Priest revisits childhood massacre to share message of faith and forgiveness
What begins in violence does not need to end in vengeance.
Father Pero Miličević was only seven when Bosnian Muslim forces raided his small village and murdered his father, relatives, and neighbors in a brutal act of war; decades later, instead of hatred, he preaches peace and forgiveness as a Catholic priest, as CNA reports.
On July 28, 1993, the Croatian village of Dlkani, nestled in Bosnia's Jablanica district, became the site of a massacre when Muslim fighters stormed the area, killing 39 people in a single day. Among the dead was Father Miličević’s father, Andrija, a 45-year-old family man who had stepped out to help an aunt and never returned.
Family Devastated, But Faith Held Strong
The young Pero had been outside playing with his two brothers when bullets began flying overhead. Inside, his mother, Ruža, and sister rushed them into the house, but the chaos outside had already spelled tragedy for their family.
Three of Father Miličević’s maternal aunts and multiple cousins also lost their lives that day. His mother was left to raise nine children—seven still minors—in the wake of unimaginable loss.
“When one person dies, it’s already terrible; when three children die, as happened to my aunt, I don’t know how a mother’s heart doesn’t break,” Father Miličević said, recalling the horror of that summer day.
Surviving a Prison Camp With Prayer
In the wake of the attack, the surviving Croatian Catholics, including the Miličević family, were deported to a makeshift prison facility known as the “Museum.” It housed roughly 300 captives under gratuitously harsh conditions.
For seven excruciating months, the family endured cold, hunger, and fear, sleeping on slabs of stone and surviving on the steady rhythm of prayer. Their mother’s faith grounded them amid the darkness.
“We would never have survived without faith, prayer, and the need for peace,” Miličević said. That inner strength didn’t come from ideology or politics—it came from spiritual conviction and resilience.
Bones Buried, But Hatred Rejected
When the family was released, they returned to the village to find Andrija’s body had been left unburied for the entire time—stripped down to bones by the elements. What they put in the ground wasn’t a body, it was a memory clothed in grief.
Even as rage was natural, revenge was never an option. “We had to maintain peace in our hearts and not think about revenge,” said Father Miličević.
Many in the modern West might scoff at forgiveness as outdated or “unprogressive,” but it was key to his healing. Holding grievances as a badge of identity is a trend that predates Twitter—Miličević took a different road.
A Mission of Reconciliation Over Bitterness
He was ordained a priest in 2012, nearly two decades after the massacre. The journey wasn’t smooth. He admits that early on, bitterness nearly consumed him.
The tipping point came during confession, when listening to others made him reflect on his own inability to let go. “When I began hearing the confessions of the faithful, I understood that there can be no inner peace without forgiveness,” he said.
That’s much deeper than the bumper-sticker moralizing common in today’s culture wars. It’s not about forgetting—it’s about confronting horror and choosing virtue anyway.
Returning to the Heart of Darkness
The priest returned in 2013 to the former prison camp, now a hollow relic of its past. He wept, but those tears were not weakness—they were release.
It was an act of reclaiming the place where he and his family were once dehumanized. He described the visit as emotional and freeing, closing a loop that began in the worst of times.
Quoting Pope Leo XIV’s message for this year’s World Day of Peace, he reflected, “Goodness is disarming.” That isn’t just religious language—it’s a truth the modern world would do well to recall.
Forgiveness Doesn't Mean Forgetting, But Moving Forward
Father Miličević isn’t asking crocodiles to cry; he’s showing that one needn’t choose between memory and mercy. Evil, he said, is overcome “not with revenge or weapons,” but by doing good.
He’s not preaching weakness—he’s teaching the strength of a different kind. One forged in the furnace of war, yet tempered by faith, not fury.
In a world increasingly allergic to anything absolute, this priest’s story puts steel behind the call for peace. There’s no room for moral relativism when your family’s bones are the story.




