Ustasa Guerilla After War PDF
Ustasa Guerilla After War PDF
Ustasa Guerilla After War PDF
5)”1945/1953”
Tomislav JONJIĆ*
Introduction
After the Second World War, Croatia again found itself in a Yugoslav state.
After the difficult experience of the monarchic Yugoslavia (1918-1941) and
the bloody conflicts during the war, the restoration of a Yugoslav state had
many opponents among Croats. The fact that in the new state Communists
overwhelmed other political groups and took over all power and introduced
a totalitarian system intensified that resistance and added a new ideological
dimension to it. Apart from making use of the favourable foreign political
environment, the totalitarian Communist regime retained power by using
organised violence; specifically the physical liquidation of many people at
the time it assumed power and immediately after it had consolidated its
hold on the state, and strong repression throughout the regime’s existence.
Consequently, the history of Communist Yugoslavia is at the same time the
history of political persecution and political imprisonment. Among the
thousands of judgements handed down in political trials, many were cap-
ital punishments and an even larger number of political sentences, which
totalled thousands of years. The sentence was regularly accompanied by
*
Tomislav JONJIĆ, Zagreb
Regarding the position of Croats in monarchic Yugoslavia, see Rudolf Horvat, Hrvatska na
mučilištu (Z (Zagreb, 1944); Rudolf Bićanić, Ekonomska podloga hrvatskog pitanja, 2nd ed. (Zagreb,
1938); Bosiljka Janjatović, Politički teror u Hrvatskoj 1918.-1935. (Zagreb, 2002); Jure Krišto and
Ivica Miškulin, Špijuni na hodočašću. Euharistijski kongres u Zagrebu 1930. godine u susta-
vu represije nad Hrvatima, Tkalčić. Godišnjak Društva za povjesnicu Zagrebačke nadbiskup-
ije, no. 9 (2005), pp. 273-326..
Yugoslav communists had started building their repressive system as early as 1941, and
after the war it became the key lever of the new regime’s power. The Communist secret
service OZN (Department for People’s Protection) was established on 13 May 1944. In
March 1946, the service was reorganised and divided into a Directorate for Reasearch and
Documentation (UID), a Directorate of State Security (UDB), a Military Intelligence Service
(VOS) and a Counterintelligence Service (KOS). Later on, there were additional organisa-
tional changes. (See Croatian Parliament – Commission for Establishing Wartime and Post-
war Victims (hereafter, HDS, Commission), Izvješće o radu od osnutka (11. veljače 1992.) do rujna
1999. (Zagreb, 8 October 1999), pp.. 22-25. Also see Josip Jurčević, Bleiburg – Jugoslavenski porat-
ni zločini nad Hrvatima (Zagreb, 2005), pp. 239-364.
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T. Jonjić, Organised Resistance to the Yugoslav Communist Regime in Croatia in 1945-1953
Even at the time of the first democratic elections in Croatia, in spring 1990, after the fall
of the Berlin wall and the Ceaucescu’s regime, numerous political prisoners who had been
convicted in the communist Yugoslavia were still confined in Croatian prisons, among them
Filip Bagić, Stjepan Deglin, Ivo Tubanović, Juraj Pilko, and Ludvig Pavlović, a member of the
“Bugojno group.” Political prisoners of other nationalities, especially Albanians, were also
serving their time in Communist prisons in Croatia.
A lot of memoirs on that subject were published in Politički zatvorenik, a monthly magazine
of the Croatian Association of political prisoners, as well as in other magazines and news-
papers (Narod, Glas Koncila etc.). Books about the memories of Bleiburg and the Way of the
Cross have been published by: Zvonimir Dusper, U vrtlogu Bleiburga (Zagreb, 1996); Tomislav
Obrdalj, Jedan život od Bleiburga do danas (Sarajevo, 1998); Stipo Slipac, Svjedok - Moj križni put
(Novi Travnik, 1996), Ivan Alilović, Križni put i raspuća hrvatskih đaka, studenata i intelektualaca iz
Hercegovine, (Mostar – Zagreb, 1999); Nedžat Sulejmanpašić, Od Sarajeva do Bleiburga u povratak.
Ratni dnevnik 18. 12. 1944, - 11. 6. 1945. (Zagreb, 2006), and others.
Branimir Petener, Ustaše – spomen i baština (Zagreb, 1992); Petar Peko Cota, Svjedočenja
(Zagreb, 1994); Ivan J. PINTAR, Četiri godine u Titovu paklu (Zagreb, 1995); Svjedočenje dva-
naestorice: 20189 dana robije(Rijeka, 1995); Mara Čović, Sjećanje – svjedočenje: Zvuči kao priča a bila
je istina! (Rijeka, 1996); Ante Prpić, Iza lepoglavskih rešetaka (Rijeka, 1996); Slavko Radičević,
Robijaševi zapisi (Rijeka, 1999); Blaž Bordić, Moja sjećanja. Hrvati u okovima velikosrpskog i
jugokomunističkog režima (Donji Andrijevci, 2000), Ivo Grgurev, Svjedočanstvo (jednog i mnogih
stradanja) (Split, no year [1999]); Julijan Ramljak, Nečastiva urota (Visovac, 2000); same author,
Nečastiva urota II. (Visovac, 2000); Josip BEJUK, Sjećanja logoraša br. 2544 (Sinj, 2000); Marica
Stanković, Godine teške i bolne (Zagreb, 2000); Ivo Bjelokosić, Svećenik matični broj St. Grad. 2019
(Dubrovnik, 2002); Baldo Mladošević, Gospodin je bio moja snaga (Dubrovnik, 2004), etc.
Augustin Franić has dealt in detail with the Penitentiary and Correctional Home in
Lepoglava, KPD Lepoglava – mučilište i gubilište hrvatskih političkih osuđenika (Zagreb, 2000). Kaja
Pereković has published a collection of memoirs and documents about the womens’ peniten-
tiary in Požega: Naše robijanje. Hrvatske žene u komunističkim zatvorima – okovane golubice (Rijeka
– Zagreb, 2004).
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Review of Croatian History 3/2007, no.1, 109 - 145
secution of the Catholic Church in the Croatian territories. There have also
been many articles and one monograph on the Crusader Movement, which
was active during the first post-war years in Croatia and BiH.
This article aims to show that as early as since 1945 the Yugoslav regime
in Croatia and BiH was facing not only the active and passive resistance of
individuals, but also an organised resistance of illegal groups of Croatian
peasants, workers, high-school students and university students. As a rule,
those groups were created spontaneously and always in response to foreign-
policy events and the internal political turmoil in Yugoslavia. In the first
post-war years, the basic note in their political activities was the hope that
the armed Crusader Movement would result in overthrowing the commu-
nist regime and establishing an independent Croatian state. When that hope
came to nothing, the centre of illegal groups’ activities focused on political
action and propaganda whose aim was to strip bare the communist regime
and discredit yugoslavianism as an idea of statehood and nationality.
nal offences. Those “old offences” were often linked to “new” ones, that is, to
the actual or alleged anti-Yugoslav activities after the war.
There followed a period of fear and general personal and legal insecuri-
ty. Living conditions and the general economic situation were very difficult.
The war had exhausted Croatia, villages and towns had been destroyed and
damaged, and its population had been decimated and was now faced with
rationed supplies. Despite the regime’s promises to redistribute goods and
establish a socially just order, nationalisation and agrarian reform only wors-
ened Croatia’s war ravaged economy. At both actual and symbolic levels, a
large majority of Croats felt vanquished as the glorification of Croatianness
(Hrvatstvo) during NDH was replaced with brotherhood and unity,10and
streets and squares that had been named after Croatian national great men
were renamed after the Red Army and the Soviet marshals. A collision of
cultures was visible everywhere; instead of a European or its traditional
Central European orientation, Croatia was exposed to the influence of the
Communist East. Schools and universities were awash in Soviet books, and
Soviet films were shown in cinemas. The new Yugoslav regime also direct-
ly persecuted key Croatian cultural institutions. Some of the leading per-
sons of Matica hrvatska emigrated, while others were arrested or deposed, as
the regime’s men took over the organization’s leadership. Another important
Croatian cultural institution, Croatian Cultural Society Napredak, which was
headquartered in Sarajevo, was banned after a staged trial in which its pres-
ident, Ante Alaupović, and twenty-three of its members were found guilty
and convicted.11 Other important Croatian cultural societies were also dis-
banded, among them the St. Jerome Society and The Croatian Publishing
and Bibliographic Institute. Croatian Encyclopaedia was no longer pub-
lished, and its newly-printed fifth volume was destroyed. Many writers and
culture professionals were prohibited from appearing and speaking in pub-
lic. The Catholic press was banned or in other ways prevented from being
published. Young people also suffered repression, for example, the frequent
banning from school of politically unsuitable students whose diplomas were
invalidated and who were unable to continue schooling—usually without
any court proceedings or any formal attempt to establish individual guilt.12
10
Interestingly, the slogan “brotherhood and unity of all our nations and nationalities” was
always limited to “brotherhood and unity” of Croats and Serbs, so “brotherhood and unity”
never applied to, among others, Croats and Macedonians.
11
The Archive of the Croatian Association of Political Prisoners (in further text: AHDPZ),
Judgement of the Court of People’s Honour of Bosnia and Herzegovina, number 221/45 of
30 July 1945. Mladen Čaldarović, “‘Napredak’ 1945.-1949.,” Radovi Hrvatskog društva za znanost
i umjetnost 3 (1995): 73-85.
12
J. Juras alluded to the persecution of dissident students at the Classical High School in
Zagreb 1945-46 in a polemic with Dražen Kalogjera (Jure JURAS, “Činjenice malo drugačije”,
Vjesnik, 19 January 1996, pp. 34-35). A. Tomlinović has described discrimination and iden-
tification of enemies at Nova Gradiška High School in spring 1946 (Augustin Tomlinović-
Samac, “Iz uspomena jednoga hrvatskog robijaša”, (2), PZ, (8) 1998, no. 70: 41-42). Recollecting
the activities of Branko Horvat, who later became a prominent economist, L. Buturac recalled
that some thirty students who were considered unsuitable owing to their class or politics
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Review of Croatian History 3/2007, no.1, 109 - 145
were banned from the Požega High School in the academic year 1945-46. (Lojzo Buturac,
“Jednom partizan, uvijek partisan”, Hrvatsko slovo, (8) 2002, 27 December. Such measures were
applied throughout Croatia in subsequent decades.
