The period of Croatia within ex-Yugoslavia(1918-1941, 1945-1991)© by Darko Zubrinic, Zagreb (1995)It is interesting that the greatest promoters of creating a state of the Southern Slavs, i.e. the idea of Yugoslavia, were the Croats (Josip Juraj Strossmayer on the first place), but they did not conceive of it as the centralized, Serb-dominated state. Their aim was to preserve the Croatian national identity and the sovereignty of Croatia and to organize the new state of South Slavs on a confederative basis. That is why the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, established in 1918, did not obtain the confirmation and permission of the Croatian Parliament. This state, created in 1918 from the Austro-Hungarian part, (Slovenia, Croatia, Vojvodina, Bosnia-Herzegovina) and Serbia and Montenegro, which were opposing sides during the First World War (1914-1918), contained a germ of numerous future conflicts. It was composed of different traditions, religions, nations, languages and scripts. At that time the region of Vojvodina did not include Srijem (the territory between rivers Sava and Danube), that before 1918 belonged to Croatia. Vojvodina belonged to Hungary before 1918. The idea of Yugoslavia was in fact the best opportunity for Serbian nationalists to create the Greater Serbia, which was completed in 1918 according to the 1844 secret program. Montenegro lost its independence in 1918 after being brutally annexed to Serbia. The independence of Montenegro was regained in 1945 within the Tito's Yugoslavia. The whole property of the Austro-Hungarian state and booty was confiscated by the Serbian authorities. Immediately after 1918 all the leading positions in the army were seized by Serbian officers, who treated Croatia as a hostile territory in the common state (it was publicly declared in 1919!). On the other hand, it was presented to Europe as if the Croats had entered willingly the union with Serbia. The Serbian legislature, juridical and military 19th century law was simply implemented into the new state without changes and without consultations with the Croats. It resulted in unbearable terror and persecutions of Croatian peasants and intellectuals. Croatian teachers were retired and persecuted. Equally difficult was the economic terror of the Belgrade government. The Croats were not proportionally represented in the government and diplomatic corps. The old currencies - Serbian dinars and Croatian (Austrian) crowns, which in 1918 had the same value, were in 1919 changed for the new dinar in the following ratio: 1 dinar = 4 crowns! On the other hand,
Very cruel persecutions of the Muslims by the Serbs resulted in their massive emigration to Turkey soon after the foundation of Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes in 1918, where Serbia was the leading and privileged nation. The same happened to several hundred thousand Muslims soon after the Second World War. We have witnessed the same persecutions since 1992. Only in the first half of 1992 about 250,000 Croats and Muslims were exiled from Bosnia to Croatia, as an adding to its own 350,000 citizens exiled from the occupied areas. One of the most outstanding and most popular personalities in the Croatian political history was Stjepan Radic (1871-1928), the leader of the Croatian Peasant Party, assassinated in the Yugoslav parliament in Belgrade (capital of present Serbia) in 1928 together with his colleagues. The assassination was organized at the Royal court in Belgrade. Radic strived to renew the Croatian sovereignty and the economic and cultural emancipation of Croatia. He wanted the state of the Southern Slavs to be reorganized on confederative basis, without Serbian hegemony. For more information see:
Stjepan Radic completed his studies in France, on École Libre des Sciences Politiques in Paris, with the thesis La Croatie actuelle et les Slaves du sud.
The culmination of the Serbian police terror took place during the personal dictatorship of king Aleksandar Karadzordevic since 1929. One of the historical documents from that period, showing `methods' of the Serbian police and administration, is a bill [JPG] on 13 dinars and 15 paras charged to a Croatian family in 1934 for five bullets fired at the father, who was sentenced to death. The families were persuaded even to pay the `expenses' of the execution within eight days, under the threat of confiscation of their property. Croatian archbishop Alojzije Stepinac reported about this event to the French diplomat Ernest Pezet in 1935.
Belgrade made use of the world economic crises in 1929 to destroy the Croatian banking system, which had been the strongest in Yugoslavia. Out of 165 active army generals of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia (1929 - 1941) only 2 were the Croats, and - 161 Serbs. In 1937, out of 22 Yugoslav ambassadors 20 were Serbs and only two Croats, see [Peric, p 42]. All this led to the formation of the Croatian separatist group called Ustasha, which gathered around Ante Pavelic (1889-1959). It had been supported by the fascist Italy. Croatian scientists were also victims of the Greater-Serbian terror. So Milan Sufflay, historian of international reputation known by his numerous scientific contributions, especially in the field of albanology, was assassinated by a steel rod on a street in the center of Zagreb in 1931. After the dramatic events that followed, Albert Einstein and Heinrich Mann sent an appeal to the International League of Human Rights in Paris to protect Croats from the terror and persecutions of the Serbian police. It was also published in the New York Times (6th May 1931). As we learn from this letter, the newspapers in Zagreb were not allowed to report about Sufflay's activity; it was not allowed to attach a half-mast flag on the main building of the University of Zagreb in his honour; the time of the funeral could not be announced publicly, and even condolence messages were not allowed to be telegraphed. In their letter Einstein and Mann hold the Yugoslav king Aleksandar explicitly responsible for the state terror over the Croats. The letter concludes that it should not be tolerated that killings be allowed as a means to achieve political goals. We should not allow killers to be promoted as national heroes. The king himself was assassinated by a Macedonian patriot in Marseille in 1934 (there are indications that there was a collaboration of the Macedonian Revolutionary Organization with the Ustasha organization).
