Documents from Exile - DOKUMENTI IZ ISELJENIŠTVA

DOKUMENTI IZ ISELJENIŠTVA
A two-volume archival collection documenting the work of the Toronto Chapter of Bedem Ljubavi – Mothers for Peace. Compiled and preserved by Valentina Krčmar, these books chronicle the efforts of Croatian women in exile who organized humanitarian aid, advocacy, and community support during the Croatian War of Independence (1991–1998).

Book One Title (Left Book) BEDEM LJUBAVI, MOTHERS FOR PEACE, OGRANAK TORONTO — TORONTO CHAPTER, PRVA KNJIGA — 1991–1995 — BOOK ONE      

 Book Two Title (Right Book) 
BEDEM LJUBAVI, MOTHERS FOR PEACE, OGRANAK TORONTO — TORONTO CHAPTER, DRUGA KNJIGA — 1995–1998 — BOOK TWO                                       

 

 

Letter from Eric Margolis to Valentina Krčmar – Defending the Integrity of War Reporting

Create: Thu, 10/30/2025 - 23:18
Author: admin
Newspaper

Date: November 14, 1994
Author: Eric Margolis, Foreign Editor, The Toronto Sun
Addressed to: Valentina Krčmar, Director, Bedem Ljubavi – Mothers for Peace
View the Original Letter: krcmar book 2_Part152 20.pdf

 

About This Letter

This letter, written on November 14, 1994, by Eric Margolis, then Foreign Editor of The Toronto Sun, was sent in response to an inquiry from Valentina Krčmar, Director of Mothers for Peace (Bedem Ljubavi).

Krčmar had reached out to confirm a claim made by General Lewis MacKenzie, who alleged that Margolis had privately admitted his reporting on the Yugoslav Wars was “full of errors.” In this short but definitive reply, Margolis dismisses the accusation outright.

“As usual, General MacKenzie is not being accurate. I have never admitted that my articles were ‘full of errors.’ All of the statements that I made remain valid and I stand behind them.”

Margolis’s words reaffirm his journalistic integrity and his continued belief in the accuracy of his coverage — particularly his critical reporting on Serbian aggression and Western inaction during the wars in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The exchange reflects a broader ideological divide that characterized Canadian media discourse at the time. While General MacKenzie publicly questioned the objectivity of journalists sympathetic to Croatian and Bosnian suffering, Margolis stood out as one of the few Canadian correspondents willing to expose the atrocities committed by Serbian forces and to condemn the failures of international diplomacy.

Krčmar’s decision to verify and preserve this correspondence — later referencing it in her own letter to MacKenzie in January 1995 — demonstrates her meticulous approach to truth and accountability. Together, the two letters form a powerful pair: Margolis defending truth in journalism, and Krčmar defending truth in history.