MIA: Subjects: Yugoslavia

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MIA in Yugoslavian languages:   Македонски   |   slovenščina   |   srpskohrvatski


 

The Resistance and the Struggle for National Liberation

1941 - 1946

partisans pursuing behind a pillbox Following the German invasions of Yugoslavia and the USSR, the Yugoslav people mobilized a large a partisan army to repel the occupying forces. The partisan resistance was organized and led by Josip Broz Tito and the Communist Party of Yugoslavia. Following their victory over the German occupiers, the people of Yugoslavia refused to re-establish the rule of monarchy under the exiled King Peter. The Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia was founded and Tito was elected president of the nation shortly thereafter.

Oath Taken by Fighting Men of Partisan Detachments

 

Survey of the People's Liberation War  by Colonel Fabijan Trgo

 

It has been necessary to shed floods of precious national blood, it has been necessary that tens of thousands of the nation's finest sons lay down their lives in the course of two years' unequal struggle with the enemy, that in the end the truth about the actual situation in Yugoslavia might hew its way through to the world. Never before perhaps has a small nation paid such a high price to convince the world that the blood which has been shed in Yugoslavia is its own blood…The struggles of our peoples and the brilliant successes which they have achieved on the field of battle…have created all the conditions necessary that our peoples may succeed in realizing their aspiration-a free, truly democratic, fraternal, federal Yugoslavia.

—Josip Broz Tito

 

portrait Josip Broz Tito  (1892 -1980)
Tito organized and led the partisan resistance in Yugoslavia during World War II. He was elected Prime Minister of Yugoslavia in 1945 and in 1974 he was named President for life, a position he held until his death in 1980.  (Full biography)

 

 

portrait Tito and His People
A chronicle of the Yugoslav resistance, including a biographical sketch of Josip Broz Tito and information regarding the history of Yugoslavia through the eyes of American author Howard Fast. First published in 1944.

 

 

 

Maps of Yugoslavia from the Partisan Resistance era

Dismemberment of Yugoslavia by Germany, Italy and their allies in April 1941  562 K

Liberated and semi-liberated territory at the end of 1942  438 K

Liberated territory in Yugoslavia and grouping of forces of the People's Liberation Army of Yugoslavia and of the invaders towards the end of September 1944  1 MB

Maps from Tito: Selected Military Writings, Vojnoizdavčki Zavod, Belgrade, 1966

 


Writings from the People's Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
(1946-1963)

Peace and Greece  Ales Bebler (October 1948)
Speech of Dr. Ales Bebler, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs and Acting Chief of the Delegation of the F.P.R. of Yugoslavia to the Third Session of the General Assembly of the United Nations. Delivered before the First Committee of the General Assembly on October 27, 1948.

Communism and Fatherland by Boris Ziherl (1949)


Self-Management in Yugoslavia

Excerpt from the Basic Law on Management of State Economic Enterprises and Higher Economic Associations by the Workers' Collective (1950)

Workers Manage Factories in Yugoslavia by Marshal Tito (1950)

 

Branko Pribićević Archive   Pribićević was one of the most prominent political scientists in the former Yugoslavia. His PhD thesis was published in 1959 as The shop stewards’ movement and workers’ control 1910-1922.


 

The Praxis Group portrait
A Marxist-humanist journal which stressed the significance of the early humanists writings of Marx and pleaded for a creative adaptation of Marxism in the context of Yugoslav self-management.

 

portrait Gajo Petrović Archive  One of the main theorists in the Praxis Group and long-time editor of the journal Praxis, Petrović was one of the leaders of the Yugoslav critique of Stalinist philosophical ideas after the early 1950s. His philosophical views evolved towards an interpretation of Marxism based on the philosophical works of the young Marx.


Trotskyist Writings on Yugoslavia

portrait Letter to Yugoslav Comrades  L.D. Trotsky  (October 10, 1920)
Discussion On Yugoslavia & The Tito-Stalin Split 1947-1951

 

 

On the Class Nature of the "People's Democracies"  Tony Cliff  (July 1950)
Stalin's Satellites in Europe  Tony Cliff  (1952)

First Balance Sheet of the Yugoslav Affair  Ernest Mandel  (July 1951)
On the Workers and Peasants Government  Ernest Mandel  (April 1984)

Writings of Michel Pablo
The Yugoslav Affair (August 1948)
Evolution of Yugoslav Centrism (October 1949)
Yugoslavia and Permanent Revolution (January 1950)


Anarchist Writings on Yugoslavia

Birth of a Revolutionary Movement in Yugoslavia  Fredy Perlman  (1969)


portrait Enver Hoxha on Tito
“After many patient efforts to bring the renegade Tito into line, when they were convinced he was incorrigible, Stalin, the Bolshevik Party and all the other genuine communist parties of the world unanimously condemned him.”

          -- from With Stalin: Memoirs from My Meetings with Stalin

 


portrait Maoist Critiques of Tito and Yugoslavian Communism
“Tito specialized in being disappointed. His energy belongs to that side. The Moscow Declaration is the strength of our side. The Yugoslavia program checks the ambition of the proletariat and encourages the arrogance of the enemy.”

-- from Speeches At The Second Session Of The Eighth Party Congress
by Mao Zedong, May 8-23, 1958

 

 


Music

The Internationale (Serbo-Croatian) 767K mp3 file

Hej Sloveni ("Hey Slavs" - National Anthem of Yugoslavia) 937K mp3 file

Lenka by Kočo Racin (performed by Zafir Hadzimanov) 1.5MB mp3 file    Lyrics

portrait
Kočo Racin

Kočo Racin (22 December 1908 - 13 June 1943) was a Macedonian poet who is considered to be the founder of modern Macedonian literature. He was also one of the leading Communists in the Republic of Macedonia in the period between the two world wars. In the second half of 1933 he was member of the Land Committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia for Macedonia. In the beginning of 1934 he was captured by the police and sentenced to prison. He was imprisoned until December 1935. During World War II, Racin joined the ranks of the National Liberation Army. He was killed on Lopushnik Mountain in 1943 by his comrades in arms, most probably by mistake.

Racin wrote his major work, "Beli mugri" ("White downs"), in 1939 and "Lenka" is a song from this collection.


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