From the BBC:
“Bosnia: Protesters condemn Mass
for WWII Croat Nazi collaborators”
Security has been stepped in
Bosnia-Herzegovina's capital Sarajevo ahead of a Mass to honour Croatia's Nazi
collaborators in World War Two. Anti-fascists organisations and activists took
to the streets of the city to protest against the religious service. The annual event, usually held in the Austrian
town of Bleiburg where Croatia's pro-Nazi Ustasha regime troops had gone to
surrender to British forces, was moved to Bosnia because of coronavirus
restrictions. Thousands of people marched in Sarajevo, as police closely
watched. There were no reports of violence. The fascist Ustasha regime ruled Croatia as a
puppet regime of Nazi Germany from 1941 to 1945, their country having been
expanded to include all of Bosnia and some parts of Serbia. During that period,
they set about exterminating the Serb, Jewish, and Gypsy inhabitants. Photographs
showing victims of Nazi forces and the Ustasha regime had been placed along the
route of the protest march. Big crowds
later gathered in the city centre, as the Mass was condemned by Sarajevo's
mayor, the president of Croatia, and the World Jewish Congress. The
Nazi-hunting Simon Wiesenthal Center described the event as a "travesty of
memory and justice". Police sealed
off the area around the Sacred Heart Cathedral, where the Mass was held on
Saturday morning. Sarajevo Archbishop Vinko Puljic, who led the service,
rejected all the accusations and said praying for victims' souls did not mean
approval of their acts. A similar memorial event was held in Croatia's capital
Zagreb. Tens of thousands of Nazi-allied Croatian soldiers and their families
fled to Austria at the end of World War Two. But British forces handed them
over to Yugoslav partisans, who killed many of them at Bleiburg and on a forced
march back to Yugoslavia.
^ The remembrance of the Ustasha
is a disgrace and a national shame for Croatia. No German Collaborators should
ever be praised or remembered for their “service.” They should be treated as
the evil murderers they were. I’m glad that there have been protests against
these remembrance ceremonies. It shows that there are still people who know the
truth behind the Ustasha. Croatia (and every other country that had Collaborators
with Germany) should treat this period in their history as a dark stain that should
be taught and remembered as a “what not to ever do again” rather than as a
proud moment. I have been to Croatia and to Bosnia and know there are good and
intelligent people there the same way I have been to Germany and know there are
good and intelligent people there. Those good and intelligent people need to
make their voices heard so the voices of the unintelligent (those that praise
the Ustasha) can be drowned-out. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-52692097
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