Trying to Wake Up

Globalism and the New World Order enforced by NATO - Serbs are suffering its dehumanizing consequences for over 15 years now
After the ethnic cleansing of the Serbs in Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Kosovo and Metohia, after the first war in the history of the European Union, i.e. the punitive expedition by 19 states against the Serbs in 1999 - to the chronicler is left little more than to, in a peace that is just a continuation of war, record instances of the duplicity and hypocrisy of Euro-Atlantic civilization. The fact that the heroes of Eurocentism aren't just personalities of a punishably low moral level but devoted racists as well, is confirmed by the observation of New York Times correspondent David Binder, who writes that "Serbia has become an object of repulsion in the international community, even hate. On the political-intellectual global axis, which runs from Paris to London, to Washington and New York, all the way to Hollywood, the anti-Serb sentiment is equal to or even greater than the one directed against Nazi Germany."
Even though it wasn't at war with any member of the NATO alliance, the enlightened barbarians bestially bombed Serbia, dismantled its ethnic-historical territories and applied a program of annihilation to the Serbian nation. The Euro-Atlantic political lobby (before all Germany, the U.S. and the Vatican) is the most responsible for the dismemberment of Yugoslavia (1991), the economic sanctions of the E.C. and the UN against Serbia and Montenegro within the framework of the third Yugoslavia (1991 and 1992), the massacres of Yugoslav Army reserves in Karlovac and Sarajevo (1991 and 1992), massacres of indigenous Serb populations in Croatia in zones protected by UN peacekeeping forces (1992, 1993 and 1995), the killing of 12 babies in Banja Luka (1992), the abrogation of the Lisbon Agreement (1992) and the breaking out of war in Bosnia-Herzegovina (as testified by political analyst Sir Alfred Sherman).
Entire article at The Foundation of Truth About Serbs

Target in the center of Cross. Serbian poster from the time of NATO aggression on Serbia, 1999 Pascha/Easter
A Bishop's Faith
His dwindling flock is scattered and under siege. His churches and cemeteries have been vandalized. The world appears to sympathize with his persecutors, but the spiritual leader of Kosovo's Orthodox Serbs says he cannot afford the luxury of feeling sorry for himself.
“To be pessimistic is not an attribute for a man of faith,” said Bishop Artemije of Kosovo and Metohija, “particularly for a bishop.”
(...)“If you look at the situation with human eyes, it can seem depressing and hopeless at times,” he said. “But if you look at Kosovo with the eyes of faith, hope is never lost. There is always hope that there is still honesty in the world, a world that seems to be asleep and that we will try with all our might to wake up.”
Article by James Morrison, Washington Post's Embassy Row.