Wednesday 5 June
At Vukovar. This is one of the few calling points on this
cruise whose name is familiar. Mohacs, Vidin, Pleven, Tulcea, Novi Sad, Rousse,
Cernavoda... maybe I ought to have heard of these because they are all sizeable
towns but I hold my hand up to admit that I haven’t. (Yes I know, of course
we’ve heard of Budapest, Bucharest and Belgrade too... but these are capital
cities, so there’d be no excuse.) But Vukovar? Surely everyone who lived
through the 1990s and was paying even the slightest attention to the news from
beyond our shores has heard of this little place on the Croatian (south) bank
of the Danube. For this was right in the front line of the Yugoslav War between
Serbia and Croatia, and took a terrible hammering in the conflict in the autumn
of 1991.
Our young guide is one of the best we’ve had on this voyage.
She tells us she studied English and German at university, but she has an
intellectual and cultural hinterland that’s impressive. She cuts straight to
the chase as we form up in our group. “Over there you can see the town’s water
tower, built in the 1970s. It was hit in the war of 1991. It’s a symbol of all
that Vukovar suffered in that year. This city was almost completely flattened
in the war. Those buildings that weren’t destroyed were riddled with bullet
holes that bear witness to the ferocity of the fighting. Some of them are being
restored but others have been left as they are, as a memorial to the conflict
of that year.”
I was in my early forties in 1991. At Coventry Cathedral
where I worked at the time, we raised money for the victims of the conflict and
filled enormous skips with foodstuffs, medical supplies, blankets and
children’s toys for Vukovar. But I’m ashamed to say that I had only the vaguest
understanding of the political and ethnic roots of this conflict that was
happening, not on the other side of the world but in our own continent of
Europe. In particular, I had forgotten that the Danube was the front line of
the war between Serbia and Croatia; neither had I remembered the three month
Siege of Vukovar, nor one of the very worst of the atrocities, the assault on
the town hospital when two hundred non-Serbian patients and staff were taken
away in trucks, corralled in a remote farmhouse for three days, then
slaughtered like cattle. And they were only some of the many thousands of
victims (on both sides) who perished by the Danube that year.
This is the first time we’ve felt that a guide has been
candid with us about the events of a quarter of a century ago. Of course, the
narrative is much more complex than a tour guide can possibly present in a few
minutes. But there’s no dispute that the war happened as a direct result of
Yugoslav President Slobodan Milocevic’s expansionist plans for a Greater Serbia,
aided by Serbian militia leaders, in particular Jaradan Karadic, This is the
“secret in the family” that we’ve found it so hard to penetrate in conversation
with Serbians. It is incredibly hard for them to speak about their recent
shameful past. It’s always easier for the victim to tell the story than the
oppressor who has been shamed before the world, as the trials for war
crimes and genocide at The Hague have done.
So I ask our Croatian guide about relationships with Serbia
today. “They are normalising” she says, without hesitating, but I suspect
choosing her words with care. “Another generation has grown up since those
days. The young think in different ways from their parents and grandparents.
This country is now a member of the European Union. My generation wants to
break down barriers, not erect them. So our relations with Serbia are no
different from those with any other of our neighbours. Maybe she wants to add,
“even if the history will still haunt us for many years to come.” The healing of
memories doesn’t happen in a few short years. And as I’ve written already, the
ethnic fault lines haven’t gone away. 30 per cent of Vukovar’s population is
Serb. In this Catholic country, there are sizeable minorities of Orthodox
believers. And although religion did not (she says) play a part in the Croatian
conflict (which sets it apart from those in Bosnia and Kosovo), its temples and
rituals still act as markers of identity. Peace and reconciliation are real
enough here, I think. But it’s sobering to realise how hard-won they are, how
fragile they must continue to be for decades to come.
She is speaking as we drive past the railway station. “We
don’t have trains any more” she laments. The building is ruinous. It cuts a
forlorn figure among the twenty first century industrial and commercial
buildings going up all round it. I badly want to get out and photograph this
poignant scene, but time is not on our side. I do my best from the coach and
wonder, not for the first time on this cruise, how humanity can be so brutal to
its own kind, how little our race has learned from the relentless wars and
conflicts that have bloodied the soil of our continent.