13
HDS, Commission, Activity Report, 21-38.
14
A classical example was the pro-Communist faction of the HSS, which was instrumen-
talised by the communist regime and used as the Executive Committee of the Croatian
Republican Peasants’ Party.
15
More in: Z. Radelić, Hrvatska seljačka stranka 1945.-1950. (Zagreb, 1996). Among these tri-
als were those against Tomo Jančiković and others and against Ivan Restek and others, in
which ten persons were convicted because of their membership in an illegal organization of
followers of Maček founded in 1945 (AHDPZ, Indictment of the Public Prosecutor’s Office
for the City of Zagreb no. K-48/1948 of 3 February 1948 against T. Jančikovića and others,
and Judgement of the Ditrict Court for the City of Zagreb Kz-48/48 of 23 February 1948;
Indictment of the Public Prosecutor’s Office for the City of Zagreb – Security Department,
no. B. 120/1948 of 22 March 1948 against I. Restak and others and Judgement of the Ditrict
Court for the City of Zagreb no. K-139/48 of 2 April 1948.
16
For example, Crusader Antun Tuna Buturac was arrested on the mountain of Dilj on 15
January 1955 (Lojzo Buturac, “Tuna Buturac 17 godina bez slobode (1945.-1962.)”, PZ, (10)
2000, no. 102, September 2000, 43-44). Some Crusaders remained in hiding until mid 1960’s
(Z. Radelić, Križari..., p. 230).
17
Radelić gives a list of a large number of Croatian guerrilla groups in the only monograph
about Crusader movement to date (Z. Radelić, Križari..., pp. 482-489).
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T. Jonjić, Organised Resistance to the Yugoslav Communist Regime in Croatia in 1945-1953
almost all regions populated by Croats: from Subotica to Konavle and Boka
Kotorska, and from Čakovec and Varaždin to Gorski Kotar and Rijeka.18
There were no such groups is Istria, primarily because the situation there
was unique, including the unsolved border dispute with Italy.19
Clearly, the behaviour of members of Crusader groups – and opponents
of the new regime generally – was to a large extent conditioned by the
expectations and rumours that the West would attack the Yugoslav com-
munist regime. According to the record of an interview of a Crusaders’ har-
bourer, Jago Tomac, the Crusaders in the area around Bjelovar were trying
to convince people “that the whole world is fighting against communists
and that they are supported by England and America, because the situation
like this cannot last”.20 Indeed, apart from the English, the most frequent-
ly mentioned allies and supporters were the United States of America.21 In
the words of Father Ivo Grgurev, who in 1945 was sentenced to fifteen years
of imprisonment because of three articles published in a newspaper from
Šibenik, Hrvatski Jadran, in which he supported the revival of NDH, “In those
days everybody believed that the English and the Americans would arrive
soon . . . . No one could even imagine then that the Western superpowers,
which ruled the seas and oceans, could allow the Soviet bear to put its paws
into the Adriatic Sea...”.22 One of the participants in the events remembers
18
There were Crusaders on islands as well: Ivan Pandol from the island of Hvar joined
Crusaders in 1945 (Cf. Ivan Pandol, “Neka mi se jave supatnici!”, PZ, (9) 1999, no. 83: 30).
In March 1948, the District Court in Subotica convicted three groups of Croats who were
accused of being members of an “Ustasha and Crusader terrorist organization”; by the judge-
ment no. K-95/48 of 17 March 1948, Vojislav Pešut and nine more persons, with three priests
among them, were convicted; by the judgement no. K-104/48 of 24 March 1948, Marija Čović
and eight more persons, also with three priests among them, were convicted; and by the
judgement no. K-108/48 of 25 March 1948 Tome Vukmanov and six more persons were con-
victed (Marija Dulić, “Da se ne zaboravi: subotički proces 1946.”, PZ, (9) 1999, no. 87: 47; Ante
Sekulić, “Dvije subotičke presude (1948. i 1972.)”, PZ, (10) 2000, no. 102: 37-40). Radelić also
wrote about one case of Crusader operations near Srijemska Mitrovica (Z. Radelić, Križari...,
p. 427).
19
Those Croatian priests in Istria who refused to take the side of the winners of the war
were called by the Partisan Communist leaderhip “Ustashas” and “fascists”, and many priests
were killed during and after the war. (More in Ivan Grah, Istarska crkva u ratnom vihoru (1943.-
1945.), 2nd ed.( Pazin, 1998)). However, the regime realised that the support of the clergy was
necessary in settling the territorial dispute with Italy, so it made some major concessions,
and the clerical factors, having in mind the importance of settlement of the territorial issue,
expressed their readiness to make concessions, creating a situation in which the two sides,
although they opposed one another on principle and ideologically, could temporarily tolerate
each other. (Cf. Stipan Trogrlić, “Uz 60. godišnjicu ubojstva Sluge Božjega Miroslava Bulešića”,
(1), Glas Koncila, (46) 2007, 2 September, p. 25)
20
AHDPZ, Record of the interrogation of Jage Tomac, made on 21 April 1947 at the office
of the district UDB department for the district of Bjelovar.
21
Cf. Z. Radelić, Križari...., passim. M. Grabarević describes the situation then, “There was
much talking about all that. People were whispering that Crusaders would get help from
abroad, that Americans would send weapons, ammunition and food, and that our people
would return together with them.” (M. Grabarević, Kalvarija hrvatskog vojnika..., p. 104)
22
I. Grgurev, Svjedočanstvo, 162
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Review of Croatian History 3/2007, no.1, 109 - 145
the spirit of the Posavina Crusaders and says the following: “Our compan-
ions were encouraging us and promising help from abroad, we did not know
from where; we only strongly believed in that, and that kept us going”.23
It can also be said that in the creation of numerous illegal groups an impor-
tant role was played by the belief that the Croatian political emigration had
pulled itself together and organised itself well, and that it planned an armed
return to the homeland in order to establish an independent Croatian state.24
In pursuit of that goal, the emigration was to rely on numerous Crusaders’
groups. At the same time, the political emigration, which started organis-
ing itself already in summer 1945,25 saw in the Crusader movement the key
lever for its return to the homeland. In order to organise and link together
the Crusader groups, the former state leadership issued an order to launch
an operation called 10th April. The operation had tragic consequences for
many of its immediate participants.: On 22 July 1948, the Supreme court
of the People’s Republic of Croatia (NRH) (decision no. K-1/48-141 of 22
July 1948) sentenced Ljubo Miloš and twenty persons, to death by hanging,
and twenty-three to death by shooting squad. The sentences were executed
on 31 August 1948.26 In addition to weakening the emigration, the regime
made use of that operation, or, more precisely, of the trial against its partici-
pants, to create a “black legend” regarding Croats.27, Nonetheless, Operation
10th April is one of the most important episodes of the Croatian resistance
against Communist Yugoslavia because it demonstrated the patriotic resis-
tance of a significant part of the Croatian population and the role in that
struggle played by the emigration.28 It also gave hope to the opposition
23
I. Lučić-Paroković, Uvijek uz Hrvatsku, 21
24
Cf. Ladislav Hajba, “Prekodravski seljaci u ‘Akciji Deseti travanj’”, PZ, (12) 2002, no. 121:
31. The author ascribes such idea to the rumours the Yugoslav intelligence service was spread-
ing intentionally, for the purpose of provoking a fight with their political opponenets.
25
Z. Radelić, Križari..., pp. 45-46
26
AHDPZ, Indictment of the Public Prosecutor’s Office of FNRJ no. K-124/48 of 17 June
1948, Judgement of the Supreme Court of NRH no. K 1/48-141 of 27 August 1948 and the
Record on the execution of death penalty no. Pov. 1573-III-1-1948 of 31 August 1948.
27
K. Katalinić gives a very interesting analysis of that trial and its role in the creation of the
Jasenovac myth, as well as in the turmoils in the Yugoslav Communist leadership in light of
the Resolution of the Information Bureau, in the manuscript, Poslijeratna politička emigracija: od
Bleiburga do Republike Hrvatske.
28
There were also other attempts to organise uprisings, in which members of the Croatian
political emigration participated The Tolić-Oblak group, which consisted of nine guer-
rilla members (Ilija Tolić, Josip Oblak, Dražen Tapšanji, Mirko Fumić, Krešimir Perković,
Rade Stojić, Stanko Zdrilić, Branko Podrug and Vlado Leko) came to Croatia on 7 July 1963.
Armed members of the so-called Bugojno Group, nineteen of them led by brothers Ambroz
and Adolf Andrić, crossed the border between Austria and Yugoslavia on 20 June 1972. Most
were killed in the following weeks; three of them (Mirko Vlasnović, Đuro Horvat and Vejsil
Keškić) were captured, tried, and sentenced to death and executed on 17 March 1973. Young
Ludvig Pavlović was the only one who lived to see the liberation of Croatia in 1991, but in
that year, he was killed in suspicious circumstances at Studeni Vrili near Posušje as a partici-
pant of the Homeland War. In autumn 1974, Ivan Matičević and Mate Prpić entered Croatia,
and were killed on 29 October 1974 near Gospić.
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T. Jonjić, Organised Resistance to the Yugoslav Communist Regime in Croatia in 1945-1953
groups and anti-Yugoslav circles in the homeland, which was crucial for a
continued resistance to the regime, and it strengthened the pro-Western ori-
entation of the Croatian liberation struggle. Although one may assume that
the communist authorities spread such rumours themselves,29 the regime
was obviously convinced that the “help from the outside”, that is from the
West, was really coming. Consequently, the authorities detained suspicious
individuals who might serve as a link between the West (or at least Western
intelligence services) and Crusaders within Croatia.30
Objectively speaking, the Crusader movement was destined to failure
from the beginning because abroad the political environment was such that
the dissolution of Yugoslavia and establishment of independent Croatia were
out of question; and within the country mass murder and a brutal repres-
sion was narrowing the field of operations from day to day. Therefore, the
Crusader Movement should be viewed as a symptom of a “national” frame
of mind by many Croats and as evidence of the continuity of the struggle
for state independence, rather than as a movement that could have revital-
ized Croatian politics or created a new Croatian state.
