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Stefan looked at the heavy textbook again. It didn't seem quite so heavy anymore. It wasn't a list of dead facts; it was a catalog of people who lived, laughed, struggled, and passed the torch down to him.

"Milan was no grand general," Jovan said, his eyes twinkling. "He was a simple plum farmer who loved nothing more than a quiet afternoon with his family. One morning, the village crier came running through the square, shouting that the uprising had begun and every able-bodied man was needed. Milan looked at his wife, looked at his ripening plum trees, and sighed. He grabbed his old, rusted haiduk rifle, kissed his family goodbye, and marched off." "Did he fight in a massive battle?" Stefan asked. Mala istorija Srbije

"Yes," Jovan nodded, leaning forward. "The history of the ordinary people standing just outside the frame of those grand paintings. Take the year 1804, for example. Your textbook tells you all about Karađorđe and the First Serbian Uprising. It talks about grand strategies and political shifts. But let me tell you about a man named Milan from a tiny village near Topola." Stefan looked at the heavy textbook again

"Ah, let us look smaller there, too," Jovan said, pouring them both a glass of water. "Think of the master stone-cutter, Pavle, who worked on the walls of the Studenica monastery. The king ordered the grand structure, but it was Pavle's hands that shaped the white marble. Every day for years, in the scorching sun and biting wind, he chipped away. He didn't do it for the glory of the crown; he did it because he believed that creating something beautiful was his way of speaking to God. When you look at those perfect stone arches today, you aren't just looking at royal wealth. You are looking at Pavle’s devotion and calloused hands." "Milan was no grand general," Jovan said, his eyes twinkling

The small tavern on the outskirts of Belgrade smelled of roasted coffee, dried tobacco, and centuries of heavy secrets. Behind the heavy wooden counter sat Jovan, a man whose gray beard seemed to hold as many stories as the dusty books lining his shelves.

Across from him sat his grandson, Stefan, staring blankly at a thick, intimidating textbook titled The History of Serbia . The boy sighed, letting his forehead drop onto the open pages. "I give up, Deda," Stefan groaned. "It is just a never-ending parade of battles, dates, and kings with identical names. How am I supposed to remember all of this for my exam tomorrow?"

"He did," Jovan replied. "But Milan’s greatest contribution to the uprising wasn’t a brilliant tactical maneuver. It happened on a freezing night before a major clash. The men were cold, terrified, and questioning why they were risking everything against a massive empire. Milan, despite being just as terrified, reached into his rucksack. He pulled out a small flask of homemade šljivovica—plum brandy—that he had managed to sneak along. He passed it around the campfire."