We are reminded that Croatia has been a member of the EU
since 2013, the second of the former Yugoslav states to join (the first was
Slovenia which joined as far back as 2004 and is in the Eurozone, unlike
Croatia). I ask what effect EU membership has had on the country. It’s mixed,
says our guide. On the one hand the young especially value the freedom of movement
they didn’t know before. On the other hand, there has not (yet) been much
inward investment to show for member status, so there’s been a brain drain of
young bright able professionals to Germany especially, and also (surprisingly?)
Ireland. She doesn’t mention the EU funds that have helped reconstruct the
country since the war and developed its transport infrastructure, particularly
here in Slavonia. A long way from the national capital Zagreb and the country’s
celebrated coast, East Croatia is not much visited by tourists. Which is why
she thanks us for coming to this less well known part of her country. It’s
sincerely meant.
40 kilometres over the level plain and along an
arrow-straight road stands the city of Osijek, the fourth largest in Croatia.
The name means “ebb tide” because it stands slightly above the marshlands of
the Drava flood-plain that always threatened to flood the environment. Murad of
antiquity, it was a colonia of the Empire in Hadrian’s time. After the Ottoman
centuries it was taken by the Habsburgs in the late seventeenth century and the
old city is hallmarked with Austro-Hungarian splendour. The eighteenth century
town includes grand military buildings, a courthouse and a Friary with a large
baroque church popularly known as Saint Antony’s. Of Padua, this one, patron
saint of lost things and lost causes, depicted on a large eighteenth century
painting of dubious quality but undeniable charm, and better still, in a
contemporary sculpture outside, He is holding the infant Jesus seated on the
book of the scriptures, a pose familiar all over Europe. “Tony, Tony, come
around, / Something’s lost and must be found” quips our guide.
And indeed we seem to be back in the catholic west in this
royal free city where the spirit of Empress Maria Theresa might have walked
last week. You feel that Budapest and Vienna can’t be far away. Trinity Square,
surely one of the most elegant piazzas in Europe, is dominated by a column
dominated by a baroque sculpture of the Holy Trinity. It was put up in 1729 to
give thanks for the end of the plague Osijek had suffered and that had carried
off some of its most distinguished citizens. I can’t recall ever having set
eyes on a full-blown sculpture of the Trinity before, certainly not in a public
square. I’m uneasy about the theological propriety of this, if I’m honest, but
the patron or sculptor would no doubt reply that if it’s permitted to paint the
Trinity, why should a sculpture be inappropriate? But this is precisely the
point. What our visits to Orthodox churches have taught us is that painting is
an entirely different medium from plastic sculpture. A two-dimensional drawing
or painting is a “projection” that demands to be read in a symbolic way
(because that’s the only way to make sense of it). A three dimensional
“representation” - a bust, a statue - risks being reified into an object in its
own right as if to say, the reality is just like this, only bigger. That
clearly won’t do in a monotheistic religion. Which is why the iconoclastic
controversy is so important in the development of the separate artistic
traditions of the churches of the east and the
west.

This old city would be the perfect imperial picture postcard
except for one thing: the pockmarked buildings that remind us of a conflict
much more recent than the War of the Spanish Succession or the Napoleonic
campaigns. Eight hundred people were killed when the town was shelled from August 1991 to
June 1992, about half the total number of citizens from Osijek killed in the
Croatian War of Independence. And lest my account has seemed to be heavily
tilted against the Serbian expansionism that gave rise to the conflict in the
first place, its important to recall that at least five Croatian officials were
indicted for war crimes against the Osijek Serbs. Here as everywhere else,
conflict brutalises all its participants. In these Balkan wars, everyone was a
victim in the end. As was truth, always the first casualty of war.
The complete story, inevitably much more complex and
intractable than popular narrative, has yet to be told here in the lower
Danube. Some historians say we are not even close to gaining a full perspective
on the Great War more than a hundred years ago, let alone this one. It takes
time for history to coalesce, settle down into a shape and configuration that
its participants can own for themselves. Just as I’m aware, as the cruise comes
to an end, that my own first impressions of it jotted down in this blog will
take time to mature, become nuanced, even begin to do justice to the complexity
of what I have seen and learned in this fortnight on the river. How do you take
in such a tangled, such an ancient, such a contested political history from the
deck of a luxury cruise ship and the window of an air-conditioned coach? What,
intellectually speaking, is “responsible tourism” in these circumstances?

