Current sectionHaaretz MagazineShare to FacebookShare to XArticle printing is available to subscribers onlyPrint in a simple, ad-free formatSubscribeComments: Zen reading is available to subscribers onlyAd-free and in a comfortable reading formatSubscribeEmir Suljagic beside a childhood photo with his parents. "One day, I received a call from the Commission for Missing Persons saying they might have found my father's remains." Credit: Ahmedin DjozicEmir Suljagić survived the 1995 Srebrenica massacre, Europe's worst massacre since World War II. As director of the town's Genocide Memorial Center, he says justice remains elusive, but memory is nonnegotiable: 'We survived genocide. Then we had to find the bodies to prove it'Ran Levy Talbi02:42 AM • June 15 2026 IDTAt 21 years old, Emir Suljagic came face to face with evil.Loading...CommentsLoading...In the NewsIn the News: Israel-Iran Live UpdatesU.S.-Iran DealHormuzUNRWAIsrael ElectionsPark Slope Food Co-opWorld CupHaQuizHaaretz Podcast'Responsibility for Genocide Does Not Diminish With Age or the Passage of Time'U.S.-Iran Deal Reached, Includes 'Immediate Termination' of Fighting in LebanonTwo Brothers at Jewish Sleepaway Camp in 1980s Guatemala. What Could Go Wrong?Pressure Grows to Suspend Israeli Medical Association From Global Medical BodyHumiliated by Trump on the Iran Front, Netanyahu May Set the Middle East AblazeRemembering and rebuilding two years laterICYMISix-year-old Boy Punctures a Magritte Iconic Masterpiece at Israel MuseumTrump Just Dropped a Megaton Bomb on Netanyahu's Re-election CampaignNetanyahu May Find His Way Back From Trump's Humiliation, but Back to What?The Fake Gaza Charity Linked to the Anti-left Disinformation Campaign in FranceNetanyahu's Middle East Doctrine Has Collapsed – and It's Costing Him WashingtonWhat the Knicks Mania Reveals About Israelis and Collective Blame for Gaza