The Serbs Chose War, Ruth Mitchel
27. FOREVER UNDEFEATED
ANOTHER TRAIN came in en route to Sarajevo, my next objective. It was
made up of cattle trucks and was filled with ground crews of the Yugoslav
Air Force retiring to new bases. In agreeable contrast to the
sour Pullman escapists they cordially beckoned to us to join them and
quickly piled up duffel bags to make comfortable seats for us.
They were Montenegrin Serbs and huge: great shaggy, fierce-looking
fellows who reminded one of Newfoundland dogs. They bounced and
pushed one another about to make room for us, and each insisted we must
share his meager rations. One even produced that unbelievable treasure, a
little bag of sticky gumdrops, almost enough to go once around.
There was a stove in the middle of the car with wood piled beside it. The
big middle doors were open upon a slowly passing panorama of
magnificent scenery. As we rose ever higher into the wild, snow-covered
mountains, it became very cold. Wood was piled in until the stove glowed
red-hot. And round it, coatless, in every attitude of relaxation, the
dark-browed giants lay, silent or in quiet talk or song.
I tried to find out what they expected of help from the Allies, but they
evaded all talk about it. Here, as ever, there was no word of complaint
against others. They themselves would fight, they would do their best, and
they took it for granted others too were doing their best. I may be wrong,
but it seemed to me this was notably different from the criticism and
disappointed howls of other countries. One could not help but admire their
simple, even generous, really brotherly attitude. I felt very much at home
with these tough fellows.
The sergeant in command of them sat beside the younger of my pretty
girls, and hour after hour they talked of his family and hers, and we had to
look at the snapshots of his two charming children. His name was Sergeant
Barbovich.
Many times we had to jump out and throw ourselves into the snowy
fields to avoid the bombs German planes tried to drop on us. Surprisingly
there was no machine-gunning, and by noon the attacks had ceased.
All day men stood in a row leaning on the iron bars across the wide-open
doors. So I could only catch exquisite glimpses of snow peaks soaring
above deep rugged canyons, with their wildly tumbling streams, all
amusingly framed by widespread military legs. And all the time almost
without interruption for sixteen hours these grim yet gentle Serbian giants
sang.
Each of the Balkan peoples has its special songs. Even each district has
a style of its own. All, except the Montenegrin songs which are
curiously monotonous, have in common the haunting sweetness of falling
minor cadences. They are moving beyond any other music I have ever
heard, for they express a history tragic surely beyond any on the earth.
For century after endless century in the crushing vassalage and
bloodshed of the Balkans no man could hope for man's just stature or for
liberty, no woman for security of love and home. They could only dream
and sing of how, perhaps, life had been once long ago, or of how in a
future Golden Age the ever-present threat of death and degradation might
someday pass away.
Steadily, for almost sixteen hours, these Montenegrins of the Yugoslav
Flying Corps sang their ancient songs, in elaborate "close harmony."
They were still singing at eleven o'clock that night when we arrived in
the capital of Bosnia, Sarajevo of sinister memory. It was here that the shot
was fired that started World War I. Sadly we bade our soldier friends
farewell.
That wild night was the most miserable of the whole journey. Snow was
falling heavily, and it was piercingly cold.
We plunged into a dense crowd of refugees. This time they were mostly
Serbian women and children with many bundles. They had evidently felt
this Moslem ground trembling under them and were going to relatives in
what they considered safer regions.
In a dark corner before a deserted ticket window I was lucky enough to
find a precarious berth on one of those high small tables on which people
rest their bags while paying fares. But I did not remain undisturbed for
long. Three times that night planes hummed above the low-hung clouds,
hunting for the station, and three times the station staff raucously ordered
everyone to leave. Once I groped my way under a narrow bridge across the
foaming, snow-caked Neretva River. But the third time I refused to move
out of the station and, my knees under my chin, dozed fitfully, while below
me a tall Albanian slept peacefully throughout the uproar.
Dawn-and a desperate hunt for food. I managed to get three cups of
coffee from the restaurant. While we were sipping it thankfully, the war, the
stark and tangible reality of battles won and lost, moved in upon us.
For suddenly complete stillness fell upon the milling crowd. Slowly
down the platform there marched, or rather hobbled, a company of soldiers
back from the front: a defeated battalion-all that was left of it. Or were
they defeated?
Every man was wounded. Most of them had rags bound round arms or
legs, and some had bloody bandages over one eve. But not one back
slumped, not one head hung down. On the contrary many were
smiling-bitterly. They marched, slowly but steadily. And before them
went their ragged flags.
Flags, one hears, are no longer carried into battle by modern armies: in
these realistic, rational days they are put for safekeeping somewhere far
behind the lines. Not so with the Serbs. Their standards are as alive to
them as their commanders. The flags go into battle. And, whatever human
life must stay behind forever on the field, the flags must come out again.
The flags saved, nothing is quite lost. Certainly these two standards had
been in the thick of it: they were torn by shellfire, punctured by bullets and
in ribbons.
The people on the platform were mostly Serbs. The soldiers were
certainly Serbs.
I expected cheers, salutes, some kind of demonstration. There was
nothing of the sort. The men were offered cigarettes by those who still had
them, and everyone nodded calmly, as if this were only what one must
expect. And quietly, without either self-pity or bravado, those wounded
men marched down the platform to entrain.
These people had gone into war well knowing there was hope of nothing
but defeat. But their bitter history had inured them to every conceivable
loss. They were superior to it-superior both to victory and to defeat.
They were absorbed in one thought, just one: the saving of their honor,
which is a nation's soul.
But if they acted with stoicism these hot-blooded southern people were
not without feeling. On the contrary their emotions were so strong as
sometimes to overcome their iron reserve.
In a dark and dirty washroom where I had gone for much-needed water, I
saw, half lying on a table, his head buried in his arms, a colonel of artillery,
his broad shoulders heaving in an agony of silent sobs.
I stood a moment, transfixed at what this shattering grief portended
-then ran to find the woman attendant. Gently, with an ancient patience,
the old crone shook her head: "He has just heard that his only son
is dead."
Again I stood beside him, feeling I must find some word to say. Then it
came to me with agonizing certainty: this pain too deep even for a long
vista of sonless years. His grief could be not alone for his lost son, but for
Serbia, lost-too soon.
Six days, only six days of war. If the Serbian Army was already
hopelessly going down, it could be only because of treachery, the well
organized treachery I had feared.
Well-that was the Army.
Let what must happen to the Army, we could not be completely beaten,
not in a matter of days or months, or even years. There were still our wild
Black Mountains, "Planino moja starino," still Montenegro, still our deep,
almost virgin forests of Bosnia, Herzegovina, and the Sanjak-as there had
been these more than thousand years. And indigenous as the soil,
implacably resistant as ever in those long and desperate years, and as
unconquerable, there were still my Chetniks.
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