Search


Advanced Search
Nenad Bach - Editor in Chief

Sponsored Ads
 »  Home  »  Friends In Action  »  Colonel Mark Cook and the Lipik Orphanage
 »  Home  »  History  »  Colonel Mark Cook and the Lipik Orphanage
Colonel Mark Cook and the Lipik Orphanage
By Prof.Dr. Darko Zubrinic | Published  04/15/2007 | Friends In Action , History | Unrated
Mark Cook and the Lipik Orphanage

The Lipik Orphanage and
Colonel Mark Cook

© by Darko Zubrinic, Zagreb (1999) [in Croatian]

Vladek Matic (Lipik Orphanage) and Valentina Murtic (Children's Home in Selce), 1993

The Lipik coat of arms with Kursalon and LipizzanerThe Lipik Children's home was the first object to be destroyed by Greater Serbian forces in 19 August 1991. The shelling of the city of Lipik and Pakrac started at 05.30 with the shelling of orphanage, which had 80 children, aged between 3 and 16, sleeping at the time. They took refuge in a cellar for 7 days until they could be evacuated. The orphanage consisted of three buildings, including kitchen and dining room, classrooms and recreation rooms, and all were badly damaged and gutted by fire.

Lipik Children's home, August 1991 after Greater Serbian destruction

In October 1991 the largest Lipizzaner horse-farm in Croatia, situated near the town of Lipik, was bombed with napalm bombs.

Lipizzaner horse-farm before Greater Serbian destruction

 

Colonel Mark Cook, the Commander of the British Contingent of the UNPROFOR in Croatia, supported by his family in Great Britain and together with British soldiers, initiated helping to rebuild the orphanage.

 

Mr. Mark Cook entering the ruins of Children's Home

Lipik Children's Home for Orphans destroyed by Greater Serbian forces in August 1991

Rebuilding of Lipik Children's Home for Orphans

Mr. Mark Cook with Croatian workers in Lipik during rebuilding of Children's Home

By free will the British soldiers were helping to rebuild Orphans Home in Lipik at their spare time

Obnova razorenog Dječjeg doma u Lipiku dovr±ena je 1993

 

The Lipik Orphanage (Djecji Dom) was opened in December 1993. Here we should acknowledge also very important help in the reconstruction of the city of Lipik offered by Italian government. It is interesting that Aleksandar Srzic from Makarska composed a nice march in honour of Mark Cook. About a half of expenses for renewal of the Home have been covered by the Government of the Republic of Croatia, and half by numerous donators including Croatian diaspora. The main burden of the overall organization of rebuilding the Home were taken by Mr. Mark Cook, Dr. Marica Topic and prof. Goran Nikles, director of the Lipik Orphanage.

Mr. Mark Cook adressing to children at the openining of Children's Home in Lipik, 1993

Mr. Mark Cook greeting children at the main entrance of the rebuilt Lipik Orphanage, 1993

Dr. Marica Topic addressing to the participants of the opening ceremony of the Lipik Orphanage, 1993

 

Here are some excerpts from appeal of Colonel Mark Cook and his numerous supporters from Great Britain and other countries.

 

 

I made a promise to the kids to get them back into their Orphanage... You can't break promises to children.

Colonel Mark Cook

 

... and they are still in my heart!

The Hearts of Gold calendar has been inspired by the work of Colonel Mark Cook, a Commander of the British Section of the UN Peace Keeping Force in Croatia. He saw first hand the devastating effects of an attack on the Children's Home in Lipik which reduced the building to rubble and left the children without their only home. These orphan children come from all three communities - Serb, Croat and Bosnian Moslem, yet they have grown up together in harmony. Now the future was bleak, suddenly their home was destroyed, their hopes shattered.

The children persuaded Colonel Cook to promise to rebuild the Orphanage. The work, which will cost one million pounds, is already underway with British troops assisting local architects and tradesmen. Thanks to the Colonel the children should be able to return to their home very soon.