The Crusader Movement was commonly considered to be a form of
“Ustasha guerrilla”.31 That might have been true in some areas, such as Lika,
Dalmatinska Zagora, and Herzegovina, where most of Crusaders really were
former members of the armed forces of NDH.32 However, in other areas,
such as Hrvatsko Zagorje and Podravina, most Crusader groups consist-
ed of former HSS followers.33 For example, in late 1945, members of the
29
One should bear in mind that such rumours did have an influence and incited some
people to assist the Crusaders, e.g., “He even told us (...) that in Brodski Varoš and near-
by villages aid is gathered in food and clothing, and that people are responding more and
more, because they are convinced that Americans will help their armament”. (M. Grabarević,
Kalvarija hrvatskog vojnika, 119)
30
A characteristic example was an American citizen of Croatian origin, Ivana J. Pintara,
who was sentenced to four years, because – according to The New York Times in January 1947
– he was “serving a representative of international reaction” and “encouraging Crusaders and
terrorist gangs in hope that they would get help from abroad” (I. J. Pintar, Četiri godine, 70)
31
“Namely,” Radelic write, “it is not only that many among them were Ustashas, the main
reason is that the basic tone to Crusaders, their military and political orientation, apart from
all the changes brought about by the fall of NDH, was given by members of the Ustasha
movement and army”. Still, the author is aware that the Crusader movement was not entirely
homogenous. “Undoubtedly,” he notes, “among Crusaders the most numerous were members
of the armed forces of NDH who immediately withdrew into the woods. They were followed
by those who escaped out of fear of arrest, but also fugitives from camps and deserters from
the Yugoslav Army”. (Z. Radelić, Križari..., pp. 17, 197.)
32
A. Vukić, Velebitski vukovi, title; Ivan Gabelica, “Križari – hrvatski pokret otpora u Imotskoj
krajini 1941.-1945.”, (I) PZ, (12) 2002, no. 122, May 2002, 33-38; (II) PZ, (12) 2002, no. 123, June
2002, 27-31. Radelić published a report of the First Herzegovina Crusader Brigade dated
27 July 1946, in which the members were referred to as “Ustashas”, and whish also says that
75 percent of Croats were still devoted to Pavelić and Ustasha movement, around 20 per-
cent to Maček and HSS, and only 5 percent to “Tito and the partisan movement” (Z. Radelić,
Križari..., pp. 97, 108-109.)
33
L. HAJBA, “Prekodravski seljaci...”, title
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Review of Croatian History 3/2007, no.1, 109 - 145
HSS in the Virovitica area formed the “Propaganda Department of the 2nd
Crusaders’ Division”. The group consisted of forty-nine members, one of
whom was killed in the woods; another 28 were arrested, and in November
1946, the Divisional Military Court in Osijek sentenced twenty-one mem-
bers.34 According to the trial transcripts, the organisation had distributed
anti-regime leaflets and tried to establish links to Crusader groups. They
were also accused of spreading the news that “within the emigration there
is a new Croatian government led by Maček and Butković, and that they
were fully supported by the English, and that they will come to Croatia soon
to take over power. .that an army of 80,000 soldiers was formed abroad,
and that 12,000 of them have already been transferred to Bilogora, and that
these units, together with the Crusaders, fight against today’s authorities”.35
There are also other cases where the HSS was accused of having links to the
Crusaders.36 In some places, Crusader units included deserters or members
of the Yugoslav Army whom the Partisans had recruited by force but who
had escaped into the woods for various reasons. There were many such cases
in Konavle.37 On 28 January 1947, the Bjelovar Divisional Military court,
with its seat in Osijek, pronounced sentences against Vjekoslav Mikuličin
and five of his comrades, who had, as members of the Yugoslav Army, estab-
lished a group which had attempted to contact the Crusaders and then to
escape into the woods or emigrate, in order to fight the Yugoslav state order.
Five of the six accused came from southern Croatia, and had been Partisans
since February 1945.38 According to a Catholic nun, who was sentenced for
assisting Crusaders, there had been both Muslim and Orthodox members
among the Crusaders in Bosanska Posavina.39
Many of the judgements against members of the Crusader Movement and
those who aided them have been preserved.40 It is not possible to list them
34
AHDPZ, Judgement of the Divisional Military Court in Osijek no. 18005-18026/46 of 27
November 1946 against Ladislav Hajba and others
35
AHDPZ, Judgement of the Divisional Military Court in Osijek no. 18005-18026/46 of
27 November 1946. Cf. L. Hajba, “‘Promičbeni odjel II. križarske divizije’”, PZ, (12) 2002, no.
124/125: 54-62.
36
Z. Radelić, Križari..., pp. 159-166.
37
Letter of Dr. A. Franić to the author, dated 2 October 2004. Cf. A. Franić, Povodom šezdesete
godišnjice smrti Pera Bakića, vođe konavoskih križara, PZ, (15) 2005: 24-26; Z. Radelić, Križari..., pp.
414-415.
38
AHDPZ, Judgement of the Divisional Military Court in Bjelovar – now in Osijek, no. 61-
83/47 of 28 January 1947.
39
Enver Mehmedagić, “Razgovor sa sestrom Zvjezdanom u tišini samostanskog ozračja”,
PZ, (6) 1996 (Zagreb, June 1996, 35. Accordinf to Ante Vrban’s report from November 1946,
there was only one percent of Muslims among Crusaders in BiH (Z. Radelić, Križari..., pp.
103-104)
40
Apart from court archives, copies of numerous judgements are stored at the Croatian
Association of Political Prisoners and at the Administrative Commission of the Government
of the Republic of Croatia which is competent to decide on the status of former Croatian
political prisoners in administrative procedure. The author is in the possession of all the
judgements that are cited in the text.
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T. Jonjić, Organised Resistance to the Yugoslav Communist Regime in Croatia in 1945-1953
all here, but all of them are similar in certain respects. During the summa-
ry investigative proceedings the suspect did not have any right to legal aid,
and trials were very short—their sole purpose to confirm the content of
the investigation in front of judges, who then convicted and sentenced the
accused. When attorneys were present, they limited their defence to request-
ing a more lenient punishment. But sentences were not only pronounced
quickly, punishments were generally draconian. In many cases, the accused
did not appeal, and when they did, the appeals were dealt with very quick-
ly as well.41
The judgments of Yugoslav military and criminal courts in the proceed-
ings against Crusaders and harbourers regularly referred to the confessions
of the accused. But there are very few cases where the judgement men-
tions the manner in which those confessions were obtained. One such case
occurred in Zadar, where the District Court (the judgement K-62/1948 of
30 December 1948) sentenced Petar Sidić and four more persons for orga-
nising themselves during 1947 in order to assist Crusaders in the Zadar hin-
terland and for acquiring some weapon for that purpose. The judgment also
notes that the first accused wanted to emigrate in 1948 “in order to com-
mit offences against the people and the state”, but was prevented from doing
so by “the state security organs”. All of the accused acknowledged during
the trial that they had signed the investigation records, but they also said
that they had done so “because they were required” to do so. The first of the
accused, Petar Sidić, was, according to the judgement, “a former Ustasha,
who makes an impression of an obdurate and persistent man, even though
he admits that he was not beaten, wants to explain his confession by say-
ing that he was tied and put into solitary confinement”. The fourth accused,
Dušan Golem, “claims at first that he was confessing whatever they asked
him to confess out of fear, and then, during the interrogation and confron-
tation he was terrified and unconscious because of malaria he was suffer-
ing from at the time, so that he does not remember what he was saying”,
while the second accused, Pavle Knežević, “says that he did not confess what
the record says[,] the interrogator wrote whatever he wanted, and he was
also beaten”. In short, the men claimed that their confessions were coerced.
Whether this was in fact the case, the court did not accept their claims and
let their confessions stand.42
41
For example, in case against Franjo Ozmec and others, an attorney from Zagreb Dr. Ivo
Maraković, who defended the accused, received the first-instance judgement on 2 August
1948. The date of the appeal is not known, nor whether there were more appeals by other
accused, but the second-instance judgement was pronounced already on 17 August 1948, two
weeks later. (AHDPZ, Judgement of the District Court for the City of Zagreb K-246/48 of 29
July 1948; Judgement of the Supreme Court of NRH Kž-1211/1948 of 17 August 1948). In the
case against the Zagreb Franciscans (Gaon Operation), the period between the first-instance
and the second-instance judgement was sixteen days. That was still an improvement, com-
pared to the proceedings in 1945, where as a rule, trial, judgement and execution (in case of
capital punishment) happened in a single day.
42
AHDPZ, Judgement of the District Court in Zadar no. K-62/1948 of 30 December 1948.
118
Review of Croatian History 3/2007, no.1, 109 - 145
as reading and distributing enemy leaflets. The students had also alleged-
ly been preparing to escape into the woods. With the first-instance judge-
ment, five of them were sentenced to death. Three (Vladimir Ključec, Željko
Hamperl and Ivan Javor) were executed, but the sentences of two (Stjepan
Brajdić and Rudolf Sambolec) were commuted to 20 years of imprisonment.
Six others (Josip Bašić, Anton Baćani, Baltazar Katić, Petar Jurišić, Nikola
Vrkljan and Tomislav Javor) were sentenced to long prison terms.51
Only few weeks after the fall of the NDH, in late May and in June 1945,
a group of Catholic and Muslim high-school students from Zagreb, aged
between 15 and 17, organised a Secret Organisation of Croatian Youth
(TOHM). According to the indictment against them, at the incitement of
Željko Gjukić they were organised in groups of five in order to spread pro-
paganda against the Democratic Federative Republic of Yugoslavia, to estab-
lish connections with Crusaders in the woods, to support armed resistance
by attacking members of the Yugoslav Army, and to perform acts of sab-
otage. According to the memories of the founding members, the allega-
tions in the indictments were mostly correct.52 The organisation was created
under the impression of the fall of NDH, in light of the terror that followed
in Zagreb, where mutilated bodies were dumped in the Sava River daily,
and in the hope that the Crusaders’ resistance in the woods would succeed.
