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Description
Mr. Williams describes the sights and the differences in culture when arriving in Bosnia, almost a state of disbelief in what we as Canadians are used to.
Transcription
Well when you first get to Bosnia you are on the plane, you’re all hyped up, you’re ready to do what you’re there for. By the time you get there you’re so tired from flying all night and you arrive first thing in the morning. The major city we land in, you land in the plane and all you see are tanks lining the runway, MIG jets are blown off, off to the side of the runway and you suddenly realize where you are. You left a nice city of Edmonton where it’s all nice and clean and everything and you arrive there, everything is roof topped, is red, there’s holes in the walls. On your way down to your base all, alongside the roads, all the houses have either blown all to pieces, or they’re on fire, there are holes along the wall where you can see where tanks and stuff have driven along and just put bullet holes in everyone’s windows. There’s nobody out on the streets, like we see people walking around the streets here, there we are driving down there at eight or nine in the morning and there’s no one around. So that was a bit of a culture shock and just to see the state of people’s homes like nothing what we are used to living like here in Canada. Brick buildings half built and you talk to them later and find out they lived in that forever, it’s not like something they just built last week or something and just the general state to their homes and everything else but that’s the way they have lived for years.