This calendar will raise funds to ensure the Colonel's dream is realised. We asked some of the leading photographers in the country for their favourite pictures of children. We must thank them, together with all the companies who have freely donated their time and talent to produce and print this calendar. By buying it you have helped to create a safe place for the orphaned children of Lipik. Above all we want to congratulate Colonel Cook for his dedication and the vision to rebuild their home.

Esther Rantzen & Mike Smith

BBC
hearts of gold
1994 calendar IN AID OF
THE LIPIK ORPHANAGE
CROATIA

 

Mr. Mark Cook and Dr. Marica Topic with children from the Lipik Orphanage

Here is a list of some of the donors, whose names are indicated on slates exhibited on walls inside the renewed building:

 

Mark Cook, Caroline Cook [wife of Mr. Mark Cook], H.R.H. Prince Hassan of Jordan, Cargilfield School, Breaside School, Sherborn Girls School, Letzebuerger Initiativ für Kroatien, Hall Grove School, Hrvatska Malteska Sluzba, Dan Eldon, Baroness Chalker, Paula Dumas - Dimmel, Mohammed El Fayed, Gerge Perinovic, Mladen Grbin, Stjepan Mandorelo, Anton Jurgens Charitable Trust, Peter Praxmarer, Suganya Lee, John Redwood, Bryan Sparrow, Sherborn Boys School, Tony Pratt, Brian Douglas, Marica Topic, Ros Hardie, Caro Brewster, Margaret Mc Lean.

 

Mr. Mark Cook at the opening of Children's Orphanage in Lipik, 1993

Lipik Children's home, August 1991 after Greater Serbian destruction
Lipik Children's home, December 1993, after the reconstruction initiated by Mark Cook.

The Lipik Orphanage in 1991 and in 1993

H.R.H. Prince Hassan of Jordan in the ruined town of Lipik

Numerous volunteers, as a rule very young, are offering their generous help in everyday work with orphans. Here are some of their impressions taken from the Guest Book of The Lipik Orphanage.

 

25. May 1999.

I have had the most amazing 6 months here at Lipik and I feel so privileged to have been given the chance to know you all.

Thank you for your friendship, love and patience (when I didn't understand!), and thank you for making my stay here so enjoyable. I take away many, many happy memories of the fun we had together and I will always have a special place for you in my heart.

I love you all so much, and will miss you more than words can say. But I will be back to see how you are getting on, and hopefully I will be able to have a swim in the basin then!

Take care of yourselves,

Big Hug!

Julia Abel
(Volunteer from November '98 to May '99)

 

24-25 August 1998

I was once again drawn by here by the magic quality of the home and the special people in it. I think I came to retrieve my heart which I left here 1 year ago, but once again I am forced to leave in your possession. This is where it belongs! Keep going with the work, play and laughter, they are essential parts of childhood and I'm thrilled to find so much here. I'll be back soon I'm sure, I don't know when, but I will return.

Love always,
Ursula

 

Testimony of prim. dr. Fuad Secerbegovic about saving Bosnian children from chetnik persecutions during WW2

It is interesting that the first railway-track from Lipik to Vienna was built in 1861 by Henry D'Heureux - Gibel, a French enterprise dealing with exploitation of oak trees. Already in 1894 the town was electrified. In 1866 Lipik had 228 inhabitants: 222 Roman Catholics, 3 Pravoslavs, and 3 Jews.

Lipik in the first half of 20th century (Kursalon)

The town of Lipik is known for its very rich Recreation and Health Center, built already in the 19th century. It had

  • baths with thermal mineral water, mineral water supply (300,000 liters per year),
  • theatre,
  • gallery
  • concert and congress hall, dancing hall,
  • exceptionally cultivated park area,
  • olympic swimming pool,
  • cultural object (Kursalon) of zero category (neo renaissance object built in 1893 according to a project of Gustav Rath, architect from Budapest),
  • hotel (four stars), hospital with hydro therapeutic facilities,
  • a small artificial lake with an island,
  • tennis playgrounds,
  • private villas in secession style, etc.