TOHM was to have a supreme council and be organised in interconnected
cells. Members wrote slogans on buildings, reproduced leaflets, and collect-
ed medical supplies for the Crusaders. In an attempt to seize weapons, they
also wounded a Yugoslav Army captain named Globočnik. During the arrest
the police seized some weapons.
Most of the members were arrested in August 1945. The regime could
not identify all members of the organisation, but it tried to link it to the
Kaptol and Archbishop Stepinac, even though neither had any relations with
the organisation. The trial was held on 16 December. Due to illness and
the fact that the summons could not be delivered, the proceedings against
Vlado Gračanin and Mato Tafra were conducted separately, and the District
Court for the City of Zagreb (judgement Kz-466/45 of 17 December 1945)
convicted Željko Gjukić, Milivoj Krema, Omer Stunić, Milan Novaković,
Stanko Šumanović, Gašpar Bolković, Tefko Saračević, Ante Novaković,
Marijan Kereković and Budimir Boras. One of the organisation’s members,
Mladen Gereš, emigrated with his family. The founder of the organisation
died in 1947 in prison from untreated meningitis; Bolković got seriously ill
soon afterward in prison and barely survived, Novaković lost a kidney in
Lepoglava, and Krema ended in a psychiatric hospital.53
51
Miroslav GAZDA, “U ime naroda Jugoslavije: Bio sam šesti na popisu na kojem su petor-
ica osuđena na smrt”, PZ, (15) 2005: 32-33
52
Tefko SARAČEVIĆ – Omer Stunić, “Tajna organizacija hrvatske mladeži (TOHM): Jedan
od prvih organiziranih otpora komunističkom režimu 1945.”, PZ, (11) 2001, no. 116: 35-38
53
AHDPZ, District Court for the Cit of Zagreb, Judgement no. Kz-466/45 of 17 December
1945. Cf. T. SARAČEVIĆ – O. Stunić, “Tajna organizacija.; Marijan Kereković, “Sjećanja
121
T. Jonjić, Organised Resistance to the Yugoslav Communist Regime in Croatia in 1945-1953
na TOHM, lipanj – kolovoz 1945.”, PZ, (11) 2001, no. 116: 39-41; Gašpar Bolković, “Ćelija
19 – sjećanje na ‘TOHM’”, (I.), PZ, (11) 2001, no. 116: 42-44 (II), PZ, no. 117, : 43-45; Milan
Novaković, “Još o skupini T.O.H.M.”, PZ, (12) 2002, no. 119: 28. M. Novaković – M. Kereković
– G. Bolković, “Optužnica – dopuna sjećanja na T.O.H.M.”, PZ, (12) 2002, no. 123: 39
54
Ante Prlić, “Robijaš broj – 3562”, in: P. P. Cota, Svjedočenja, 261-263
55
Stjepan Plantak, “Proces protiv zagrebačkih bogoslova i njhovih poglavara”, (I), PZ, (14)
2004, no. 143:21 and no. 147: 38-39. Plantak was one of the convicted in the trial against the
Zagreb theology students in 1950-51.
56
J. Bejuk, Sjećanja logoraša, title In his text about the events in the Stara Gradiška prison
in 1951, Hauptfeld mentions Ivica Orešković aka Šana from Zagreb who, as an ABP mem-
ber, was sentenced to twenty years of prison (Hrvoje Hauptfeld, “Argentinci”, in: S. Radičević,
Robijaševi zapisi, 175)
122
Review of Croatian History 3/2007, no.1, 109 - 145
of the strong impact on the Croatian and foreign public of the Shepherd’s
Letter of the Conference of Bishops dated 20 September 1945, and later the
trials against Lisak and Archbishop Stepinac, TOHO members also copied
and distributed Stepinac’s defence speech, which made a strong case for the
right of the Croatian nation to its own state and condemned the commu-
nist regime.61
In the night between 23 and 24 April 1947, TOHO planned to take down
Tito’s pictures in all high schools in Zagreb, but UDB found out about the
operation at the last moment and blocked the operation in all schools but
one. Police agents immediately arrested some of the participants. As the
organisation was organised in closed threes, most members did not know
each other. In the course of the investigation the authorities arrested about a
hundred high-school students from Zagreb. Two organisation members were
killed: the founder A. Capek, who had taken refuge in Slavonska Orahovica,
was executed on 9 May 1947, and Marijan Hrvoj, who was arrested dur-
ing the April operation and disappeared during the investigation. Despite
the use of torture to extract confessions, the authorities managed to indict
only twelve persons: Radovan Grgec, Mišo Zorenić, Velimir Celić, Srećko
Vitković, Lovro Rogina, Branko Pilepić, Željko Rukavina, Zvonimir Zorić,
Vlatko Božinović, Vladimir Šterman, Anto Zorić and Zora Heger. Only
Heger was legally an adult. The trial in (case K-404/47) was held between
18 and 21 August 1947 at the District Court in Zagreb, and all the accused,
even though all but one were under age, were found guilty and sentenced
to prison with forced labour for a period of one to five years. Pursuant to
the usual practice at the time, by the decision of the Ministry of Education,
those students were banned from all schools in Croatia. Zora Heger, the
only adult, was sentenced to six years of incarceration.62
In late 1945, the authorities eradicated two organisations close to the HSS.
By the judgement of the Division Military Court Zagreb (no. 739/46 of 30
April 1946) Antun Maček, Branko Kunaj and Zdenko Beg were found guilty
of organising, in November 1945, in cooperation with Ivan Bernardić, a
“group of enemy elements consisting of more than a hundred people, mostly
university and school students”, with whom they had held meetings and incit-
ed anti-state activities, while one part of the organisation (Branko Horvatić,
Đuro Filips, Branko Nikolčić and Drago Horvatić) established communi-
cation with the Ustasha and Crusader elements in the woods.63 In the case
against Marijan Peštaj and others, on 5 February 1946, the Military Court
of the Command of the Zagreb Military District handed down a judgement
61
Mišo Zorenić, “Viđenje suđenja nadbiskupu Stepincu Miše Zorenića” ZatvorenikZatvorenik,
(3) 1992, no. 21 : 40
62
Ž. Rukavina, “Sudbina ‘TOHO-a’”; Zvonimir Zorić-Zorko, “Kardinal Stepinac”
ZatvorenikZatvorenik, (3) 1992, no. 22-23: 34-38; Z. Zorić, “Zora Heger rođ. Nikić (10. 4. 1899. –
23. 1. 1994.), In memoriam” ZatvorenikZatvorenik, (3) 1994, no. 34: 38
63
AHDPZ, Judgement of the Division Military Court in Zagreb no. 739/46 of 30 April
1946.
124
Review of Croatian History 3/2007, no.1, 109 - 145
(number Vkr. 147/50) by which Peštaj was sentenced to death, and his eight
collaborators (Krešimir Cervelin, Zvonimir Hmelina, Dragutin Marković,
Milena Tijardović, Anđela Tedeško, Irgand Vrkljan, Martin Rukavina and
Marija Vorin) to long prison terms for establishing an illegal organisation
which had distributed anti-Yugoslav leaflets and enemy propaganda in gen-
eral, and had connections abroad, to which pamphlets had been sent to be
published in the foreign press. The organisation was also linked to another
“terrorist organisation” called the Anti-Bolshevik Movement (ABP).64
In late 1945 or early 1946, an organisation was established in Osijek
called the Society of People’s Resistance.65 It consisted of young men and
women who were determined to oppose the Yugoslav communist regime,
not only with propaganda and political means, but also through the use of
violent methods. By the judgement of the District People’s Court in Osijek
(Stup.. 165/46 of 8 June 1946), the founder and leader of the organisation,
Mirko Hubak, was sentenced to death by hanging, while several members—
Ivan Obertlik, Aleksandar Konečnik, Josip Nejašmić, Dževad Špica, Slavko
Kudrna, Teodor Liska, Rudolf Jakševac, Dragutin Obal, Zlata Kolčić, Dragica
Vukašinović, Nikola Horvat and Kata Skokić—were sentenced to long pris-
on terms. Following an appeal, the Supreme Court of the People’s Republic
of Croatia changed the sentence for Hubak to death by shooting squad, and
slightly reduced the sentences of the others.66 Hubak was executed imme-
diately. Špica was also almost killed, and Liska died during the slaughter of
prisoners in Lepoglava in July 1948.67
During the first post-war academic year, the first illegal organisation was
created at the University of Zagreb by a law student, Slavko Radičević, act-
ing with five other university students, Jerko Artuković, Branko Jerčinović,
Milan Cahunek, Branko Tomljanović and Slavko Geršić. In the first half of
1946, they founded the Croatian Republican Liberation Movement (HROP).
The organisation was created to work for a “free and independent Croatian
state, and [to] struggle against Yugoslavia and the communist regime.”
According to Radičević, the “Croatian state was important to us and not
the regime that had ruled in NDH. . . . HROP was originally our organisa-
tion established in 1946 without any foreign models or links with any other
organisation from abroad.”68 The founders of the organisation found “sup-
porters everywhere: at faculties, among high-school students, craftsmen,
workers, and farmers”.69 They drafted temporary instructions for members
64
AHDPZ, Judgement of the Military Court of the Command of the Zagreb Military
District no. Vkr. 147/50 (sic!) of 5 February 1946.
65
The judgement mentions another name: “National Uprising Committee.” But, members
of the organisation did not use that name.
66
AHDPZ, Judgement of the District People’s Court in Osijek Stup. 165/46 of 8 June 1946;
Judgement of the Supreme Court of NRH no. K-1994/46-2 of 10 August 1946.
67
Slavko Kudrna, “Društvo narodnog otpora (Osijek)”, PZ, (8) 1998, no. 78: 10-15 Cf. A.
Franić, KPD Lepoglava, 141-150.
