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Lotika Zellermeier

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File:Zellermeier Lotika.jpg
Lotika Zellermeier

Lotika Zellermeier (Cyrillic: Лотика Цилермајер, Serbian Latin: Lotika Cilermajer) (1860, Kraków, Poland1938, Višegrad, Yugoslavia) was the inspiration for the main character from the 1961 Nobel Prize winner Ivo Andrić’s novel The Bridge on the Drina. She is the oldest of three sisters Zellermeier who moved, at the end of the 19th century, to Bosnia from Kraków, Poland.

Biography

Little is known about Lotika’s childhood and early adulthood. She was married to a doctor in Kraków but his identity is not known today. He died when Lotika was 19 years old. Soon after her husband’s death, Lotika moved with her sisters to Višegrad, Bosnia, then Austrian Hungarian Empire. At the same time two other Jewish families, Zaller and Apfelmeier, moved from Kraków to Višegrad. Their destinies will inseparably entwine in the coming years.

Even she was widowed at such an early age, Lotika never married again and had no descendants.

A bit more is known about Lotika’s life after she moved to Bosnia. In Višegrad she worked as a manager of the Zur Brucke hotel, commonly known as Lotika’s Hotel among the locals. The owner of the hotel was husband of her sister Debora, Adolf Zaller[1]. While she was managing the hotel, one of the regulars was Ivo Andrić. The two of them built a close relationship over the years.

Lotika and Ivo Andrić

File:Ivo Andric Letter.jpg
Ina and Helena congratulated Ivo Andrić on the Nobel Prize in 1961. He kindly responded thanking them (from the Svetlana Davidovac-Đurović archive)

Ivo Andrić has spent his childhood, youth and early adulthood in Višegrad [2] and he enjoyed spending time in Lotika’s Hotel [3]. Having established a close relationship with Lotika, he used her and her family as a basis for many of the characters in his novel The Bridge on the Drina. When he won Nobel Prize for literature in 1961, 23 years after Lotika’s death, her nieces Ina and Helena congratulated him in a letter. He kindly responded thanking them.

Family

File:Zellermeier Lotika (group photo).jpg
Lotika (circled), her sister Debora (sitting, far right) with unnamed employees of Lotika's hotel and several Austrian officers (from the Bukica Romano archive)

Lotika’s sister Debora was married to Adolph Zaller, also mentioned in Andrić’s novel. Their daughter Ina married Drago Maras, a doctor from Zagreb. They lived in Montreal, Canada, for the rest of their lives.

The youngest sister, Adelaide, married Lavoslav Sperling, a businessman from Višegrad. They had five children, sons Samuel, a banker killed by Nazis in Vienna in 1941, Benjamin, a leather factory owner in Leipzig, also killed at the beginning of the Second World War, Ferdinand who was killed at the Sajmište concentration camp in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, and daughters Ana, who died of tuberculosis at an early age, and Serafina, the only child to survive the war. It is assumed today that the reason for her survival was the fact that she married Anton Škarda, a Jew with the Czech surname.

Descendants of Serafina and Anton, Oto, Adela, Vladimir and Helena are the only members of the Višegrad branch of the Zellermeier family tree. Their children and grandchildren currently live both in Serbia and Western Europe.

Lotika today

Bosnian film director Emir Kusturica owns a traditional Serbian coffee shop Lotika on the grounds of the Mokra Gora National Park in Serbia. His business enterprise also bears Lotika’s name (Lotika d.o.o)[4]. Belgrade TV station B92 has kept those facts in the focus of the Serbian public[5].

As a beneficiary of the funds granted by the Serbian Ministry of Culture, Kusturica is working on the opera The Bridge on the Drina[6].

Jelena Đurović, a writer from Belgrade and Lotika’s great-grandniece, is working on a novel in which she wants to perpetuate Lotika’s family. It is going to be the second part in the spy trilogy, conceived as pseudo-autobiography, in which Lotika, other Zellermeier sisters and Adolf Zaller will feature as characters. It is titled The Well of the Past (“Bunar prošlosti”)

References