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Mila
Tsar
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Topic: Yugoslav Partisans Posted: 10-Jan-2006 at 18:49 |
VALTER brani sarajevo
The movie
"Valter brani Sarajevo!" (Walter defends Sarajevo!) is to Bosnia and
Herzegovina what Star Wars is space geeks. It tells the story of
Vladimir Peric, the leader of Sarajevo's resistence movement during the
Second World War.
And while what really happened is not nearly as exciting or glorious,
it is enough to justify Vladimir Peric's near-superhuman fame
throughout the former Yugoslavia, nowhere moreso than Sarajevo.
Vladimir Peric was born in 1919 in Prijepolje, in the Sandzak region of
Serbia and Montenegro. The son of a Serbian father and a Bosniak
mother, Vladimir felt a deep pride and cultural connection with both
Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia and Montenegro. Thus, when he
finished his studies, he left Prijepolje and moved to Sarajevo.
Prijepolje:
Vladimir
Peric worked as an accountant at a bank in Sarajevo and by all accounts
immersed himself in the local culture and way-of-life. He would have
been a model Bosnian citizen, but fate had other plans.
Peric had been living in Sarajevo for less than a year when the fascist
forces of Croatia's Ustasa regime occupied the city. Vladimir Peric
expressed shock, dismay, and outrage that the city of Sarajevo fell
without a single bullet. He could not understand why residents of
Sarajevo were willing to tolerate the disintegration of the first
Yugoslavia.
And so he set about forming a resistence.
Vladimir Peric surrounded himself with young people from the city
equally disturbed by the turn of events and began an almost comedic
routine of sabotage missions designed to give the people of Sarajevo a
good laugh and some cheer, while causing an only mild annoyance to the
occupying forces.
Soon, though, the dark truth of what the occupying forces had planned
for many for Sarajevo's citizens - among them Serbs and Jews - came to
light.
Vladimir Peric fled Sarajevo - but not as a coward, as a fighter. He
assumed command of the Zenica Partisan Brigade in central Bosnia and
Herzegovina where he led several successful raids against Croatian
forces.
With time he received word that many of his Serbian family members had
been killed by the Croatian and Bosniak fascist forces, and many of his
Bosniak family members were killed by the Serbian Cetniks. With this is
left the Zenica Partisans and joined the Eastern Bosnia brigade, which
was actively fighting Cetniks along the Serbian border.
In 1943 he was ordered by his commander to return to Sarajevo and
assume control of what was now a unified, violent resistence. Under his
leadership, Sarajevo's resistence fighters decimated Croatian and
German supply convoys and played a large part in weakening the city
enough that Partisan forces were able to get near to it.
The decisive battles came in March and April of 1945 when the Croatian
and German forces completely fled the city under heavy Partisan
bombardment and resistence violence.
Vladimir Peric woke up on April 6, 1945, and went downtown - running
through the narrow streets of Sarajevo and shouting to everyone he had
received word that the last remnants of the German and Croatian forces
had been ordered to retreat.
As they left, they bombarded the city. As the Partisans entered, they
bombarded the city. No one knows whether the mortar that killed
Vladimir Peric on April 6, 1945 - Sarajevo's liberation day - came from
the fascists or the Partisans.
All we know for certain are Vladimir Peric's last words.
"Look, my friends! WELCOME TO YUGOSLAVIA!"
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medenaywe
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Posted: 21-Oct-2011 at 15:12 |
Sehen Sie diese Stadt? Das ist Walter.
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Nick1986
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Posted: 21-Oct-2011 at 20:37 |
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Me Grimlock not nice Dino! Me bash brains!
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medenaywe
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Posted: 22-Oct-2011 at 00:59 |
Have You seen the serial?Resistance movement in Sarajevo during WW2.Yugoslavia was "United Nations of Balkans" concept or similar to that.What did happen next?It is hard to believe even today for those that have raised inside this country!Were all social communities created over ideology finished like it?
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Nick1986
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Posted: 22-Oct-2011 at 20:36 |
Tito was a brilliant leader. He successfully managed to unite the squabbling resistance groups into a professional army and bring stability to the Balkans until his death
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Me Grimlock not nice Dino! Me bash brains!
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Nick1986
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Posted: 26-Oct-2011 at 19:33 |
It's a pity his successors didn't do more to suppress the nationalism that tore the Balkans apart. That pointless war between the Serbs, Croats and Muslims could have been prevented and many lives saved
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Me Grimlock not nice Dino! Me bash brains!
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nickherc
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Joined: 07-Nov-2014
Location: Slovenia
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Posted: 04-Dec-2014 at 05:11 |
Yeah, partisans were really a high efficient fighting force that emerged from practically nothing. Battle of Sutjetska, Neretva, really, you have to stand in awe of the moral and efficiency. Tito knew how to organize different elements into one.
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