He was a passionate smoker, but he never dreamed that cigars would save him from the German bombs.



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Požega – Cigarettes are considered dangerous to health and can be the cause of certain diseases, however, for Sreten Vuković, a Serbian fighter in World War I, this very vice saved his life. When the Germans began bombing Belgrade on April 6, 1941, the Nis barracks was also on the map of their warplanes, where the wax worker Sreten from Požega was in debt to his homeland.

Moravia
photo: RINA

“Grandpa was deployed there, they didn’t know their barracks would be hit by German bombs that April. He was a passionate smoker and when he ran out of cigarettes he decided to go to the store and buy two more packs. On his way back, he heard one strong explosion, but he did not know what it was about. However, when he arrived in front of the barracks, he saw how the building was razed and almost all his comrades in war lost their lives, “says Sreten Vukovic of RINA, who inherited a name from his grandfather, but also a very valuable memory.

Moravia
photo: RINA

Realizing at that moment that those two herds of the then green “Morava” saved his life, the Serbian soldier decided to save them as a memory and as an eternal reminder that only with God’s help did he escape death in World War II. .

“He didn’t talk much about it, he kept the packages in his drawer. On one, he wrote” memories of Nis “and the date the attack took place. If we asked him what it was, he would answer briefly that it saved his life and that he shouldn’t. be touched. These cigarettes survived him because he quit smoking after that event. There are 20 pieces inside, as a young man I tried to light just one, but felt that the tobacco had evaporated.

Moravia
photo: RINA

The famous Sreten cigarettes are now part of the stage of the virtual homeland museum in Požega, and all history buffs can see exactly what the packaging of “Morava” looked like more than half a century ago.

(Kurir.rs/RINA)


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