The Serbs Chose War, Ruth Mitchel
17. "WATCHMAN, WHAT OF AMERICA?"
AT NEW YEAR'S the British Legation as usual gave a reception. General
Nedich, the only strong Serb in the Government, had been dismissed and
had left town. An ancient general, once minister to Brussels, had
succeeded him as Minister of War.
General Boro Mirkovich was in
command of aviation in the Belgrade
district. Eager to give public and emphatic
expression to the Serbian admiration for
England, the general planned to attend the
British reception with his whole staff in
uniform. In high spirits he even went so
far as to demonstrate how they all would
bow low and say: "Your Excellency, we
represent the real heart of our country."
And "Long live our dear and admired
friend, England!"
The Minister of War got wind of his
intention, and he received positive orders
forbidding him to go. I was asked to
explain to the British minister what had
been intended. I did so. Only one member
of the general's staff M.P., a reserve
officer in a strong position, could brave
the order. He received a very cordial and
hilarious reception.
This indicates the feeling in the country
when the German negotiations with
Yugoslavia for signing the Axis pact
began. To the Serbs in general the thing
was simply inconceivable: it couldn't be, it
mustn't be-surely, surely it would not be
done!
But Machek and all the other Croat
politicians were using every conceivable
pressure and the threat of immediate
German intervention to force the signature
of the pact.
Some of us knew that Cvetkovich, the
Prime Minister, intended to do it. Yet, in
the strangest way, even those most in the
know couldn't bring themselves to believe
it was going to be done.
The strain was terrific. Almost hourly I
received telephone messages. "He still
means to do it." . . . "Yes, he is going to
sign."
Could he be in doubt about the feelings
of the country? That seemed impossible.
The Patriarch Gavrilo, head of the Serb
National Church, a grand old man whose
sister I knew in the Sanjak, warned the
Regent and the Prime Minister that the
Church and the people were solidly
against it. Kosta Pechanats warned them
that the Chetniks would certainly rise.
Serbs of all stations begged Cvetkovich:
"Delay, delay at least-until the British can
come to our help."
M.P., an old friend of his, in a surge of
anxiety, fell on one knee before him: "I
beg you, Dragisha, do anything,
anything-break your leg-do anything to
put it off even a few more days!"
Cvetkovich brought his finger down in
an imperious gesture: "If anyone so much
as dares to move, he will be shot on the
sport!"
M.P. was immediately arrested and
confined to his house under guard. Did
Cvetkovich suspect? Already I knew, but
only in outline,
that there was a great plan for revolution. I was deeply alarmed for M.P.
The place was seething with plots of all sorts. Unless you had lived
yourself in that feverish atmosphere of threatening, subterranean violence,
you would find it hard to imagine.
At the instance of the same group of patriots who later carried out the
coup d'etat, I approached the British minister with a plan for blowing up
and blocking the Iron Gates on the Danube to halt, if only for a few days,
German transport of munitions and oil to and from Rumania and Bulgaria.
The plan was declined. I gave up the half-dead British Legation in despair.
(America was not yet in the war.) Mihailovich has since carried out this
plan with great success.
The minister, Sir Ronald Campbell, was very well liked by the few people
who ever succeeded in seeing him. Men of real knowledge and ability came
to me in amazement and deep alarm at being unable to do so. And those
who did succeed in getting through to him spoke, in this hour of desperate
crisis for their country, with gentle yet bitter irony of the fact that a
well-worn golf bag was the first object that met the eye on entering the
Legation door.
It must be said that the British representatives moved only within the
narrowest circle connected with the Court. The Serbs are the most
democratic people in Europe, not excepting the Swiss. As among our own
grandfathers, there is no aristocracy in the sense of special privilege or a
snobbish superiority based on titles or on great possessions. (And, as
with our grandparents, there are also no Serb servants, there are only
friends who come to help you: servants in Belgrade were almost without
exception of German or Croat extraction.)
Serbia is a land of self-respecting smallholders, and there are no castles
in which to entertain with empressement. But in Croatia, with its Austrian
culture and class distinctions, and so little ravaged by struggles for
freedom, there are handsome castles. Foreign diplomatic circles therefore
naturally made Croatia their playground and were unavoidably influenced
by the more luxurious comfort there. And if moments of pleasant leisure
were used by the eagerly planning Croats to instill in their guests a bias
against the socially less adroit Serbs, who can be surprised?
And who can wonder too that the best Serbs, notably lacking in
a "keeping up with his lordship" complex, withdrew themselves in
pride? Personally if I were King of Serbia, instead of trying to adopt
alien usage, I would return to the dignified simplicity of my own
tradition, with a Serbian house instead of a characterless palace,
and with my proudest Serbs in their extremely handsome and
dignified national dress around me: I would demand-and
receive-respect instead of condescension.
Self-respecting pride in our own inheritance, without either
contempt or envy for that of others-that, I am convinced, must
become the axiomatic basis of world co-operation and peace.
The American representatives were much better mixers than the
British, but far less influential on public feeling, since America, by
her lack of participation in the war, seemed coldly unconcerned with
the fate of small nations.
I tried to spread the conviction that America, slow to move
because of its huge size, was firm as ever in its great democratic
principles and ideals. I said, as I believed, that as our own
forefathers too had not hesitated to make every conceivable
sacrifice for the attainment of that ideal, so the present generation
of Americans, profiting by and enjoying the splendid fruits of those
sacrifices, would in turn be willing, proud, and eager to make every
sacrifice in defense of them.
But there were those, thoughtful men, who saw in the burning
fanaticism of the totalitarian converts, German and Russian (then
still allies), inevitable defeat for democracy grown fat and slack
with ease and success.
"Everything we value," said Imre Gal, a wise old Czech, at one of
my Sunday-evening gatherings, "everything we treasure must be
paid for without ceasing-or it is lost. The totalitarian states are
ready to sacrifice everything for their creed of loss of liberty for the
common man, for government by terror of the few over the many,
for dictatorship. Will Americans still be content to pay to the
uttermost for their treasure of liberty? Are you sure democracy has
not grown stale and uninspiring to them with use? Americans across
the broad seas have forgotten what loss of liberty means. Can they
understand that loss of freedom anywhere means greater danger to
their own? They think themselves safe. The seas are their Maginot
Line. Useless, useless! A new art has come into war. Secret
penetration,
like ants, can eat away at the heart,
leaving only a still strong-looking surface,
a hollow shell which-as in France-can
crumble at a blow. Tells us, does the
American heart still beat strong, alert,
and eager for democracy ? "
There was a silence. My friends looked
at me agonized, holding their breath with
anxiety. At that moment I felt humble
and proud to be looked upon with such
confidence as the interpreter of my
country.
I said: "It does. Yes. Be sure. It does."
"Then," said my dear friend Imre Gal,
"then and only then will America save
the great ideal of human freedom. Then
and only then will America
save-herself."
Imre, with his wife and girl and boy
whom I loved, did not live to see my
word made good: all four were among the
more than 20,000 who died only a few days
later in the fiendish Belgrade
bombardment. I hope he knows that
America now fights, stronger than ever in
her history, for government "of the
people, for the people, by the people" not
only for herself but for all the smaller
democracies of the world, including the
Czech and the Serb.
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