My First Step Abroad
By Micho Stefanovski
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It was early March in 1948. The ground was still
wet after a record snowfall early in February, the
sub-zero temperature did not deter the villagers
to venture out from their semi-hibernation to begin
the cycle over the land as their fathers and grandfathers
did for centuries before them.
This coming spring, however, must have been very
difficult for the villagers to begin their never
ending chores as most of their equipment and grain
supplies were lost six months earlier when the army
burnt down most of the village.
They were willing to recoup their losses however
if only the two warring factious had left them alone.
Drenichevo (Kranohori in Greek) a small village
situated close to the highway between Kostur (Kastoria)
and
the
small provincial town of Nestram (Nestourion) was
the meat in the sandwich between the Greek army and
the partisans. The army had kept a garrison in Nestram
and that garrison had to be supplied with food and
military equipment every second week.
Every time the army had tried to bring in some supplies
to Nestram, the partisans would attack the convoy,
consisting of trucks, mules, horses and donkeys,
to disrupt the supply lines. The partisans would
enter my village, taking positions in the church,
school and strategically placed houses to fire on
the convoy. The army in return would fire back with
machine gun fire, mortar and artillery shells into
the village.
These never-ending battles had a devastating effect
on the villagers, disrupting their daily lives with
fields unharvested, fodder and hay uncollected, firewood
uncut and so on. Early in March, rumours reached
Drenichevo that the army was about to launch an offensive
against partisan lines near the village of Gradche
(Ftelia) about four kilometres west of Drenichevo.
It was crystal clear that the partisans would never
allow at any cost the army to reach their front line
positions so the battle would be fought between Drenichevo
and Gradche. There was another rumour however, even
more disturbing for my village than the first one.
The army will occupy Drenichevo and send all the
population into exile.
My father was very disturbed about these rumours.
He actually worried more about our livestock than
the safety of my family. After all the land and our
animals provided us with food to live on, without
them there would be no life. We decided that the
only way to beat the army offensive was to get all
our animals out of Drenichevo and into partisan controlled
territories. By the 10th March, my father and I and
with many other villagers set out with our animals
to reach safety behind partisan lines which were
situated a couple of kilometres west of Gradche.
I never said good-bye to my mother, brothers, sister
or to my aunty Melyovitsa. We assumed that the trip
would last only a week or two as it did during WW2
fleeing the Germans for the same reasons.
The exodus from Drenichevo was slow and painful.
People would get out from their charred houses to
see where we were going. Some of them wanted to join
us, but others just cursed us for creating an unnecessary
panic and mayhem. It took us nearly two hours to
reach the outskirts of Gradche where two plain clothed
partisans with guns were manning a checkpoint. They
wanted to know about us and where we were heading.
A written pass or some kind of permission was issued
to us on a scrap of paper to enter the partisan controlled
zone. We went through Gradche very quickly and headed
for the hills of Sveti Ilija and Popov Vr. Actually,
Gradche means 'a little town' in Macedonian. I wonder
what history and ancient past glories lies buried
under the ruins of this little village.
About one kilometre west of Gradche, we came to
another checkpoint manned by several uniformed partisans.
They took away our passes and let us continue our
journey. The narrow path was taking us higher and
higher into the hills. We could see bunkers nearby
and partisans sitting or lying around. They were
dirty, badly clothed and possessing a variety of
weapons, such as English made 303 rifles and Bren
guns, Italian made sub machine guns and machine guns,
German made ERMA MP40 or Stager and Smazer submachine
guns and of course the famous German made fast firing
M634 machine guns. They were just as deadly as any
modern weapon in the Greek army armour. Half way
up the hill, we could see more bunkers and more partisans
sitting or lying around. One young partisan no more
than 18 or 19 years old came to my father asking
for food. He said it was a hard and difficult winter
and he said that they were practically starving.
My father reached for the bag he was carrying, gave
him one large loaf of bread and kept one for ourselves.
The young partisan got down on his knees, grabbed
my father's hand and kissed him. "Thank you
chichko" (uncle), he said several times and
went back to share the meal with his comrades. It
was obvious that these boys were starving. How they
fought the enemy on a empty stomach was anybody's
guess. When we reached the top of the hills, a place
called the Cradle of Garleni (Hionatou), we could
see many women and older men constructing or repairing
a series of bunkers. They would drag timber logs
from great distances to reinforce these bunkers damaged
during recent fighting. Heaps of spent machine-gun
and rifle cartridges were lying around. Hundreds
of artillery made craters were scattered near the
bunkers. The land was practically covered with small
and large pieces of rusting shrapnel. It looked like
a moonscape.
From there on it was all the way down to the Turkish
built little village of Garleni (Hionatou). The present
inhabitants were refugees from Turkey brought in
by the Greek government in 1923 after the Greco-Turkish
war in 1922. Most of these people were monarchists
siding with the army. During the early days of the
Greek Civil War, they fled their homes for the safety
in army controlled territories.
