silm wrote:Raspala se sto joj je isteko vakat.
Pola ljudskog vijeka sa bogovima ideologije puta u komunizam.Niti napadnuta iz vana niti iznutra.
Iz have dosla slabost. Bas ko snijeg sto se topi. Nigdje nista ne vidis a vehne, nestaje, tanji se.
I to planetarno.
Jeste istekao vakat.
Komunizmu.
Raspad Jugoslavije ili razvaljivanje Jugoslavije kako rece gore Spejs dogodio se u to vreme pada Komunizma ali sam
taj proces nije bio nuzno i uzrok raspada - razvaljivanja Jugoslavije. Ja bih rekao pre da je to bila samo polazna
tacka i background dogadjanja.
Ono sto mi najcesce nazovemo izdajnicima, ljudima koji se bore za tudj interes - smatrajuci ga za svoj, uze narodni,
taj sloj ljudi ja bih pre smatrao kao jedan dosta sirok sloj neuklopljenih, nezadovoljnih i rekao bih neizivljenih.
Svakako neostvarenih, a siledezija, kabadahija sto bi rekli nasi stari. Nametljivaca.
Jer pogledajmo i sada samo ta tri presudno uticajna profila - na tri narodnosti Bosne i Hercegovine i sta vidimo ?
Promasene, karijere, zivote i rezultate koje zapravo niko nije zeleo. Cak i njihovi najblizi vec sada imaju problem sa
njima samim i njihovim svakolikim nasledjem. Da ne govorim o obicnim ljudima.
Ti rezultati htenja "narodnih vodja" u punom su skladu sa njihovim kapacitetima, dometima, i u potpunom neskladu
sa ma kakvim jugoslovenskim interesom, koji nije imao ni priliku da se predstavi, upravo zahvaljujuci njima.
Rezultati zadnjeg jugoslovenskog gradjanskog rata odgovarali su samo trenutno zainteresovanim uticajnim drzavama
koje su zapravo vodile medjusobni spor oko njihovog uticaja - na nasem prostoru.
Kako bi rekli nasi jalovi, neozbiljni, drugovi, bejasmo moneta za potkusurivanje.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Radostan dan
Evo nesto o Marku i celoj toj prici - izvor je sa neta - naravno strani, kad se mi vazda bavimo tudjim poslom, avaj
http://www.osaarchivum.org/files/holdin ... 3-18.shtml
BOX-FOLDER-REPORT: 86-3-18
TITLE: Prominent Yugoslavia Party Veteran Harassed
BY: Zdenko Antic
DATE: 1983-12-29
COUNTRY: Yugoslavia
ORIGINAL SUBJECT: RAD Background Report/286
--- Begin ---
RFE-RL
RADIO FREE EUROPE Research
RAD Background Report/286
(Yugoslavia)
29 December 1983
PROMINENT YUGOSLAVIA PARTY VETERAN HARASSED*
by Zdenko Antic
Summary: The Yugoslav historian and famous
biographer of Tito, Vladimir Dedijer, was reportedly
forced to move his family from Yugoslavia to
Florence in order to avoid continuing harassment
on the part of unidentified people. It seems
that this was a consequence of Dedijer's
political conflict with some Croatian party leaders
who, he said, were about to rehabilitate the late
Andrija Henrang, a veteran Communist who was
arrested and prosecuted and then allegedly
committed suicide, because of his pro-Soviet stand
in 1948.
* * *
Professor Vladimir Dedijer, the only authorized biographer
of Tito and the President of the International Russell Tribunal,
is in trouble again. According to a long interview published in
the Italian weekly L'Espresso, "undefined forces in Yugoslavia
are harassing him and his family,"1 while some official
quarters are trying to censor the manuscript of the third volume
of his New Contributions to the Biography of Josip Broz
Tito, which should already have gone to press.[2]
Dedijer's complaints as revealed to L'Espresso appear to be
quite serious. Following the publication of the second volume of
Tito's biography in 1981, several managers of Liburnija, the
company publishing the biography, were removed from their positions
under pressure from the Croatian leadership. Thereafter Dedijer's
son, Borivoje, died tragically in an mysterious accident. Now,
* This Paper was first issued on 14 December 1983.
This material was prepared for the use of the staff of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.
[page 2]
Dedijer's other son, Marko, has received several threatening
letters, causing Dedijer to move with his wife and two sons from his
villa on the Slovenian coast to Florence. Miodrag Marovic, a
well-known Yugoslav journalist and Dedijer's closest
collaborator, was attacked by a group of hooligans in a Moscow street
where he had been doing research on Tito's stay in Moscow. On 29
November 1982, while Dedijer was having a discussion in his villa
with a number of historians and political scientists, two
unidentified persons entered the house and told Dedijer that he would
be killed unless he immediately discontinued publishing.
