I travelled through Bosnia late this spring and found that deeply unsettling.
The contrast between the idyllic setting--deep green valleys, milky rivers and soaring limestone peaks--and the wreck of human lives--a countryside dotted with blackened, burnt-out farmsteads and villages, houses riddled with bullets--is truly disturbing.
Or the war-graves on the quiet hills of western Europe, endless fields of white headstones, each engraved with a pitiful age, 18, 20, 22. So many, many stolen, wasted lives. Its very sobering.
2007-12-15 20:58:21
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answer #1
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answered by Thalia 7
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Battlefields are places of mass violent death. I think there is an energy that remains, an energy that surrounds all human beings. In the event of war deaths, even if the soul has moved on, part of the souls last frightening moments seem to remain like a radio wave, or, in some cases, a brief video tape that people who are psychically sensitive can pick up on. No, it's not pleasant at all to feel this energy, but remember, it was alot less pleasant for the poor souls who left that energy behind. Gives one a different perspective on war and why the human race should stop fighting.
2007-12-16 00:51:40
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answer #2
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answered by sophielove10 2
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Yes! me too! Check out my website at www.goodpsychicmedium.com
2007-12-16 00:36:45
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answer #3
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answered by SandraR 3
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There are memorials where both sides are laid to rest together, its not creepy but still sad.
2007-12-16 01:47:36
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answer #4
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answered by ? 3
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Gettysburg is a classic example of what you say.
2007-12-16 00:26:17
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answer #5
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answered by Stephen C 4
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