The Serbs Chose War, Ruth Mitchel
19. THE SERBS CHOOSE WAR
ALREADY, BY THE MIDDLE OF MARCH, all British nationals had been
first advised, then urged, and at last peremptorily ordered by the British
consul to leave the country. Most of them had gone and most Americans
too, feeling the Nazis creeping close upon their heels.
A steady infiltration of German "businessmen" had been going on for
some time. They were so sure-so cocky and so sure: "The Gestapo will
soon be in charge of everything. It will be Bulgaria over again!" So they
thought, and even said loudly.
At this time I gave a lecture at the Anglo-American Club on "The
Serbian Character as Shown in the National Epics." It was embarrassing to
face an audience which probably knew more about it than I did; for they
were all Serbs, the Anglo-Americans having gone. That evening I was able
to give an almost exact prediction of the course events would take.
The day came when Cvetkovich, the Prime Minister, and Cincar
Markovich the Foreign Minister, left for Germany in a steel train. And still
the people didn't believe. Up to the very last moment no Serb, not even
those who knew positively that it was going to be done, could bring
himself to believe it. Most of them went about in a sort of daze of disbelief,
of stubborn, blind, mute inability to envisage the possibility of Serbs
tamely handing over the independence for which they had paid such a
frightful price.
At ten-fifteen on the morning of March 25 the news was flashed:
"Yugoslavia has signed the Axis pact."
Immediately the streets became empty. For an hour or so Belgrade lay
silent in a paralysis of horror, of shame, of slowly kindling fury.
Then the storm broke. Toward evening I sent Michael, my
houseman, into town. He reported that the university students were
demonstrating fiercely, defying the soldiers, who with fixed
bayonets broke up the meetings and processions. Dispersed in one
place, they hurried round the corner and re-formed, shouting:
"Down with the traitors! Better war than the pact!"
In Serbia the voice of the students, expressing the real feelings of
the people, had often proved ominous. It was not least the students
who in 1928 had forced King Alexander to drop the humiliating
Concordat which would have bound the country in spiritual
vassalage to Italy. In 1903 the students had voiced the revolt of the
people against King Alexander Obrenovic, who was selling them out
to Austria. This revolt resulted in the death of the King and of
Draga his wife and put on the throne King Peter I, the
Karageorgivich grandfather of the present King Peter II.
Did these determined demonstrations of the students now portend
another bloodbath?
That night, as related in Chapter I, I dined with the British
correspondents, including Terence Atherton. I was so
absent-minded that I felt I was hardly there.
Next day, hating the thought of watching curiously the humiliation
of a proud small race, I stayed quietly at home, trying vainly to read.
I couldn't seem to sit still for five minutes. Knowing, as I described
in my first chapter, of plans for revolution, my anxiety was intense.
What would be the outcome ? Whichever way it went, the result
was bound to be catastrophic for my friends. One by one I picked
up the charming things I had gathered that spoke so eloquently of a
splendid history. How absurd it seemed to try to read, no matter
what, when here I had the fortune to be myself living in a greater
drama, a greater tragedy than could ever be adequately written!
In the afternoon four leading Montenegrin men came to see me.
The drawing room was chilly, so we sat round the fire in my small
library. They were so huge they seemed to fill the whole room. In
spite of their modern clothes, their strongly cut faces, heavy
eyebrows, and warm color gave a curious kind of authenticity to the
beautiful antiques surrounding them, relics of the brave days of their
own ancestors: they went well together, were somehow undeniably
akin.
Montenegrins age very slowly. Although
they were middle-aged they showed
hardly a gray hair. They had mellowed
with time, but not grown weak-only
stronger and more patient.
They were neither Chetniks nor fliers.
They had come in charming compliment
to me to decide on policy affecting the
future of the state of Montenegro.
In these small countries, so easily
shaken, so at the mercy of political
storms raised by the greater Powers, it is
an inspiring feeling to be vividly living
history. Because they are so small you
seem always to be at the beating heart of
their problems.
These men were facing a cataclysmic
crisis in the affairs of their country. On
what they decided would depend, not
just their own lives-that did not worry
them-but the lives and the future of all
their people.
I cannot tell (in fact I have been
anxiously begged not to say) who these
men were and what they decided that
day. Only this: they came to a certain
remarkable decision. Although I could
not see altogether eye to eye with them,
could not entirely approve, I was full of
admiration for the spirit that prompted it.
I mention the incident only to put it on
record for the future. Balkan history will
one day explain the significance of it.