We wander round Osijek’s civic centre, a triangular piazza
where the only wheels allowed apart from bicycles and push chairs are the
trams. They have been running for 135 years, says our guide proudly. So this is
a real city. It feels lively enough to qualify, even if it only has a
pro-cathedral, the red brick neo-gothic church of St Peter and St Paul whose
spires dominate the town. Outside, children are playing in the fountains and
clambering on to a bronze sculpture depicting the citizens of Osijek. By the
marina coffee shops are doing a brisk trade. There’s a holiday atmosphere here.
The long summer school vacation is about to begin.
As we arrive back at the ship, a few of us notice what looks
like a haphazard pile of concrete slabs on the grass by the quayside. This
turns out to be a striking and eloquent sculpture. The slabs have been cut,
presumably from buildings destroyed in the war, with triangular heads to
resemble rough-hewn tombstones. On each is a “found” relic of the conflict - a
piece of shattered glass, a graffito, pieces of twisted steel. The stones are
all leaning over at crazy angles like a procession of dominoes frozen at the
moment of toppling. For this is indeed “the toppling city”, a town so
completely shattered by war yet with its spirit, even in the act of falling,
not torn from it, not yet, not ever. It reminds me of the “Plumb Line and the
City” sculpture in Coventry Cathedral where the uprightness and integrity of a
community, symbolised by buildings of every shape and size, is measured against
Amos’ vertical plumb line suspended above it. Here, nothing is straight,
nothing is true, nothing stands upright any more.
And yet the spirit of the place, its daemon if you like, is
undefeated despite the worst that the aggressor can do. Why did not our
excellent guide mention it when the sculpture is clearly meant to be the first
thing you see when you land in this damaged but powerfully evocative place?
It’s another of those visits on this cruise that would not be on anyone’s
bucket list for scenic beauty but is so well worth spending time in for all
that it has to tell us about the times in which we live.
So taken am I with this sculpture that I forget to check the time. I am the last on board, only a couple of minutes late, but nonetheless chided for it (in the nicest possible way). Everyone knows that I'm the one the ship is waiting for because when we go ashore, we check ourselves out with our electronic key cards, and check back in again when we return. I'm sure this is a detail of twenty-first century cruising that readers of this blog would want to know about.
********
The ship sets off on its last and longest leg back
upstream to Budapest. The community resumes its dreamy existence dislocated
from the historical turbulence of these troubled shores. There is afternoon tea
in the lounge with cakes and conversation to enjoy. Apart from that I spend the
afternoon on deck watching the miles of forest drift by, interspersed by the
occasional settlement that has gathered round a white baroque church spire. I
realise again how remote this landscape is, how little populated. I’ve already
written about the lack of drama on this cruise compared with the Upper Danube
and still more the Rhine. There is little to see other than at the high points
of any Danube voyage such as the Iron Gates. But this very evenness is part of
the beauty of it, this fortnight of green, ordinary time that has a mesmeric,
almost retreat-like quality because of the way it distends the cycles of each
day. Millions of trees, vast expanses of water, wide skies become all the more miraculous
when there is nothing else to look at. This for me is the most important
spiritual insight of this fortnight. As I’ve said, it makes a contemplative out
of me - or has the potential to if only I will let it.
But there is one moment of drama that takes us by surprise
and has us holding on to our hats - literally. We’ve all noticed how high
the river is at present, flooding the banks, invading the forests, its level
even swallowing up the bottom of the tree canopy. We approach a border bridge that
carries a railway line. It can scarcely be higher than the height of this
ship’s bridge. In fact, we would collide with it were it not for some clever
technology that lowers the entire bridge, foremast and everything else
protruding above deck level. One of the crew walks along and tells us to sit
down as we pass underneath. You could literally touch the steel girders. If the
river were a few inches higher, this stretch would be impassable to ships like
ours. It’s an exciting photo opportunity we SLR brigade are not expecting.