68
S. Radičević, Robijaševi zapisi, 17.
69
Also, 18. Interestingly, Radičević says in the autobiographic “Bilješka o piscu”, in the book
125
T. Jonjić, Organised Resistance to the Yugoslav Communist Regime in Croatia in 1945-1953
and wrote various manifestos calling for resistance to the regime. In their
search of Radičević’s rented room, the police found a number of compro-
mising documents on the basis of which a resolution on the situation in the
country was to be drafted and sent to the American Ambassador. HROP
members planned to inform the Western powers about the real situation
in Yugoslavia. The organisation did not have weapons, but the programme
principles and a leaflet entitled “Braćo i sestre!” (Brothers and sisters), as
well as other materials. were seized. 70
The public activities of HROP were limited to laying wraths on the
grave of the Radić brothers, and the grave of Dr. Ante Starčević in Šestine.71
Although these were limited, under the circumstances they required consid-
erable courage, and the group’s internal organisation was both serious and
ambitious. The founding members were given various tasks, such as intel-
ligence service, propaganda, communication with Crusaders, and the num-
ber of members organised in “trojkas” increased significantly. On 19 June
1947, the prosecutor of the military command of the city of Zagreb indict-
ed twenty-one persons from this group: thirteen university students, two
high-school students, two skilled workers, and three female workers (indict-
ment no. 127/47).72 Contrary to the common practice at the time of reading
or simply summarising the indictment at the beginning of the trial, in this
case the charges were delivered to the accused. Nonetheless, draconian sen-
tences – for the founders between ten and twenty years of prison with hard
labour – were pronounced after a secret three-day trial; and the judgement
of the Military Court of the Command of the city of Zagreb (no. 420/47 of
23 August 1947) was given to the convicts only after 1990, and even then
only in the form of excerpts.73 It is worth noting that, despite the size of the
group, none of the accused yielded under UDB investigators’ pressure, nor
did they accuse one another during the trial, an indication of their firmness
and determination.74
The prisons in Stara Gradiška, Srijemska Mitrovica, Lepoglava, Zenica,
Foča, and Mostar, and the camps in Sisak, Velika Pisanica, Gospić, and else-
where, were full of convicted Croatian youth in those days. In the Penitentiary
and Correctional Home in Lepoglava alone, some 12,500 political prison-
ers served their sentences between 1945 and 1990.75 The vast majority of
them were Croats, who were also the majority of inmates in other pris-
of his memories, that a group of university students “in June 1946” founded “the first student
organisation Croatian Republican Liberation Movement ‘Hrvatski domobran’” (Also, 305.)
70
Also, 16-18, 22-23, 33-38
71
Also, 18-19. Cf. interview with S. Radičevićem in: Svjedočenje dvanaestorice, 33-44
72
Also, 28-32. Beside six founders, accused were: Ivan Ceglec, Blanka Tomljanović, Matija
Adžić, Dragutin Piškur, Ivan Đikić, Viktor Kavalir (Zlata Poslončec, Katica Sabljak, Vlatka
Tomljanović, Milica Glavaš, Franjo Hranueli (Zdravko Korać, Eugen Medek, Dragutin
Menšik and Ivan Petroci.
73
Also, 32-36.
74
Also, 33-34.
75
A. FRANIĆ, KPD Lepoglava – mučilište, 10.
126
Review of Croatian History 3/2007, no.1, 109 - 145
Šutalo was sentenced to death, and the other four to long prison terms. But
even before the trial ended, Wollitz was shot from behind in a Dubrovnik
high school.81 Safret was transferred to another group of seventeen accused,
who were brought before the same court in July. They also were accused of
founding in the second half of 1946 in Dubrovnik “a terrorist-fascist organi-
sation, the so called HOP”. They were charged with spreading propaganda by
writing slogans (“ŽAP” - Živio Ante Pavelić!, or Long live Ante Pavelić!) and
distributing leaflets (e.g. “Katolička mladeži!”, or To the Catholic Youth!”),
and copying and distributing the defence speech of Archbishop Stepinac
from his trial in Zagreb. They had also supposedly made a list of members
of SKOJ (Young Communist League of Yugoslavia) and government repre-
sentatives, and sent some of them threatening letters. In addition, they were
charged with seeking to establish links with the Crusaders and collecting aid
for them. Some of the organisation’s members were also charged with hav-
ing planned to emigrate. By the judgement of that Court, on 16 July 1947,
the following people were sentenced to long imprisonment: Joško Radica,
Augustin Franić, Antun Tutman, Bruno Safret, Đuro Bender, Ivo Katić,
Đuro Novaković, Ivan Radović, Ivo Grbić, Stijepo Radić, Ivo Kraljić, Damjan
Pavlović, Julijan Vidman and Kate Lisa. The first accused, Josip Franić, man-
aged to escape and flee the country.82 Although both groups were convicted
for helping to found HOP and taking part in the work of organisation with
that name, the accused only found out the name of their organization at the
trial, which strongly suggests that UDB gave the name to the group.83
The Split group gathered around Zvonimir Marković, which cooperat-
ed with the Dubrovnik and Zagreb groups, was not destroyed by UDB until
1948. But, a year earlier , an organisation was founded in the Dalmatian city
that was called the Croatian Liberation Movement (HOP). Its members orig-
inated from different parts of Dalmatia, and wrote anti-Yugoslav and anti-
communist slogans on buildings. They also wrote, copied, and distributed
leaflets calling for the restoration of a Croatian state, if necessary through
the use of armed struggle, and they urged people to help the Crusaders in
the woods. The group’s most spectacular operation was undoubtedly the
raising of an 18 metre-long Croatian tricolour on the mountain of Marjan
on 10 April 1947, the anniversary of the proclamation of the NDH. A few
days later, some of the group were arrested. The Public Prosecutor of the
Dalmatian District filed an indictment (no. I-60/47) on 20 May 1947 against
Frane Bettini, Ivica Bavčević, Nikola Penso, Jelka Betica, Vlado Zelinak,
81
“Suđenje članovima ilegalne ustaške organizacije ‘HOP’ u Dubrovniku”, Slobodna
Dalmacija, 29 May 1947; “Osudjeni su članovi terorističke organizacije ‘HOP’ U Dubrovniku”,
Slobodna Dalmacija, 30 May 1947; A. Franić, “Povodom pedesete obljetnice podmuklog ubojst-
va Stjepana Wollitza”, PZ, (7) 1997, 43.
82
AHDPZ, Judgement of the District Court u Dubrovniku K-66/47-28 of 16 July 1947.
Judgement of the Supreme Court of NRH Kž-1673/47-2 of 30 August 1947; “Osuđena je
druga grupa pripadnika i saradnika t. zv. organizacije HOP u Dubrovniku”, Slobodna Dalmacija,
31 July 1947.
83
Letter of Dr. A. Franić to the author, dated 2 October 2004.
128
Review of Croatian History 3/2007, no.1, 109 - 145
Borica Jonić, Ruža Anić, Katica Šanić, Jakov Kirigin, Tomislav Karaman,
Vjekoslav Matijević and Frano Tenta. All of the accused were sentenced to
long terms of imprisonment by the District Court of Central Dalmatia on
27 May 1947.84 In the course of the investigation, the accused were physical-
ly abused and forced to confess to actions that they had not committed. The
authorities were especially eager to force them to confess that the Bishop of
Split and Makarska, Kvirin Klement Bonefačić, was a member of HOP, but
they did not succeed in doing so.85 Still, in the course of the proceedings, it
was established that the first five accused had founded the organisation and
given it the name HOP and that they had been planning to found a similar
organisation in Makarska. It seems that an organisation with the same name
also existed in Žežvica, a village between the Omiš hinterland and Imotska
Krajina. According to the court record, especially detrimental for the first
accused, Bettini, was his “entirely specified [spontaneous?] confession” that
he had “been ready to assist anyone struggling for a free Croatia, and a state
like that was to be realised in the so-called NDH”.86
In the autumn of 1946, at the High School in Vinkovci, a secret organ-
isation named BAH (“Bog – Ante – Hrvatska, or God – Ante – Croatia)
was established. The group consisted of the then underage Slavica Vinković,
Zlatko Posavac, Tomislav Lukačević, Miroslav Herceg and Tomislav Janošić.