Milan Sufflay at the funeral of Stjepan Radic in 1928, Zagreb An extremely valuable account on the terrorist methods of the Pan-Serbs in Yugoslavia between the two WWs has been written by Henri Pozzi, a brave French diplomat (his mother was English) and a close witness, in his book Black Hand over Europe, London, 1935. "Black hand" is the name of the Pan-Serbian secret terrorist organization, very close to the Royal court in Belgrade. It was the "Black hand" that organized the assassination of the Austrian archduke Ferdinand Habsburg in Sarajevo in 1914, which meant the beginning of the First WW. All the best posts in Croatia were occupied by the Serbs. Around 1930 the situation in Croatia was to following (see Henri Pozzi, p.35):
In 1934 the Croatian community in the USA sent with 43,000 signatures of American Croats. The petition urged the League to secure the independence of Croatia from Yugoslavia on the plea that Yugoslavia was mistreating the Croats. It was initiated by Ivan A. Stipanovic (1890-1970), a parish priest in Youngstown, Ohio, USA. The petition began with a reference to Woodrow Wilson's plea for the right of self-determination. The memorandum was sent to embassies of all nations represented in the USA and to the Pope Pius at Rome. Signatures were collected during 1932 and 1933 in 26 American states, Washington, and in three provinces in Canada, and all of them authenticated by notaries public in these states. The petition was soon stolen from the Geneva archives of the League of Nations, see an article published in Youngstown Vindicator, 10th December 1934. The tendency of administrative parcelization of Croatia that started in 1922 was revised by the establishment of the autonomous Croatia - Banovina Hrvatska - in 1939. It also included parts of Bosnia-Herzegovina. After the military defeat of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1941, parts of Croatia were annexed to Italy and Hungary, and the rest of Croatia was occupied by the Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy. In this part of Croatia and in Bosnia-Herzegovina the occupational forces enabled the formation of the Independent State of Croatia (NDH, Nezavisna drzava Hrvatska, 1941-1945), with its own fascist ustasha order introduced from Italy and Germany, and with Ante Pavelic as its president. It brought misfortune to many Serbs, Jews, Gypsies and Croats. The aim of the Ustasha regime was to have ethnically pure Croatian territories. Mass executions were organized in the infamous Jasenovac concentration camp, similar to those in Germany and Poland. A part of captives has been left to the German occupational rule in NDH and transported to concentration camps in Germany and Poland. There is no doubt that this was the darkest period of the Croatian history. For those wishing to obtain a more complete information on the history of Independent state of Croatia we recommend to consult an essay of Sentija in [Macan, Sentija]. We also recommend you to consult an extensive book of [Paul Garde]. John Kraljic (New York, USA): The New York Times, Croatia and History Disappointment with the NDH came very soon. Forty days after its proclamation there came the "Rome agreement", in fact a dictate of the fascist Italy (Pavelic's protector in time of his emigration), by which large parts of Croatian national territory, including Dalmatia, had to be ceded to Italy, and Medimurje to Horthy's Hungary. The vassal status of NDH towards Hitler's Germany and Mussolini's Italy greatly reduced the initial support that NDH enjoyed among the Croats. The Independent state of Croatia (NDH), though awaited by many who wanted to get rid of the Yugoslav terror, led to the new tragedy of the Croats. They were divided in two opposing parts - those who supported the Independent State of Croatia, and those who joined the Antifascist movement, which fought for the new Yugoslavia on federative basis, where the Croatian state would enjoy the same rights as others. Thus, however contradictory it may seem, both opposing parts of the Croatian population fought for the same goal - for free Croatia. It should be noted that, though NDH had its fascist ustasha order introduced from Italy and Germany, never in the history there was any fascist (or ustasha) party in Croatia. This is a clear indication of the negative attitude of great majority of the Croats towards Fascism. On the other hand, in 1941 the Serbian Fascist Party has been founded in Belgrade by Dimitrije Ljotic, the principal Fascist ideologist of Serbia, Nedic's second in command. The Serbian government under General Milan Nedic, a close collaborator of the Nazi officials, proclaimed Belgrade to be the first "Judenfrei" city in Europe (see [Cohen] in Helsinki or Cohen's important book for more details). Belgrade was the only European capital that had concentration camps exclusively for Jews (Sajmiste and Banjica), see e.g. [Pecaric]. There are no holocaust memorial tablets in Belgrade, as is the case in the similar camps elsewhere in Europe. It is estimated that the number of victims is comparable to that in the Jasenovac camp. Croatian population was mostly peasant, politically organized in the Croatian Peasant Party (HSS), by far the strongest in the country before 1941. Its strength stem from the popularity of Stjepan Radic, killed in the Belgrade parliament in 1928. Vladko Maček, who took over the leadership of HSS after Radic's assassination, had been imprisoned by the Ustasha regime in 1941 in Jasenovac, and then kept in custody. When the WW2 ended and Tito's communist regime started, the Croatian Peasant Party was forbidden. An amazing antifascist case of "Stadium" in Croatian capital Zagreb is for sure without precedent in the history of WW2, in the part of Europe already occupied by nazists and fascists. In May 26, 1941, all secondary school pupils in Zagreb had to gather on a city stadium, lined in ranks. The ustasha officials ordered all Jews and Serbs to step forward. And what happened? ALL PUPILS stepped forward - Croats, Jews, and Serbs - aware of the police terror that awaited them. On the other hand (also without precedent in the history of WW2), three months later, August 13, 1941, "An appeal to Serbian people" was signed by 545 leading Serbian intellectuals in Belgrade, including four archbishops, at least 81 university professors, artsits, etc. Two of the best known intellectuals are Aleksandar Belich, a linguist, one of the "scientific" founders of Greater Serbian program, and Viktor Novak, who