By dinner time I’m left entirely alone on deck. I’ve loved
these hours of solitude with the woods and the water and the reddening sky.
It’s like being on the beach when everyone else has packed up their things and
gone home. It’s a travel-writing cliché to talk about the magic of such
moments. It would take a Delius to find a musical language that could do
justice to this peace and tranquility of a Summer Night on the River. And a
Wordsworth to do the same in poetry, given that we are sailing on his eponymous
ship.
Tonight there’s a pub quiz to test our knowledge of the
Danube and the places we’ve visited. Our foursome does pretty well, though we
struggle to match memories and mental images to so many of these places with
(to us) unpronounceable names. Two weeks of five countries with their
distinctive landscapes, cities and towns, their churches and mosques, their
citadels and antiquities, flow into one another. How did that great Danubian
writer Patrick Leigh Fermor keep his memories distinct, unentangled, write it
all down with a hindsight that was so clear, so focused?
But maybe it doesn’t matter too much. What matters is the
experience of the river and its people that has touched us, maybe changed our
perceptions in important ways. Could it have been transformative? Only time
will tell.
The ship sails on towards Hungary.
Tuesday 4 June
We awaken to thick fog. Both banks of the river are clothed
in the mist. Occasionally the ghostly outline of an onion-spited church or a
house can be glimpsed among trees that are no more than shadows on the river banks. From time to time tree trunks and branches drift languidly by. The fog emphasises our insulation from the world we are gliding through. We sail on in this capsule that is gliding so effortlessly across Eastern and Central Europe.
I speculate about the hazards of navigating
in these conditions. I’ve read enough about the Danube to realise how tricky it
is to stay safely within the deep water channels, avoid the sandbars that are
constantly shifting with the changing currents of the Danube as it responds to
rainfall and snowmelt upstream. These 135 metre-long river cruisers are flat
bottomed, enabling them to negotiate the river in all but the driest conditions
(I came across a bitter complaint on social media from last year telling us
how, when customers were already en route for the airport, Riviera had had to
cancel a cruise because there was not enough water in the river to navigate
safely).
After breakfast the mist has cleared and we go out on deck
to enjoy the sunshine. We have now travelled beyond the Romanian border, so all
around it is Serbia. Pretty villages line the river bank on the south side
where a line of hills sweeps down to the river. The Danube is very high round
here. On the north bank, there is extensive flooding isolating horses, cattle
and pigs. Bird life is abundant, and a group of voyagers has gathered with
their field glasses and notebooks pointing out what’s to be seen - storks,
terns, Black-winged stilts, squacco herons, bee-eaters nesting in holes in sandy
banks, wagtails, little winged plovers, a white-tailed eagle, and even
golden orioles - heard but not seen.
That’s an impressive list of fauna, but I claim no
credit for it. I've no eye for bird life, alas. It calls for an attention to detail that I seem not to have been gifted with. I've always been drawn to the bigger picture. But I've enjoyed overhearing what these experts have been discussing
for an hour this morning - obsessives they tell me they are happy to be called. One of them
says that the history and politics have passed him by on this voyage, but the ornithology
has been to die for. He could sit on deck all day peering into the forests to enjoy their natural history. I reply how good it is that on this cruise there is
something for everyone. But another affirms that for her, the history and politics
have been eye-opening. “This voyage on the Danube has made me a better
European” she says with real conviction. I love that because it’s been
precisely the same for me.
We draw in to Novi Sad. My guide book is unremittingly
negative about this once elegant Habsburg city, Serbia’s second largest with a quarter of million inhabitants. It suffered badly in
the Balkan wars, all three Danube bridges being destroyed in 1999. Our Serbian
guide corrects one misapprehension about this. It’s said that NATO bombed them
all. In fact, the bridge by Vauban’s citadel was blown up by Serbian forces
themselves to avoid offering up the citadel as a target for the bombers. Now
these three bridges have been rebuilt, the finest of them an “infinity” bridge
like Stockton’s, opened last year.
