While in
While sipping strong espresso, a social commonplace in most Southeastern European countries, my friend Lindsay invited me to a Food Not Bombs meeting in
We headed to the street where the activist webpage told us the meeting would be. Through a small opening between buildings we walked down the small alleyway to what we thought was the place and waited for a while. Nobody was around. On the buildings was graffiti, illustrating the kinds of stories these people were trying to show symbolically. What stood out most were the words “I am not his story”, showing possible feminist ideals and the subject of silencing the past these people had once experienced during the wars. Within the walls around me screamed experiences completely unimaginable to my mind but similar to my own people’s history. It was comforting.
Soon a young man peddled through the alleyway on his bike, with his head mostly shaved except for a spot on the top where long hair flowed out. He dressed in dark clothes, locking his bike up to a post and lighting up a cigarette. His clothes were symbolically universal to anarchism and activism in general—dark clothes, the interesting hair do, the cigarette, the bike, the patches found on his clothes. A taste of my familiar family of activists from home.
“Bog”, I said walking up to him. “Govorite li engleski?”
“Malo”, he replied, sitting down on the sidewalk looking up at me.
“Is there a meeting for Food Not Bombs?”
“Da, yes, at seven o’clock”.
I introduced myself, and he to I, and then Lindsay as well. He is from Rijeke, a small town southwest of
A woman sitting to the right of me, Dora, asked us where we were from and was surprised, assuming we were German from the way we spoke Croatian. We laughed, silently wishing that we were, in fact, not from
Time went on and cigarettes were lit and devoured, the bottle of Ouzo slowly reaching its end. I realized that the meeting was long over and they were just sitting chatting with one another. Once they realized we hardly spoke any Croatian, they began weaving in their broken English into the conversation, asking where we were from and why we were there. They were happy to hear that Food Not Bombs was practicing in so many other places in the world. Certainly this would be a community I could go to in my free time, to socialize, to meet the local community around me and to get a better grasp of the stories behind the words and images plastered to each clean slab of stone. I walked away early, hoping to get home with enough time to chat with my family and finish my homework. Dora looked at me before I left and said, “Don’t get too drunk on Friday night; you must come help us help others”. She is from

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