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Bukovica massacre

The Bukovica massacre was a massacre of Muslims in Bukovica, Pljevlja, in the Axis-occupied Italian governorate of Montenegro. It took place on 4–7 February 1943,[1] during Pavle Đurišić's Chetniks' 1943 cleansing campaign (conducted against the order of supreme Chetnik command). The massacre was aimed at establishing Chetnik control over territories held by the Sandžak Muslim militia. After a short battle with the Muslim militia, Chetniks captured Bukovica and killed over five hundred civilians.

Battle of Bukovica
Part of World War II in Yugoslavia
Date4–7 February 1943
Location
Result After short battle with Muslim militia, Bukovica fell under Chetnik control
Belligerents
Sandžak Muslim militia Chetniks
Commanders and leaders
  • Latif Močević
  • Alija Hadžimusić  
Units involved
  • Bukovica detachment
  • Foča detachment
  • Mileševa Corps
  • Drina Corps
  • Durmitor Brigade
Strength
2,500 3,550
Casualties and losses
more than 576 civilians

Background

Geography and demography

Bukovica is a rural area of Pljevlja municipality located in northern Montenegro, and is part of the Sandžak region.[2] Prior to the start of World War II, the population of Bukovica was predominantly Muslim, with a substantial Serb population.

Muslim militia in Sandžak

At the end of April 1941 and into the beginning of May, Croatian Ustaše forces captured Sandžak.[3] Political representatives of the Muslim population requested that the territory of Sandžak should be annexed by the Independent State of Croatia.[4] Thus the Sandžak Muslim militia was established in all regions of Sandžak, including Pljevlja. After withdrawal of the Ustaše from Sandžak in September 1941, the region came under control of Italian forces as part of Italian governorate of Montenegro. In April 1942, Italians established a battalion of Muslim militia in Metaljka, near Čajniče, composed of about 500 Muslims from villages near Pljevlja and Čajniče. Soon after, a command post of Muslim militia was established in Bukovica, near Pljevlja. It was commanded by Latif Moćević, the president of Bukovica municipality. From the end of May 1942, his units attacked and killed local Serbs.[5]

In December 1942, around 3,000 Muslims attacked the Serbian village of Buđevo and several surrounding villages near Sjenica, burning down Serb houses and murdering Serb citizens.[6] According to Chetnik sources, Muslims were preparing to expel Serbs who lived on the right bank of Lim, Pljevlja, Čajniče, and Foča.[7]

Order of Draža Mihailović

On 3 January 1943 Draža Mihailović issued an order for the "cleansing of Ustaše-Muslim organizations" from Čajniče region with the explanation that Ustaše and Sandžak Muslim militia forces had continued to attack and kill Serb civilians, rob Serb-populated villages and rape women and girls. Stating that the total number of their armed forces was 2,500,[8] Mihailović issued his order to:

  • Mileševa Corps, commanded by Vojislav Lukačević and Railić Radoman,
  • Drina Corps, commanded by Bajo Nikič
  • Durmitor brigade, commanded by Nikola Bojović
 
Đurišić's report of 13 February 1943 informing Mihailović of the massacres of Muslims in the counties of Čajniče and Foča in southeastern Bosnia and in the county of Pljevlja in the Sandžak.

Đurišić's January raids of revenge

On 5 January 1943 Montenegrin Chetniks, commanded by Pavle Đurišić, attacked 33 villages predominantly populated with Muslims in the region of Lower Bihor.[9] They pursued raids of revenge against Sandžak Muslims, many being innocent villagers, with the goal of settling accounts with Muslim militias.[10][11][12]

A group commanded by Lukačević began their attack on 5 January 1943.[13] As soon as they attacked, Italian forces tried to intervene.[13] On the same day a unit commanded by Rade Korda burned 15 houses and killed 15 people.[13] The unit commanded by Miraš Savić began to attack on 6 January.[13] On 10 January, Đurišić reported that the Chetniks under his command had burned down 33 Muslim villages, killed 400 Muslim fighters, and had also killed about 1,000 Muslim women and children in the region of Bjelo Polje.

