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Liberation Front of the Slovene Nation

The Liberation Front of the Slovene Nation (Slovene: Osvobodilna fronta slovenskega naroda), or simply Liberation Front (Osvobodilna fronta, OF), originally called the Anti-Imperialist Front (Protiimperialistična fronta, PIF), was a Slovene anti-fascist political party. The Anti-Imperialist Front had ideological ties to the Soviet Union (which was at the time in a non-aggression pact with Nazi Germany)[1][2][3] in its fight against the imperialistic tendencies of the United States and the United Kingdom (the western powers),[4][5] and it was led by the Communist Party of Slovenia. In May 1941, weeks into the German occupation of Yugoslavia, in the first wartime issue of the illegal newspaper Slovenski poročevalec (Slovenian Reporter), members of the organization criticized the German regime and described Germans as imperialists.[6] They started raising money for a liberation fund via the second issue of the newspaper published on 8 June 1941.[7] When Germany attacked the Soviet Union, the Anti-Imperialist Front was formally renamed[8][9][10] and became the main anti-fascist Slovene civil resistance and political organization under the guidance and control of the Slovene communists. It was active in the Slovene Lands during World War II. Its military arm was the Slovene Partisans. The organisation was established in the Province of Ljubljana on 26 April 1941 in the house of the literary critic Josip Vidmar.[11] Its leaders were Boris Kidrič and Edvard Kardelj.

Liberation Front of the Slovene Nation
Osvobodilna fronta slovenskega naroda
AbbreviationOF
LeaderBoris Kidrič
FoundedApril 26, 1941 (1941-04-26)
DissolvedFebruary 19, 1944 (1944-02-19)
Merged intoPeople's Front of Yugoslavia
Succeeded bySlovene National Liberation Committee
Armed wingSlovene Partisans
IdeologyAnti-fascism
Communism
Slovenian nationalism
Yugoslavism
Factions:
Christian socialism
Liberalism
Political positionLeft-wing
Flag of the LFSN
Slovene Partisans in winter 1942.

Programme

The programme of the Fronta was outlined by the following fundamental points:

  • Armed struggle
  • United Slovenia
  • Continuity of Yugoslavia as a Slovene state, further Slovene integration into Yugoslav identity and closeness with the Russian people
  • Loyalty of all factions to the Liberation Front and by extension to the Yugoslav Partisans
  • Adherence to democracy after the liberation
  • Acceptance of the Atlantic Charter
  • Outgrowth of the Partisan Units and People’s Guards into a broader front of the National Liberation Struggle.[12]

Internal political situation

Although the Front originally consisted of multiple political groups of left-wing orientation, including some Christian Socialists, a dissident group of Slovene Sokols (also known as "National Democrats"), and a group of liberal intellectuals around the journals Sodobnost and Ljubljanski zvon,[13] during the course of the war, the influence of the Communist Party of Slovenia started to grow, until the founding groups signed the so-called Dolomite Declaration (Dolomitska izjava), giving the exclusive right to organize themselves as a political party only to the communists, on 1 March 1943.[14]

On 3 October 1943, on the session, known as Assembly of the Delegates of the Slovene Nation, which was held in Kočevje by the 572 directly elected and 78 indirectly elected members, the 120-member plenum was constituted as the highest civil governing organ of anti-fascist movement in Slovenia during the World War II.[citation needed]

After the war, the Liberation Front was transformed into the Socialist Alliance of the Working People of Slovenia.[15]

External political activity

On 19 February 1944, the 120-member Črnomelj plenum of Liberation Front of the Slovenian People changed its name to SNOS and proclaim itself as the temporary Slovenian parliament. One of its most important decisions was that after the end of the war Slovenia would become a state within the Yugoslav federation.[16]

Just before the end of the war, on May 5, 1945, the SNOS met for the last time in the town of Ajdovščina in the Julian March (then formally still part of the Kingdom of Italy) and established the Slovenian government with Boris Kidrič as its president.[17]

The Liberation Front led an intensive and specific propaganda system. It printed flyers, bulletins and other material to persuade people about its cause and slander the occupying fascist forces and local nazi collaborators who were supported by the Catholic Church.[18] The Front's radio, called Kričač (Screamer), was the only one of its kind in the occupied Europe. It emitted from various locations and occupying forces confiscated the receivers' antennas from the local population in order to prevent listening to it.[citation needed]

Slovene Partisans

The Slovene Partisans were the armed wing of the Liberation Front,[19] which fought in the beginning as a guerilla and later as an army. It was mostly ethnically homogenous and primarily communicated in Slovene.[13] These two features have been considered vital for its success.[13] It was the first Slovene military force.[13] Its most characteristic symbol was the Triglav cap.[13][20] Contrary to elsewhere in Yugoslavia, where on the freed territories the political life was organized by the military itself, the Slovene Partisans were subordinated to the civil political authority of the Front.[19] The partisan activities in Slovenia were initially independent of Tito's Partisans in the south. The merger of the Slovene Partisans with Tito's forces happened in 1944.[21][22]

