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To browse Academia. Religion and Violence. The starting point of this study is the war that took place in northwestern Bosnia and Herzegovina in the s. Serbian soldiers and police targeted their use of violent force directly against the civilian populations in northwestern Bosnia. In their quest to expel Bosniacs and Croats from this area, Serbian soldiers and police used mass executions, forced flight, systematic rape, and concentration camps.
The aim of this study is analyzing the narratives of survivors of the war in northwestern Bosnia. Analysis shows that the interpersonal interactions that caused the violence continue even after the violent situation is over. Recollections from perpetrators and those subjected to violence of the war do not exist only as verbal constructions in Bosnia of today. Stories about violent situations live their own lives after the war and continue being important to individuals and social life. All interviewees in this study experienced and survived the war in northwestern Bosnia.
These individuals have a present, ongoing relation with these communities: Some live there permanently, and some spend their summers in northwestern Bosnia. The narratives in my empirical material seem to be influenced by or coherent with the rhetoric mediated in these fora.
When informants emphasize extermination and the systematization of violence during the war, they produce and reproduce the image of a mutual struggle on a collective level.