According to some sources, Italians wanted to reward Chetniks because they had agreed to participate in the Case White operation against Communists. This allowed Chetnik attacks on the Muslim population to occur in Sandžak and Montenegro. Chetnik forces began with preparation for this attack on 1 February 1943.[14]

At the end of January 1943, Muslims from Kalinovik in eastern Herzegovina advised Muslims from Bukovica not to allow communists to misuse them against Serbs, like Ustaše had misused them in 1942. This advice was not followed and some Muslims from this region continued to terrorize Serbs from Bukovica and neighboring places.[15]

After a short battle with Muslim militia, Bukovica fell under Chetnik control.[16]

Casualties

An incomplete list of 576 victims of the Chetnik attack on Bukovica municipality was published in Prilog u krvi Pljevlja 1941–45.godine (1969) by the SUBNOR (Union of Veterans of the People's Liberation War). 443 of the listed victims were children under the age of 18. Many of the men escaped, believing that civilian villages would not be in danger. Many civilians were tortured before being killed; a number of women and girls were raped. According to an incomplete list, Chetniks burned 1,171 houses and 468 other buildings.[17] On 1 March 1943 Latif Močević sent a report to the 1st Alpine Division Taurinense, informing them about this massacre. He stated that the number of victims in Bukovica was about 500 civilians,[18] including 81 child in only one village - Močevići.[19] In his testimony he said that Chetniks made a toilet from the corpses, which they named Muslim Mosque. Chetniks also threw Muslims regardless of age or gender into Ćehotina river, raped girls and than killed them with stakes through their 'private parts' and they tore skin of certain Hadžija Tahirović from below the knees than up the backs and the skin was return down the chest. Last brutal act Chetniks called Muslim women with a burqa.[19]

The Chetniks killed Pavle Đurković, a notable person from Bukovica, because he was opposed to the massacre of Muslims.[20]

On 16 February 1943 Ustaše reported to their ministry of external affairs that Latif Močević, a detachment commander of Muslim militia from Bukovica, and some other militia members were captured by Italians in Čajniče. According to this report, Alija Hadžimusić, a commander of Foča detachment of Muslim militia, was killed in the battle near Čajniče. Ustaše reported that the Muslim militia was surrounded near Čajniče, with insufficient ammunition, being "on the edge of annihilation."[21]

Aftermath

On 28 February 1943 there was a conference in Prijepolje attended by Italian Lieutenant General Luigi Mentasti, who was commander of Italian forces in Montenegro. Mentasti asserted that Italian forces were not responsible for the Bukovica massacre, citing the centuries-long conflict between Orthodox Christians and Muslims. In turn, one million Serbs murdered mostly by Muslims on the territory of the Independent State of Croatia which included Bosnia and Hercegovina. He also accused the population of Bukovica of providing haven to a communist agent, an accusation that was denied by the mufti Šećerkadić from Pljevlja. Mentasti explained that Italian forces could not guarantee the security of Muslims in Pljevlja and recommended that they follow the example of Muslims from Berane and Bijelo Polje who signed agreements with Pavle Đurišić and Chetnik General Đukanović.[22]

During the war, communists established a commission for the investigation of war crimes of occupying forces and their collaborators. After the war, this commission investigated the massacre committed by Chetniks in villages of the Pljevlja municipality and emphasized that it was committed by Chetniks commanded by Draža Mihajlović and his subordinate officers with the approval of the commander of the 1st Alpine Division Taurinense.[23] This commission composed a list of 95 Muslims and 59 Orthodox Christian war criminals in Pljevlja during the war. Seventeen former Chetniks were accused of committing the Bukovica massacre.[24]

References

  1. ^ Knežević 1969, p. 113
  2. ^ HLC 2003
  3. ^ IIRPS 1972, p. 465.
  4. ^ Knežević 1969
  5. ^ Vasović 2009, p. 36
  6. ^ Redžić 2002, p. 60.
  7. ^ Pajović 1977, p. 57.
  8. ^ "Zapovest". Retrieved 3 June 2014.
  9. ^ Božović, Branislav; Vavić, Milorad (1991). Surova vremena na Kosovu i Metohiji: kvislinzi i kolaboracija u drugom svetskom ratu. Institut za savremenu istoriju. p. 246. ISBN 9788674030400. Четници Павла Ђуришића су, 5. јануара 1943. године, напали 33 села у Доњем Бихору, настањеном Муслиманима.
  10. ^ Redžić 2002, p. 60
  11. ^ Sedlar, Jean W. (2007). The Axis empire in southeast Europe, 1939–1945. Booklocker. p. 163. ISBN 978-1-60145-297-9.
  12. ^ Lampe, John R. (2000). Yugoslavia as History: Twice There Was a Country. Cambridge University Press. p. 215. ISBN 978-0-521-77401-7.
  13. ^ a b c d Dedijer & Miletić 1990, p. 379.
  14. ^ Knežević 1969, p. 113
  15. ^ Petrović 2009, p. 415
  16. ^ Šarkinović, H. (1997). Bošnjaci od Načertanija do Memoranduma. Podgorica.[page needed]
  17. ^ Knežević 1969, p. 114
  18. ^ Čekić 1996, p. 254.
  19. ^ a b Živković, Milutin (2017). Санџак 1941-1943 [Sandžak 1941-1943] (in Serbo-Croatian). p. 934.
  20. ^ Knežević 1969, p. 113, 114
  21. ^ Čekić 1996, p. 253.
  22. ^ Čekić 1996, p. 256.
  23. ^ Čekić 1996, p. 463.
  24. ^ Petrović 2009, p. 436