became ardent communist after 1945, and wrote a voluminous Magnum Crimen accusing the Catholic Church and Cardinal Alojzije Stepinac for "collaboration with ustashis" (its "reliability" is well known; of course, his books are extensively cited by Serbian sources). The "Appeal" represented a public call to support Nazi occupying forces and local quislings in Serbia. Many of the signatories (the complete list can be seen in [Cohen], p. 158-172) became important figures after 1945 in Tito's Yugoslavia (!), and 28 of them even members of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. This Academy has created intellectual program for the unsuccessful project of Greater Serbia, i.e. Serbia extended to BiH and a large part of Croatia. It is very little known that the famous Sarajevo Haggadah (Jewish Bible) has been saved from German Nazis by Jozo Petricevic, director of the Sarajevo Museum in 1941. Here we would like to mention a tragic fate of a division composed of about 500-1000 Catholic and Muslim Croats which has been sent by force to France in 1943 by the Nazis in order to fight there. Originally this division was predicted to act as a defensive formation exclusively on the Croatian soil. A rebellion of the Croatian troops which took place in Villefranche-de-Rouergue (capital of an arrondissement in the region of Aveyron) in September 1943 shows clearly the patriotism of Croatian soldiers. The goal of the rebellion within Nazi troops was to approach the French Liberation Movement and Anglo-Americans, and then to come back to Croatia. It had a tragic outcome, with only a few who managed to escape. This rebellion, the first within the Nazi military system during the WW2, was highly esteemed by the French citizens of Villefranche-de-Rouergue. When the city was liberated in 1944, they decided to pay tribute to these tragic victims by naming one of its streets as Avenue des Croates. The French witnesses called this insurrection la révolte des Croates. According to Louis Erignac, Villefranche-de-Rouergue was the first free city of occupied France. Even today citizens of the city regularly commemorate this tragic event (September 14th). In 1952 the participants of the Croatian Partisan Movement planned to build up a memorial to the Croatian victims in Villefranche-de-Rouergue (with a sculpture of Vanja Radaus), but this has been prevented by the (ex)Yugoslav government in Belgrade under the pretext that in this way the "quislings" would be honoured. For more details see [Croatie/France], and a monograph [Grmek, Lambrichs] related to this subject.
Croatia gave a great contribution to the victory of the Antifascist coalition in the Second World War. Out of all the brigades and divisions of Tito's Liberation Movement created on the territory of former Yugoslavia, the great majority was from Croatia. We find it pertinent to cite the following words of Georges-Marie Chenu, Ministre plénipotentiaire, the first Ambassador of France in Zagreb (1992-94), see [Gregory Peroche], p. 10:
Pendant trop longtemps, l'opinion publique française ignora que, parmi les résistants au nazisme dans la région, plus de la moitié étaient croates ou slovènes et qu'au début de 1944 - les combats se prolongèrent après la capitulation du Reich - il y avait en Croatie autant de résistants actifs qu'en France, pays neuf fois plus peuplé! Stjepan Filipovic (1916 -1942), a Croatian antifascist born in Opuzen, in Dalmatian part of Croatia, was hanged publicly in the city of Valjevo in Serbia. The beginning of WW2 found him in Serbia where he was working as a factory worker. His grand monument in Valjevo still exists, with his serbized name (Stevan). Present Serbain sources (as well as former Yugoslav sources) present him as a Serb hanged by the Germans. There exists a photo taken just a moment before his hanging, where one can clearly see Serbian chetniks together with German officers, one of many proofs of their very close collaboration. This amazing photo of a victim of the fascist terror is also exhibited in the building of UN in New York. Whose terror? The nationality of this Croatian victim of the Serbian and German Fascism is not indicated. See [Ljubica Stefan] for more details. Petar Perica (1881-1944) composed two sacral songs still extremely popular among the Croats: Do nebesa nek se ori (in 1900, at the age of 19) and Rajska Djevo (in 1904, at the age of 23). In 1901 he entered the Society of Jesus. Killed by communist partisans in 1944 on the islet of Daksa near Dubrovnik. Hrvoje Kacic: "Dubrovacke zrtve", Jugokomunisticki teror na hrvatskom jugu 1944. i poratnim godinama (pocetak Bleiburga) After the capitulation of Italy in 1943 the Anti-fascist council for the national liberation of Croatia (ZAVNOH) decided to join Istria, Rijeka, Zadar, the islands and other occupied areas to Croatia. All agreements made by the NDH and the former Kingdom of Yugoslavia with the fascist Italy were torn up. Not only the Croats participated in the Anti-fascist war in Croatia, but also a part of the Serbian minority in Croatia and many other ethnical groups. A part of Serbs in Croatia joined the Greater-Serbian extremist organization (chetniks) which collaborated with the occupational forces. The mass crimes against the Croats and Muslim Slavs committed by the Serbian chetnik movement were particularly cruel. The aim was to create ethnically pure Greater Serbia that would include Bosnia-Herzegovina and a large part of Croatia. Ljubica Stefan: Americko gostoprimstvo zlocincu Momcilu Djuicu, Hrvatsko Slovo, November 6, 1998 By the end of the Second World War the remaining parts of the NDH Army together with many civilians began to withdraw to Austria, and in the battles until 15 May 1945 they surrendered to the Yugoslav Army, which surrounded them. Many people who flew to Austria in mid-May 1945, were sent back by the British military authorities (who had jurisdiction over a part of Austria) to the Yugoslav partisans. Tens of thousands of soldiers and civil captives were killed after the capitulation. The symbol of the Croatian tragedy is the slaughter of Croats near the city of Bleiburg in Austria. Those who were not killed immediately, were forced to walk up to 700-800 km. (the infamous "death marches") with mass executions on the way, organized mostly by Serbian partisan officers. These death marches are known among the Croats as "krizni put" (Way of the Cross). Many sites of mass executions were discovered throughout Croatia and Slovenia after democratic changes in 1990.
