Not My Turn to Die: Memoirs of a Broken Childhood in Bosnia / Edition 1

Not My Turn to Die: Memoirs of a Broken Childhood in Bosnia / Edition 1

by Savo Heleta
ISBN-10:
0814401651
ISBN-13:
9780814401651
Pub. Date:
02/28/2008
Publisher:
AMACOM
ISBN-10:
0814401651
ISBN-13:
9780814401651
Pub. Date:
02/28/2008
Publisher:
AMACOM
Not My Turn to Die: Memoirs of a Broken Childhood in Bosnia / Edition 1

Not My Turn to Die: Memoirs of a Broken Childhood in Bosnia / Edition 1

by Savo Heleta
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Overview

In 1992, Savo Heleta was a young Serbian boy enjoying an idyllic, peaceful childhood in Gorazde, a primarily Muslim city in Bosnia. At the age of just thirteen, Savo’s life was turned upside down as war broke out. When Bosnian Serbs attacked the city, Savo and his family became objects of suspicion overnight. Through the next two years, they endured treatment that no human being should ever be subjected to. Their lives were threatened, they were shot at, terrorized, put in a detention camp, starved, and eventually stripped of everything they owned. But after two long years, Savo and his family managed to escape. And then the real transformation took place.

From his childhood before the war to his internment and eventual freedom, we follow Savo’s emotional journey from a young teenager seeking retribution to a peace-seeking diplomat seeking healing and reconciliation. As the war unfolds, we meet the incredible people who helped shape Savo’s life, from his brave younger sister Sanja to Meho, the family friend who would become the family’s ultimate betrayer. Through it all, we begin to understand this young man’s arduous struggle to forgive the very people he could no longer trust. At once powerful and elegiac, Not My Turn to Die offers a unique look at a conflict that continues to fascinate and enlighten us.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814401651
Publisher: AMACOM
Publication date: 02/28/2008
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.10(d)
Age Range: 17 Years

About the Author

Savo Heleta (Port Elizabeth, South Africa) has trained groups from Bosnia to become leaders in their communities. He has traveled to the United States, Canada, and Spain to conduct education in youth camps, communication and leadership trainings, and strategic planning. He is currently studying conflict transformation and management in South Africa.

Read an Excerpt

Prologue

The Muslim drivers looked terrified, their hands on the steering wheels and their eyes riveted to the bumpers in front of them. They were driving through enemy territory after almost four blood-soaked years, and here they’d been stopped in the middle of nowhere due to some formalities.

It was a foggy, rainy day in the spring of 1996. The war had ended only months before, and this was one of the first convoys going to the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo to get food for Gorazˇde. No one would guarantee the safety of the Muslim drivers, so the NATO peacekeeping forces agreed to escort the convoy. If someone wanted to attack the drivers, a dozen NATO soldiers assigned to protect them wouldn’t be enough to save them, just as the UN had not been able to prevent and stop the war and the loss of one hundred thousand lives.

With nothing else to do, my friends and I had decided to walk the length of the convoy, looking for familiar faces.

“Wait a second. I recognize that man,” I said to my friends. a pointed to a man in his forties who sat in the cab of a truck.

“He’s probably someone who lived in your neighborhood before the war,” one friend said. “Or maybe he’s the dad of some kid you knew.”

“No, this is different. I have a really bad feeling about this guy.” I stared at the truck. Unshaven and with hefty bags under his drawn and hazy eyes, the driver looked as if he hadn’t slept for days.

“Let’s keep going,” my other friend called over his shoulder as he walked on. “I want to see if we know anyone.”

As we walked from truck to truck, it came to me.

“I have to go back! I think he is the man who tried to kill my family!” a ran back to the truck. Another close look at that face and my head and heart began throbbing. At first, I couldn’t believe he would have the guts to come here. Could it really be him? a recognized that face. It was him!

My anger bubbled up from deep inside. This man, sitting safely inside his muddy truck, had brutally terrorized my family. We’d stayed in Gorazˇde when the war began. As Serbs in a

Muslim-controlled city under siege, we’d had reason to fear for our lives, both because of the relentless Serbian attacks on the city and because of our ethnic differences from the people in charge. The Muslim majority saw us as the enemy within their city walls, not victims of the same guns that were killing their families. I wanted to open the door, drag him to the ground, and strangle him. I tried to open the truck; the door was locked. a wanted to open the door, drag him to the ground, and strangle him. I tried to open the truck; the door was locked.

“Get out!” I yelled in rage.

NATO soldiers, machine guns in their hands, nervously looked at me, but said nothing and did nothing. They stared, either out of ignorance or surprise at what I was doing. During the war, UN forces had strict orders from the UN Security Council not to interfere in the fighting on the ground, only to escort convoys with humanitarian aid, and to fire back only if someone fired at them. When the war ended and NATO took over to keep peace in Bosnia, it kept the policy of noninterference. I wasn’t yelling at them, so they perhaps assumed they didn’t have to interfere.

