BOSNIA, PART 5: BATA (2 OF 3)

La version française est en cours de traduction. Merci de votre patience. 

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Our introduction into the harsh reality of Mostar is immediate. I might even call it abrupt!

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The highway we used so innocently the day before, turns out to mark a division between two territories. East for Bosniaks, West for Croats. Bata took the time to make sure we understood that both are Bosnians. The Croat side is rich; fewer ruins; several modern shopping centers and hotels. Even a McDonald’s. Bata drives us back and forth between the two and gives us an overview of both sides; several important buildings that were destroyed and the secrets they hold. The City Bath with its Olympic size swimming pool where Bosniaks have to wait months for a ½ hour training session.

The Music School with its new 2MIO euros façade and rotten interiors. The ghost of a shopping center with its impressive bas-relief motifs inspired by Bosnia’s early mythology: it lost its eight floors of apartments to a bomb. The 25000 seat Croat-controlled Stadium where the Bosniak team is not allowed. The street plaques painted over and renamed with Croatian names (thus rendering our map unusable). The University where the language of admission is Croatian. The high school, used as an example of children being educated together when in fact, Bosniaks and Croats are kept apart. The elderly who are reduced to dumpster-diving to augment their meager pensions. The city parks which, except for two, were all turned into cemeteries. I went back the next day: without fail the tumbstones bear the same death year.  The Promenade where young single people would parade and try to find a mate. As Bata’s story goes, the men were so busy acting like peacocks that the women all left and got married elsewhere, thus leaving a slew of older single guys behind – they’re still on the promenade today, sipping their beer in hopes of finding the right woman. We saw them!

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The information doesn’t just rain on us. It’s a deluge. It is not organized like a nice history book. Clean and unemotional. Architecture and historical information are mixed with painful details of the on-going consequences of war in every-day life for Bosnians. Nothing one will ever read in a guidebook.

 

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A couple of hours later, it’s time for an abrupt change of pace! Bata jumps on the main road and heads out of town at the speed of light. He is taking us to the Kravice Waterfalls. As we get out of Bella, he says now we rest, we don’t speak about history anymore. We relax. Have fun. Swim. Eat. Drink.

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The break is welcome. For him as well as for us. Bata gives it all he’s got. He must be exhausted. Personally at that moment I am thinking that the ten-hour tour is just a name … who would ever really do that? It’s crazy. So I’m preparing myself for the inevitable: the return to Mostar after the Falls. Wrong – woman of little faith. I really didn’t know or understand the Bata phenomenon!

There is as much to come as we have already experienced … 

CROATIA, PART 3: A SPECIAL MEETING (PART 3/3)

La version française est en cours de traduction. Merci de votre patience. 

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But he wasn’t done yet: we had to seal our connection with a special ceremony…

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He invites me to drink his homemade raki. Alcohol and riding is definitely not my favorite equation but … really: I’m going to say no to this man who by now I’m convinced is my long lost father from a former life? We are like two peas in a pod, reunited at last. Of course I will have his raki. That makes him very very happy. 

By now you might be wondering: where is Mike while all this is happening? He is right there, near us. Completely invisible to Copic. I don’t think he ever looked at Mike. And if I had any doubt that my perception was false, I was about to get full confirmation that it wasn’t. He comes back from his little booth with the raki (the Coca-Cola bottle is always a good indicator of origins) and two glasses: one shot glass (emphasis on ONE: Mike is definitely not included) and a normal glass that is already filled with some murky liquid. Slowly he pours the raki in the shot glass. Still smiling. He hands it to me gesturing for me to drink it bottom up. No problem. It’s only 3PM and I am about to get on my bike. Great plan!

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I will do nothing to disappoint Copic. Bottom up it is. As I come back to my senses, he hands me the other glass, which he has been lovingly stirring for a few minutes. I have no idea what it is. I trust him. I grab the glass and swallow its content. After all, what can go wrong: we don’t even speak the same language!

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Whoa: sugar water, a superb complement to the strong alcohol.

You won’t believe it: as I’m sitting down today to write this blog, something else happens! This story just never stops on giving. I open Google Maps to make sure I had all my facts right, and guess what? It turns out we never did go to Una National Park! We went instead to Vrejo Une, which has absolutely nothing to do with Una. Une… Una? Let me tell you: BIG difference! Obviously Copic and I were meant to meet!

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So now, when I go back to see him, I’ll ride another 20 kms to Una NP.

Or not. But this time, I’ll know where I am not.

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