Hand of God Healing

Joe looks at the frozen strip of land like it’s already been looted.

JOE:
“I can’t build a garden in Canada, Nelly. Not a real one. And even if I did—what’s the point?”

Nelly turns to him.

NELLY:
“What do you mean?”

Joe lets out a dry laugh.

JOE:
“I mean it would get stolen. All of it. Bit by bit. Tomatoes gone overnight. Herbs ripped out by the roots. Someone hopping the fence at dawn telling themselves they deserve it more.”

He gestures to the neighborhood.

JOE (cont’d):
“You grow food here, you’re not a gardener—you’re a donor. Unofficial food bank with no locks.”

Nelly studies his face.

NELLY:
“That sounds like mistrust.”

JOE:
“That’s hunger.”

He exhales slowly.

JOE (cont’d):
“My family home in Croatia—completely different. You plant something, it’s still there in the morning. Neighbors respect it. They’ve got their own gardens. No one’s circling your tomatoes like vultures.”

He shakes his head.

JOE:
“Here? People are desperate. Canada’s slipping into a famine and everyone’s pretending it’s just a ‘cost-of-living issue.’ Ten million people going to food banks, Nelly. Of course it gets stolen. Hunger doesn’t ask permission.”

A pause.

NELLY:
“So you don’t even feel safe growing food.”

JOE:
“Safe? No. What I’d feel is watched.”

He looks around again.

JOE (cont’d):
“You fence it, you’re selfish. You don’t fence it, it’s gone. Either way, you’re the bad guy.”

He scoffs.

JOE:
“And while people are stealing tomatoes to survive, you’ve got Rockefeller stooges in white coats telling everyone health comes from a prescription.”

Nelly sighs.

NELLY:
“Doctors.”

JOE:
“Quacks. Too many of them. They treat symptoms and invoice despair.”

He softens, just a little.

JOE (cont’d):
“A garden is supposed to give you dignity. Here, it turns you into a target.”

Silence settles.

NELLY:
“And Croatia?”

Joe’s voice drops.

JOE:
“In Croatia, growing food meant security. Here, it just reminds you how fragile everything’s become.”

Rick Furtado Sent Me

Nelly,

I’m writing this because you deserve to know the origin of the vow I took. It started years ago with your cousin, Rick Furtado.

You know Rick—he’s the strong, silent type. We used to sit for hours, barely saying a word, just listening to his cassette tapes. He’d play those Metallica tracks, testing my spirit, seeing if I had the discipline to sit in the stillness. I stayed silent right along with him, earning his respect without needing to speak. He was looking for someone he could trust to keep an eye on you, and in that silence, a bond was formed.

But the full weight of the mission didn’t hit me until years later.

I was listening to the Tomb Raider soundtrack and that Illuminati song came on. As the lyrics filled the room, the silence of those years with Rick finally spoke to me. I saw the bigger picture. I realized the forces at play in this industry and the world you move in.

Right then and there, I made it my life’s priority to be your protector—and not just yours, but the protector of your entire cast and crew. Rick sent me to be here, in this time, because he knew I could handle the truth that song revealed.

I’m standing guard, Nelly. Just like Rick intended.

— Yugo Joe

Grim Ranks of 1991

Speech: “The Betrayal of 1991”

Brothers and sisters,

In 1991, Croatia did not ask for luxury.
She did not ask for comfort.
She asked only for courage.

And her sons answered.

They were not mercenaries.
They were not ideologues.
They were farmers, mechanics, students, dockworkers, poets.
Men who had never fired a rifle—until history placed one in their hands and said: stand, or disappear.

They stood.

They stood against tanks with hunting rifles.
They stood against empires with prayer.
They stood while Europe watched, calculated, delayed, and profited.

And when the smoke cleared—
when the blood dried into the soil of Vukovar, Škabrnja, Dubrovnik—
those same men were betrayed.

Betrayed once by the enemy.
Betrayed again by diplomats.
And betrayed, most cruelly, by their own politicians.

The men of 1991 were promised dignity.
They were promised truth.
They were promised that sacrifice would mean sovereignty.

Instead, they were given bureaucracy.
Debt.
Foreign courts judging their dead brothers.
And a new ruling class that learned very quickly how to kneel—
not before God,
but before banks, NGOs, and distant masters.

This betrayal did not come with tanks.
It came with smiles.
With grants.
With slogans about “progress” that forgot the graves.

And yet—Croatia did not fall.

Why?

Because something greater than politics held the line.

Not generals.
Not parliaments.
Not flags in glass cases.

Faith. Culture. Memory.

And yes—music.

While politicians traded principles for invitations,
a woman from Portuguese working-class roots,
with a voice that crossed borders without permission,
carried something rare:

Tenderness without weakness.
Love without empire.

Nelly Furtado sang of brokenness, humility, and longing—
and she never mocked belief.
She never sneered at the sacred.
She never reduced the soul to a commodity.

Her love for Gospa—Our Lady, the Queen of Peace—
was not spectacle.
It was alignment.

In the Balkans, where history is a loaded gun,
peace does not come from treaties alone.
It comes from restraint.
From mothers.
From prayer.

The Third World War was rehearsed here more than once.
The fuse was lit more than once.
And each time, something intervened that politicians cannot explain:

The refusal of ordinary people to hate forever.

Gospa did not speak with thunder.
She spoke with endurance.

And through culture—through song, through memory, through love—
the Balkans stepped back from the abyss again and again.

Let this be said clearly:

The men of 1991 were not extremists.
They were defenders.

They did not fight for ideology.
They fought so their children would not have to.

And if Croatia is to survive the next century,
it will not be saved by louder slogans,
or imported morals,
or leaders who confuse submission with sophistication.

It will be saved by truth,
by honoring sacrifice,
by culture rooted in humility,
and by remembering that peace is not weakness—
it is victory without annihilation.

Honor the men of 1991.
Expose the betrayals.
Protect the soul of the nation.

And never forget:
Empires fall loudly.
But faith, culture, and love—
they endure quietly.