Drazen Pantic on Mon, 8 Jun 1998 19:19:12 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> Better I Tell You the Truth... |
Belgrade independent daily Glas Javnosti,=20 Issue as of Tuesday, June 2, 1998 Better I Tell You the Truth... Soldier Dusan Tasic, was born on June 15 1977 and killed on May 29 [1998] in the area around the border outpost of "Morina" [in Kosovo]. He was burried yesterday in his hometown, Pozarevac. He went to serve his term in the army on December 25th 1997. This is his last letter to his mother and brothers Darko (1976) and Dejan (1984).=20 Hi everybody,=20 This is my 28th day in the field. I was very glad to receive Darko and mom's letter. Much has happened and changed in the meanwhile. Right now, I've fled from everybody and am near a book. The weather is beautiful. Life conditions are much better now. They give us more food, i.e. enough but not too much. It is tasteless but at least there's some quantity... You'd probably like to know when I'll be going back to the barracks and coming back home. I'd like to know that as well. One thing is for sure - it's not going to be soon. The course (for ensigns) I was supposed to attend in Prizren will be held here May 16 - June 15. Hopefully they'll let me back to the barracks after that.=20 I've had one shower in these 28 days, that was when I phoned home and talked with Darko. The other time I faked a bad case of rash and they had to take me back to the barracks. It's complete chaos at the barracks. I no longer know where my things are. Tanks and loads of soldiers are all over the place: military police, infantry, scouts, army reserves. It's complete chaos, I tell you. They sleep in our barracks, and they've moved us out. They'll not let us go down to the barracks soon. Our police has a lot of work in these villages. On some days, there's shooting around the clock. It's some 4-5 km away from me and I can hear everything clearly. They're not bringing army in for the time being, but... Two days ago, my camp and barracks were supposed to assault the village of Ponoshevac. As I got it, the village has been torn down to the ground. They gave us full weaponry (not to me), told us not to shoot hostages... We were supposed to move at 3 am. I belong to the camp defense squad so I would not have gone. All's been postponed and we're waiting for further orders. I was the courier for the officer on duty last night, so I took a look at some plans and maps on the sly, so I know what they were up to. They wanted to bring in tanks, cannons, howitzers, Pragas and to fire 120mm shells from the camp. It's all chaos. Better I tell you the truth than you listen to somebody else's lies. The military is secretely backing the police. When shit broke out in Junik, two our Pragas went there. They lambasted the Scquiptars. They [the Scquiptars] did not let out any sound for two days. God forbid they should try even a smallest attack against the army. They [the army] would flatten half the Kosovo. Shit, I must go.=20 Here I am again. It's May 10. I ran to the camp the day before yesterday because shooting started from behind the hill. Nothing came out of it. Everything was perfectly fine. When I went up there, fellows were already having showers. They've started giving us showers in the field. They put up a tent with 8 showers inside and let 10-15 of us in. On the 8-9th night, I was in an ambush. We didn't go on the hill but closer. The night was clear and it didn't rain, so it wasn't so bad. That's been my 6 or 7th ambush since I've been here. What do I do? At night I keep watch or go and lay ambushes. They take some ten soldiers and arm them fully: 150 bullets, two bombs, rifle mounted granade mines and the hand granade launcher. I load myself as a mule and then we go up the next hill. 1150m above the sea level. By the time I get up there, I'm all sweaty, even my knickers are wet. What's even worse, we go by night. They could've sent me to Albania, I wouldn't have known it. When we get on top of the hill, we lay an ambush. I build a shelter of rocks, put the bombs in front of me, a bullet in the barrel, lay down and lie still until the morning. I have cramps all night. We're lying in wet, but we're "lucky": the wind blows on the hill to dry us. And you're supposed to preserve your kidneys and the rest of the equipment. They report results of ambushes in the news. So far, there's been nothing where I've been. I must say a word about the package. I didn't want to but as time goes by, I'm beginning to need some things. Most of all socks, 2-3 pairs, not more. Let Darko buy those square patterned so they'll not be to thin (my new boots hurt my feet), I need razors, shaving foam... and of course envelopes and stamps, that's a must. I don't know how I'll send this one. Mom, don't waste your time and make some complicated and expensive cakes, make wafle-cakes or just buy some biscuits... Don't send much sweets. I've nowhere to put them. I hope I haven't exaggerated with demands. Just one more thing--it's very urgent. Darko says I should not count my days here. I pray to God everything turns out well and I don't have to stay in this shit for years. 