A Voice For the Voiceless

MISSION

The Advocacy Project (AP) recruits students to help marginalized communities tell their story and claim their rights.

My RSS Feed

Twitter: #apfellows

Are They Really Victims?

Quinn Van Valer-Campbell | PostedJuly 6th, 2011 | Europe

Tags: , , , , ,

In six days I will join my fellow BOSFAM women at the Potocari memorial to commemorate the genocide.  For the past week there has been a palpable shift in attitudes around here.  The news is also gearing up for the anniversary and I cannot help but notice how freely the word victim is tossed around.

Remembering July 11, 1995
Remembering July 11, 1995

The word victim connotes one who has not only suffered but has also been damaged and destroyed.  This so-called victim is usually helpless and weak.  A victim has been wronged, but a victim has also accepted the pain and suffering.  It is almost something comfortable and a feeling of safety by those who know nothing besides abuse and hardship.

What attracted me to BOSFAM, however, was the simple fact that these women are not victims.  They don’t sit around wallowing in their pain or in their past.  Tima and Zifa are anything but victims.  Their strength is more than many of us will ever know – the pure strength to not give up and to not live in the past, which is so easy to do.

To pigeonhole someone because of her past has proven detrimental for a country like Bosnia where so many have suffered so intensely.  The victim is someone to be coddled and protected.  This does not allow said person to stand and walk, let alone to grow.  BBC and Balkan Insight discuss the survivors of the Srebrenica massacre with the same pity that is reserved for the victims themselves.  But the survivors are just that.  They have survived and they have overcome their losses.  Their past is something hideous that is remembered and honored, but it is not something that defines them.

Honoring the past
Honoring the past

Honoring the past

The country as a whole could stand to recognize this and learn from Tima and Zifa.  They have overcome the deaths of husbands, brothers, and sons.  Their houses were destroyed, and they were forced to move away from the only town they ever called home.  They started from nothing and rebuilt their lives one day at a time.  If they have been able to do all this, and to do all this without hate, why are they still victims?  They have not succumbed to anything nor have they let the past define them.

Tags: , , , , ,

2 Responses to “Are They Really Victims?”

  1. Quinn Van Valer-Campbell says:

    Rebecca! Thank you so much for reading my blog. It’s interesting to know how the same issue reaches across countries so vastly different. I will be following up with what you’re doing as well to see how you and your colleagues are overcoming the stigma of being a victim.

  2. Rebecca says:

    Great post, Quinn. It’s amazing how such a small word makes such a big difference in how somebody is viewed. Is it pity or empowering? Degrading or inspiring? I’m finding the same thing here in Gulu, where people with disabilities are either SUFFERING FROM DISABILITIES or LIVING WITH A DISABILITY. You decide…I look forward to hearing more about how BOSFAM commemorates the SURVIVORS!!!

Leave a Reply

Security Code:

Fellow: Quinn Van Valer-Campbell

BOSFAM


Tags

Advocacy Project Beba Hadzic BOSFAM Bosnia-Herzegovina Conflict Resolution Home ICMP July 11 Potocari Slana Banja Srebrenica survivors The Advocacy Project The Balkans Tuzla victims


Subscribe


 


Newswire

2012 Fellows

Africa

Megan Orr


2011 Fellows

Africa

Charlie Walker
Charlotte Bourdillon
Cleia Noia
Dina Buck
Jamyel Jenifer
Kristen Maryn
Rebecca Scherpelz
Scarlett Chidgey
Walter James

Asia

Amanda Lasik
Chantal Uwizera
Chelsea Ament
Clara Kollm
Corey Black
Lauren Katz
Maelanny Purwaningrum
Maria Skouras
Meredith Williams
Ryan McGovern
Samantha Syverson

Europe

Beth Wofford
Julia Dowling
Quinn Van Valer-Campbell
Samantha Hammer
Susan Craig-Greene

Latin America

Amy Bracken
Catherine Binet

Middle East

Nikki Hodgson

North America

Sarah Wang


2010 Fellows

Africa

Abisola Adekoya
Annika Allman
Brooke Blanchard
Christine Carlson
Christy Gillmore
Dara Lipton
Dina Buck
Josanna Lewin
Joya Taft-Dick
Louis Rezac
Ned Meerdink
Sylvie Bisangwa

