The Key to My Neighbor's House

The Key to My Neighbor's House

By Elizabeth Neuffer

Subjects: Menschenrechtsverletzung, Tribunalen, Africa, sub-saharan, history, Genocide, Bosnia and hercegovina, history, Rwanda, Yugoslav War, 1991-1995, Civil War (Rwanda : 1994) fast (OCoLC)fst01352318, Yugoslav War (1991-1995) fast (OCoLC)fst01183774, Yugoslav war, 1991-1995, Atrocities, Burgeroorlogen, Bürgerkrieg, Urteil, New York Times reviewed, Rwanda Civil War, 1990-1993, History, Rwanda Civil War, 1994, Civil War (Rwanda : 1990-1993) fast (OCoLC)fst01352317

Description: "From her unique vantage point as a reporter directly covering the reality of genocide and its aftermath in Bosnia and Rwanda, journalist Elizabeth Neuffer tells the compelling story of two parallel journeys toward justice in each country - that of the international war crime tribunals, and that of the people left behind.". "Sometimes heartbreaking, sometimes blood-chilling, sometimes inspiring, and including accounts from victims and perpetrators, forensic experts, and tribunal judges, three stories form the backbone of this book. We follow Hasan Nuhanovic, a young Bosnian Muslim student determined to discover the fate of his family lost at Srebrenica, as he matures over the years from a gangling youth to a man with the authority to testify before Congress in Washington, D.C. In counterpoint, we follow Witness JJ, a shy Tutsi woman of immense courage, who overcomes her modesty and the dictates of her culture to testify about her rape - an act that resulted in wartime rape being classified as a war crime. And we get a revealing inside look at the workings of the newly created international tribunals through the eyes of Gabrielle Kirk McDonald, an African-American judge appointed to the court."--BOOK JACKET.

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