“…They concern painful stories about neighbors who changed their behavior when the war began: One day, a neighbor is a civilian greeting you just as friendly as ever, and a week later, the same neighbor is in uniform; he still greets, but he also participates in massacres, rapes, robberies, and abduction of neighbors to place them in concentration camps. The narratives also tell us how the camps were organized and governed; they describe "pockets of resistance" and survival tactics, and they speak of rituals confirming the guards' oppression and the inmates' submission (Basic, 2007(Basic, , 2017. I also researched the competition for the victim role after the war as well as reconciliation and implacability of social life in the post-war society of present-day Bosnia, namely, how people, in their everyday lives, try to cope with the fact that some events can never be forgiven, or at least leave very few opportunities for reconciliation (Basic, 2005(Basic, , 2007(Basic, , 2015a(Basic, , 2015b(Basic, , 2015c(Basic, , 2015d(Basic, , 2015e, 2017 ).…”