Sources

Books
  • Dedijer, Vladimir; Miletić, Antun (1990). Genocid nad Muslimanima, 1941-1945. Svjetlost. ISBN 9788601015258.
  • Čekić, Smail (1996). Genocid nad Bošnjacima u Drugom svjetskom ratu: dokumenti. Udruženje Muslimana za antigenocidne aktivnosti.
  • IIRPS (1972). NOR i revolucija u Srbiji, 1941–1945: naučni skup posvećen 30-godišnjici ustanka, održan na Zlatiboru 25–26 septembra 1971. Institut za istoriju radničkog pokreta Srbije (IIRPS).
  • Knežević, Danilo (1969). Prilog u krvi: Pljevlja 1941–1945. Opštinski odbor SUBNOR-a.
  • Vasović, Milorad S. (2009). Istorija Pljevlja. Opština Pljevlja. ISBN 978-9940-512-03-3.
  • Pajović, Radoje (1977). Kontrarevolucija u Crnoj Gori: Četnički i federalistički pokret, 1941–1945 [The Counter-revolution in Montenegro: The Chetnik and Federalist Movements, 1941–1945] (in Serbo-Croatian). Cetinje: Obod. OCLC 5351995.
  • Petrović, Milić F. (2009). "Nacionalni Pokreti u Pljevaljskom Kraju 1941-1945". Istorija Pljevalja. Opština Pljevalja.
  • Redžić, Vučeta (2002). Građanski rat u Crnoj Gori: Dešavanja od sredine 1942. godine do sredine 1945. godine. Stupovi.
Documents
  • HLC (10 February 2003). (PDF). HLC. ISBN 86-82599-39-2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 January 2012. Retrieved 18 November 2017.