We take a coach tour of the city, and there is more Serbian
history to go with it. Novi Sad (= "new orchard") is another very ancient settlement that became Roman Cusum when it was conquered and incorporated into the imperial province of Pannonia. We see Roman tombs outside the museum in which there is a good collection of antiquities. I wish we had time to look inside. In the centuries following the collapse of the Roman Empire, the city had a complicated history in which Hungarians, Slavs and later the Ottoman Empire all vied for control. In Habsburg days it was Ratzen Stadt, "Serb City".
We get to the final decade of the twentieth century and the terrible cost of Yugoslavia's break-up. Unlike a previous Serbian guide, today's doesn’t dismiss the 1990s as merely
“difficult”. She points out that Serbia sits on fault lines that divide
Rome from Constantinople, and Catholic from Orthodox, and Christian from Moslem, and after the last world war, all
faith groups from the communists. So it’s not surprising that conflict is an
ever-present risk in this part of Europe. And because whoever controls the
Danube controls central Europe, Novi Sad’s bridges are always going to be vulnerable
to attack. “It’s happened for centuries” she says, “and the 1990s attacks will
probably not be the last”. It’s a sobering introduction to the city.
We drive round the citadel, noting the entrances to the
tunnels that Empress Maria Theresa ordered to be constructed underneath the
fortifications. Mention of her name introduces the geographical position of
this place. Our guide says we are not to think of Novi Sad as a Balkan city but
rather as belonging to the Pannonian Plain that links it to the Austrian-Hungarian
Empire. This is a highly cosmopolitan city she says, in which no fewer than
eight languages are officially recognised. And as we drive round, we can’t help
noticing the colourful, vibrant character of the centre. It’s a lot better
than my gloomy prognostications informed by my book - but then that
was written closer to the destructive Balkan wars than we are now. I have
already decided that I like this place a lot more than Belgrade.

We walk round the centre. In the Orthodox Church our guide
explains that it is strongly influenced by western ecclesiastical architecture.
Completed only in 1903 rather in the style of a London Wren church, it has
stained glass windows, most unusual for a church in the east. She elaborates on
further differences between Orthodox and Catholic architecture and
spirituality, including an excursus on the Iconoclastic controversy in order to
explain why Orthodox churches are filled with paintings but have no sculpture.
The significance of the iconostasis is explained, as is the liturgy of
Orthodoxy with its Little and Great Entrances. And the importance of the
eastern tradition of standing throughout the liturgy. It’s good that all this
is spelled out to people who may be unfamiliar with the practices of the
Orthodox (or, for that matter, any other) Church.
In the free time we have we wander round the streets,
and visit the Catholic Church in the central square (for there is a significant
minority Catholic community here). It’s a nicely designed hall church whose
aisle vaults reach the same height as the central nave.
But after the Orthodox
Church, it leaves us cold. There isn’t the same spirit of devotion here,
somehow, the same fervour, the same conviction. I can’t explain it, but for the
first time I begin to see what it is that many western Christians find so
appealing about Eastern Christianity. One of my theological students is now an
Orthodox priest, while another has made the journey there and come back to
Anglicanism, albeit enriched by his experience. I recall my discussion with our
Bulgarian young guide Peter on the coach, how he complained that his Catholic
upbringing gave him no hint of the rich treasures of mystical prayer that
Orthodoxy had opened up for him. There’s a clear lesson for us practitioners
of western Christianity. Whatever else it is, it
needs to be more impassioned, more affective, less milk-and-water, less sweetly
reasonable, less afraid of touching and changing lives. This, I imagine, is what lies behind these
"Thy Kingdom Come" days between Ascension and Pentecost that we are travelling
through at this precise time.
Back on the ship I sit by the open window and gaze out at
the river. It’s a lazy, sultry afternoon. We’ve already had one thunderstorm
today, but the cumulonimbus is piling up again and promises more to
come. A push-tug propels a heavy load of barges upstream at barely more reaching
walking pace against a fierce current energised by the recent downpours. This
journey is almost at an end. We have come a long way together, and I’m clear
that my writing about it is only the beginning of the search for understanding
what it may mean for my own Europeanism and my grasp of this continent’s past,
present and future. There is so much I realise I don’t know. What wasn’t I
paying attention to all these years? Why has this closed book of Eastern Europe
only now begun to open for me, in just the same way as classical Greece did
last autumn?
