The Serbs Chose War, Ruth Mitchel
8. I MEET KING'S SON MARKO
So THE SUMMER OF I939 passed in Budva of the Beautiful Beaches. Once a nest
of the notorious Adriatic pirates, it was a sort of miniature Dubrovnik, even
to the island lying, like Lokrum, out in the bay. But its surrounding
mountain scenery was far more magnificent. Cockily its little medieval walls
stood out into the waves; snug was its tiny harbor for the snub-nosed
Turkish sailing ships with wooden turbans on their prows and huge eyes
painted on their bows.
Through the mellow nights the local boys wandered up and down the
rose-hung streets or drifted in little boats, strumming their guitars and
singing the lovely Dalmatian, Serbian, and Macedonian songs- and
never, never once a strain of jazz.
"Tamo daleto... [So far, so far, my love...]" Ineffable the sweetness of
this, my favorite Balkan melody, as it floated across the calm, moonlit
waters.
Budva was very primitive, with no electricity and with streets too narrow
and winding for wheeled traffic. During the residence of the
King at his near-by summer palace, the smart, white-uniformed
naval officers passing with their pretty lassies at night through dim-lit
arches gave the town an unreal, theatrical effect.
All day I either bathed in the warm, sunny Adriatic or sometimes,
guided by my friend Rado Zambalich, hunted for ancient Greek
remains washed up by the sea: pieces of pottery or statuettes more
than two thousand years old.
And every day I worked, and worked hard. For in the intervals of
my prison-breaking plots, I had discovered what I consider to be one
of the great literary treasures of humanity, far too little known by the
outside world: the national epics of Serbia. I studied them with
absorption, and I discovered that Goethe had considered the Serbian
epics to be the finest in the world, even surpassing the German
Niebelungenlied.
The Serbs are a very small race; there were before the war not
more than eight million of them. But it is a race of strikingly
individual character, of extraordinary tenacity of purpose and ideal.
That ideal can be expressed in a single word: Freedom.
"It is not glory, it is not riches, neither is it honor, but it is liberty
alone that we fight and contend for, which no honest man will lose
but with his life." Thus have spoken the Serbs throughout their
history. So they are speaking and acting now, at this moment. For
them freedom means not only national but individual freedom for
each man: every man a little king. For centuries, since before
America was even discovered, they have defended their and our
own ideal of democracy with their blood. Their whole history is
simply the epic of the struggle of humanity for liberty.
And through the long centuries until today, as in a heroic opera,
the same motif returns. For see how strangely, almost word for
word, the events chronicled in their epics of five hundred years ago
have repeated themselves in the present war.
On the eve of the battle of Kossovo in I389, SO sing those ancient
songs, Prince Lazar, the leader of the Serbs, was offered "an earthly
kingdom"-that is, vassalage to the Turks, with security of frontiers,
life, and property-or "a heavenly kingdom": death in a hopeless
cause. He and his men deliberately chose the latter, went out
against a numerically superior and better-armed Turkish army,
and-died.
They died, but, even as today, their choice that day profoundly influenced
the destiny of nations. If they had not fought as they did
fight then and unceasingly afterwards, the Turks would almost
certainly have overrun the whole of Europe. In that event our
history, yours and mine and America's, might have been very
different: our culture might have been Ottomanized. (What a
splendid historical compensation it would be if the Turks, as seems
today not unlikely, should be the ones to help the Serbs to save their
liberty!)
Could there be a more perfect parallel in present history than the
German offers and promises to the Serbs? In 1941, as in I389, this tiny
race on the narrow road between Europe and Asia stood, like
Horatio on the bridge, holding back single-handed the conquering
horde, so that those behind could prepare. They stood and they died.
Today they stand as no other race is standing and they are dying as
no other race is dying.
Only this time the name is not Prince Lazar, but General Draja
Mihailovich.
I'll never forget how I got my first inkling of those great Serbian
epics. It was in Scutari, in Albania, in the ancient, tangled garden of
my lovely vizier's house. The grapevines were in flower, huge vines
that threw their gnarled old branches over trellised arbors. Have you
ever smelled the scent of the Oriental grape in flower? It is exquisite
and intoxicating, so intoxicating that thick swarms of bees and
enormous butterflies are apt to fall drunk with an orgy of grape
nectar into one's lap and down one's neck.
Some boys from the high school who wanted to practice their
English used to come to tea. Over us spread, above the grapevines,
an enormous mulberry tree, and the white squashy fruits kept
dropping round us. We picked them up and sucked them while we
chattered and laughed in the hot Albanian afternoon.
One boy said something about Kraljevich Marko (King's Son
Marko) .
"And who," said I, "is he?"
Startled looks passed from eye to eye: Had this unfortunate
foreigner had no education at all?
"You don't know about Kraljevich Marko?"
It seemed impossible, but I didn't.
So one of them, a black-eyed, curly-headed boy, lying on the
ground
amongst the white mulberries and the
drunk butterflies, put his hands behind his
head-and let me have it. Tale after tale he
told about the great Serbian hero, Marko,
and his almost equally heroic horse,
Sharats or Shahrin. I was amazed and
delighted. I have a passion for legendary
tales.
So, soon after reaching Montenegro, I
plunged into a study of Kraljevich Marko.
Before I had finished I was able to offer a
prize of five dollars to anyone who could
tell me a detail about him I did not know
or could start a story about him which I
could not finish- and there were dozens.
Several connoisseurs gaily tried but had to
admit themselves defeated.
Later, in the prisons, this store of tales
proved a strange blessing. Night after night
I told stories, drawn out with fanciful
elaboration, to lure the minds of my
wretched fellow prisoners away into
another world, away from the horrors of
the present and the dread of a dark future.
It is related that King's Son Marko was
just too young to take part in the fatal
battle of Kossovo, when the Serbs became
vassals to the Turks. But he grew up to be
the indomitable champion of his
downtrodden race, fighting without
ceasing for justice to his people.
He was so adored by his people for his
courage, his self-reliance, his loyalty to
word and oath, his faithfulness to his
friends in whatever situation, that the
Turks could not risk a great Serbian revolt
by an overt murder. Hence much of this
cycle of songs concerns the attempts of the
Sultan to have him killed in fight or by
"accident."
The cycle expresses the heartrending yet
heartening cry of the hopelessly defeated
who yet never lose courage, pride, and
hope. Not he the conquering hero who, as
in the epics of all other nations, emerges
crowned with victory. He fights and he
wins, but always with the bitter
consciousness that his successes are only a
part of a larger struggle which can only be
hopeless because of the odds against his
race. Yet he never cries for help.
He is Serbia. King's Son Marko is Serbia
today.
He never loses his enthusiasm. He is
always ready to try again at the drop of the
hat, with a great laugh at the sheer thrill of
the fight
He is the Serbian peasant, he is
Mihailovich and the Chetniks, he is
all the nameless men and women-don't forget the women-who have
sacrificed all they possessed, who are laboring and resisting from dawn to
dawn. Foodless, shelterless, with only the poorest of poor equipment,
absurdly outnumbered, they continue to fight.
King's Son Marko himself, the deathless champion of human justice and
liberty, is our ally today in the Balkans, an ally whose real value we have
only begun to realize.
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