These students evidently established their group spontaneously, without any
outside instruction or influence, and they interpreted their political pro-
gram as a synthesis of the writings and practice of Ante Starčević, Stjepan
Radić and Ante Pavelić. They limited their activities to writing slogans and
distributing leaflets with anti-Yugoslav contents. During the investigation,
they were also pressed to confess that they had links to the Catholic Church,
which apparently did not exist. All of them were convicted at the District
Court in Slavonski Brod on 20 June 1947 (judgement no. III-K. 236/47). 87
At the opposite part of Croatia, in Zadvarje, a village on the Cetina River, a
secret group called the Organisation of Croatian Catholics was founded in
1946. It was eradicated in 1947, when many of its members were convicted
at the staged trial in summary proceedings in the middle of the village on 16
May 1947.88 According to Yugoslav data, in 1947 alone, thirty-eight “enemy
84
AHDPZ, Judgement of the District Court of Central Dalmatia of 27 May 1947 (Due to
reckless copying, the copy of the judgement at AHDPZ does not have a case number). In the
book of A. Franić about KPD Lepoglava, the name of Frano Tente is followed by the number
of case in which he was convicted K-133/47. Tente was murdered or died in Lepoglava on 8
November 1948, at the age of 20. (A. FRANIĆ, KPD Lepoglava – mučilište, 74, 8.) Zelinka’s des-
tiny seems to be the same. (Vjekoslav MATIJEVIĆ, “Nakon pola stoljeća”, PZ, (7) 1997, no. 63:
46)
85
Marija Katica Šanić, “Imala je samo 10 godina,” Zatvorenik, (2) 1991, no. 12-13, April-May
1991, 51-53
86
AHDPZ, Judgement of the District Court of Central Dalmatia of 27 May 1947
87
Zlatko POSAVAC, “Zbog ideala slobodne Hrvatske vinkovački gimnazijalci suđeni 1947.”,
(I), PZ, (9) 1999, no. 92: 40-42
88
Josip Krivić, “Žrtve i odpor šestanovačkoga kraja”, (II), PZ, (10) 2000, no. 99: 42-43
129
T. Jonjić, Organised Resistance to the Yugoslav Communist Regime in Croatia in 1945-1953
meetings, exchanged literature, and wrote slogans and leaflets; they even
managed to collect a small quantity of weapons. They were arrested in April
1949. Soon afterwards, fourteen accused were brought before the District
Court in Osijek; thirteen of whom were between 17 and 20 years of age. All
were charged with conspiracy against the Yugoslav State, and all were subse-
quently found guilty and sentenced to a total of 99 years of incarceration.93
In 1948, an organization which called itself the Croatian Liberation
Homeland Action (HODA) was founded in Zagreb.94 As early as 1946-1947,
a group of young people from Split and the surrounding area established
various forms of cooperation with like-minded youth from Zagreb and
Dubrovnik. In 1948, at the initiative of Anto Bačić from Zagreb, the group
was bound together more tightly by Zvonimir Marković within an ille-
gal organisation called the Croatian Liberation Movement – The Avengers
of Dravograd (HOP-ODRA).95 This organisation also worked in trojka, or
groups of three, whose members did not know each other, including the
main group, which consisted of Josip Dominis, Mijo Glavina and Ante
Tomić.96 During the proceedings, Marković confessed that he had accept-
ed the proposal of (the previously convicted) Bačić to spread the activities
of this organisation throughout Croatia. He had gathered his first associates,
and the organisation started to spread. Dominis confessed during the inves-
tigation “that the aim of the organisation was to overthrow the existing sys-
tem and that that was the purpose of his joining and managing the organisa-
tion in the city of Split». The organisation members had apparently met on
several occasions in order to plan operations. According to the trial record,
they had exchanged “fascist literature”, that is, different politically unsuitable
books, mostly those published in NDH; they had spread anti-Yugoslav and
anti-communist propaganda, and they had tried to establish branches of
their organisation in other Dalmatian towns. They were also accused of hav-
ing gathered funds for the families of political prisoners, and of having start-
ed to gather weapons. It was established during the trial that they had mak-
ing plans in the event of international conflict, into which Yugoslavia would
also be dragged, and there were indications that some members planned to
go abroad in order to establish contact with Croatian political emigrants.
93
Memoirs of one of the members of this group, Augustin Tomlinović, were published
under title Iz uspomena jednoga hrvatskog robijaša posthumously in Politički zatvoreniki in
1997/98.
94
Zvonimir Puškaš: Hrvatski demokratski nacionalizam (Organizirani otpor jugokomunističkoj
tiraniji 1948.-1990. godine) (Zagreb, 1997). Letter of Z. Puškaš to the author (no date, October
2005).
95
Interestingly, the Indictment of the Public Prosecutor’s Office if the Dalmatian District
no. «B» 247/49 of 7 November 1949 consistently speaks about an organisation called HOP-
ODRA, while the Judgement of the District Court in Split K-86/49-7 of 3 December 1949
persistently mentions a “terrorist organisation HROP-ODRA”, where that acronym, accord-
ing to the Court, meant: Croatian Liberation Movement – Avenge for the home guards exe-
cuted in Dravograd”.
96
One of the most important people in that organisation, Mijo Glavina, met Bačić as late as
in 1990’s. (Mijo Glavina in conversation with the author, 17 September 2007)
131
T. Jonjić, Organised Resistance to the Yugoslav Communist Regime in Croatia in 1945-1953
All of the accused (Marković, Dominis, Glavina, Tomić, Marin Špika, Marin
Zulin, Petar Glavina, Šime Perković and Mirko Benzon) were sentenced to
long terms of imprisonment by the decision of the District Court in Split
(no. K-86/49-7 dated 3 December 1949).97
According to one of the accused in the Split trial, who had been arrest-
ed earlier, in 1945 for distributing HSS anti-communist leaflets, the inves-
tigative and the criminal proceedings in general in 1949 were much more
brutal than in 1945.98 The explanation for the difference lies not only in a
more sophisticated repressive system, but also in a general atmosphere of
fear and violence after the Information Bureau Resolution and the elimina-
tion of fractions among the communist circles. The authorities undoubtedly
felt they needed to show to the Communist world that they were not arrest-
ing only those Communists who were supporting the Information Bureau
Resolution, but others as well.
Almost at the same time that the organisation called HOP-ODRA was
dissolved, the Great Croatian Crusader Brotherhood (VHKB) was eliminat-
ed as well, and that was formally established in the second half of 1949. The
organisation was active in the Livno and Duvno area, in Sarajevo, Vukovar
and Zagreb, and consisted of a considerably large number of members.99 Its
aim was to establish an independent Croatian state; in deciding on the struc-
ture of the organisation the leadership was guided by the idea that “an immi-
nent conflict between the West and East European countries” would bring
about “an attack on our country, when today’s social system in FNRJ would
be changed”. The organisation had its book of rules and the members had
to take an oath. Apart from propaganda work, they were gathering money,
and the plan was to collect weapons as well, while awaiting an internation-
al conflict, which would bring about the fall of Yugoslavia. For the purposes
of the preparation of the operation, some leading members planned “a jour-
ney abroad in order to establish connections with those who fled the coun-
try and gather funds for the organisation”.100 Twelve VHKB members from
Livno municipality (Draško Đogić, Dražen Tadić, Srećko Jurkić, Mladen
Sučić, Josip Kajić, Nikola Bobetić, Boško Gabrić, Josip Džaja, Jozo Pašalić,
Ivica Jurkić, Jozo Zrno and Franjo Nevistić) were convicted in a separate trial
in July 1950, also in Mostar.101 The Military Court in Zagreb, (judgement
97
AHDPZ, Indictment of the Public Prosecutor’s Office of the Dalmatian District no.
«B» 247/49 of 7 November 1949; Judgement of the District Court in Split K-86/49-7 of 3
December 1949
98
Josip Bepo Dominis, “Ti nećeš imati potomstva... Od zla roda nek ne bi poroda”, (2), PZ,
(6) 1996, no. 48, 34-37.
99
By the Judgement of the District Court in Mostar K-148/50 of 1 September 1950, some
of the leaders were sentenced to prison with forced laboure: Ljupko Gotovac to 20 years,
Nikola Jukanović to 18 years, Jozo Nevjestić to 16 and Žarko Radnić to 15 years. (AHDPZ,
Judgement of the District Court in Mostar, K-148/50 of 2 September 1950).
100
AHDPZ, Judgement of the District Court in Mostar, K-148/50. Cf. Ljubomir GOTOVAC,
“Bilo je to 1950. godine”, PZ, (12) 2002, no. 120 (Zagreb, March 2002, 32-34.
101
AHDPZ, Judgement of the District Court in Mostar K-132/50 of 25 July 1950.
132
Review of Croatian History 3/2007, no.1, 109 - 145
In such cases, they were regularly accused of forming illegal groups, which
justified stricter sentencing. But other aims were achieved that way as well:
providing proof of orthodoxy for Moscow and accusing the West of under-
mining the new, communist system.
For instance, on 24 October 1945, the Military Court of the 34th Assault
Division in Petrinja sentenced seven young men to death (Boro, Brajković,
Ilić, Mahler, Marić, Pećarina, Ramljak), based on charges that they had formed
an enemy conspiracy group propagating Ustasha principles and inciting the
struggle against the People’s Liberation Movement (NOP), although some
of them did not even know each other. On 26 November of the same year
their sentence was commuted, by the decision of the Military Council of
the Supreme Court of DFJ, into a lengthy imprisonment.108 The ten accused,
including Slavko Fužinac, who were arrested in mid 1945 and subsequent-
ly convicted by the Military Court of the 43rd Division in Slovenia on 31
December 1945, obviously did not create any organisation; at most, they
were merely a group of malcontents. Despite that, one of them, Anton Bujan,
was sentenced to death and executed.109
On 6 February 1947, the Divisional Military Court in Bjelovar convict-
ed a group which had purportedly been organised in mid summer 1946
by Zvonimir Balta, Luka Vidaković and Stanko Perić. Its members were
accused of spreading anti-Yugoslav propaganda, seeking to convince people
that the Crusaders were really a formidable force, and predicting that a con-
flict between Yugoslavia on one side, and the USA and the Great Britain on
the other, was imminent, and that its result would be the fall of Yugoslavia
and the return of Maček to power.110
On 14 June 1949, the District Court in Dubrovnik sentenced Marinko
Garbati and Branko Brkanović to prison. For the minor, Bogdan Jurišić,
the Court prescribed the protective measure of tight control, based on the
charges that in October 1948 they had formed an organisation which had
been designed to undermine the existing order, and that they had written
on several occasions on the walls of Dubrovnik slogans such as “Long live
Ante Pavelić!” and “a slogan by which they were mocking SKOJ”. They were
also accused of “spreading a slogan on the imminence of war[,] [of having]
hailed the power of capitalist states[,] [and of having] emphasising especial-
ly the power of the English navy and atomic bomb. . . .”111
108
AHDPZ, Certificate of the Ministry of Justice of the Republic of Croatia dated 11
December 1991 on the Judgement of the Military Court of the Assault Division II of JA
938/45. Cf. Tomislav Pećarina, “Sjećanje na Veliku Pisanicu (Prof. Petru Grgcu)”, PZ, (8) 1998,
no. 76/77: 64-65. In a letter addressed to the author, dated 4 March 1998, T. Pećarina says that
his main “sin” was the fact that he had been editor of magazine Među nama during the war.
