Three decades since the start of the war in former Yugoslavia and a quarter of a century after the end of the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina, ethno-national positions of former warrying parties are still firmly cemented without signs of softening of narratives and building of a sincere process of reconciliation. Wartime events are still interpreted the same way as when they actually happened. The guilt is seen exclusively on one side, self-reflection and self-criticism are virtually inexistent. Even the “biology” aspect does not work in favor of those advocating reconciliation. Although active participants of wartime and post-war events are at the end of their political and biological life, it appears that younger generations, even those born after the war, almost equally or even more passionately advocate the positions and follow the same narrative matrix created by their ethno-national ancestors.