We came to a village that looked like it had no businesses at all. Then a man took us into a big, blocky, white building resembling a giant Monopoly house. He opened the door and we stepped inside, under tons of golden ham aging peacefully. It was a smokehouse — jammed with five layers of hanging ham hocks. Our Montenegrin friend stoked up his fire, filled the place with smoke, and we filmed. More industry than you realize hides out in sleepy villages.
I spoke with some of the locals about their experiences growing up in Yugoslavia (which broke apart in the 1990s). They have generally good memories of the times. Marshal Tito (its strong-arm dictator who didn’t always follow Moscow’s lead) is remembered in a single phrase: “He said ‘No’ to Stalin.” Not all the bonds have been cut. People in most of the former Yugoslavia speak what used to be called Serbo-Croatian (or Croato-Serbian, depending on your ethnicity). Today the languages are all essentially the same but, as required by each new country’s constitution, they are called Bosnian, Montenegrin, Serbian, and Croatian.
Despite any language barriers, we had some great people moments. When we dropped in on a mountaintop Serbian-Orthodox monastery, the monks (their long black beards matching their long black robes) joked with us, saying, “You look suspicious with no beards.” In prepping them for my interview, I said part of our TV-production mission was to help Americans understand, rather than fear, people who are different.
In the middle of this Montenegrin nowhere, we met an American family travelling with their 91-year-old grandmother. We shared stories of beautiful times we’ve enjoyed and lessons we’ve learned getting to know the people in this region. The grandma said, “Travelling in places like this inspires me to keep going when I should be staying home.”
Most tourists stick to Montenegro’s scenic and increasingly glitzy Bay of Kotor. It’s certainly worth a visit, but for a Back Door experience, head deep into the rugged interior of Montenegro.
Rick Steves (www.ricksteves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email him at [email protected], or write to him c/o P.O. Box 2009, Edmonds, Wash. 98020.Special to The Vancouver Sun |