If God Exists, Then Why?
Earthquakes. Corruption. Tragedy. War.
Train station disasters. Generations shaped by occupation, loss, and injustice.
In Serbia and throughout the Balkans, history has not been gentle. From the long shadow of the Ottoman Empire and the taking of children into slavery, to the conflict over Kosovo, to modern corruption and sudden public tragedies — suffering is not theoretical here. It is personal. It is remembered.
And so the question rises again and again:
If God really exists, then why?
Why does He allow injustice?
Why does He allow corruption?
Why does He allow innocent people to suffer?
Why does tragedy strike without warning?
This book was written specifically with that question in mind.
Rather than offering shallow answers or religious clichés, this work carefully explores the problem of evil, suffering, and divine justice from a Christian perspective. It wrestles honestly with doubt, historical pain, and personal grief, while pointing toward a deeper understanding of God's character, human responsibility, and eternal hope.
This is not a book written from a distance. It was written in the context of real Balkan history, real suffering, and real conversations with people asking hard questions.
If you have ever asked, "Where is God in all of this?" — this book is for you.