109
Svjedočenje dvanaestorice, 46-55
110
AHDPZ, Judgement of the Division Military Court in Bjelovar, no. 107/47 of 6 February
1947
111
AHDPZ, Judgement of the District Court in Dubrovnik no. K-13/49-5 of 14 June 1949;
Judgement of the Supreme Court of NRH no. Kž-470/49-3 of 15 July 1949
134
Review of Croatian History 3/2007, no.1, 109 - 145
on 30 May 1952 to the Head of the 3rd Directorate of the Ministry of the
Interior of NRH suggests the same thing. He wrote that numerous convicts
“incite Ustasha idea among those who were convicted for having Ustasha
idea. They promise the return of Pavelić and Maček[,] saying that persis-
tence against the enemy will be rewarded. They are spreading chauvin-
ist hatred because of the unsolved national issue, stating that the Croatian
nation is oppressed. They say that farmers are forced to join communes,
while workers are poorly paid, and the prices are going up constantly, and
that all that indicates a revolution in the country soon. They are even set-
tling scores by use of force with some convicts who show signs of improve-
ment, they call them snitches; they isolate and mock them. The result is that
those who would be corrected have to be passive...»116
Because of the power and the reputation of the Church among the Croatian
people, and because of its supranational significance, Communists tried to
discredit it with accusations that it was actively fighting against or even coor-
dinating the fight against the regime.122 Priests appeared among the accused
at the first “Crusader” trials. For instance, Father Ivo Bjelokosić, together
with Jakov Andrijuci, was convicted on 18 June 1945 for distributing leaf-
lets with contents against the state and providing assistance to Crusaders.123
The fact is that Bjelokosić and some other priests from Dubrovnik opposed
the attempt of the Partisan authorities, after the slaughter of a large num-
ber of priests and civilians, to organise a celebration of St. Blaise’s Day in
Dubrovnik and thereby present themselves as advocates of freedom of reli-
gion.124 Father Sebastijan Šantalab was convicted in 1945 in Bjelovar, togeth-
er with Zvonimir Žagi, for distributing leaflets calling Croatian people to
rebel that had been seized from Žagi.125
The Shepherd’s Letter published by the Conference of Bishops on 20
September 1945 sped up a clash that was probably inevitable, owing to the
irreconcilable antagonism between the Communist regime and the Catholic
Church in Croatia. Vladimir Bakarić announced a new, even harsher cam-
paign against the Church on 15 December 1945, and CK KPJ and CK KPH
agreed on the arrest of Archbishop Stepinac.126 During the preparations for
the arrest and the trial of Stepinac, which was to be the ultimate battle with
the Church, they invested all their efforts in trying to diminish the posi-
tion and reputation of the Church. Therefore, at the time when the Crusader
Movement was at its peak, a large number of trials against Crusaders or those
who harboured them involved Catholic priests, monks and nuns as well.
Convicted with a number of people at the District Court in Bjelovar
on 10 December 1945, the nun Florentina Cerovski was sentenced to fif-
teen years of prison, for having received a letter via another accused nun
Nenada Zvonar that had been sent by a Crusader leader Martin Nemec.
Cerovski apparently sent several packages of medical material to Crusaders
in the woods after receiving the letter.127 Thirty persons were arrested in
ship (Croatian State Archive, f. 310 – Commission for Relations with Religious Communities
(in further text: HDA, KOVZ), box 341.
122
In September 1945, Andrija Hebrang said in the pre-election speech in Zagreb: “Riding
on clerical reaction’s coat-tails are Maček followers, Crusader, Ustashas, and even Chetniks...”
(Nada Kisić-Kolanović, Hebrang. Iluzije i otrežnjenja (Zagreb, 1996), p. 145)).
123
Judgement of the Military Court for Dalmatian District – Chamber at the Command
of the Southern Dalmatia District no. 164/45 of 18 June 1945 published in the book of
Bjelokosić’s memoirs: I. Bjelokosić, Svećenik..., pp. 161-162
124
Statement of Dr. A. Franić given to the author, 6 October 2007
125
Zvonimir ŽAGI, “Moja mladost provedena u robijašnicama Jugoslavije: I. dio – Osvrt na
logor Velika Pisanica”, PZ, (6) 1996, no. 57: 21-22
126
Z. Radelić, Križari..., pp. 138-139; More in: Miroslav Akmadža, “The Position of the
Catholic Church in Croatia 1945-1990”, Review of Croatian History, 2/2006, no. 1: 89-115.
127
AHDPZ, Judgement of the District Court in Bjelovar K.z. 239/45 of 10 December 1945.
Notification of KPD Slavonska Gradiška no. 6591/1954 of 29 November 1954.
137
T. Jonjić, Organised Resistance to the Yugoslav Communist Regime in Croatia in 1945-1953
early January 1946 in Bosanski Brod and the surrounding area. Two nuns
were among them, although, according to a subsequent testimony of one of
them , they had nothing to do with the other accused. During the investiga-
tion prior to the trial, the nuns were evidently pressed to accuse the parish
priest in Bosanski Brod of conspiracy against the state.128 After the sentence
was pronounced on 1 June 1946, the two nuns were transferred to Zenica
to serve their time, where they joined another twenty-eight nuns who had
been convicted on similar charges: fourteen from Sarajevo, two from Žepče,
three from Banja Luka, two from Doboj, three from Mostar, and one from
Brčko.129
There was also an attempt to link the Archbishop of Zagreb, Dr. Alojzije
Stepinac, directly with the Crusaders, owing to the fact that the he had
received a prominent Ustasha official, Erih Lisak, at the Archbishop’s res-
idence. Also Lisak had gained admittance to the Archbishop by using
a false name, the prosecution argued that two letters from General Ante
Moškov had been received at the Kaptol, that medications had been col-
lected for Crusaders by the Archbishop’s staff, and that a Crusader flag had
been blessed. During the trial, both the prosecutor and the defence allud-
ed to other cases in which priests had allegedly helped Crusaders.130 Indeed,
there were many such cases.131 Some of the accused in the trial against the
Archbishop of Zagreb were sentenced to death, and others to many years of
prison; Stepinac himself was sentenced to sixteen years of incarceration.
At the time that the verdict against Stepinac was handed down, dozens of
trials against other priests were underway. In Sarajevo, the Military Court of
the 27th Shooting Division (no. 203/45 of 30 December 1945) sentenced thir-
teen persons, led by Zvonko Lakatoš, to death, and nineteen more to years
of imprisonment. All of thee accused were charged with founding an organ-
isation on the instructions of a Catholic priest, Father Čondrić, in order
to help Crusaders operating in north-western Bosnia. Apart from printing
and distributing anti-regime leaflets (“Down with bloody Stalin, down with
bloody Tito, long live Croatia!”), the accused had allegedly been preparing
help for Crusaders who were planning an attack on Tuzla and liberation of
a large number of political prisoners held at the prison there.132 In this case,
128
E. Mehmedagić, «Razgovor sa sestrom Zvjezdanom».
129
Sister Zvjezdana (Jelka) VUK, “Kako su me odgajali za uhodu”, PZ, (6) 1996, no. 57: 39-
41.
130
Milan Stanić [editor], Suđenje Lisaku, Stepincu, Šaliću i družini, ustaško-križarskim zločinima i
njihovim pomagačima (Zagreb, 1946).
131
Cf. Z. RADELIĆ, Križari..., pp. 139-153.
132
AHDPZ, Judgement of the Supreme Court of FNRJ, II no. 75/46 of 6 February 1946. By
the second-instance judgement, the sentences were made a bit more lenient, and the capi-
tal punishment was confirmed only for Z. Lakatoš, while for the others it was changed into
twenty and ten yers of incarceration. That jusgement, and the first-instance judgement of the
Military Court of the 27th Shooting Division, no. 203/45 of 30 November 1945, with detailed
memories of one of the convicts was published in: T. Obrdalj, Jedan život.Cf. Anton Ferenc – T.
Obrdalj, «Anton Bilela – In memoriam», PZ, (11) 2001, no. 119: 45.
138
Review of Croatian History 3/2007, no.1, 109 - 145
an organisation actually had been founded in the summer of 1945, and its
members had sought to establish contact with the Crusaders.133 In tandem
with this trial, the Military Court in Tuzla convicted Father Efrem Ćosić,
Father Ljudevit Josić, Father Ljudevit Bralić and seven civilians, who were
charged with conspiring against the state and providing assistance to the
Crusaders.134
At the District Court in Varaždin a trial against Dragutin Gazivoda and
others was held between 20 August and 7 September 1946. Among the ten
accused, there were four priests, who were convicted of having links to the
Crusaders and the Croatian emigration, of gathering weapons, and so on.135
Father Anselmo Canjuga was convicted in late May 1947, together with
a large group of civilians, for helping the Crusaders.136 Although physical
violence against those accused of such crimes was routine, the possession,
reading and distribution of the Shepherd’s Letter led to exceptionally bru-
tal physical violence against the accused.137 On 26 May 1947, the District
People’s Court in Zadar convicted (judgement no. K-85/47) Father Eugen
Konatić and five other persons were charged with engaging in activities
against the people and of spreading false propaganda and undermining the
state and the regime.138 In March 1948, the District Court in Subotica con-
victed three groups of Croats who were accused of being affiliated with an
“Ustasha and Crusader terrorist organisation” (judgment no. K-95/48 of 17
March 1948). On 24 March 1948, Vojislav Pešut and ten other persons were
convicted, among them three priests (judgment no. K-104/48), Marija Čović
and eight more persons were also convicted, among them three priests
(judgement no. K-108/48 of 25 March 1948), as were Tome Vukmanov and
six more persons.139 Two rifles, three bombs and 26 bullets had been planted
at the home of Father Ratimir Kordić, a parish priest in Drinovci in Western
Herzegovina, who was suspected of assisting Herzegovinian Crusaders. As a
result, he was sentenced in 1949 to six years of incarceration.140
Government prosecutors also sought to link the Catholic Church to
other forms of resistance in addition to the Crusader movement. There
were attempts to link the Kaptol in Zagreb with the TOHO organisation,
133
T. Obrdalj, Jedan život..., pp. 56-59.
134
Facsimile news about that trial dated 3 February 1946 and published in Sarajevski dnevnik,
prepared by T. Obrdalj, Jedan život..., p. 127.
135
Vlado Hajnić, “Pripreme za obračun s nadbiskupom Stepincem”, PZ, (9) 1999, no. 85,
April 1999, 21-22; Idem, “Zatvorske uspomene (I.)”, PZ, (9) 1999, no. 91, October 1999, 48
136
“Fra Anzelmo Canjuga,” Blaženi Alojzije Stepinac, 10/2003, no. 1, 34
137
Lj.[ubica] P.[Avičić], “Kako je izgledala briga komunista za djecu” Zatvorenik, (2) 1991,
no. 9, 39-40.