bukovica, massacre, massacre, muslims, bukovica, pljevlja, axis, occupied, italian, governorate, montenegro, took, place, february, 1943, during, pavle, Đurišić, chetniks, 1943, cleansing, campaign, conducted, against, order, supreme, chetnik, command, massacr. The Bukovica massacre was a massacre of Muslims in Bukovica Pljevlja in the Axis occupied Italian governorate of Montenegro It took place on 4 7 February 1943 1 during Pavle Đurisic s Chetniks 1943 cleansing campaign conducted against the order of supreme Chetnik command The massacre was aimed at establishing Chetnik control over territories held by the Sandzak Muslim militia After a short battle with the Muslim militia Chetniks captured Bukovica and killed over five hundred civilians Battle of BukovicaPart of World War II in YugoslaviaDate4 7 February 1943LocationBukovica Pljevlja Italian governorate of Montenegro modern day Montenegro ResultAfter short battle with Muslim militia Bukovica fell under Chetnik controlBelligerentsSandzak Muslim militiaChetniksCommanders and leadersLatif Mocevic Alija Hadzimusic Pavle ĐurisicUnits involvedBukovica detachment Foca detachmentMileseva Corps Drina Corps Durmitor BrigadeStrength2 5003 550Casualties and lossesmore than 576 civilians Contents 1 Background 1 1 Geography and demography 1 2 Muslim militia in Sandzak 1 3 Order of Draza Mihailovic 1 4 Đurisic s January raids of revenge 2 Casualties 3 Aftermath 4 References 5 SourcesBackground EditGeography and demography Edit Bukovica is a rural area of Pljevlja municipality located in northern Montenegro and is part of the Sandzak region 2 Prior to the start of World War II the population of Bukovica was predominantly Muslim with a substantial Serb population Muslim militia in Sandzak Edit At the end of April 1941 and into the beginning of May Croatian Ustase forces captured Sandzak 3 Political representatives of the Muslim population requested that the territory of Sandzak should be annexed by the Independent State of Croatia 4 Thus the Sandzak Muslim militia was established in all regions of Sandzak including Pljevlja After withdrawal of the Ustase from Sandzak in September 1941 the region came under control of Italian forces as part of Italian governorate of Montenegro In April 1942 Italians established a battalion of Muslim militia in Metaljka near Cajnice composed of about 500 Muslims from villages near Pljevlja and Cajnice Soon after a command post of Muslim militia was established in Bukovica near Pljevlja It was commanded by Latif Mocevic the president of Bukovica municipality From the end of May 1942 his units attacked and killed local Serbs 5 In December 1942 around 3 000 Muslims attacked the Serbian village of Buđevo and several surrounding villages near Sjenica burning down Serb houses and murdering Serb citizens 6 According to Chetnik sources Muslims were preparing to expel Serbs who lived on the right bank of Lim Pljevlja Cajnice and Foca 7 Order of Draza Mihailovic Edit On 3 January 1943 Draza Mihailovic issued an order for the cleansing of Ustase Muslim organizations from Cajnice region with the explanation that Ustase and Sandzak Muslim militia forces had continued to attack and kill Serb civilians rob Serb populated villages and rape women and girls Stating that the total number of their armed forces was 2 500 8 Mihailovic issued his order to Mileseva Corps commanded by Vojislav Lukacevic and Railic Radoman Drina Corps commanded by Bajo Nikic Durmitor brigade commanded by Nikola Bojovic Đurisic s report of 13 February 1943 informing Mihailovic of the massacres of Muslims in the counties of Cajnice and Foca in southeastern Bosnia and in the county of Pljevlja in the Sandzak Đurisic s January raids of revenge Edit On 5 January 1943 Montenegrin Chetniks commanded by Pavle Đurisic attacked 33 villages predominantly populated with Muslims in the region of Lower Bihor 9 They pursued raids of revenge against Sandzak Muslims many being innocent villagers with the goal of settling accounts with Muslim militias 10 11 12 A group commanded by Lukacevic began their attack on 5 January 1943 13 As soon as they attacked Italian forces tried to intervene 13 On the same day a unit commanded by Rade Korda burned 15 houses and killed 15 people 13 The unit commanded by Miras Savic began to attack on 6 January 13 On 10 January Đurisic reported that the Chetniks under his command had burned down 33 Muslim villages killed 400 Muslim fighters and had also killed about 1 000 Muslim women and children in the region of Bjelo Polje According to some sources Italians wanted to reward Chetniks because they had agreed to participate in the Case White operation against Communists This allowed Chetnik attacks on the Muslim population to occur in Sandzak and Montenegro Chetnik forces began with preparation for this attack on 1 February 1943 14 At the end of January 1943 Muslims from Kalinovik in eastern Herzegovina advised Muslims from Bukovica not to allow communists to misuse them against Serbs like Ustase had misused them in 1942 This advice was not followed and some Muslims from this region continued to terrorize Serbs from Bukovica and neighboring places 15 After a short battle with Muslim militia Bukovica fell under Chetnik control 16 Casualties EditAn incomplete list of 576 victims of the Chetnik attack on Bukovica municipality was published in Prilog u krvi Pljevlja 1941 45 godine 1969 by the SUBNOR Union of Veterans of the People s Liberation War 443 of the listed