“I know you. Your name is Meho.” I spit his name at him. “You know the Heleta family. My uncle was one of your best friends before the war. Remember shooting at my home?”

The driver’s window was open slightly. I knew he could hear me.

“I know the Heletas,” he said, not looking at me, “but I didn’t shoot at anyone during the war.”

“You came to my home and took my grandfather to kill him on the bridge! Remember what you said? ‘After I kill your grandpa, I’ll come back for the rest of you!’ After what you did to us, you think you can drive through here without getting a bullet in your head?!”

He tried to say something, but I yelled over his voice.

“I can get over starving, freezing, bleeding, losing my home and everything my family ever owned, but I can’t get over what you did to us.”

He finally looked at me. I saw fear in his eyes.

“The scars you made are too deep to heal.”

His jaw started shaking. He placed a hand over half of his face to hide the tremors. Suddenly, he started crying. He did this before, on the day he came to murder my family.

“You cried when my grandma reminded you of how much help you received from my family. Still, that didn’t stop you from terrorizing us. I want you to be as frightened as I was when you came to my home. I want you to feel the fear I felt for so long. Your days of kicking people around are over!”

“You have mistaken me for somebody else. I . . . I didn’t . . . I never did anything bad to anyone,” he mumbled through tears.

In any other circumstance, I would feel pity for a grown man crying in front of me and wiping his nose and eyes with his sleeve. But not now.

“Lie to somebody else who doesn’t have nightmares because of you. I’ll never forget your face. That look of joy when you told us you would exterminate all of us like bugs.”

Often this man had stormed into my dreams. Suddenly in a room where my family was sitting. Screaming at us. Shooting. Blood on the carpet, walls, my face, my parents, my sister. a ran to my friends who were watching nearby.

“I need a gun right now!” a was seventeen, no longer the little boy who had to be a victim. Now I could fight back. I didn’t care about consequences. My only thought was to kill the bastard.

My friends had heard before about my experiences during the war. They told me now that they would be with me whatever I decided to do.

“I know somebody who has guns. Let’s go! We’ll help you,” one of my friends said. He understood my rage and wanted revenge too. His father had been killed in Gorazde during the war.

“The convoy won’t be going anywhere for a while. They are negotiating a safe passage with the police,” another friend said.

“And Meho can’t run away,” I added. His truck was blocked in the middle of the convoy, stopped in hostile territory.

In no time, we sought out a friend of ours who lived about two hundred yards from the place where the convoy had stopped. His father was a member of a special forces unit and their house was packed with guns. Many times when his dad wasn’t around, we would go to the woods and practice shooting from handguns and machine guns. My friend’s dad wasn’t at home this time. Without even asking why we needed the weapons, my friend gave us a handgun and a grenade.

“I’ll stand next to you, Savo. I’ll protect you if the UN soldiers try to stop you,” one friend said.

“I have a grenade. I’ll watch your back,” another one said. a wanted justice. I felt that if I didn’t take the law into my own hands, those who had tormented my family would never be punished for their crimes.

“I don’t care about other people in this convoy. I just want to kill this monster.” a had the gun. I checked it. The bullet lay in the gun barrel, poised to kill. I covered the gun with the sleeve of my shirt and walked toward the truck. I wanted to have a clear shot.

What People are Saying About This

Andrew Himes

"Savo Heleta's memoir of the war in Bosnia is an eloquent testimony to the human capacity for compassion and forgiveness. Only by hearing the personal stories of those, like Savo, who are witnesses to the terrible trauma and lasting damage of war, can we imagine how to create a culture of peace. I am grateful to Savo Heleta for erecting a signpost along our path."--(Andrew Himes, executive director of the Voices in Wartime Education Project)

Louise Diamond

"All of us face the choice to feed hatred or love, war or peace, yet few of us need do so under the desperate circumstances that teenaged Savo experienced during the Bosnian war. We tremble with him and his family through the violence and trauma of those years, and rejoice with him as he confronts the path of revenge and chooses instead the way of the peacemaker. Thank you, Savo, for taking us with you on this incredible journey."--(Louise Diamond, Ph.D., president emeritus, the Institute for Multi-Track Diplomacy)

James Lyons

"Savo Heleta's account of life in pre-war and war-time Bosnia, and his experiences as a minority Serb in the besieged Muslim enclave of war-time Gorazde is a gripping and compelling story of the nobility of good and the banality of evil. Through the eyes of young Savo we watch the collapse of human moral values under the onslaught of hatred, propaganda, desperation and lies, while also seeing the attempts by some to maintain their humanity in the face of overwhelming odds. It is a fascinating piece of memoir literature from Bosnia that is certain to outrage the reader, while at the same time offering an exciting narrative."--(Dr. James Lyons, The International Crisis Group)

John McDonald

"Savo Heleta's moving portrait of life in Gorazde during the Bosnian War takes us beyond the simplicity of victim and victimizer, beyond the minutiae of peace negotiations and into the realm of cold, hard war." --Ambassador John McDonald)

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