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What I found in Bosnia was a story of individual doctors that highlighted, clarified, and personalized a war so many people outside found confusing and that offered insights into larger questions about how“regular people” with no conscious desire to fight (with, in fact, a sacred pledge to sustain life) were caught up and participated in war. I chose to reconstruct a narrative from the perspective of several doctors—Bosnian Muslim, Bosnian Serb, and international from Doctors Without Borders—whose individual backgrounds, personalities, and beliefs led them into and out of the war zone at various times, responding in very different ways to the challenges that faced them. What linked them, besides the three-story Srebrenica Hospital building, was their confrontation, at least once, with that ultimate doctors’ dilemma—whether to serve their patients or save themselves. Ignoring my outburst, the nurse positions the guardrails to make sure they’re firmly in place.
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