138
AHDPZ, Judgement of the District Court in Zadar no. K-85/47 of 26 May 1947. Cf.
Bruno ZORIĆ, “Progon katoličkih svećenika”, PZ, (12) 2002, no. 128, November 2002, 37-39
Orbituary for father E. Konatić, with some interesting detailes published by Ive Livljanić and
B. Zorić in PZ, (16) 2006, no. 172-173: 59
139
M. Dulić, “Da se ne zaboravi”; A. Sekulić, “Dvije subotičke presude”. M. Čović says that
the investigation covered 200 people. (M. Čović, Sjećanje – svjedočenje, 44).
140
Father Ratimir Kordić, Fratar narodni neprijatelj (Zagreb, 1995).
139
T. Jonjić, Organised Resistance to the Yugoslav Communist Regime in Croatia in 1945-1953
although such a link did not exist.141 I have mentioned the case of the Bishop
Bonefačić of Split and the attempt to link him with the members of the
Split HOP organisation.142 In the trial against two groups from Dubrovnik
in 1947, there was also an attempt to present Catholic priests as the actual
instigators of the illegal anti-regime activity.
According to official sources, in 1947 only seven priests were killed, but
nine were assaulted and 74 were arrested; including 25 who were accused of
cooperating with “Ustasha and Crusader outcasts”.143 There was also a case
in which a priest who had been stoned,144 and more than ten years after the
war, the Archbishop of Split, Dr. Frane Franić, was a victim of stoning and
an attempted lynching.145 American diplomats at the Holy See noted on 14
February 1948 that, “In Yugoslavia at the moment, at the notorious Stara
Gradiška prison 104 Catholic priests in total are imprisoned. This number
indicates an increase of 20 priests since two months ago. . . .”146 According to
the “Overview of the convicted priests, nuns and clerical officials of all reli-
gions in the territory of NRH between 1944 and 1951”, during that peri-
od some 206 Roman Catholic priests were convicted, as well as 15 Roman
Catholic seminary students, 15 Roman Catholic nuns, three Greek Catholic
and 13 Orthodox priests, two Orthodox nuns, one official of the Evangelic
Church, two Muslim officials, seven officials of the Adventist religious com-
munity and seven officials of Jehovah’s Witnesses. 147 However, this is not
a complete list, because it does not include the names of priests who are
known to have been convicted. It is also necessary to say that the procedure
in which hundreds of Catholic priests were confined in camps and prisons
was more brutal that the one applied to convicted lay persons.148
Very often, the judgements against priests charged with participating in
subversive movements or of assisting the Crusader movement contained
confessions by priests. However, they very rarely participated in Crusader
141
Cf. Z. Radelić, Križari..., p. 136.
142
M. K. Šanić, “Imala je samo 10 godina”.
143
Z. Radelić, Križari..., p. 140.
144
It was an ettempted murder of the parish priest in Promin Mirko Validžić Ćelkanović,
who was stoned in Oklaj on 17 February 1946, and miraculously survived. (P. P. Cota,
Svjedočenja (Zagreb, 1994, 134)
145
Branko Madunić, “Msgr. dr. Frane Franić, nadbiskup u mirovini: Nikad nisam posumn-
jao u svoju svećeničku misiju”, Nedjeljni vjesnik, 16 February 1997, 7.
146
J. Batelja, Crna knjiga, LXI.
147
HDA, b. 310 – KOVZ, box 341.
148
Camp in Viktorovac near Sisak and prison in Stara Gradiška, Cf. P. P. Cota, Svjedočenja,
118, 129-133. S. Radičević, a convict for a long time at Stara Gradiška and Lepoglava, also
speaks about the special treatment of priests. (S. Radičević, Robijaševi zapisi, 64-67). The same
applies to Sarajevo, Zenica and Foča, as confirmed by H. Zilić, member of organisation
“Young Muslims” (Hadžibeg Zilić, «Sjećanje na zatvorske dane» Zatvorenik, (2) 1991, no. 17-
18: 45-46)
140
Review of Croatian History 3/2007, no.1, 109 - 145
ing of the organisation whose members had become her associates, Sisters
Slavka Matijanić and Inviolata Anić, the head of the Monastery. They were
accused of having gathered and copied leaflets with “subversive contents”, of
having assisted Crusaders in the woods in various ways, and even of having
gathered weapons and ammunition. Most of the illegal meetings, the indict-
ment said, had been held at the Monastery. According to handwritten com-
ments on one copy of the judgement, which is available in the AHDPZ, and
undoubtedly originated from one of the convicted nuns, none of the incrim-
inations was correct, except for their having received “10 copies of leaflets
about the elections”. Those handwritten comments imply that the accused
were instigated to do so by a woman named Zdenka, who is mentioned in
the judgement as a “former Ustasha official.” Although Zdenka’s last name
is not stated anywhere, it appears that she was an agent provocateur of the
Yugoslav intelligence service.155
On 7 December 1947, Father Julijan Ramljak, Joso Šarić, Filip Grabovac,
Dragutin Božić, Križan Gotovac, Dujo Šarić and Božo Skejo were tried in
the District Court of Šibenik. The trial was over in a single day, and the
accused were convicted of having assisted the Crusaders and undermined
the Communist system. While serving his eight-year prison sentence, Father
J. Ramljak was charged again, and on 17 August 1948 he was sentenced to a
single-term imprisonment of 18 years for having organised an armed attack
on the gunpowder warehouse in Siverić in January 1947 (among other charg-
es). None of the charges were true: there had been no subversive organisa-
tion, neither had the accused taken any subversive actions. Their only crime
had been to offer a passive resistance to the Yugoslav Communist regime.156
Nonetheless, there were cases where priests and seminary students had
been active in the illegal resistance to the regime. In mid September 1950,
UDB arrested forty seminary students and several lay persons from Zagreb
who had been connected with the seminary students. The investigation last-
ed until 17 May of the following year, when the Public Prosecutor’s Office
for the City of Zagreb filed an indictment (number B-283/1951) against
fourteen seminary students (Stjepan Novak, Vladimir Šubat, Mate Selak,
Gabrijel Sakač, Stjepan Plantak, Silvije Brezovnjački, Antun Grivec, August
Korpar, August Horvat, Marijan Grgić, Gustav Kuzmić, Milan Balenović,
Franjo Muren, Ignatije Hrastić) and two priests (Josip Salač and Franjo
Talan). They were accused of founding a secret organisation called Croatian
National Resistance (HNO) in February 1950 with the aim of undermin-
ing the state and the social order through propaganda. The organisation
had a book of rules, and its members were taking an oath. As a part of its
activities, the organisation prepared, produced and distributed a number
of leaflets with hostile content; they sent a number of life-threatening let-
155
AHDPZ, Division Military Court in Banja Luka, judgement no. 446/47 of 17 July 1947.
The handwritten notes on a copy of the judgement at AHDPZ say that “some Zdenka” is
identified as Mira Krajči, an OZN collaborator.
156
More in father J. Ramljak, Nečastiva urota, title; Idem, Nečastiva urota II., title
142
Review of Croatian History 3/2007, no.1, 109 - 145
Conclusion
The establishment of the communist Yugoslavia was followed by violence,
mass murder, the suppression of normal political freedoms, the imprison-
ment of political opponents, and widespread hunger among the general pop-
ulation. Consequently, the regime faced from the very beginning a passive
resistance to its attempts to reshape society on the Bolshevik model. Besides
passive resistance, during the entire time of the existence of the communist
Yugoslavia, from its birth to its last breath, authorities faced a political, and
sometimes armed, resistance by a large number of individuals and groups in
Croatia and BiH. There has been no research so far that could give a reliable
answer to the question of whether there were significant differences in the
attitude of members of various nations towards that ideology. Still, even the
incomplete statistical data on those executed after the Second World War
and on political prisoners imply with great probability that Croat Catholics
were the least prone to make concessions to the communist ideology and
regime.
Croats were among those who continued the armed struggle against
communist Yugoslavia after the fall of NDH. The key role in that struggle
was played by Crusader groups, which continued offering armed resistance,
while waiting for a conflict between the democratic and communist coun-
tries, which they considered imminent, in which Croatia, owing to its tra-
ditionally European orientation, and with the help of the Croatian politi-
cal emigration, would be liberated and re-established as a state. Although
it took several years for the Yugoslav regime to break it, and more than ten
years to destroy it completely, the Crusader movement was destined to fail-
ure because the mass slaughters at the end of the war and the brutal regime’s
repression hindered their military and political victory in the country, while
the international situation –as in earlier periods – was entirely unfavourable
for the establishment of an independent Croatia.
At the same time, when the Crusader movement began in the spring of
1945, dozens of illegal groups of Croatian farmers, workers, clerks, high-
school and university students were established all over Croatia, which in
different ways demonstrated their resistance to Communism and the idea of
a Yugoslav state. Similarly to the treatment of the Crusader movement, the
Yugoslav authorities occasionally invented such groups in order to achieve
various aims. By doing that, they eliminated potentially dangerous individ-
uals. On the other hand, they justified the introduction of a more repressive
regime every time and gained means to achieve benefits in foreign policy,
such as levelling the relations with the East and the West, and the conflict
ulatori? Udruženje katoličkih svećenika BiH ‘Dobri pastir’”, Fra Ferdo Vlašić, vizionar i patnik.
Spomenica, ed. father Robert Jolić, father Gabrijel Mioč and Marija Vukadin (Tomislavgrad,
2005), pp. 81-101. The article was published in Katolički tjednik from Sarajevo, no. 21-25, 28
May – 25 June 2006. See also the polemics which followed in the same weekly between the
author and several Bosnian Franciscans.
144
Review of Croatian History 3/2007, no.1, 109 - 145
with the Holy See, as the Catholic Church proved to be a sole serious and
organised opponent to the communist regime on the long run.
All those forms of resistance did not suffice to dissemble the communist
regime and Yugoslavia. Still, their systematicness and long life undoubtedly
show that the struggle for the achievement of those aims never ceased.
Zusammenfassung
145