The most important things for
a traveler to report are things he did not expect, and the things he cannot
readily explain. Usually, if we have an
explanation close to hand for something we just saw, it generally comes from
our preconceived notions about a country, and not necessarily from the true
causes. However, a complete surprise
takes us out of our prejudices, and can reveal to us an actual glimpse of
another country, and the realities behind it.
In Belgrade, the one
unexpected thing was the street signs.
Or rather, the lack thereof. In
the US, and in most Western European cities, every single crossroads and
junction has a little signpost labeling each road. Often, they’re found on traffic lights and
stop signs, as a convenient place. If
you’ve grown up with that, you tend to think of it as a normal part of any
city. Walking in Belgrade during the
evening, I couldn’t see any, which came as a complete surprise to me, and not a
pleasant one either, given that I was trying to navigate by a street map.
I don’t know why they’re not
there. It’s possible, of course, that
they were there and I didn’t notice. My
map was made for tourists, and all the street names are written in the Latin
Alphabet. If there were signs using
Cyrillic, I may have just skipped over them visually. If that’s so, though, the street signs here
follow a different pattern and design from the ones at home.
That was just one detail I
noticed out of many, but the overarching thing I’m feeling right now is a
general sense of culture shock, I guess.
I’m not sure what triggered it; in Berlin I didn’t feel like I was in an
alien culture, even though I was in a foreign country. It was a metropolis of Western Culture, the
same that I’ve lived my whole life in.
The language may have been different, but the norms are pretty much the
same.
In Budapest, it was a little
different, but nothing too shocking, or anything that would make me feel
unwelcomed. There was a touch of the
exotic, the feeling that I was definitely in Central Europe, and not Western
Europe, but there wasn’t anything particularly hostile about it. Come to think of it, I don’t remember seeing
many street signs there, either, but I was able to find my way around due to
the frequent underground train stops that showed up at regular intervals.
In Belgrade, however, there
was an entirely different atmosphere.
Most other people in my group remarked on it too; somehow it just wasn’t
as welcome or accommodating as the other two cities. We felt the absence of a native guide
acutely, and were more quick to suspect hostility in the locals. It’s hard to pin down the causes of this
difference; it may have been partially due to the fact that no one was here to
welcome us, unlike in Berlin and Budapest, where we had a local guide. The presence of the Cyrillic alphabet, too,
may have given us the impression of an alien culture. Perhaps, also, might be the knowledge that as
Americans, we cannot expect to be automatically liked here; not just because of
the Communist history, but also of more recent military excursions against the
Serbs..
I, personally, felt that at
last I had entered Eastern Europe, whatever that meant.
I’m not sure I could tell you
what Eastern Europe is, but If I even get an answer to why there are no street
signs in Belgrade, I think I might be able to.
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