It is sad that the Croats in present day Slovenia do not enjoy the status of national minority, contrary to the much smaller Slovenian community in Croatia. Note that the second name Horvat is among the most widespread in Slovenia. See a list of 456 Croatian Catholic priests, theology students and religious brothers killed by communists and Serbian chetniks in the former Yugoslavia during and after World War II, written by Ante Cuvalo. A detailed and well documented scholarly monograph concerning the chetnik crimes in Croatia and in Bosnia-Herzegovina is [Dizdar, Sobolevski]. One of the great tragedies of the Second World War was the slaughter of 12,000 Polish officers in the Katyn wood (Poland) in 1940. Also a mass grave with more than thousand Ukrainian peasants and workers in Vinica (Ukraine), killed in 1938, was found by Germans. The Soviets accused Germans for these horrible crimes, and vice versa. Among leading European experts from 12 countries in pathological anatomy, two Croatian specialists were invited by the International Committee of the Red Cross to take part in the investigation in 1943: prof.dr. Eduard Miloslavic and prof.dr. Ljudevit Jurak. The result was that this cold-blooded mass slaughter was committed by the Soviets. Prof.dr. Miloslavic emigrated in time from ex-Yugoslavia to the USA by the end of WWII, while prof. Jurak remained in Zagreb, and was imprisoned on the demand of the Russian NKVD by the Yugoslav communists in May 1945. It was offered to him that he would not be accused as a military criminal and that his life would be spared if he declared that his report for the Red Cross Committee had been signed under pressure. He refused to do so, fully aware of the consequence. Dr. Edward L. Miloslavich Croatian investigator of the Katyn Forest tragedy It is a well known fact that the Jasenovac concentration camp is a symbol of the fascist terror in Croatia during the WW2. However, it is not widely known that the same concentration camp served to the communist regime during several years after the WW2, where many innocent Croats have been killed until the end of 1947 without any trial. Thus Jasenovac is a place of both
Very indicative is the fact that Tito (1892-1980), president of former Yugoslavia, never payed a visit to Jasenovac. There are more than hudred persons in Croatia who obtained "The Certificate of Honour" and "The Medal of the Righteous" from Yad Vashem in Jerusalem till now, for To our knowledge there are at least eight National Heroes of the USA that are of the Croatian descent or having Croatian ancestry. One of them is Petar Tomic (Tonic -> Tomic is his clan-surname, originally Petar Herceg). He lost his life while saving the crew on the warship "US Utah AG-16" when it was bombed in the battle for Pearl Harbor in 1941. He was a member of the Croatian Fraternal Union, USA, and was born in Herzegovina in Prolog near Ljubuski. President Franklin Roosewelt awarded him posthumously for his courage by the Medal of Honour. In 1942 a new warship "Tomich DE-242" was built in the USA, that was named after him. Saving the USA soldiers in Croatia during the WWII Andrija Hebrang (1899-1948), one of the leaders of Tito's partisan movement in Croatia, was killed brutally in Belgrade (date unknown) after being unjustly imprisoned in 1948. Like Stjepan Radic, he wanted Yugoslavia to be organized on the confederative basis. A symbol of the spiritual resistance against the Yugoslav communist regime was the Croatian Cardinal Dr. Alojzije Stepinac (1898-1960). In 1946 he was sentenced to 16 year's imprisonment. He stayed in custody until his death, despite many protests coming from the free world. During the communist period in Croatia (1945-1990) he had been designated as a military criminal even in school textbooks. The Yugoslav diplomatic personnel, which was mostly Serbian, together with the well organized Belgrade propaganda, made an attempt to stigmatize the Croats as apt to genocide, by assigning all the victims of the war to the Croats, including those killed by partisans, during and immediately after the Second World War. As a result of this, even today we hear from some very uncritical Western intellectuals to operate with quite irrational ciphers. An important monograph about population losses in former Yugoslavia in 1941-1945 is [Zerjavic]. See also The Inventions and Lies of Dr Bulajic on Internet, discussing the number of victims of WW2, Jasenovac, etc., written by the leading authority - Vladimir Zerjavic. It is not possible to describe, even in outlines, the extent of the martyrdom of the Croatian emigrants, and the persecutions of the Yugoslav secret police that followed after 1945, so that here we shall mention it only in passing. One of outstanding Croatian emigrants was Ante Ciliga (born in Istria, Segotica near Vodnjan, 1898 - 1992) who spent 6 years in Russian concentration camps: 1930 - 1936. His book Au pays du grand mensonge, Paris 1938 (In the land of great lie) revealed the truth about stalinist concentration camps to the world audience. It is probably the first anti-stalinist book, translated into many languages, including Japanese. He also spent one year (1942/1943) imprisoned in the Jasenovac concentration camp. Other books: The Russian Enigma, London 1940, Il labirinto jugoslavo, Rome 1983. Related web page: Stjepan Tomislav Poglajen or Tomislav Kolakovic (1906-1990) Great importance in the recent history of Croatia had the Declaration about the Name and Position of the Croatian Literary Language (Zagreb, 1967). The declaration asked for the right of the Croats to call their language by their own national name - the Croatian language, to enable its unimpeded development, and expressed a protest against the Serbian predominance in official texts in Croatia. It was signed by 130 leading Croatian writers and linguists (including Miroslav Krleza), many of whom were then persecuted and maltreated by the Yugoslav police. In order to be more clear, it will be necessary to make the following comparison. The history of the Serbian literary language started in the 19th century with Vuk Stefanovic Karadzic, who wrote the Serbian dictionary, published in Vienna in 1818. On the other hand, Croatian literary language had already centuries of rich history, starting with the important Baska glagolitic tablet carved by the end of 11th century. Until the 19th century the Croats already had numerous dictionaries, the earliest being from the 16th century. Let us list the authors of eight of the most important Croatian dictionaries published before 1818:
We also know of six unpublished Croatian dictionaries that remained in handwriting, written before the 19th century. We know even of a Croatian - Turkish dictionary from 1631 published in the Arabian Script (critical edition published by Dervish Korkut in 1943). The things are becoming more clear if one knows that Vuk Stefanovic Karadzic borrowed many Croatian words from the monumental dictionary of Joakim Stulli (which has as many as 80,000 lexical units) for the needs of his Serbian dictionary, the first dictionary of the Serbian language. The reform of the writing in the spirit "write as you speak" undertaken by Karadzic in 1818, so that to every sound there corresponds a unique written letter and vice versa, had been performed almost two centuries earlier by a Croat Bartol Kasic (Rituale Romanum, written in the Croatian language, Rome, 1640). Many toponyms in Croatia obtained distorted names during 1918-1991 Yugoslav period in order to assign them Serbian sound. This is the case even with some towns; see an illuminating article by Zvonimir Bartolic: Beli Manastir (in Croatian). In the period of ex-Yugoslavia, 70% of the police stuff in Croatia was Serbian, while they constituted 12.2% of the entire population. In some Croatian regions these figures were even more striking: in Istria the police stuff was 82% Serbian, 95% school teachers were the Serbs. The Serbs also occupied almost all the leading positions in majority of the Croatian schools, enterprises and political institutions. One of the founders of the nonalignment movement, together with presidents Nehru and Naser, was Josip Broz Tito (1892-1980), a Croat born near Zagreb, the president of former Yugoslavia. His great merit was the brave 1948 decision, not to allow the Soviet dictatorship of Stalin. However, he retained a rigid communist system and tolerated the cult of his personality. His attempt to solve the national problem in the former Yugoslavia was not successful in the long run. Although he was a Croat, a great majority of military personnel in the former Yugoslav army was Serbian. This equally applies to the Yugoslav diplomatic personnel and the state administration. The extent of the economic exploitation in favor of Serbia and Yugoslav Army brought Croatia in unequal position within the Yugoslav federation. Especially difficult was the period after Tito's death (1980-1990), when the Yugoslav crisis began to sharpen. It culminated in the Greater-Serbian aggression on Croatia that started in 1991. The Yugoslav state under Tito had six republics and two autonomous provinces. Each of these eight entities had a town renamed according to Tito's name: Titovo Velenje (in Slovenia), Titova Korenica (in Croatia), Titov Drvar (in Bosnia and Herzegovina), Titograd (in Montenegro), Titovo Uzice (in Serba), Titov Veles (in Macedonia), Titov Vrbas (in the then Autonomous region of Vojvodina), and Titova Mitrovica (on the then Autonomous region of Kosovo). In 1990s the prefix "Tito" has been removed from all these eight names. Ante Čuvalo (ed.): Hrvatska mala škola "sv. Josipa" / ALBUM / Izbjeglički logor Fermo, CroLibertas Publishers, Chicago, Illinois 2015 (photos by August Frajtić, text by Marija Ramljak) Kroz logor Fermo (Campo Fermo blizu Ancone) prošlo je od 1945. do 1948. nekoliko tisuća Hrvata. Oni su organizirali vrlo bogat sportski, edukacijski, kulturno-umjetnički i duhovni život. Logorsku kapelicu posvetio je tadašnji biskup Ferma i odobrio da ona služi kao prava hrvatska katolička župa u njegovoj biskupiji. August Frajtić (1902.-1977.) bio je dugogodišnji tajnik Fotokluba Zagreb. Prigodom prvog fotoamaterskog kongresa u Beču održanog 1938. izabran je za dopredsjednika novosonovane Međunarodne fotoamaterske unije. Rođen je u Bileći u BiH, a preminuo u Buenos Airesu. Marija Ramljak (1909.-1982.) bila je organizatorice i voditeljica "Hrvatske male škole" u logoru Fermo. Rođena je u Pleternici kod Požege, a preminula u Argentini. The roots of the Greater-Serbian 1991-1995 aggression on Croatia and Bosnia-HerzegovinaThe contemporary plan of creating the "Greater Serbia" defines its borders roughly as those gained by the Turkish Ottoman Empire in the past, tracing the farthest Serbian enclaves in Croatia. This irrational plan was laid down in a secret written program, created in 1844 by the Serbian minister of inner affairs. Today the main promoter of this idea is the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, through a systematic indoctrination of the entire Serbian population. This highest cultural institution of Serbia bears the greatest responsibility for the tragedy of the Croats, Muslims and even their own people in the aggression that started in 1991. In the states of Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina the Serbs are represented by 20% of the entire population.The scheme for creating the "Greater Serbia", hidden behind the idea of New Yugoslavia, was planned in Belgrade. Up till now we have seen the following main stages:
The second stage of this plan started in the region of Knin, a small Croatian town, which used to be the residence of Croatian kings (in the 11th century), inhabited mostly by the Serbs of the Valachian origin, was carefully planned immediately after Tito's death in 1980 and coordinated from Belgrade, disguised as pretended care for the `threatened' Serbs in Croatia. In the beginning it was a very consistent, simultaneous activity of the Serbian Orthodox Church, Yugoslav diplomacy, Belgrade propaganda machinery and armed extremists supported by the Yugoslav army. A sufficient indication of the aims of the Greater Serbian-aggression is a systematic destruction of Croatian cultural monuments, churches, libraries, museums etc. Just as an illustration, we provide the following figures (Bosnia-Herzegovina not included):
Dubrovnik in 1991 (the main street Stradun) Greater Serbian bombing of the city of Dubrovnik in 1991. Croatian Heroes: Pavo Urban defended Dubrovnik with his camera According to [Wounded libraries of Croatia] in the period 1991-1993 only among destroyed or damaged libraries were (note that destroyed or damaged libraries in Bosnia and Herzegovina are not included in this list):
See also LIBROCIDE by Nensi Brailo. War damages to museums and galleries in Croatia Shelling of Zadar Library, 5 October 1991 (from an article by Jean Lunt Marinovic) Maybe it will be difficult for the reader to hear about a morbid song of Serbian extremists, revealing in full extent the character of the aggression against Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina. It starts like this: "Milosevic, bring us salad, we shall have meat, we'll butcher the Croats". Equally morbid is their flag: it is black, with a skull and cross-bones. All this was shown on TV by CNN and BBC (unfortunately without the English translation) in November 1991, when Serbian troops entered Vukovar, completely destroyed after three months of uninterrupted shelling and bombing. Two hundred and sixty Croats have been transported by the Serbs from the Vukovar hospital (N.B.: in the presence of the international Red Cross representatives) to the nearby location of Ovcara, killed there and dumped in a massive grave, as reported by three survivors.
