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Novak Djokovic, the beloved sports hero of Balkans - France 24


4 min

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Belgrade (AFP)

Novak Djokovic, who won a sixth Wimbledon and record-equalling 20th major on
Sunday, is regarded as a beloved sports hero in both his native Serbia and
throughout the former Yugoslavia.

Tennis fans and the general public in the region, tormented by a series of
wars in the 1990s that accompanied Yugoslavia's collapse, cheer for the Serb
who is known for his humanitarian work as much as for his sports success.

Donations he made in 2014 to Croatia, Bosnia and Serbia, hit by catastrophic
floods, as well as appeals to help them are still remembered.

At the time Djokovic said on Twitter that his "heart breaks" when he sees
how many people had to be evacuated due to floods in Bosnia.

"Long live all the people of former Yugoslavia. May God be with you," he
tweeted.

He made donations to Serbia to help fight the coronavirus pandemic but also
donated ventilators to neighbouring Montenegro.

- 'Represents us all' -

"'Nole' represents us all, us Serbs, but also our neighbours Croats,
Muslims, all," said bank employee Kristina Popovic.

"He is always there for us which explains his popularity everywhere in the
region," the 27-year-old from Belgrade told AFP.

In Croatia and Bosnia, whose ties with Serbia remain tense since the 1990s
wars, Djokovic is widely respected and liked.

For Semir Osmanagic, founder of Bosnia's controversial Pyramid Park, visited
by Djokovic three times since mid-2020, the tennis star has "achieved more
on communication and understanding between people (in former Yugoslavia)
than some politicians ... who are mostly dividing us".

Djokovic, who is known for his new-age spiritual interests, hailed the site,
which large number of people believe has healing powers, as a "paradise on
earth".

Since Djokovic's visits thousands of Serbs have flocked there, Osmanagic
said.

His father Srdjan Djokovic said in 2020 that his son considered all
countries that emerged after Yugoslavia's break-up as his own.

"He never made any difference between them notably when there was a need to
help people."

- 'Croatians are mine' -

Croatia's former Wimbledon champion Goran Ivanisevic is Djokovic's coach
while local media often highlight that his mother is of Croatian origins.

The 34-year-old Serb often spends his summer vacation on Croatia's coast
that he labelled a "jewel" and the "most beautiful in the world".

"I always felt good (in Croatia), people were always receiving me nicely and
was always welcome," he told local media in 2019.

Like Croatians cheer for Djokovic, he himself backs top Croatian athletes as
he did during the 2018 World Cup, where Croatia finished runners-up.

The same year, the then Croatian president Kolinda Grabar-Kitarovic on
Facebook described Djokovic as a "great man and athlete, to enter Wimbledon
finals" and published a photo with him.

But his support of the Croatia squad, which he labelled "logical", sparked
criticism in some media and on social networks in Serbia.

"Whom will I support if not Croatia? I simply feel that Croatians are mine,"
he told local media in 2019.

- Firm ties to Belgrade -

Djokovic has kept very firm ties to his native Belgrade where he frequently
returns and meets his childhood friends.

Just days after his second victory at the French Open last month he arrived
in the Serbian capital to attend the wedding of one of them.

"He never forgot his origins, that's why I like him even more," said pastry
cook Nedeljko Savic.

Also, Djokovic has invested in Serbia where he has restaurants and notably a
tennis centre in Belgrade which carries his name.

The Novak Tennis Centre, in the heart of the capital, will be the basis of a
future tennis academy that Djokovic plans to set up.

He has also created the charitable Novak Djokovic Foundation, headed by his
wife Jelena, supporting early childhood education.

C 2021 AFP

 

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