Yugo Joe looked at Nelly over a tiny cup of coffee that seemed far too strong for civilized society.
โNelly,โ he said, โyou should come to Croatia. Or at least to Medjugorje. The place runs on prayer, stories, candles, and people looking for something bigger than themselves.โ
Nelly smiled cautiously. โYou make it sound like an airport terminal for mystics.โ
Joe pointed a finger.
โExactly! And listen โ the six Medjugorje seers? Their story brought pilgrims from everywhere. Believers, doubters, curious tourists, exhausted people carrying heavy lives. Lovers of Gospa, you could say.โ
Nelly tilted her head. โLovers of Gospa?โ
โPeople devoted to Nossa Senhora. People who pray. People searching. People who want mercy, meaning, maybe even a miracle.โ
The church bells sounded faintly in the distance.
โIn our story,โ Joe continued, โthe six seers are expecting not celebrities, not influencers โ but ordinary lovers of Gospa. The woman with the rosary worn smooth from use. The guy who hasnโt prayed in twenty years but walks up the hill anyway. The skeptic who says, โIโm just here for cultural reasons,โ and somehow ends up lighting a candle.โ
Nelly laughed softly.
โSo youโre recruiting me into a pilgrimage?โ
Joe shrugged dramatically.
โIโm inviting you into a conversation older than both of us. Canada says, โKeep spirituality polite and personal.โ The Balkans say, โPull up a chair, argue theology, drink coffee, and tell us your story.โโ
โAnd what if people think Iโm strange?โ
Joe grinned.
โIn the Balkans? Strange is practically a citizenship category.โ