364 days is not so much and passes quickly. For the record - I've got 219 to go.=20 Duci A BOY'S DEATH Commentary by Aleksandar Tijanic, published in Belgrade independent daily "Dnevni Telegraf" on June 5, 1998. The author is a well-known Belgrade journalist and former Serbian Information Minister who resigned from the post during the civil protest in 1996.=20 Most tragic account on how this country was created through formula which says that cheapest thing in Serbia are Serbs themselves - was given by little Dusan, soldier who was killed in Kosovo. In his letter his parents, it can be seen that he died alone, without any sense, any personal will, mobilized for death, just like other Serbs are forced to live. For the last time, with handwriting of a child, he asked parents to send him three pairs of clean socks and asked his mother to send him her cookies, simple ones, so they can last long. Whatever kind of cookies, they lasted longer than he did. Then a moronic Colonel spoke at boy=92s funeral and called him "New Obilic"!=20 We all were at the funeral; collection of witnesses of an age and society in which the fastest race is being run between the two nothingnesses - being born and dying. Co-authors of Dusan=92s death; collection of politica= l pity; collective corpse; we stood beside the coffin, us, seven or eight millions of clones created in laboratory of our own apathy, omnipotence of the governing structures and Supreme Unerring Authority. When a letter and coffin of the dead boy become symbols of a policy, it is very easy for me to imagine the creators of such a policy.=20 That letter shows the reality of Kosovo today: young boys lying in the dark trenches, clenching their hand grenades, waiting for an attack from who knows where, the only thing they hear is their own heartbeat, they are trying not to shake, listening sounds of distant shooting and hoping it would not come near this time. That letter does not say those boys are thinking about sacred Serbian land, democratic negotiations with Rugova or unity of Serbia. It is only them, who are inside the gloom of Kosovo, to whom our life looks so good, so precious, so worthwile. Even normal! Do those boys, maybe, have the right to know why they are supposed to die? Or to kill?=20 On the day of Dusan=92s funeral, papers published news that about hundred Serbian policemen were fired because they had not agreed to spend shift of 40 days in Kosovo or to be appointed for service in the province. What is it? Professional policemen are deserting? Are the guys who are under command of the Minister, called ALF, afraid? They are absolutely right if they believe that it is much simpler to beat students in Belgrade than to chase Albanians in Drenica. However, is not a shame for the striking fist of the regime to employ people who do not want to sacrifice themselves to the myth part of Serbia?=20 I am not so sure about their fear; I would rather say that it is Serbian experience of dying for nothing, several times in this decade. After those people had died, politicians did things which could have been done much before people died - they reached an agreement! Each of those policemen sees his possible death as unnecessary toll in the foreplay which is supposed to provide peaceful mutation of Kosovo into an autonomous province.On the other hand, it is also supposed to train those Serbs who are demanding better life, security, progress and democracy in the middle of fight for Kosovo.=20 After such a fight for Kosovo, in which we prove to Albanians that their blood is red, and in which they spill our blood for the same reason, Serbs will never be heavenly nation again. Autonomy of Kosovo will be an airport which will land us permanently. I am not so sure that it would be an end to the lesson. As means for flight control of some future pilots, I propose memory of a boy who died asking for three pairs of socks, simple cookies, his mother and his life. He evn did not know it was so Serbian, so Obilic-like. Now he knows!=20 --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl