Clock

The boy had not seen them for a long time. He missed them. And sometimes wishes do come true.One.....

CLOCK

CLOCK

CLOCK

The boy had not seen them for a long time. He missed them. And sometimes wishes do come true.

One winter evening, someone knocked on the door of the apartment where he lived with his parents and grandmother. When the door opened, he heard his grandfather's voice. He came from afar, from Donja Velešnja. His mother had been telling him for two years that they couldn't go there because there was a war. Serbs were fighting against Croats, fearing a repeat of what had happened to them not so long ago. That's how he understood his mother.

The embrace between the boy and his grandfather was firm and warm. He came for a short visit, just one day, to see them, buy something in town, bring them a little something, from his hand and heart. And to leave them a clock. A clock he got from a woman, a German, with whom he worked when he was in Germany as a prisoner of war.

He tells the boy that his uncle and grandmother send their regards and can't wait to see him. The boy is joyful, listening to his grandfather's stories for a long time. Even when he went to bed, excitement kept him from falling asleep.

The day awakens and quickly passes, the boy talks with his grandfather, plays chess, looks at the clock's case, opens it, and takes out a beautiful, silver watch with a long chain. The hands have stopped. But time still flows quickly. He smells a strong scent of hay and the barn that he loves so much.

The day passes, and evening falls. Father and grandfather, with the boy in the car, head to the train station. And there, the memory becomes blurry...

The boy has grown up, matured into a man. But he has never seen his grandfather again. From the beginning, now he understands, of the civil war in Croatia, the boy did not see his uncle, who died during the war, nor his grandmother. Grandfather and grandmother, who were captured by the Croatian army after "Operation Storm," interrogated, and lived a little longer, passed away in their home, far away from him.

Hundreds of thousands of his people fled from the Croats. Thousands of them did not...

The clock was never repaired. No one had parts for it. But it still stands neatly in its black case. Whenever the man wishes to feel the scent he loved and loves, the scent of distant times, the scent of the barn and hay, he opens the case and takes a deep breath to absorb the fragrance, the fragrance of the past, the fragrance of all those days and nights he was supposed to spend with his loved ones, stolen from him by war.

The clock has stopped, but its heart beats, and its soul preserves memories. It refuses to forget them and will never let them go.

Igor Tintor

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Igor Tintor was born in Belgrade in 1979. He is a member of the Association of Writers of Serbia, the Association of Writers of Serbia, the Association of Serbian Writers in the Homeland and the Diaspora. So far, he has published five lyrical collections of poetry: "Dreams from Reality," "Two Sides of the Medal," "Nomad Poems," "Dislocation," "Faces of Love" from 2009 to 2013 for USKOR, as well as the drama-lyrical epic "Repentance" in 2015. In the same year, he released the historical epic "The Fall of Constantinople" and the two-book "Dramolets" and "Nameless." His next work is published by IP Prosveta, titled "Poetry of Life and Death" in 2016. Then, IP Prosveta publishes his novel "The Path of Blindness" in 2018. In 2021, IP Prosveta publishes a collaborative work with the prose and poetic creator Marina Matić titled "One," followed by poetry collections "Marina," "Indivisible," "You Eternal Love," and "Before God and Before You," in the same year. He lives and works as a freelance artist in his hometown.
INTRODUCTION

This work is dedicated to all the victims of the fascist entity, the Independent State of Croatia, with a special focus on the mass crimes against the Serbian population during the first two years of the existence of this criminal regime. During this time, hundreds of thousands of children, women, and men were forcibly displaced and brutally killed in camps throughout that fascist entity, and the survivors were forcibly converted to Catholicism.

The work is based on the testimonies of survivors, confirmed historical facts, seen from the perspectives of the victims and perpetrators, including the final moments of those who perished in pits, camps, their villages, cities, homes, and fields, killed by their former neighbors of Croatian nationality.

While reading documentation about atrocities committed against Serbs, Jews, Roma, and a few Croats who refused to serve the fascist regime, along with testimonies from surviving members of my family and many others, I can say that I am fully aware of the unprecedented extent of the crimes in the history of humanity against my Serbian people in the territory of today's Republic of Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and parts of Vojvodina under the occupation of the Croatian fascist regime.

One historical fact is most terrifying. In the territory of the Independent State of Croatia at that time, there were camps for the extermination of children, and there was a plan, partially realized, to exterminate and kill thirty thousand children. Fifteen thousand boys and girls were killed by knives, hunger, torture...

Why did I write this work? My people have a short memory. I hope that this work will also help Serbs remember, respect our victims, and prevent such atrocities from ever happening again. Yet, we allowed crimes and the largest ethnic cleansing of our people after World War II in "Operation Flash" and "Storm," carried out by Croats in 1995.

I have only one message for you, readers. We never seek revenge, but we remember forever.

Igor Tintor
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