Serbian faithful defy coronavirus to mark Tito’s death

Four decades after the death of Yugoslavia’s lifetime leader Josip Broz Tito, a few dozen visitors anxious to honour his memory donned face masks against the coronavirus to visit the compound in Belgrade that houses his grave.People pose for a picture in front of a statue of the late Yugoslav Communist leader Josip Broz Tito at his mausoleum, “House of Flowers”, marking the 40th anniversary of his death as the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues in Belgrade, Serbia, May 4, 2020.

Tito died on May 4, 1980, and his funeral four days later was attended by presidents, prime ministers and kings from 128 countries, and about 700,000 people. What followed was a decade of decline that culminated in the wars that broke up Yugoslavia.

Even with the passing of time, Tito’s grave in the House of Flowers is always visited on the anniversary of his death.

Despite coronavirus restrictions, dozens were allowed inside on Monday, far fewer than in previous years when hundreds marked his death.

A delegation from Serbia’s co-ruling Socialists, successors to the Communists from the late 1980s, led by their president and Foreign Minister Ivica Dacic, laid a wreath on Tito’s grave.

“Many across former Yugoslavia are nostalgic … I would not call this nostalgia for Tito, but for the society in which we lived back then, for some socialist values that were ahead of their time,” Dacic told Reuters.

Broz, a metalworker from the Croatian village of Kumrovec, led Communist fighters against Nazi Germany in World War Two, securing his grip over Yugoslavia for the next 35 years.

In 1948, he turned away from the Soviet bloc in a delicate balancing act with the West, using Yugoslavia as a buffer between adversaries in the Cold War.

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