victims were children under the age of 18 Many of the men escaped believing that civilian villages would not be in danger Many civilians were tortured before being killed a number of women and girls were raped According to an incomplete list Chetniks burned 1 171 houses and 468 other buildings 17 On 1 March 1943 Latif Mocevic sent a report to the 1st Alpine Division Taurinense informing them about this massacre He stated that the number of victims in Bukovica was about 500 civilians 18 including 81 child in only one village Mocevici 19 In his testimony he said that Chetniks made a toilet from the corpses which they named Muslim Mosque Chetniks also threw Muslims regardless of age or gender into Cehotina river raped girls and than killed them with stakes through their private parts and they tore skin of certain Hadzija Tahirovic from below the knees than up the backs and the skin was return down the chest Last brutal act Chetniks called Muslim women with a burqa 19 The Chetniks killed Pavle Đurkovic a notable person from Bukovica because he was opposed to the massacre of Muslims 20 On 16 February 1943 Ustase reported to their ministry of external affairs that Latif Mocevic a detachment commander of Muslim militia from Bukovica and some other militia members were captured by Italians in Cajnice According to this report Alija Hadzimusic a commander of Foca detachment of Muslim militia was killed in the battle near Cajnice Ustase reported that the Muslim militia was surrounded near Cajnice with insufficient ammunition being on the edge of annihilation 21 Aftermath EditOn 28 February 1943 there was a conference in Prijepolje attended by Italian Lieutenant General Luigi Mentasti who was commander of Italian forces in Montenegro Mentasti asserted that Italian forces were not responsible for the Bukovica massacre citing the centuries long conflict between Orthodox Christians and Muslims In turn one million Serbs murdered mostly by Muslims on the territory of the Independent State of Croatia which included Bosnia and Hercegovina He also accused the population of Bukovica of providing haven to a communist agent an accusation that was denied by the mufti Secerkadic from Pljevlja Mentasti explained that Italian forces could not guarantee the security of Muslims in Pljevlja and recommended that they follow the example of Muslims from Berane and Bijelo Polje who signed agreements with Pavle Đurisic and Chetnik General Đukanovic 22 During the war communists established a commission for the investigation of war crimes of occupying forces and their collaborators After the war this commission investigated the massacre committed by Chetniks in villages of the Pljevlja municipality and emphasized that it was committed by Chetniks commanded by Draza Mihajlovic and his subordinate officers with the approval of the commander of the 1st Alpine Division Taurinense 23 This commission composed a list of 95 Muslims and 59 Orthodox Christian war criminals in Pljevlja during the war Seventeen former Chetniks were accused of committing the Bukovica massacre 24 References Edit Knezevic 1969 p 113 HLC 2003 IIRPS 1972 p 465 Knezevic 1969 Vasovic 2009 p 36 Redzic 2002 p 60 Pajovic 1977 p 57 Zapovest Retrieved 3 June 2014 Bozovic Branislav Vavic Milorad 1991 Surova vremena na Kosovu i Metohiji kvislinzi i kolaboracija u drugom svetskom ratu Institut za savremenu istoriju p 246 ISBN 9788674030400 Chetnici Pavla Ђurishiћa su 5 јanuara 1943 godine napali 33 sela u Doњem Bihoru nastaњenom Muslimanima Redzic 2002 p 60 Sedlar Jean W 2007 The Axis empire in southeast Europe 1939 1945 Booklocker p 163 ISBN 978 1 60145 297 9 Lampe John R 2000 Yugoslavia as History Twice There Was a Country Cambridge University Press p 215 ISBN 978 0 521 77401 7 a b c d Dedijer amp Miletic 1990 p 379 Knezevic 1969 p 113 Petrovic 2009 p 415 Sarkinovic H 1997 Bosnjaci od Nacertanija do Memoranduma Podgorica page needed Knezevic 1969 p 114 Cekic 1996 p 254 a b Zivkovic Milutin 2017 Sanџak 1941 1943 Sandzak 1941 1943 in Serbo Croatian p 934 Knezevic 1969 p 113 114 Cekic 1996 p 253 Cekic 1996 p 256 Cekic 1996 p 463 Petrovic 2009 p 436Sources EditBooksDedijer Vladimir Miletic Antun 1990 Genocid nad Muslimanima 1941 1945 Svjetlost ISBN 9788601015258 Cekic Smail 1996 Genocid nad Bosnjacima u Drugom svjetskom ratu dokumenti Udruzenje Muslimana za antigenocidne aktivnosti IIRPS 1972 NOR i revolucija u Srbiji 1941 1945 naucni skup posvecen 30 godisnjici ustanka odrzan na Zlatiboru 25 26 septembra 1971 Institut za istoriju radnickog pokreta Srbije IIRPS Knezevic Danilo 1969 Prilog u krvi Pljevlja 1941 1945 Opstinski odbor SUBNOR a Vasovic Milorad S 2009 Istorija Pljevlja Opstina Pljevlja ISBN 978 9940 512 03 3 Pajovic Radoje 1977 Kontrarevolucija u Crnoj Gori Cetnicki i federalisticki pokret 1941 1945 The Counter revolution in Montenegro The Chetnik and Federalist Movements 1941 1945 in Serbo Croatian Cetinje Obod OCLC 5351995 Petrovic Milic F 2009 Nacionalni Pokreti u Pljevaljskom Kraju 1941 1945 Istorija Pljevalja Opstina Pljevalja Redzic Vuceta 2002 Građanski rat u Crnoj Gori Desavanja od sredine 1942 godine do sredine 1945 godine Stupovi DocumentsHLC 10 February 2003 Bukovica PDF HLC ISBN 86 82599 39 2 Archived from the original PDF on 19 January 2012 Retrieved 18 November 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bukovica massacre amp oldid 1129306616, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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