

The forgotten genocide nobody taught you in school.
This documentary tells the story of the Ustashe. These Croatians nationalists had been involved in several murderous attacks before WWII until they rose to power in 1941, supported by the Nazis. Then, they led a campaign of ethnic cleansing in the country, while participating actively in the Final Solution. However, their regime is one of the lesser known ones of WWII and their story has almost been forgotten. Why has it been so thoroughly erased?
Direction
Walter lets survivor testimonies breathe, refuses sensationalism.
Editing
Archival footage cuts like a wound—no dramatic score needed.
Writing
The central question haunts: who benefits from forgetting?
Director
Miriana Bojic Walter
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Croatia's WWII history remains politically explosive; this film premiered amid rising nationalist tensions in Zagreb.
The Jasenovac camp system killed over 80,000 people but lacks the iconic status of Auschwitz—partly because Tito suppressed distinct ethnic victimhood narratives.
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