Hello everyone, speaking of monuments these days, I have to introduce you to another one that I visited a few days ago and it is one of the most important historical sights of Serbia. It is the Jajinci Memorial Park in Belgrade.
Visiting this place is an experience that carries both serenity and a quiet heaviness.
As you step into this vast green space, the openness of the fields stretches in every direction, giving a feeling of freedom, yet it is impossible to forget the history hidden beneath the soil.
During World War II, this was a site of great suffering, where thousands of innocent lives were lost. And the monument that rises in the center is a reminder of the weight of memory.
Walking through the small wooded paths around the park, I found myself reflecting on how peaceful it is today compared to the darkness of the past.
You just can't tear yourself away from those thoughts. You imagine the people who fell dead here and that the bloody story does not make this place an ordinary meadow where children play, full of joy.
But truly, at the same time, there is life all around. Families stroll, children laugh, and on the wide plateau in front of the monument, kids run freely, their colorful kites soaring into the sky. It feels like a beautiful contradiction - playfulness existing in a place meant for remembrance.
While we were walking, we came across a stone tablet that reads: "If my arms are broken, I have wings, and with them, like a bird, I embrace the horizon".
Survivors said that the most horrific scenes of human suffering took place here, affecting both soldiers and innocent civilians. They were executed in mass shootings and burned.
As the sun began to set, the sky turned gold, casting long shadows across the memorial. I stood there for a moment, caught between the weight of history and the lightness of the present.
Jajinci Memorial park is a testament to resilience, showing how spaces of tragedy can transform into places of peace and reflection.
Let's hope that history will not repeat itself and that there will be more carefree places in the world like this one now.
Thank you for reading.
Jelena