In a landmark moment, Beyond Srebrenica’s acclaimed theatre-in-education production Inseparable: Lessons from a nation divided has this week reached 10,000 young people across Scotland. This milestone comes in the programme’s third run, and in the same year the world marks 30 years since the genocide in Srebrenica.

Commissioned by Beyond Srebrenica and developed by Collingwood Learning, the play and accompanying workshops are designed to help pupils understand the impact of hate, extremism and division – using the real-life horrors of the Bosnian war as a starting point for reflection and learning.
Funded by the Gordon Cook Foundation, Inseparable is offered free to schools in Scotland and remains fully booked, with many schools asking for it to return.
Sabina Kadic-Mackenzie, Chair of Beyond Srebrenica and a child survivor of the Bosnian war, said:
“This milestone is not just about numbers – it’s about lives touched, conversations started, and young people who now understand the horrific consequences of hate.
“As we remember the atrocities committed in my home country 30 years ago, it’s more important than ever that the next generation learns from the past. ‘Inseparable’ shows them that these horrors aren’t just history – they are warnings for today.”
The performance follows the lives of Azra, Adnan, and Novak, three teenagers whose friendship is tested as hatred spreads in their community and war tears their lives apart. The story is grounded in real survivor testimony, including the voices of children who lived through the war, made available by the War Childhood Museum in Sarajevo.
To find out more about Inseparable: Lessons from a Nation Divided, visit please contact us enquiries@srebrenica.scot