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This book is my testament, my battle cry, my lullaby. It's for every soul adrift in a world that too often turns its back on compassion. May these words be a beacon, illuminating the shared humanity that binds us all, refugee and citizen alike. When the fierce hunger of Serbian nationalism reaches Bosnia, Nadina Ronc and her brother are suddenly bundled into the family's car. The moment they leave their home in the Bosnian city of Brcko, they become a family of refugees. Drawing on her work as a journalist and political analyst, Nadina Ronc's memoir is an unflinching account of the breakup of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book is my testament, my battle cry, my lullaby. It's for every soul adrift in a world that too often turns its back on compassion. May these words be a beacon, illuminating the shared humanity that binds us all, refugee and citizen alike. When the fierce hunger of Serbian nationalism reaches Bosnia, Nadina Ronc and her brother are suddenly bundled into the family's car. The moment they leave their home in the Bosnian city of Brcko, they become a family of refugees. Drawing on her work as a journalist and political analyst, Nadina Ronc's memoir is an unflinching account of the breakup of a country and the breakup of a family. A powerful read, it chronicles systematic abuse of power and reveals what being a refugee in a foreign country can really be like.
Autorenporträt
Nadina Ronc is an author and political analyst whose work centres on Russian foreign policy and its impact on regional and global security. She examines how Moscow combines geopolitical strategy, economic pressure, and hybrid tactics to shape outcomes in its neighbourhood and beyond. Her research has been supported by a grant from the Strategic Studies Institute of the U.S. Army War College, where she conducted an in-depth assessment of Russia's influence in the Western Balkans and its implications for U.S. land power and the European Union's strategic posture. This work deepens understanding of the shifting risks facing the United States and its allies.Alongside her policy analysis, she is also the author of Daughters of Dissidents Need Not Apply, a memoir that weaves personal experience with investigative reflection to reveal the enduring consequences of Yugoslavia's collapse. Moving between past and present, the book explores intergenerational trauma, the legacy borne by daughters of political dissidents, and the difficult pursuit of justice when official institutions fall short.