The task of finding accommodation for us and the
animals was left to the partisan officials. There
were many empty houses but the influx of people from
other villages fleeing the army had made the matter
a lot more difficult. We were given a half burnt
house near the centre of the village. The large earth
floored room with a large fireplace must have been
a kitchen and a storeroom combined. Another room
on the other side of the house was occupied by the
partisans using it as a telephone or telegraph room
relaying messages to other units in the area. My
father and I together with at least ten other people
had to share the room for the duration of our stay
in that village.
We slept on the cold and hard floor with one blanket
as a mattress and another to cover ourselves. To
keep us warm, we kept the fireplace going 24 hours
a day. Next to our room there were some barns for
our animals. From the first day of our arrival, my
job was to take our sheep and lambs for grazing in
the countryside. Father would look after the bulls
and other animals at home. Soon after the second
day we completely ran out of food. We drank some
milk from our sheep but milk after all is only water
and not very filling. This problem was widespread
throughout the village. People complained of hunger
and partisan authorities were powerless to rectify
the problem. After all they needed more food themselves
to fight the enemy than us. Some shipment of cornbread
was organized to be shipped from Albania with mules
during the night. It was equally distributed throughout
the village. Our ration was one slice of cornbread
a day. I would take my slice with me out to work,
cut it in half with my penknife. I would eat half
of the slice for lunch and bring the other half home
to be eaten for dinner before going to sleep. At
night before going to sleep the older people would
tell stories about their terrible experiences since
the days of the 1903 uprising. Their fight for freedom
against the Turks. Stories about the war in 1912-13
when our neighbours divided our land. Stories about
the Greek army arriving in Macedonia from the south
and how badly they treated our people. Many more
stories about how some of them emigrated to America,
their stay there and why they returned back home
again. I would listen to all these stories with great
interest and I would compare them with our problems
we were facing now. During the early hours in the
morning, we would be awaken by noise made by horses
or mules on a cobblestone road just next to our wall.
The partisans were ferrying supplies to the front.
These supplies were apparently coming from Albania
across the border with great secrecy. Every morning,
I would take my sheep and lambs to the pastures around
the village exploring the countryside for unusual
and interesting spots.
Sometimes, another child would accompany me to the
pastures making my life more bearable. I would take
my sheep miles away without any fear from anyone.
Partisans in groups would walk to their destinations.
Some of them would search my pockets and take away
my slice of bread. I would go back home at night
very hungry and ask my father if he had some of his
slice for a rainy day like that. Sometimes I would
follow a group of partisans for miles with my sheep
to find out what they were up to. They would set
up some rough made targets and use them as practice
shooting. I would go behind them and beg them so
I could have a go. Many times I was chased away but
sometimes they would give me a rifle, teach me how
to aim and squeeze the trigger. I would miss the
target by a mile. They would wet themselves laughing,
telling me that I would make a bad partisan. By the
second week, I began to feel a bit homesick. I was
missing my mother, younger brothers and sister.
I would take my sheep to the highest spot in the
district where the panoramic views were spectacular.
I could see all the plains below as far away as Kostur.
I could see my village below, the hills where I used
to play and take my animals to graze. It looked so
peaceful from afar. Then I could see some smoke mushrooming
into balls. I knew exactly by experience what they
were. Mortar bombs were falling around the village.
The rumours we heard earlier about the army offensive
were not rumours after all. I used to take my sheep
to a plateau, a few kilometres east of the village.
It was not very far from the bunkers the women and
men were earlier constructing and repairing. The
ground was littered with war junk. I was desperately
searching to find something to eat. I was so hungry.
One slice of cornbread a day was not enough for a
growing 12 year old boy like me.
There were several graves of soldiers hastily buried
by their comrades. Some of their boots were clearly
visible above the wet soil. While removing a pair
of boots from one of the semi decomposed soldier,
I unearthed an army pack (sack) buried close to
the corpse half full of sultanas. I was so happy.
I took the boots and the army pack back to my father.
He washed the sultanas and shared it with the other
people in the room. It smelled like earth, but god
it tasted so good. The next day I would go back to
the same spot searching for more food, maybe a can
or two left behind by the army. I became a scavenger
actually competing with the vultures flying round
in circles searching for food too. An army plane
would fly around in circles perhaps on a reconnaissance
mission photographing partisan targets. At times
it would sweep so close to the ground for a second
look that the pilots face was clearly visible. It
would spook my sheep in all directions. I would curse
him for his action for hours, praying to God that
the bastard was dead. I never tried to hide, I felt
that my life was so cheap and was not worth living.
By now some of the first casualties from the battle
below had started to arrive. Young women with stretchers
bringing in a lot of badly wounded partisans. Some
of them were without an arm or a leg or their stomachs
were ripped apart by a bomb that their intestines
were clearly visible. They would cry with pain and
ask for water. There was very little the women could
do for them. With no doctors or medical supplies,
the badly wounded ones would die. The legendary Macedonian
partisan officer P. Shiperko was killed by a mortar
bomb in the same battle. His body was brought in
on a white horse for burial. He was mourned by thousand
of partisans and civilians alike who knew him. About
1,500 metres east of Garleni close to a small creek,
I found hundreds of partisan graves marked by a simple
wooden cross and without any name.
