In part two, we get to meet a few new characters, and how they play a part in each of these four main characters lives. I've taken a huge liking to Dragan's friend Emina. He sees her and hopes she does not stop to talk to him. She stops and tells him she is taking her deceased mother's heart meds to a woman in need. They are expired, but can surely be useful, rather than having none at all. Then she tells Dragan about how the war has forced them to go outside their everyday boundaries and how she is seeing parts of her neighborhood she has never seen before. They both silently agree, they believe no help is coming to them. They are losing faith, and hope. Dragan mentions the man he knew who survived Jasenovac and Auschwitz and then killed himself the day the war in Sarajevo broke out. He states,
"I think he believed that what he and others suffered there meant something, that people had learned from it. But they haven't."Emina then tells Dragan about her giving the neighbor lady a part of her salt she had more than she needed, and the lady gives her way too many buckets of her cherries, so she then divides them into ten portions, and gives to ten of her neighbors. Emina says to Dragan,
"Isn't that how we are suppose to behave? Isn't that how we used to be?"
"I don't know ," Dragan says. "I can't remember if we were. It seems impossible to remember what things were like." And he suspects this is what the men on the hills want most. They would, of course, like to kill them all, but if they can't, they would like to make them forget how they used to be, how civilized people act. He wonders how long it will take before they succeed. As long as he stands here waiting to cross, he knows, they're winning. It's time his day, his life, moved through this intersection and toward whatever end awaits him. "I think I'll cross now," he says to Emina. Dragan gets shot but is okay, he and Emina joke about the soldier being a bad shot.
"Sarajevo roulette," she says. "So much more complicated than Russian." He laughs, not because it's funny but because it's true, and he stands there, Emina's hand on his back, glad for the first time in a long while to be alive.This was such a touching part of this section. The man killing himself because he sees the suffering he and thousands have already lived through seems to not have made a difference in how people continue to kill each other. He felt all hope was gone, and did not want to live through yet more killings, struggles and strife. Then Emina's attitude, although she is feeling a bit hopeless about help coming for them, shows that she is willing to risk her life by taking old medication to hopefully save someone else's life.
This reminds me of the parable from the Bible of the Good Samaritan, Luke 10: 25-37
https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke+10%3A25-37The cherry story reminds me of the parable in the Bible of the Manna from Heaven
https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Exodus+16In times of war it is easy to lose our faith and hope, yet there are always incidents we can see, that people even in their worst times have the humanity, and goodwill to help others in need. We step outside of ourselves and think of others because like Emina said,
"Isn't that how we are suppose to behave?"This section brought tears to my eyes.