All of this was either destroyed or seriously damaged during Greater Serbian shelling and bombing (including napalm bombs) in 1991.

Kursalon after the Greater Serbian agression in 1991

Numerous Croatian artists, above all those gathered within the association HLD SPEKTAR from Zagreb, donated altogether hundreds of their works of art to the future gallery of the town of Lipik. Many of them are exhibited in the Lipik Orphanage. Some artists from abroad also donated their works, like Janet Q. Treloar, London.

The Lipik Catholic church  after the Greater Serbian destruction in 1991

The Lipik Catholic church after the Greater Serbian destruction in 1991

Dr. Ivica Sreter, director of the Lipik Hospital,
kidnapped by Greater-Serbian forces and killed in 1991 at unknown place;
a short information about him can be found here at Croatian Society of Prisoners of Serbian Concentration Camps

Mr. Stjepan Horvat, mayor of the town of Lipik, donated a very nice doll dressed in a local national costume to the King of Dolls. The doll was handed over to him in Zagreb, accompanied with a special diploma. The doll and diploma are in the Ethnographic museum in Zagreb, as well as the whole collection of the King.

In 1998 Mr. Mark Cook became honorable citizen of the town of Lipik.


Hope and Homes for Children or HHC is a charity organization working in 13 countries in Eastern Europe and Africa. Their head office is based in Wiltshire in the UK. It was established by Mr. Mark Cook and his wife Caroline. The first project was an orphanage in Croatia, in Lipik. For more information see the following web pages:

Mr. Mark Cook

Hope and Homes for Children is a charity dedicated to providing homes for children orphaned by war. Colonel Mark Cook is the former commander of the British Contingent of the U.N. Protection Force in Croatia. In 1992, in a small town Lipik (Croatia) he made a promise to the orphans that he would rebuild their home which had been completely destroyed by the Serbs. After first retiring from the armed forces, and with the support of many kind, caring people from around the world, Mark and his wife Caroline founded Hope and Homes for Children, raised over L 1 million and rebuilt a multi-ethnic home for 80 children in Lipik. (This text is taken from the web page www.streetkids.net).

I have left Croatia, but...

Clouds over the town of Lipik

 


Acknowledgements. Many thanks for kind help in collecting data about the Lipik Orphanage to Stjepan Horvat (former Mayor of the town of Lipik), Antun Haramija, Lipik, members of HLD SPEKTAR from Zagreb - in particular to Snjezana Bozic (founder of the art colony To Lipik With Love in 1997, and the founder of the Lipik Gallery), Snjezana Krejci (The Lipik Tourist Office), to Ivan Puscenik (many thanks for DVDs), and to children and staff of the Home for their hospitality.



Formated for CROWN by
prof.dr. Darko Zubrinic
Distributed by www.Croatia.org . This message is intended for Croatian Associations/Institutions and their Friends in Croatia and in the World. The opinions/articles expressed on this list do not reflect personal opinions of the moderator. If the reader of this message is not the intended recipient, please delete or destroy all copies of this communication and please, let us know!

How would you rate the quality of this article?

Verification:
Enter the security code shown below:
imgRegenerate Image


Add comment
Related Articles
Related Links
Comments
  • Comment #1 (Posted by Hilda M. Foley)

    It was with tears and then joy reading about the Lipik orphanage and the kindness of strangers who donated so much to rebuilding it. Many thanks to all of them, especially to Colonel Mark Cook. I am sure he will be forever remembered in Lipik for his compassion.
     
Submit Comment


Article Options
Croatian Constellation



Popular Articles
  1. Dr. Andrija Puharich: parapsychologist, medical researcher, and inventor
  2. (E) Croatian Book Club-Mike Celizic
  3. Europe 2007: Zagreb the Continent's new star
  4. (E) 100 Years Old Hotel Therapia reopens in Crikvenica
  5. Nenad Bach singing without his hat in 1978 in Croatia's capital Zagreb
No popular articles found.