Vesna Bosanac: Pocetak agresija na Vukovar i ratni ustroj bolnice When the occupation of Vukovar started in August 25th 1991, the Serbian military officials, as well as some experts on the West, predicted that the city will fall in no more than two days. Vukovar had only 1,700 defenders (700 members of the Croatian national guard and 1000 volunteers), against 40-60,000 well equipped Serbian soldiers and paramilitary, supported by the aircraft, heavy artillery and 600 tanks. But the defense of the city lasted for almost three months (86 days), enabling thus the Croatian resistance to consolidate on other battlefields. The name of Vukovar has a special meaning for every Croat. The Yugoslav army, which had been ranked as the third in Europe according to its military potential (after France and Great Britain; supplied with classical weapons better than the Bundeswehr of the united Germany), soon became the greatest and most aggressive formation. On the other hand, Croatian military resources of Territorial defense were confiscated in a secret operation just before the democratic changes in Croatia in 1990, so that Croatia was left practically without means to defend itself. Moreover, the international community imposed embargo on import of arms to Croatia (for the Serbs the embargo on import of arms had no importance). According to the latest information (1996), Croatia has
in this war. The destiny of 72862 persons is still not known, for many of them since 1991 (1400 are from Vukovar), when the aggression against Croatia started. There is no doubt that those who survived are held in concentration camps and prisons in Serbia. According to information provided by dr. Andrija Hebrang (who is the son of Andrija Hebrang the elder) in 2004, during the Homeland 1991-1995 War in Croatia there were
The figures concerning the Croats and Muslim Slavs in Bosnia-Herzegovina are even more tragic. The reader can easily imagine the suffering of these people if he/she recalls the humiliation of the entire international community when the UN officers were arrested and maltreated by the Serbs in Bosnia in May 1995. The Wall of Pain (Zid boli) in Zagreb is a memorial for all Croatians who were killed or disappeared during the Greater-Serbian aggression on Croatia (1990-1995). It was built in 1993 by mothers and relatives of killed and missing soldiers and civilians upon the initiative of Mrs Zdenka Farkas, and placed around the building where UN Peace Mission to Croatia had its headquarters. It has been built as an appeal for humanity and human rigts addressed to the UN. There have been frequent objections (especially from the Serbian propaganda machinery) about would be premature international recognition of Croatia (January 15, 1992) and Bosnia-Herzegovina. Probably the most concise explanation has been provided by Alain Finkelakraut: La sécession des républiques non serbes n'est pas la cause de la politique de Milosevic mais son inexorable conséquence, (see Finkelkraut's essay "La victoire posthume de Hitler" in [Véronique Nahoum - Grappe], p. 207). The first multiparty elections for the Croatian Parliament (Sabor) were held in May 1990. Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) won 205 seats out of 350. In 19th of May 1991, a general referendum was held, which had to decide whether Croatia should stay within the Yugoslav federation as before, or it should be an independent state - but still with the possibility of entering into confederative union with other states. Over three quarters of the electoral rolls voted for the latter. Many organizations and individuals throughout the world contributed the international recognition of Croatia. Especially important was the support provided by Hans Dietrich Genscher (German minister of foreign affairs) and Helmut Kohl (German chancellor, Bundeskanzler). Here we should also emphasize that Germany took care of about 400,000 exiles and refugees from Bosnia - Herzegovina, which is by far the greatest number compared with other West European countries. Italian president Francesco Cossiga was the first foreign high state representative who payed an official visit to Croatia (January 1992). In October 1991 Milosevic's forces tried to assassinate Croatian president Franjo Tudjman by bombing his palace in Zagreb in an air strike.There are enormously many evidences of the most savage humiliation of women, which also seem to have been a part of the program of the aggression. Sceneries like in Dachau or Auschwitz (which we believed would never repeat again in Europe) could have been seen in the Serbian concentration camps (note well: only in those camps to which press agents had the permission of approach from the Serbian authorities). Some of the most infamous such camps are:
in the Banja Luka region in Bosnia and
in Serbia. According to the UN report (Bassiouni) held in Geneva, there were altogether 45 Serbian concentration camps. Bosnian official sources claim the existence of more than 100 concentration camps. You can see:
Roy Gutman, a journalist of the "Newsday" (New York), obtained the prestigious Pulitzer Prize for his descriptions of the Serbian concentration camps. In his book on the large scale genocide over the Muslim Slavs and Croats you can find enormously many evidences of tortures and killings. According to an inquiry organized by the European community, at least 20,000 women were raped during the Serbian occupation. Some of these rapes have been perpetrated in concentration camps created specially for women and children. In his book Gut man accuses some of the leading European and American politicians and international institutions for their passivity that led to the tragedy in Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina (we recommend you to consult the French edition). Parish church in the village of Ravno, BiH (East Herzegovina, not far from Dubrovnik), after Greater Serbian destruction in 1991 The Greater-Serbian aggression against Bosnia-Herzegovina started already in October 1991 by a slaughter of Croats in the village of Ravno, which was then leveled to ground (eastern Herzegovina). Large-scale operations of the Yugoslav (Serbian) Army and well armed extremists started in April 1992. This led to massive ethnic movements. One of the consequences was a tragic conflict between Muslim Slavs and Croats in 1992. Its victim was among others the city of Mostar, and its beautiful oriental bridge built in the 16th century (the name of Mostar was coined from the Croatian word "most", which means "bridge"). For more information about destruction of the Mostar bridge see [Slobodan Praljak]. Also, the victims of this conflict had been two Bosnian Franciscans of the Friary in Fojnica - representatives of the oldest Croatian institution in Bosnia, and the only one in Bosnian history acting uninterruptedly from the 13th century till these days. Bear in mind that Croatia was taking care of 200,000 Muslim Slav exiles from Bosnia. According to investigations of Vladimir Zerjavic, retiree of UN, the overall number of 220,000 victims in Bosnia-Herzegovina is distributed as follows:
The number of victims during the conflict between Croats and Muslims is about 4,000. At the same time, about 15,000 wounded Muslims from BiH (victims of the Greater-Serbian aggression) have been nursed in numerous hospitals in Croatia, and about 400,000 Muslims were lodged throughout Croatia! (sources: see [Miro Tudjman], also Andrija Hebrang J.) The 1991 census in B&H showed that there were 1,905,000 Muslims, 1,364,000 Serbs and 752,000 Croats. According to the opinion of V. Zerjavic the Dayton division of the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina with 51% in favour of the Serbs and only 49% for the Muslim-Croatian Federation cannot be justified. Namely, Zerjavic estimates that in 1997 only 45,6% of the entire B&H population lived on the territory of Serbian entity, while 54,4% on the territory of the Muslim-Croatian entity (Federation of B&H). And until 1999, when most of the exiled Muslims and Croats will return to B&H from Croatia and other European countries, the ratio will be even worse for the Federation. For more details see an interview with V. Zerjavic in Globus, No 370, 9th January 1998, p.24-27. The suffering that this aggression brought also to the Serbian people (not only to the Croats and Muslims) was planned with the intention to remove any idea of the possible coexistence among these three nations. Mirko Kovac, an outstanding Serbian writer and intellectual, moved from Serbia to Croatia in 1991, when the large-scale aggression on Croatia started. This was a moral act of protest against barbaric destruction of Croatian cities of Vukovar, Osijek, Dubrovnik, Zadar, Sibenik, Karlovac, Pakrac etc., and their cultural values. Jevrem Brkovic, an outstanding Montenegrin writer, also left his homeland for the same reason. The list of those bearing the greatest responsibility for the organized genocide over the Croats and Muslim Slavs is as follows:
Mirko Grmek: La mémoire manipulée (Le Monde, 12/04/1991), Mirko Grmek est directeur d’études a l’École pratique des hautes études Especially difficult was the situation in Sarajevo, surrounded by the Greater-Serbian aggressors from 1992 to 1995. The capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina had about
In November 1992, i.e. after less than seven months of the Greater-Serbian aggression on Bosnia-Herzegovina that started in April that same year, UNICEF announced that there were
This clearly shows the dimensions of the genocide over the Muslim Slavs and Croats in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Furthermore, during the Serbian and Montenegrin aggression on Croatia (1990-1995) there were
The region of Banja Luka in the western Bosnia has been inhabited with about 80,000 Croats, before the Greater-Serbian aggression on B&H started in October 1991. Since then, 55,000 Croats have been exiled from this area to Croatia, 850 were killed (out of which 450 were killed and massacred in their homes). The reader can easily imagine the meaning of the fact that the Croats that remained in the Banja Luka region under the Serb regime, have to keep the doors of their houses unlocked day and night. A complete destruction of as many as 80 Catholic churches and friaries (including the Franciscan friary in Banja Luka, destroyed to the ground in May 1995), and many Croatian cultural monuments in the region of Banja Luka alone, prove that the program of this carefully planned aggression was not only the ethnic extinction of the Croats. The program was also to remove any evidence of the presence of the Croats in this area ever in the history, like in other occupied regions. Even the name of Banja Luka originates from a very old Croatian title Ban - Viceroy, known only among the Croats since the earliest period of their history (Banja Luka = Ban's Harbour). Franjo Komarica: In Defence of the Rightless Pope John Paul II visited Bosnia and Herzegovina twice (1997, 2003), and three times Croatia (1994, 1998, 2003). During his apostolic visit to Banja Luka in 2003 he beatified Ivan Merz (1896-1928), Bosnian Croat born in that town. According to information from [Maric, Vrhbosanska nadbiskupija], the Sarajevo Archbishopric (Vrhbosanska nadbiskupija) in the period of 1992-1995 suffered enormous material losses: 199 sacral objects were completely destroyed, 214 seriously damaged, and 277 damaged. Croats in Serbian conquered regions of Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina were forced to wear red-and-white armbonds, analogous to the yellow armbonds worn by Jews in Serbia during the Holocaust (see [Cohen]). As many as 250 destroyed mosques in north-western Bosnia (in the Banja Luka region) illustrate the tragedy of the Muslim Slavs. The Trappists represent an important and extremely austere branch of the Cistercion monastic order, called according to La Trappe in Normandy, France. It was installed in Croatia in Zadar, and in Bosnia in Banja Luka since 1873. It existed in Banja luka until 1991 when the Greater-Serbian aggression on BiH started. Meanwhile, Serbia and Montenegro usurped the name of the old state (ex-Yugoslavia, or more precisely - the former SFRY, the Socialist Federative Republic of Yugoslavia, which existed under this name until 1991) to create a new state, the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY), in 1991. The aim was among others to retain a considerable wealth that the former Yugoslavia possessed in many countries throughout the world: convertible money in foreign banks, apartments and buildings for the diplomatic personnel, lots of tourist offices etc. (altogether 140 buildings). Croatia being one of the six constituent republics of the ex Yugoslavia (until 1991), gave by far the greatest contribution to the overall wealth of the former state. The F.R. of Yugoslavia also usurped the right to be the only successor of the former state, though it has practically nothing to do with the old S.F.R. of Yugoslavia. It is surprising that this new state, that usurped the name of the former state, did not have to go through the process of international recognition within the UN, as did Croatia, Bosnia - Herzegovina and Slovenia. Formal acceptance of this new state (F.R. of Yugoslavia) in United Nations occurred by the end of 2000. Since 1992 the international blockade has been imposed to the F.R. of Yugoslavia, due to its deep and continuous involvement in the aggression against Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina. Millions of users of the Netscape navigator throughout the world had the opportunity to see the regulations forbidding its use in F.R. Yugoslavia and in several similar countries. Ecological disaster in Croatia (a few examples):
The Croatian territories around the city of Knin (the so-called Krajina, occupied by the Serbs since 1991), were liberated in only four days in August 1995 during the Storm Military and Police Operation in Croatia. This also lead to the deblocade of the Bosnian city of Bihac, completely surrounded by the Serbian forces for more than 1100 days (since 1992; just for comparison recall that Stalingrad was under blockade for 900 days in the WW2). In this way the tragedy greater than that that of Srebrenica was prevented. Bosnian city of Bihac had been the capital of Croatia by the end of the 15th century. Only 4.6% of the Croatian territories were still occupied by the Serbian forces since the Storm operation in 1995 until the beginning of 1998 (the region of Baranja and eastern Slavonia), and peacefully reintegrated with the help of UN. Here we would like to mention the town of Zupanja, which was under the uninterrupted general alert for more than 2,100 days, because of almost everyday bombing and shelling. Message of the president Franjo Tudjman to the Croatian citizens of Serbian nationality, August 4, 2005.