Asia

Adrienne Henck
Karie Cross
Kerry McBroom
Kate Bollinger
Lauren Katz
Simon Kläntschi
Zarin Hamid

Europe

Laila Zulkaphil
Susan Craig-Greene
Tereza Bottman

Latin America

Karin Orr

North America

Adepeju Solarin
Oscar Alvarado


2009 Fellows

Africa

Adam Welti
Alixa Sharkey
Barbara Dziedzic
Bryan Lupton

Courtney Chance
Elisa Garcia
Helah Robinson
Johanna Paillet
Johanna Wilkie
Kate Cummings
Laura Gordon
Lisa Rogoff
Luna Liu
Ned Meerdink
Walter James


Asia

Abhilash Medhi
Gretchen Murphy
Isha Mehmood
Jacqui Kotyk
Jessica Tirado
Kan Yan
Morgan St. Clair
Ted Mathys

Europe

Alison Sluiter
Christina Hooson
Donna Harati
Fanny Grandchamp
Kelsey Bristow
Simran Sachdev
Susan Craig-Greene
Tiffany Ommundsen

Latin America

Althea Middleton-Detzner
Carolyn Ramsdell
Jessica Varat
Lindsey Crifasi
Rebecca Gerome
Zachary Parker

Middle East

Corrine Schneider
Rachel Brown
Rangineh Azimzadeh

North America

Elizabeth Mandelman
Farzin Farzad

2008 Fellows

Adam Nord
Annelieke van de Wiel
Juliet Hutchings
Kristina Rosinsky
Lucas Wolf
Chi Vu
Danita Topcagic
Heather Gilberds
Jes Therkelsen
Libby Abbott
Mackenzie Berg
Nicole Farkouh
Ola Duru
Paul Colombini
Raka Banerjee
Shubha Bala
Antigona Kukaj
Colby Pacheco
James Dasinger
Janet Rabin
Nicole Slezak
Shweta Dewan
Amy Offner
Ash Kosiewicz
Hannah McKeeth
Heidi McKinnon
Larissa Hotra
Jennifer Tucker
Hannah Wright
Krystal Sirman
Rianne Van Doeveren
Willow Heske

2007 Fellows

Johnathan Homer
Adam Nord
Audrey Roberts
Caitlin Burnett
Devin Greenleaf
Jeff Yarborough
Julia Zoo
Madeline England
Maha Khan
Mariko Scavone
Mark Koenig
Nicole Farkouh
Saba Haq
Tassos Coulaloglou
Ted Samuel
Alison Morse
Gail Morgado
Jennifer Hollinger
Katie Wroblewski
Leslie Ibeanusi
Michelle Lanspa
Stephanie Gilbert
Zach Scott
Abby Weil
Jessica Boccardo
Sara Zampierin
Eliza Bates
Erin Wroblewski
Tatsiana Hulko

2006 Interns

Laura Cardinal
Jessical Sewall
Alison Long
Autumn Graham
Donna Laverdiere
Erica Issac
Greg Holyfield
Lori Tomoe Mizuno
Melissa Muscio
Nicole Cordeau
Stacey Spivey
Anya Gorovets
Barbara Bearden
Lynne Engleman
Yvette Barnes
Charles Wright
Sarah Sachs

2005 Interns

Eun Ha Kim
Malia Mason
Anne Finnan
Carrie Hasselback
Karen Adler
Sarosh Syed
Shirin Sahani
Chiara Zerunian
Ewa Sobczynska
MacKenzie Frady
Margaret Swink
Sabri Ben-Achour
Paula
Nitzan Goldberger

2004 Interns

Ginny Barahona
Michael Keller
Sarah Schores
Melinda Willis
Pia Schneider
Stacy Kosko
Carmen Morcos
Christina Fetterhoff
Stacy Kosko
Bushra Mukbil

2003 Interns

Erica Williams
Kate Kuo
Claudia Zambra
Julie Lee
Kimberly Birdsall
Marta Schaaf
Caitlin Williams
Courtney Radsch

Login

Login/Manage