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Vladimir Dedijer

    Vladimir Dedijer se consolidó como un escritor profundamente involucrado en la tumultuosa política y los significativos acontecimientos históricos del siglo XX. Su experiencia periodística informó su riguroso enfoque en la investigación histórica, particularmente en lo que respecta a las guerras de independencia yugoslavas y el panorama geopolítico en general. El trabajo de Dedijer a menudo profundizaba en las complejidades del liderazgo y la ideología, ofreciendo perspectivas críticas sobre figuras y movimientos que moldearon su época. Su legado está marcado por un profundo compromiso para descubrir y presentar la verdad histórica, a menudo a través de extensos relatos biográficos e investigativos.

    Izgubljena bitka J. V. Staljina
    Tito
    Novi prilozi za biografiju Josipa Broza Tita II
    Stalins verlorene Schlacht
    Sarajevo 1914
    The Yugoslav Auschwitz and the vatican
    • The Yugoslav Auschwitz and the vatican

      • 444 páginas
      • 16 horas de lectura

      First-hand testimony of survivors and eyewitnesses is compiled in this shocking and graphic account of the crimes committed during World War II at the largest death camp in Yugoslavia. At the small Croatian town of Jasenovac, the fascist "Independent State of Croatia" (a satellite state of the Nazi Third Reich) constructed a concentration camp where more than 200,000 people, mostly Orthodox Serbs, were systematically murdered. Among the participants in this genocide were members of the Roman Catholic Clergy, from the Franciscan monk who became the camp commandant to the infamous Archbishop Stepinac, the spiritual advisor to the fascist state appointed by Pope Pius XII.Vladimir Dedijer, a close associate of Marshall Tito, has collected irrefutable documentary and photographic evidence, attesting to thousands of atrocities and the complicity of the Catholic Church in these crimes. The events described in this important volume provide a historical context to the recent conflict in Yugoslavia and shed light on the motivations behind the apparently senseless ethnic and religious strife which tore Yugoslavia apart. The massacre at Jasenovac was the terrible culmination of centuries-old animosities between Orthodox Serbs and Catholic Croats, and a dark episode in the history of the Church, one that the Church has attempted to hush up for fifty years.

      The Yugoslav Auschwitz and the vatican