reburied remains in other mass graves to try to cover their tracks. The victims have been identified through DNA analysis and newly identified ones are buried at the Srebrenica memorial center every year.
So far 5,325 Srebrenica massacre victims found this way have been laid to rest.