Finally, on August 14 of this year, some unidentified individuals
tried to set fire to his study in his villa, where his archives
containing documents on Tito and on the work of the International
Russell Tribunal are located.[3]
Following this latest incident, Dedijer asked the Slovenian
Minister for Internal Affairs for protection. The minister, who
is on friendly terms with Dedijer, replied that no one could
protect him and advised Dedijer to move his family to a more secure
place. It was then that Dedijer decided to move to Florence.
Reasons for Harassment
For many years Dedijer had been an enfant terrible of
Yugoslav journalism, historiography, and politics. He played an
important role in the immediate prewar period when, as the son of
a respected Belgrade academic family and a talented young
journalist writing for Politika, he was used by the clandestine CP
leadership and Tito himself as a liaison officer with other
European CPs and for some secret missions. During the war Dedijer
was constantly with Tito as a member of the partisan "supreme
headquarters," with the task of writing up the day-to-day events
he was witness to; these reports were later published under the
title Diary. During the Djilas conflict with Tito in 1954, as a
member of the Yugoslav CP CC, Dedijer supported Djilas, was
expelled from the party, and was prohibited from publishing until
1966, when a reconciliation with Tito took place. Dedijer then
wrote several historical books, which, apart from a then
sensationalistic tone, were in fact antidogmatic and sharply critical
of the hegemonic policy of the Soviet Union.
Further problems arose with the publication of the second
volume of New Contributions to the Biography of Josip Broz Tito
in 1981. Dedijer was strongly attacked in the press for two
reasons: first, for trying to demystify Tito's personality and his
role during the wartime struggle, and, secondly, for interpreting
some party documents from the wartime period to the detriment of
the Croatian party leadership, in particular those involving the
case of Andrija Hebrang, the wartime Secretary of the Croatian CP
CC and later Stalin's supporter during his conflict with Tito in
1948.
The third volume of New Contributions to the Biography of
Josip Broz Tito deals with the period from 1945 to 1955 and
[page 3]
RAD BR/286
includes such sensitive events as Yugoslavia's conflict with the
Soviet Union in 1948 and its subsequent expulsion from the
Cominform. Moreover, the chapters on this conflict include and
discuss again Hebrang's case, for he was not only accused of
supporting Stalin's positions against those of Tito and the
Yugoslav leadership but also of having agreed to cooperate
secretly with the Gestapo and the pro-Nazi Croatian Ustasha
government. In his interview with L'Espresso, Dedijer claimed
that he had seen documents justifying such accusations but that
the Croatian leadership was not willing to hand them over for use
and reproduction. Moreover, he maintained that some documents
concerning Hebrang had been pulled out and were now in the
possession of Ivan Krajacic, who was organizational secretary of the
Croatian CP during the war and a close collaborator of Andrija
Hebrang. Finally, Dedijer hinted that there was some evidence
that after the collapse and dismemberment of Yugoslavia in April
1941 Andrija Hebrang had tried, following the old anti-Yugoslav
Comintern line, to influence the Soviet Union in the direction of
recognizing this dismemberment and the newly created Independent
State of Croatia, including the separation of the Croatian CP
from the Yugoslav CP. If proven, such accusations would affect
not ony some Croatian communist veterans but would also be
politically embarrassing for the Croatian CP leadership.
Who Might Be Behind the Harassment?
For Vladimir Dedijer there is no doubt that the present
leadership of the Croatian CP allied with various dogmatic forces
from other republics is behind his harassment. Dedijer accused in
the first place Ivan Racan, a Croatian CC member responsible for
ideology; a retired general, Jefto Sasic, former Chief of Army
Intelligence; another retired general, Kosta Nadj, former
President of Yugoslavia's Veterans' Federation; Josip Vrhovec, former
Yugoslav Secretary for Foreign Affairs and at present President
of Croatian League of Communists; and Branko Mikulic, a leading
Communist from Bosnia and Herzegovina. Dedijer has even accused
Josip Vrhovec of having organized an historical symposium held in
Zagreb last November with the aim of rehabilitating Andrija
Hebrang. Such a rehabilitation would have meant putting Tito in
the dock, however.
In any case, it cannot be excluded that some faction of the
Croatian CP leadership, particularly people connected with
Hebrang's wartime activities, could be among those behind the
harassment of Dedijer. Since Dedijer's collaborator Marovic has
already been beaten up in Moscow and Dedijer's activities and
especially his idea of holding a Russell Tribunal session on
[page 4]
RAD BR/286
Poland are an embarrassment for the Soviet Union, Moscow's hand
in this harassment can also not be excluded.
* * *
1 20 November 1983.
2 Novt Prilozt za Btografiju Josipa Broza Tita, Volume II (Zagreb and
Rijeka, Mladost and Liburnija, respectively, 1981).
3 Vladimir Dedijer was the initiator of the Russell Tribunal session on
Afghanistan in April 1981, and he planned to convene a session on Poland.
- end -