Mostar's
youngest diver honors centuries of tradition
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[July 30, 2018]
By Dado Ruvic
MOSTAR, Bosnia (Reuters) -
Extreme sports might seem like a modern innovation for
adrenaline junkies, but in the ancient Bosnian town of
Mostar, jumping or diving from the 24-metre-high bridge
is a test of courage that dates back more than 400
years.
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At just 16, debutant Emil Petrovic is the youngest participant
in this year's contest, the 452nd held on the gravity-defying
white bridge that arches over the Neretva River through a point
24 meters (79 feet) above the water.
"In this town, it's an obligation for every boy my age to dive
off the Stari Most," he said.
The graceful Ottoman-era Old Bridge that gives the city its name
was finished in 1566 or 1567 and stood until Bosnian Croat
artillery destroyed it in 1993, during the Bosnian War. A UNESCO
World Heritage Site, it was rebuilt in 2004.
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The first written account of young men leaping off Stari Most
into the rushing waters of the Neretva comes from the 17th
century Ottoman explorer Mehmed Zilli, known as Evliya Celebi,
who traveled the empire for 40 years, recording his observations
in his Book of Travel.
Celebi wrote that, when seen from a distance, the bridge "looks
round like a bow out of which an arrow has just flown, and the
bow froze".
He said that the divers "run up before jumping from the bridge,
fall down into the river and fly through the air like birds
performing tricks".
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To this day, the 'swallow dive' that Celebi celebrated is still
performed by Mostar's divers - although Petrovic took a safer
option, jumping in feet-first.
Sunday's contest drew 40 local and international competitors and an
audience of several thousand.
"It's a fantastic feeling," he said after emerging from the chilly
emerald water to cheers of relief and admiration from the crowd.
"I wanted to preserve the tradition -- but also to show that I'm
grown-up and brave," he said, adding that he had wanted to compete
last year, but his mother said 'no'.
"This time, my father persuaded her, and they are both proud."
(Writing by Maja Zuvela; Editing by Kevin Liffey)
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