UPDATED Character Declaration: Dzvonimir "Dzvonko" Lazarevski

Started by jennydxxth, Dec 17, 2024, 05:27 AM

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jennydxxth

MC username: mercydreams_

Name: Dzvonimir "Dzvonko" Lazarevski Mischlat

Traits and political views:
- Shlorbo-Farun who has faced much discrimination due to both his rural, poor upbringing and a poor understanding of the Farun language
- Southern regionalist with sympathies for the People's Alliance due to their support of religion and regional rights
- Heavily religious man, has vowed himself to simplicity and Cubean monasticism as stated in Ušmanevian religious texts
- An up and coming boxer in the SBL with an Elo of 400 as of writing
- A tortured soul who fights to cope with the loss of his friend during the Great War

Goals:
Become a successful boxer, overcome the shell shock

Background:
Born to a Shlorb peasant, Adamek Itscha Lazarevski, and his Farun wife, Sofija Muromets Lazarevski, in 1898 in the Duchy of Bloatia, Dzvonko lived a life of poverty. Following the outbreak of the Great War in 1913 and the settling into the Glormor trench line by 1915, Dzvonko was drafted after an Imperial decree commanded all able-bodied men above 15 were to be shipped to the frontline. After his dear friend and rumored homosexual companion Željko Malkovets perished on the frontline, he fell into deep shell shock and was discharged in 1917. Homeless, poor, and deeply traumatized, he lived a life of solitude for multiple years, living in the far west of Faru in a shack unvisited by most. By 1925, he finally exited the bounds of his shack in search of something better. He ended up going to Urbis, and, after some street begging, moved into the local Andrej Sobczyk's basement, as he was sympathetic to Shlorbs like Dzvonko.
Stumbling upon dusty tomes of old Cubeaist abstentionism and monasticism, he read them and became deeply religious, as this was one of his few introductions to Farun literature. Following the rise of the SPA, he began to believe they were his best hope for tolerance. Additionally, to make a living, he began boxing, which proved to be a good outlet for his buried traumas.