The Serbs Chose War, Ruth Mitchel
11. AGAIN EXPULSION?
September 4 1939 England and France at war with Germany. In Budva,
all the night before, a group of friends and I sat or walked up and
down the avenue of gigantic mulberry trees in front of the row of
small restaurants which possessed the only radios in the town. Each
of us was absorbed in trying to guess what was in store for our
countries and to decide what he or she ought to do.
Should I return to England or America? If I did, how useful could
I be there? I remembered Lord Beaverbrook's dictum: "Make
yourself master of one single subject and the time must come when
your knowledge will be valuable."
I decided to make Serbia, the Balkans, my subject.
I liked these people and they seemed to like me. I really loved
them.
I admired their stern struggle for the barest existence, their pride and
dignity. Soon I began to feel as if Serbia were my real home, the place
where I was meant to be.
I traveled all over Montenegro and talked, probably, with every man or
woman who spoke a word of English. I collected groups of peasants and
told them clearly what the Allies were fighting for: for liberty for the small
nations, for freedom for every man to walk upright, his own master, in the
traditions and ways of life which each thought best.
I studied the history and customs of the different regions and races of
the Balkans. I began to study the Serbian language-and I can tell you
that to master one's first Slav language is a fearful task. No matter how
many Latin languages one speaks they are of no use at all in learning a
Slav language.
Carefully I watched the trend of events in Yugoslavia and the reactions
of the people that made up that uneasy state.
I tramped across the landscape and watched the steep mountain roads
being mined in preparation for a possible Italian attack. I even had my own
German prisoner: a husky youth who was trying to return home to join his
army and whom, by various machinations, I prevented from leaving,
though I only once spoke to him in passing.
And again I became suspect. Again-"Why should a woman who might
be in the gay whirl of the world wish to remain in a little Montenegrin coast
town ?" The commandant of Budva actually wrote to the central
government (my lawyer later saw the letter) as follows:
"This lady is dangerous: she writes on her typewriter all day long."
I discovered an exquisite, completely forgotten old monastery in a lovely
valley opening to the sea. It had in its cellar a tiny windowless chapel,
whose walls were completely covered with original Byzantine frescoes at
least seven hundred years old. It had a red marble terrace about a hundred
feet long, overhung with orange and lemon trees. I decided to buy it and
made happy plans about my Montenegrin monastery with its rose-red
terrace on the Adriatic.
There was a new law that no foreigner could buy property within fifty
miles of the coast, so I had to petition the Government for permission to
purchase it. The Town Council of Budva, hearing of my wish, held a
meeting. These serious men, indignantly differing from the suspicious
military authorities, drew up a document so flattering
to me that I would hesitate to repeat the wording. They begged the
Government at Belgrade to make an exception in my favor and to grant me
every facility. As each man had to affix his signature over a twenty-dinar
tax stamp, this was no light compliment. One of the counselors ran around
quickly to show it to me before posting it, and I laid it on the floor and
photographed it.
The permission to buy arrived shortly, but not the permission to remain
there!
Instead there came an order that I must be removed inland to Cetinje, the
capital of Montenegro, and that I must not move about without a detective
always in attendance.
When I was to leave I ordered my car brought to a side gate, hoping to
depart unobserved. But the news got round and the whole back of my car
was filled with flowers, wine, and honey. And the children with their
parents stood round dismally, none of us dry-eyed.
I had the curious and perhaps unique experience of seeing a
proclamation of mine posted up on the great city gates, more than a
thousand years old, in which I thanked the people for their kindness to
me-especially the market women who had brought me as gifts flowers
they could easily have sold me. I promised to return when the day of
liberty had dawned again upon a sorrowful world. And that I propose to
do.
Cetinje was so beautiful that I could not long regret the change. The
police treated me with the most thoughtful consideration. They had to
obey their orders, but they did it in form only, laughing: "What fools they
are up in Belgrade-somebody's made a silly mistake!"
I climbed the grim Montenegrin peaks, now covered with such a wealth
of wildflowers that it took one's breath away.
The little old town of Cetinje, hardly more than a village although it is the
capital of Montenegro, lies in the huge crater of an extinct volcano
surrounded by its wreath of mountains. To the south one descends to the
lovely Lake of Scutari, to the west to Budva of the Beaches, northward to
the Boka Kotorska (Bocca di Cattaro), that inlet of the Adriatic considered
by many travelers (and by me) to be the most magnificent fiord in all
Europe. The scenery was so wonderful, the air so wine like, I felt so well,
that I came to the conclusion that of all the places in the world this
would be the most satisfactory one in
which to spend my life.
Dunkirk and the fall of France.... I was
almost beside myself with anxiety for
England . . . England, solitary, the hope
of the world.
