Posted on 11/23/2002 7:38:12 AM PST by kosta50
NEW YORK, Nov. 22 (JTA) A Holocaust exhibit at a prestigious art museum in Zagreb is being hailed as a major step forward in Croatias willingness to deal honestly with its World War II history. Croatian President Stepan Mesic recently inaugurated the exhibit, entitled The Courage to Remember, at the capitals Mimara Art Museum.
This is not an exhibition for historians, but one for those who want to revise history, Mesic said in a speech at the opening. This is not an exhibition for those who know but for those who do not know, and even more so for those who do not wish to know.
The exhibition has appeared in 19 different countries since it was created by the Simon Wiesenthal Center in 1988, but this is its first appearance in a post-Communist Eastern European nation.
The Civic Committee for Human Rights, a Zagreb-based NGO that focuses on the recent wars in the Balkans, brought the exhibit to the museum through a grant from the Heinrich Boell Foundation worth nearly $2,000.
Officials hope the exhibit 40 panels documenting the Holocaust, from the rise of Nazism in 1933 to survivors postwar struggles will travel through Croatia after its stint in Zagreb.
The exhibits name says everything we in Croatia have to be very much aware of, when it comes to our attitude toward history, toward the truth about history, Mesic said. Indeed, often one needs courage to remember things past and to admit things that happened. The past can be ugly, and the truth painful.
The exhibit sparked a small demonstration led by Mladen Schwartz, a Croatian nationalist born to Jewish parents. The motto of the gathering was Jews out of Croatia.
Mesic also met with Efraim Zuroff, director of the Simon Wiesenthal Centers Israel office, who first approached him two years ago about bringing the exhibit to Croatia.
Zuroff encouraged Mesic to initiate a renewed investigation and prosecution of World War II war criminals from Croatias wartime Ustasha fascist regime.
They also discussed proposed legislation that will prohibit the exhibition, sale, and use of Ustasha symbols in Croatia. The bill will be presented to the countrys Parliament in coming weeks.
President Mesics leadership role on these issues has been outstanding, and we hope that he will help sponsor additional educational efforts together with the Wiesenthal Center, Zuroff said.
Some 75 percent of Croatias 40,000 Jews were murdered during the Holocaust, most by Croatian collaborators.
Dinko Sakic, who served as one of the commanders of the Jasenovac concentration camp, was convicted in October 1999 of responsibility for the murder of thousands of inmates and sentenced to 20 years in jail, the maximum sentence under Croatian law.
About 85,000 people, including 18,000 Jews, were murdered at Jasenovac, considered the worst Croatian/Ustasha concentration camp.
It's the same Mesic, but I seriously doubt that anyone was listening to him. You have to understand that when he took the oath of office (to defend the constitution) he also declared he wanted to be the last president of that Yugoslavia. His party (Franjo Tudjman's HDZ at that time) openly wanted idenpendence, so Mesic violated his own oath, and was unfit to serve or give any orders.
Don't worry. Thirty years ago, no one even remotely believed the USSR would collapse. In fact 30 years ago the USSR was at its peak. The various lackeys who rule in the Blakans think things will forver be this way. Political fortunes fluctuate, but overall trendencies remain predicatble.
There are certain things that are more likely than others. For instance, I would say there is greater likelyhood for Germany to dominate Europe than Lichtenstein, if you know what I mean, and the center of gravity in the Balkans is not Montenegro...so long term planners need look at some gravitational certanties if they plan on long term benefits. :)
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