That night, you can imagine, I dozed
fitfully, one ear open for the telephone,
though I knew, and hoped, it would be
cut off.
Toward morning I must at last have
fallen into a heavy sleep.
March 27 1941 A fateful day in the history
of the world.
A commentator on the London radio
that morning said: "The action that the
Serbs have taken this day will prove to be
the turning point of the war."
He was a good prophet.
The Serbs had risen, had overthrown
their timid pro-Axis government, had put
their boy-king on the throne, and defied
the oppressors of mankind to do their
worst. A new star had arisen on the dark
night of war, the first real sign that Hitler
was doomed to failure.
As related in Chapter I, early on the
morning of that day my friend M.P.,
freed from his house-arrest, came to see
me. Listening to the pandemonium of
rejoicing that poured out of the radio, we
filled our glasses and drank a toast:
"Zivio, King Peter II."
"If only Alexander, his father, could see us now," said M.P. "His son on
the throne, with us, his Serbs, round him, as we were round himself on the
Great Retreat in the last war, defeated but unbeaten, only asking to fight
again! If he can see us now he must be proud and happy."
We emptied our glasses again to the memory of the dead king who had
been his close friend. He, like most Serbs with their passionate loyalty,
could never speak without tears of his soldier-king murdered by an
organization of Croats, the Ustashi.
Soon we were on our way downtown-I with my faithful camera.
And what a town it was: flags everywhere, the Yugoslav flag. As yet
there were few, if any, Serbian flags. The Serbs as a whole were still firmly
loyal to Yugoslavia, to the South Slav union.
In every square, at every main crossing, were guns, large or small, or
tanks. It was curious and somehow comforting to see them commanded
entirely by flying-corps officers.
M.P. was, as usual, acclaimed on all sides. We stopped every two steps.
We met, I think, everyone I knew, and not one but several men said to me
softly: "Well, this is the end of Yugoslavia. Now it's Serbia again at last!"
For already the news was spreading that Croatia was not taking part in
the great defiance of Hitler.
(I am reminded of what an old woman said to an acquaintance of mine in
Dover when the English troops were being brought back, worn out, minus
everything but their lives, from Dunkirk: "Well," said this old
Englishwoman grimly, "thank God, England is on her own again!")
Processions slowly pushed their way down the packed streets, carrying
pictures of King Peter and hastily scrawled banners, and shouting "Bolje
rat nego pact!-Bolje rat nego pact!" Every kind of organization was
represented in these processions, including business houses and factories.
There was no hysteria: only joy, a sort of solemn, grim joy. For every
Serbian man, woman, and child knew that by repudiating the Prime
Minister's signature they were declaring war on a Power that must certainly
overwhelm them. Every man-more, every woman- knew that they would
in all likelihood lose everything they held most dear, even life-even the
lives of those they loved best. Yet the
happiness, the joy, the relief of the people that they were at last
"themselves again" was as genuine as it was unbelievable.
How could these people welcome destruction, I asked myself, as
the price of an age-old dream? I felt an enormous admiration for
such clear, unmodern integrity of heart and mind: the only small
nation to whom the old values were, without any sophistry, still the
only possible right values.
I saw one very funny thing which I think no other foreigner saw.
It happens that Cvetkovich, like Laval, had a very Gypsy cast of
face, giving rise to the contemptuous gibe that he wasn't a real Serb.
So now the Gypsies, who inhabit a special district in Belgrade, had
to have a procession too. The little, undersized people, all in their
finest, brightest rags and tatters, bunched together in a gaudy crowd,
trotted proudly, crying at the tops of their shrill voices:
"Cvetkovich is no Gypsy-no, no, Cvetkovich is not one of us!"
Thus was the signer of the disgraceful pact cast out, disowned,
even by the homeless Gypsies.
We arrived before the Albaniya Building, the largest and newest
in Belgrade, standing, rather like the Flatiron Building, directly into
the main central square. An old Montenegrin appeared on the
balcony to hang out the symbolic bunting that expressed Serbia's
choice in the crisis. Spreading out his arms in joy, unconsciously he
made the gesture of crucifixion before the American and British
flags.
Other books have mentioned this episode. I was lucky enough to
photograph it (though my films were later all lost in the great
Belgrade bombardment). I also photographed the Nazi Information
Center, already completely wrecked by the populace. When I
started to do the same before the small Italian Travel Bureau, a
policeman put his hand heavily on my shoulder and tried to turn me
away. I slipped my Chetnik pass just a little from my breast pocket,
and the hand fell away and saluted.
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