Gallery of barbarism during the 1991-1995 aggression on Croatia:
There are more than 120 mass graves discovered in Croatia only in the period until May 1999, with about 3,000 killed, many of them massacred, victims of the 1991-1995 Greater-Serbian aggression. God knows how many mass graves are there in Bosnia-Herzegovina and in Kosovo.
For detailed information about the latest events in Croatia and Bosnia - Herzegovina we recommend you to visit the following web pages, maintained by Mario Profaca:
It should be pointed out that the most tragic outcome of this war is to a great extent due to the behavior of some leading European politicians, who were not willing to admit in time that Croatia was attacked (1991) and their hesitating to name the aggressor. The reader will probably agree that even the unusual shape of Croatian borders on the map of Europe bears witness of extremely difficult history throughout many centuries. ETHNIC CROATIANS KILLED BY NAZI AND FASCIST FORCES DURING WORLD WAR II John Peter Kraljic of New York and Dr. Darko Zubrinic of Zagreb, have announced the release of the initial chapter of their joint project entitled "Ethnic Croatians Killed by Nazi and Fascist Forces During World War II." The initial chapter, which can be accessed at http://www.croatianhistory. covers Primorsko-Goranska County, which centers on Rijeka and includes the Opatija Riviera, the coast to the area north of Senj, the mountainous Gorski kotar and the islands of Krk and Rab (information for Cres, Lošinj and their offshore islands have yet to be compiled). Mr. Kraljic, who holds a master's degree in history and has published a number of studies related to Croatian history, notes that the roots of the project can be traced back over a decade ago. "I was curious to see how Croatians generally commemorated events which took place during World War II. Prior to 1990, the Communist state manipulated those events to suit its own purposes, specifically as a means to justify the takeover of power by the Communist Party following the War. Croatia's democratization led to the breaking of prior taboos related to the War, and various institutions and individuals began to memorialize the misdeeds of the Communist leadership." Mr. Kraljic goes on to note that he was "specifically interested in seeing that many so-called Partisan monuments remained intact" despite the traumas through which Croatia passed in the first half of the 1990s. In his travels, Mr. Kraljic began taking photos of these monuments. "After having taken literally hundreds of photos, I realized that one could attempt to construct at least a partial list of victims killed by Nazi and Fascist forces during World War II." This is especially important in light of the continued attempts to paint Croatians as being pro-fascist during the War. "These monuments, most of them in predominately Croat inhabited areas, clearly show the level of suffering Croats as a whole suffered during the War, a level which is generally not appreciated by persons not from the area." Mr. Kraljic decided to use the information he found on various monuments and in available published sources to begin to construct a list of Croatian Partisans killed during World War II as well as of Croatian victims of fascism. He contacted Dr. Zubrinić to assist him with preparing the photos and the text. "We decided it would be appropriate to publish 'Chapter 1,' covering Primorsko-Goranska County, rather than waiting any longer." Mr. Kraljic admits that this is a long term project. "The fact is that driving to various cities, towns and hamlets, exploring innumerable cemeteries and retrieving relevant published works is very time consuming, especially for someone who does not live in Croatia." Mr. Kraljic continues, "to be frank, we posted the results Primorsko-Goranska County first since I tend to spend most of my time in Croatia in that area and have been able to personally visit practically every settlement there." Mr. Kraljic and Dr. Zubrinić have already begun to work on the next chapter which will cover Istria. Mr. Kraljic notes that, despite the title, the intent is not to exclude any ethnic group from the list. "Indeed, while Primorsko-Goranska County is predominately populated by Croats, there are a number of mostly Serb-populated settlements there, such as Moravice and hamlets around Vrbovsko which are included. Similarly, when we deal with Istria, we will include ethnic Italians in the lists. Clearly, as we get into more ethnically mixed areas, such a Lika, the lists will include many more Serb villages." It is Mr. Kraljic's and Dr. Zubrinic's hope that their work will serve as a tool for researchers. "Our goal is to be as comprehensive as we possibly can be in preparing these lists, but we recognize that there will always be something overlooked in a project as wide-ranging as this one."
Croatia - its History, Culture and Science
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