But there is still time for curiosity and discovery even
this late in life. “Old men should be explorers” said Joseph Haydn in old age,
a man from the golden age of imperial Austria-Hungary whose ear for the natural
world was so well-tuned and whose music, therefore, must have been inspired by
the Danube that flowed through the landscapes that he loved. I
hope I can live and die as an explorer of the spirit. A voyage like this is the
best possible metaphor, as it is the best possible stimulus too.

Monday 3 June
We wake up early to a lot of noisy movement going on round
the ship. We are back in the Iron Gate Lock - the upper system where (going
upstream) the ship is lifted a full 40 feet while the mountain suddenly close
in all round, the Carpathians on the Romanian side to the north, the Balkans to
the south. This right bank is now Serbia, as I find having had a
text message to say that I have left my mobile phone’s roaming switched on and
have incurred unintended internet costs. I hastily turn it off where it will
stay until we renter a friendly EU country.
It is overcast but the scenery all round is magnificent -
grander than I remember it a week ago when we were sailing downstream. I
imagine we are gliding along a Norwegian fjord, the surface of the water calm
and deep and still, unruffled save for our vessel that cuts its path cleanly
through the mirror leaving behind two beautiful hyperbolas of glassy waves that
curl their way to the shore on either side. Providence arranges that I am on
the correct side of the ship when I suddenly notice the famous Roman tablet,
the “Tabula Traiana” set into the cliffs just above the surface of the water. I
had missed this completely on the way down. It commemorates the Emperor Trajan
(one of the good ones, Hadrian’s predecessor and champion) who built his road
along the side of the canyon so that traffic could avoid navigating the
river on this deadly stretch of rapids, whirlpools and
cataracts. Just a little further up, Decabolos grabs everyone’s attention once
again, together with the beautiful little monastery at the water’s edge, its
petite towers setting off this marvellously dramatic stretch of the Danube to
perfection.
Our expedition today is the Mesolithic site of Lepenski Vir.
It would be nice to think that everyone who reads this blog has heard of this
remarkable place. I certainly hadn’t. Yet it can claim to be one of the most
important Stone Age sites in the world. Dating from 9000-6000 BCE, just after
the glaciers had started to retreat, Lepenski Vir is possibly the earliest city
in the world, not only in terms of its social and economic organisation but its
traditions of art and sculpture.

The 600 metre red porphyric rock called Treskavac rears up
dramatically above the original site on the left bank. It dominates this
stretch of the river, glowing spectacularly when the summer sun is setting on
it. This seems explain why this part of the Danube was settled by nomads who
decided to adopt the settled life of hunter-gatherers. It no doubt carried
religious and totemic significance as it guarded the settlement as well as
providing a navigational point of reference and, not least, acting as a
lightning conductor due to the strong iron content of the rock. It’s also
suggested that this stretch of the river was especially rich in nutrients and
therefore fish because of how the water was stirred up by the rapids and
whirlpools of the Iron Gate Gorge.
All this is in the past tense, because the original
archaeological site no longer exists. Along with others in the gorge, it was
flooded in the 1970s following the construction of the hydro-electric Iron Gate
Barrage through which we have passed today. The dam has been blamed for the
destruction of so much that was unique to the gorge, not just the natural river
conditions but the towns and villages that had been established in the shelter
beneath the crags since antiquity. The loss to archaeology was incalculable.
I’ve already mentioned Trajan’s road, now under several metres of water. But
paradoxically, Lepenski Vir might never have been discovered had it not been
for the extensive archaeological surveys that the construction of the dam
precipitated between 1965 and 1970. Of the middle Stone Age sites, LV was
reckoned to be the most important and the best preserved.

Removed to a higher level upstream, but still in clear sight
of the rock, LV is now contained in a striking iron-framed glass structure a
bit like a vast greenhouse. It’s a distant cousin of the Sage, Gateshead, also
on the south bank looking north across a great river. The foundations of the
trapezoidal houses are laid out on concrete foundations (yes, concrete! - we
forget how ancient this material is, and how the Romans exploited it in the
construction of some of their greatest buildings such as the Pantheon). Outside
the museum is a model of how one might have looked with thatched roof, a low
entrance and an opening above to release smoke from the fire burning inside.
