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January 08, 2009

great contradictions

090112_r17837_p233
In 1999, the Croatian novelist Slavenka Drakulić visited The Hague to observe the trials for war crimes committed in the former Yugoslavia. Among the defendants was Goran Jelisić, a thirty-year-old Serb from Bosnia, who struck her as “a man you can trust.” With his “clear, serene face, lively eyes, and big reassuring grin,” he reminded Drakulić of one of her daughter’s friends. Many of the witnesses at The Hague shared this view of the defendant—even many Muslims, who told the court how Jelisić helped an old Muslim neighbor repair her windows after they were shattered by a bomb, or how he helped another Muslim friend escape Bosnia with his family. But the Bosnian Muslims who had known Jelisić seven years earlier, when he was a guard at the Luka prison camp, had different stories to tell. Over a period of eighteen days in 1992, they testified, Jelisić himself killed more than a hundred prisoners. As Drakulić writes, he chose his victims at random, by asking “a man to kneel down and place his head over a metal drainage grating. Then he would execute him with two bullets in the back of the head from his pistol, which was equipped with a silencer.” He liked to introduce himself with the words “Hitler was the first Adolf, I am the second.” He was sentenced to forty years in prison.
more from The New Yorker here.

Posted by Morgan Meis at 08:46 AM | Permalink

Comments

Fascinating article, although I find some of Kirsch's more off-handed comments to be over the top. I've been reading Arendt on and off for a couple years now, and have found myself drawn to her blend of emphasis of the self combined with deep understanding of social structure. After this article I've put the part two of Origins back on the top of the reading pile.

Posted by: Cyrus Hall | Jan 10, 2009 7:00:36 AM

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