The attitude of the Serbs was typical of
their character. Serbs as a race had a
very strong feeling of admiration, of
affection and gratitude toward France for
the help that country had given them in
the last war. Many Serbs had finished
their education there, and many more of
them spoke French than English. England
seemed farther away, colder, less
understood.
The defection of France was received
by the Serbs like a violent blow on the
chin. They were stupefied with surprise
and disbelief. It simply could not be true:
respectable people couldn't do a thing so
disloyal. It simply passed their ability to
grasp that the last, the very last,
Frenchman would not prefer to die
before thus deserting an ally.
Slowly the truth came home. England,
little England-always now it was "little
England," like an endearment-England
stood all alone. This was right in their
own tradition. The Serbs too had stood
alone -how often in their history!
The days passed, the weeks. England
showed not the slightest sign of dismay.
In those days something was born, a
passion which England should know
about and would do well never to forget.
The sympathy which swept like a tidal
wave across Serbia, the admiration which
rose to a sort of fever heat, the feeling of
comradeship of one brave race for a
splendid brother, was unforgettable.
When the British national anthem was
played, people rose, weeping. All the old
affection for France was transferred to
England and increased a thousandfold.
France was no more spoken of. France to
the Serbs was dead.
I must mention a funny incident. One
evening I saw a German "commercial
traveler" sitting in front of the hotel, no
doubt planning, as they all did, how
Germany would suck this Yugoslavia dry
when she had seized it. Suddenly all the
doors down the main street opened. The
people rushed out and began running
madly toward the hotel.
The German jumped up. "What is it?" he asked, terrified, of the
hotel-keeper standing near. "Is it a revolution?"
The innkeeper calmly looked at his watch. "It's seven-forty, of
course. That's all."
"What do you mean?" asked the German blankly. "What's
seven-forty ?"
"Time for the English radio, of course, and mine is the only
instrument in working order."
The Nazi vanished, furious: no one stirred a foot to listen to the
Nazi radio!
A very curious thing happened to me at this time. I was on a little
mountain path, hardly noticing where I was going, so absorbed I
was in miserable speculation about the war. Could all the eager,
proud little countries already gobbled up be lost forever? How would
it all turn out?
"If I could only have some sign from heaven," I groaned
desperately, "some sign of hope!" I remembered how, not far south
of here in Ancient Greece, soothsayers foretold the future by the
flight of birds.
Now this incident sounds most improbable, but I put it down
because it happens to be true. At that moment I looked down at the
path, and this is what I saw (owing to my being under suspicion, I
now never carried a camera; otherwise, of course, I would have
photographed it):
A snake, about eighteen inches long and very slim, had swallowed
a lizard. The lizard was large, too large for the snake's capacity, and
it had only been able to swallow its prey up to the hind legs and tail,
which stuck out. In dying, the lizard had bitten the snake in the
stomach, a large hole. They both lay there dead.
Such a sight has probably very seldom been seen even by a
naturalist, but for me to see it at that moment was certainly strange.
Suddenly, without warning, came an order from Belgrade that I
was to be put over the Greek frontier within twelve hours, and that
there positively would be no appeal.
I could, however, still stand on my right, the right of every citizen
of a foreign country, to see my country's representative. I insisted
on
my right to proceed to the capital. The police were horrified by the order
and only too anxious to assist me. The wires hummed; but only to bring a
stern confirmation of the order.
I also telegraphed at once to my friend M.P., who, among his other
distinguished activities, had helped to organize the police force of
Yugoslavia and had abolished the frightful old Turkish foot-beating. The
police throughout the country remained his devoted admirers.
The chief of detectives of Montenegro was assigned to accompany me
to Belgrade with the single purpose of explaining to the authorities there
that they not only had nothing against me but only wanted me to come
back.
I decided to fly. After a three-hour car journey, we arrived at the
Podgoritsa airfield, near the Albanian frontier. The news spread like
wildfire that "a famous spy and a terrible enemy of the country" had been
caught and was being transported under arrest. A mob collected, worked
itself into a fury, picked up stones and, pressing closer and closer, showed
signs of becoming violent.
My detective stood in front of me. I can see him now, how the back of
his neck grew slowly dark red with anger. He put his hand on his hip (no
doubt he was armed) and:
"This lady is no spy," he barked. "One step nearer, let one man raise his
hand and he will be shot on the spot. This lady is a friend, a good friend, of
Yugoslavia. Disperse!"
Slowly they pushed back and melted away. I gave that good fellow an
inscribed cigarette case and never was more pleased to acknowledge a real
service.
At the Belgrade airfield I was met by M.P. And then it was, of course,
unnecessary to trouble the minister with my little problems.
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