Connections between Scotland and Srebenica massacre explored in exhibition

The ID card of a schoolgirl who was held in a concentration camp during the Bosnian War before fleeing to Scotland is part of a new exhibition commemorating the conflict and the genocide in Srebrenica.

The exhibition in the Community Gallery at Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum in Glasgow includes a unique collection of personal items from Bosnians who now live in Scotland and from Scots who travelled to Bosnia to deliver aid and help uncover the truth about the genocide.

The ID card belonging to Elvira Mujkanović, who was held in a concentration camp with her family before the Red Cross helped her flee to Scotland, will be shown alongside a letter from Elvira’s best friend that details her hopes for a future when they would both be married and have children.

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Only three days later the friend was murdered by Serb soldiers at the age of just 17.

Among the exhibits are a letter from a teenager who was killed three days later.Among the exhibits are a letter from a teenager who was killed three days later.
Among the exhibits are a letter from a teenager who was killed three days later.

Alongside the ID card is an international refugee camp registration certificate belonging to Jasmin Mujkanovic, who was held and mistreated along with thousands of others in another concentration camp. Jasmin and Elvira, each convinced the other had died, were eventually reunited in Croatia and later married.

In July 1995, Bosnian Serb forces led by General Ratko Mladić massacred 8,372 Bosnian Muslim men and boys at Srebrenica.

Twenty-six years on, there are still families searching for the bodies of their loved ones. However, there is still denial about the atrocities which took place.

The exhibition, which will run until November, was originally planned for the 25th anniversary of the war in 2020, but was delayed due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The exhibitions marks 25 years since the Srebenica massacre.The exhibitions marks 25 years since the Srebenica massacre.
The exhibitions marks 25 years since the Srebenica massacre.
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What the horrors of Srebrenica can teach Scotland 25 years on

It opens as the world marks White Armband Day, which takes place every May 31 to remember the campaign of ethnic cleansing that took place in the town of Prijedor, northern Bosnia-Herzegovina, when the Serb wartime authorities ordered non-Serbs to mark themselves and their homes with white armbands and sheets.

A United Nations cap belonging to forensic technician Robert McNeil, from Glasgow, who helped uncover mass graves in Bosnia, is part of the exhibition.

He said: “The UN cap was given to me when I first arrived in Bosnia in 1996. I wore it throughout my numerous deployments to Bosnia, particularly to Srebrenica and then to Kosovo, and I hang on to it because it’s a constant reminder of the work I was engaged with out there.

Robert McNeil is a forensic technician who helped uncover mass graves in Bosnia .Robert McNeil is a forensic technician who helped uncover mass graves in Bosnia .
Robert McNeil is a forensic technician who helped uncover mass graves in Bosnia .
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“It’s a forgotten war in a lot of ways, and it’s a reminder of the genocide that happened there.”

Charity Remembering Srebrenica Scotland has organised nearly 20 delegations to Srebrenica since 2015, including First Minister Nicola Sturgeon.

David Hamilton, secretary and treasurer of the charity, volunteered as an aid convoy driver during the war.

His parents-in-law Alan and Christine Witcutt – whose ID card is part of the exhibition – also delivered aid from Scotland to Bosnia.

David Hamilton's mother in law was killed in Sarajevo.David Hamilton's mother in law was killed in Sarajevo.
David Hamilton's mother in law was killed in Sarajevo.

Mr Hamilton said: “My late father-in-law and his wife Christine Witcutt went out to Bosnia in 1992 and sadly when they left Sarajevo, Christine was shot by sniper and died.

“So it’s very poignant to come back here and see Alan’s ID card in this exhibition, which shows the connection Scotland had with Bosnia during that terrible time.”

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