One evening a high ranking partisan officer visited
Garleni to address the people about something of
great importance. He said that the army offensive
below us was gaining momentum. It is very important
he said that every child between the age of two and
14 be evacuated to a safer place. The only safe place
around was the territory of Albania some 10 kilometres
away.
The preparation for the removal of the children
from Garleni to Albania had to be carried out within
two days. About 4 o'clock in the morning on the 25th
of March 1948, we set out from Garleni for the Turkish
built border village of Shak. We had to move in the
dark because of fear of being bombed by Greek military
planes. A lot of mothers and fathers came with us
to see us off across the border. My father came with
me carrying my blanket and the army sack I found
filled with sultanas. This time, however, the sack
was full of cooked meat. He slaughtered a lamb especially
for the occasion to make sure that I had something
to eat for at least several days.
When we arrived in Shak, the sun was already up.
We sat with my father under a huge willow tree close
to a small river running through the village. We
ate some of the meat we had in the army pack. Later
on, we visited a church and went inside to pray.
My father was a very religious person, he believed
that god would never abandon us. He would be with
us no matter where we went. Outside the church about
two metres from the bell tower were two graves side
by side close together. The locals claimed that during
the early days of the civil war a vicious battle
took place in the village. Several people were killed.
Among them were young brothers. One was a partisan
and the other one a soldier. They buried them close
together near the church. Later on we went to the
centre of the village to hear what the partisan authorities
had to say about our departure. The partisans were
celebrating the Greek National Day. We stood there
for a while. It was time for the mothers and fathers
to say good bye to their children. I could hear cries
that the children did not want to be separated from
their loved ones. I stood there with my father. We
did not say much. He had his arm around my shoulder
and he was looking at me. Through his tired and sad
eyes I could sense what he was thinking. That this
probably will be the last time he sees me. I tried
to be cheerful convincing him and myself that his
is not the end of the world. That one day, god willing,
we will see each other again. He said good bye, he
turned around and left.
I stood there in silence watching him slowly disappearing
on the horizon. He did not turn around for the second
time to say good bye. I believed that he was devastated
and heartbroken as I was and he did not want me to
see his face with tears running down his cheeks.
I knew he loved me a lot and I loved him too. That
was the last time I saw my father alive.
I stood there for a few minutes though it looked
like eternity. For the first time in my life I had
found myself alone, abandoned by the last member
of my family.
Cries were still coming from the crowd. Children
as young as three had to be separated from their
mothers and left alone. It was a heartbreaking moment.
One by one all the mothers and fathers had left.
Only two elderly mothers, one from our village and
the other one from Gradche or Chuka remained with
us. They became our foster mothers and supervisors
for the journey into Albania and beyond.
That afternoon the partisan authorities collected
all our blankets promising us that later on they
will be loaded on a truck and sent to our destination.
We never saw our blankets again. Late that afternoon
an order was given for us to cross the border. They
told us to follow one of the goat made tracks to
reach Albania but no partisan or partisan official
came to lead us for the final journey.
We took the narrow path up the hill, one mother
in front of us and the other behind. Over one hundred
children one by one slowly but surely moved closer
and closer to the border. A large white stone about
one and a half metres high and 60 centimetres wide
was marking the Greco-Albanian border. We continued
with our slow pace until we reached a barrier consisting
of a thick horizontally stretched copper wire with
other smaller vertical wires every few metres connecting
the main wire to the ground.
The leading mother had gently lifted the wire about
one metre high to let the children through. When
half of the children managed to cross that part of
the section to the other side of the wire two Albanian
soldiers with their guns ready were seen running
down the hill towards us. They were screaming at
us and telling to stop immediately. We did not understand
a word of what they were saying but we knew whatever
it was it must be very serious. When they realized
that we could not speak Albanian they asked us to
sit down and wait. One of them went back to wherever
they came from and minutes later returned with another
soldier. The other soldier was a Greek-Albanian speaking
Greek perfectly. Gently he explained to us that the
wire we were lifting was indeed a booby-trap connected
to mines on the ground. It was a miracle he said
that the mines did not go off. He also said that
the border guards have no knowledge from their higher
authorities for children like us to cross the border.
The soldiers asked us to go back to the village that
was only one kilometre away. By the time we returned
back to Shak it was already dark. The locals come
to our assistance taking us in small groups to their
homes.
Next morning the red faced officials were lost for
words about what went wrong. Apparently while they
were busy telling us what to do, they forgot to notify
the Albanian authorities about our trip. A typical
Greek bureaucratic bungle. Somehow the word that
the children had returned to Shak reached Garleni
like grass fire. Scores of mothers and fathers came
to greet their children back. The trauma of separation
was repeated again for the second day. My father
unfortunately was not one of them. I understood perfectly
that he had no time for a second farewell. He had
plenty of work to do. He had to look after the animals
himself now.
The partisans sent a representative to meet the
Albanian border guards to discuss the matter. Permission
was given for us to cross the border on the same
day.
When we reached the border two Albanian soldiers
escorted us to their barracks some two kilometres
away from the border. They gave us some cornbread
and water and put us on four military trucks for
the long trip to the city of Korcha. About two and
a half months later and thousands of kilometres behind
us we reached Brno (Czechoslovakia), our final destination.
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