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Travel Writers: Strange Appreciations by Victor J. Emmanuel III

 

The thing about traveling in Hungary is that although it is firmly planted in modern central Europe, its undercurrent is still decidedly eastern European. This certainly has more to do with recent immigrants than it does with the natives. Hungarians, I have come to realize, are amazing chic and into current western trends (save for their affinity to Hungarian pop music), considering that until a little over ten years ago they were wholly fenced in by the iron curtain.
But this has nothing to do with 'Today's Hungarian Social Climate". Instead, it is about those little things that keep Hungary eastern, like strange appreciations from Yugoslavian pot growers.

My traveling companion Rob and I had just got back to Budapest after sleeping on a sidewalk for two days in Southern Hungary in order to catch the solar eclipse in August of 1999. The only rooms left in the city were in a university dorm because the Budapest Grand Prix was only days away and all the hotels and hostels were full. Thousands of race fans from all over the world had descended on the city for three days of eating, drinking and racing. Italians, Germans, Finns, and Spaniards… everyone was there. Nationalism was at a fever pitch. Everyone thought his or her country was better than everyone else's.

Which is why when Rob and I met Dragan and Boris outside of our dorm, I was more than a little nervous. The U.S. Air Force had flattened Belgrade not two months before, and here I was having a conversation with two Belgradians. And two weird ones at that. Dragan (as if the name wasn't menacing enough) was about 6'5" of muscle, topped off with a Cambodian rice paddy hat. Boris, with his chiseled Slavic features, looked like the kind of guy you typically see on Interpol wanted lists.

As the four of us chatted, I found myself deliberately steering the conversation away from where Rob and I were from: New York. The last thing I wanted was a severe beating in the street at the hands of two Yugoslavs who had just lost their grandmothers to a smart bomb.
But eventually the topic came up. When meeting someone, you can only avoid the subject for so long. So nervously I told them. "New York."

"New York?!? No way!" Dragan didn't show instant rage I had expected. Rather, a look of delight crossed his previously stoic face. "You have driving license?"

I took out my license and handed it to him. He was stunned. I can only guess he had never met a New Yorker, much less an American in his life.

"It is so great to meet you," said Boris, smiling, as he extended his hand for a shake. What the hell is going on? I thought. Hadn't my country just bombed the daylights out of your city?

"Listen, I'm sorry about what the U.S. did to your country, the bombing, and all." I tried to be as diplomatic as possible.

"I don't agree with it, you know." I didn't know what else to say.

Boris and Dragan glanced at each other and chuckled to themselves.

"Bombing is best thing to happen to me," Dragan explained. "Before, I have no job for long, long time. I grow marijuana for money for food."

I looked at Rob quizzically.

"Then U.S. blows up all the bridges in Belgrade. I have a boat, and now I am ferry," he boasted. "People want to cross the river, they need me. Now I have job. Thank you for dropping bombs on my city."


 
   
 
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