Djokovic, a fan of a gluten-free and plant-based diet, was born in Belgrade a few years before the wars.
Amid pyramids of regenerative powers and gurus, Novak Djokovic, at the center of a legal mess since he wanted to enter Australia while still in doubt about his vaccination situation, shows a taste for the esoteric that he has never denied throughout his career.
Djoko, 34, is out of tune with the stars of world sports with his meditations with a Spanish guru, Pepe Imaz, former tennis player supporter of “love and peace.”
Preparation methods that have been able to make people talk but without ever affecting the mind of someone who at the age of seven told Serbian television that he wanted to be number one in the world.
Djokovic, a fan of a gluten-free and plant-based diet, He was born in Belgrade a few years before the wars that led to the bloody dismemberment of the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s.
He trained in an abandoned swimming pool and queued like many other citizens for milk, bread, and other staples.
Some experiences that “made him stronger and made me want to be successful,” he would explain later.
Paradisiac pyramid
Decades have passed and today he has the record of income in the ATP circuit with about 155 million dollars. He lives in Monaco, the refuge of great fortunes, but, according to general opinion, he remains close to his Belgrade roots.
Considered one of the best players in history, Djoko is also regularly in the news for his positions that make him a player apart.
Twice positive for COVID-19, in June 2020, when he organized a controversial tour in the Balkans, turned into an outbreak, and last December, when he appeared without a mask at events in Belgrade, he has never hidden his hostility to vaccination.
“Personally, I am not in favor of vaccines. I would not like someone to force me to get vaccinated to travel, “he said in April 2020.
The winner of 86 ATP titles, including 20 Grand Slams, sees a mysterious “pyramid” in Bosnia as “paradise on earth”.
Going twice in 2020 to that place, which dominates the town of Visoko, near Sarajevo, Djokovic relaunched the public’s interest in this place, a simple hill and old gold mine, according to archaeologists, a pyramid with “energetic tunnels ” for others.
The tennis player had explained to AFP that he felt “regenerated” after one of his visits. “I know there are many doubts, dilemmas about the authenticity” of the place, but “to fully understand what is happening here (…) you have to come.”
He also gave cause to speak when he considered it possible to alter the composition of the water through positive thinking.
“I have seen and know people who through energy transformation, through the power of prayer, the power of gratitude, manage to transform the most toxic foods and the most polluted water into the most purifying water,” he said in a conversation in line with an alternative nutrition guru, Chervin Jafarieh.
King of the Balkans
In the Balkans, the Serbian is an idol, considered the best player of all time.
He is also appreciated for his humanitarian activities. It makes regular donations through its foundation in Serbia, but also in Bosnia and Croatia when these countries were hit in 2014 by catastrophic floods.
Djokovic helped his native country in the early moments of the pandemic, while also sending respirators to Montenegro.
In December, he added his voice to the concert of opponents of the opening of a lithium mine in Serbia, a project supported by the government.
“Clean air, water and food are the key elements of health,” he said on social media, when Serbs demonstrated en masse against the Anglo-Australian giant Rio Tinto’s project.
“Without that, all the words about ‘health’ are obsolete,” he had added. (D)

Paul is a talented author and journalist with a passion for entertainment and general news. He currently works as a writer at the 247 News Agency, where he has established herself as a respected voice in the industry.