Round the foundations of some of these houses are triangular designs, now
established as representing the numbers of generations that have lived in each
house. One has no fewer than nine of them.
The highlight of this memorable museum is the gallery where
excavated artefacts are displayed. A human skeleton shows the height to which
the men at LV grew - up to six feet, which contradicts the oft-quoted
assumption that in prehistory, people did not grow very tall because they were
not as well nourished as in historical times. Our guide speculates on the role
a healthy diet may have played in this. It’s clear that the people of LV only
ate fish, nuts and vegetables, probably not meat (or not much) and remarkably,
not fruit or berries, thus subsisting on a diet free of both animal fats and
sugars, yet still high in proteins. Maybe we should imitate them?
But best of all in the gallery are the sculptures. Some are
purely decorative, geometric lattice patterns carved into the stone and
bringing it to life by imparting depth and texture. Others are busts of human
beings. I’m not sure if their significance has been fully understood yet. They
may depict heads of families or communities. They may represent ancestors to be
honoured. They may have religious significance symbolising the gods. Whatever
the meaning, they are highly evocative, among the most beautiful artefacts
we’ve seen on this extraordinary journey.
A final reflection strikes me as we leave the site. When we
arrived we were shown a short film made in the late 1960s chronicling the
discoveries at Lepenski Vir. The quality is terrible and you have to wonder why
a presentation on a site of this importance isn’t graced by something a lot
slicker and better. Yet it’s done with a lightness of touch that’s endearing.
To begin with, we see archaeologists shunning the camera crew as if to say, we are
experts here, not entertainers. By the end, having uncovered their marvellous
finds, they are filmed laughing and dancing in satisfaction for a project
that’s proved so rewarding. Many of this talented team of Serbian
archaeologists of more than half a century ago will now be dead. They have
joined the people of Lepenski Vir as those who are remembered but gone from us
into the shadowlands of death. I’m sobered by that thought about my own
mortality triggered a yellowing grainy film whose prehistoric stars still speak
to us so long after they have left the stage for good.

On getting back we wander round the village where we are
berthed. The whole of it was built to replace its flooded forebear, but it’s
been done with charm and with a thought to preserving a sense of scale. Pretty
pantile roofs everywhere, shops, cafes and leafy streets where children are
playing. In the church, paintings retrieved from the old building on the
riverbed are now displayed among the icons. A rusting steam engine from the nineteenth
century stands in front of the town hall - its wheels are without flanges and
it has a huge flywheel attached to its smoke box so was it a stationary engine
that used to haul ships by ropes up the canyon in this dangerous gorge? There’s
a market happening alongside it where beautiful fabrics are for sale at
ridiculous (to us) prices. I buy J a
coral-red silk scarf, but it’s the lace that catches everyone’s eye. I think of
my high church friends in the UK who would die for this.
Our impression is that Serbian villages are in better
shape than the Bulgarian villages we have seen downstream. Is this a
consequence of the different political history of Tito’s Yugoslavia that
bravely stood outside the bleak mainstream of Eastern European communism? Our
guide, like her two predecessors in Serbia, is keen to talk up her country.
“Tourism is very important to us n that we are recovering from the difficult
times of the 1990s.” Yet she allows no time for questions that might
probe this enigmatic statement. “Difficult times” is a euphemism for a brutal
war in which Serbia played a central part and whose nationalistic leaders
brought untold suffering through their policies of ethnic cleansing in Bosnia
and Kosovo.
It’s a deeply unhappy story, but Serbia seems not to be able
to speak about it in the way that, say, Germany is able to acknowledge its role
in the last war in a mature and reflective way. The ethnic fault lines that lay
across the Balkans in the 1990s still exist, just as the geological fault lines
do in this earthquake zone. Maybe EU membership on the part of some or all of
the Balkan nation’s May bring about a lasting peace. We haven’t heard about
that either, here in Serbia. Tomorrow we are in Novi Sad, Serbia’s second city.
Who knows what we’ll learn there in a place that experienced severe NATO
bombing in an attempt to deter the bellicose Serbs from their hostile activity
against their neighbours?