The Front's name

It has been traditionally claimed by Slovene historians that the term Anti-Imperialist Front was the first to occur.[23] This may be read for example in a work by Peter Vodopivec from 2006.[24] In 2008, the historian Bojan Godeša published a peer-reviewed discussion about the name. He mentions a leaflet from the end of April 1941 with liberation front (non-capitalised) written on it, two months before the first known mention of the anti-imperialist front (non-capitalised) on 22 June 1941.[23] He also mentions that Josip Rus, who represented the Slovene Sokol Society in the founding meeting of the OF, always claimed they had only discussed the organisation as the Liberation Front.[23] That's contrary to the opinion by Josip Vidmar, also a founding member, who stated that the organisation was renamed as Liberation Front only on 30 June 1941.[25] The claims by Godeša have been cited in a seminar by Božo Repe, another eminent historian, who added that the name Anti-Imperialist Front, written with capital letters, was used particularly in the communication with the Communists of the Soviet Union. He attributed this to the desire of the Slovene Communists to demonstrate that their work corresponded to the aims of the Comintern.[26]

See also

References

  1. ^ Alexander, Robert J. (1970). "The Communist Parties of Latin America". Problems of Communism. 19 (4): 38. the Soviet Union was formally allied with Nazi Germany
  2. ^ Sandbu, Martin (2015). Europe's Orphan: The Future of the Euro and the Politics of Debt. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. p. 1. The Soviet Union was still allied with Nazi Germany
  3. ^ Čuk, Ivan; Vest, Aleks Leo (January 14, 2020). "Prevarani Sokoli - anatomija sovražnega prevzema". Novice. Retrieved May 10, 2021. komunisti so se za upor odločili šele po nemškem napadu na Sovjetsko zvezo 22. junija 1941, dotlej sta bili državi z Ribbentrop-Molotovovim paktom zaveznici
  4. ^ "Komu Pahor postavlja spomenik?". siol.net (in Slovenian). Retrieved 2021-05-03. ... je bila OF najprej usmerjena tudi proti zahodnim silam.
  5. ^ Žužek, Aleš (April 27, 2021). "Od Društva prijateljev Sovjetske zveze do Osvobodilne fronte". SiolNET. Retrieved May 10, 2021. ... je bila organizacija usmerjena tudi proti Veliki Britaniji
  6. ^ Renton: 1941: Slovenski mediji med prvim letom okupacije: https://www.renton.si/slovenski-mediji-1941/
  7. ^ Slovenski poročevalec, image of second war issue: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/47/Slovenski_porocevalec_1941-06-08_URN-NBN-SI-DOC-V7BF33W2.jpg "Cena 1 din za osvobodilni fond"
  8. ^ Beltram, Vlasta; Plahuta, Slavica (1978). Zgodovinski mejniki za priključitev Primorske k Jugoslaviji. Koper: Pokrajinski muzej Koper. Protiimperialistična fronta, ki se je po napadu Nemčije na SZ 22. junija 1941 preimenovala v Osvobodilno fronto
  9. ^ "Spoštovati je treba vse žrtve, padle v NOB". 24ur.com. April 27, 2011. Retrieved May 10, 2021. Protiimperialistična fronta se je v OF slovenskega naroda preimenovala po nemškem napadu na Sovjetsko zvezo 22. junija 1941
  10. ^ "Razdvajanje slovenskega naroda". Radio Ognjišče. December 20, 2017. Retrieved May 10, 2021. Šele po nemškem napadu na Sovjetsko zvezo 22. junija 1941, ko je SZ, ki je začela vojno na strani Tretjega Rajha, stopila na stran zahodnih zaveznikov, se je situacija za KPS spremenila, V interesu SZ je bilo, da se PIF preusmeri v boj proti okupatorju, zato se je iz taktičnih razlogov preimenovala v OF.
  11. ^ "Godeša: OF je ob koncu vojne predstavljal večino Slovencev" [Towards the End of the War, the Liberation Front Represented the Majority of Slovenes]. MMC RTV Slovenija (in Slovenian). RTV Slovenija. 26 April 2011.
  12. ^ Yugoslavian Encyclopaedia, articles Slovenci and Slovenija, Yugoslavian Lexicographical Institute, Zagreb, 1981, pp. 505–528.
  13. ^ a b c d e Vankovska, Biljana; Wiberg, Håkan (2003). "Slovene and the Yugoslav People's Army". Between Past and Future: Civil-Military Relations in the Post-Communist Balkans. I.B.Tauris. p. 165. ISBN 978-1-86064-624-9.
  14. ^ Gow, James; Carmichael, Cathie (2010). Slovenia and the Slovenes: A Small State in the New Europe (Revised and updated ed.). Hurst Publishers Ltd. p. 48. ISBN 978-1-85065-944-0.
  15. ^ General Encyclopaedia, article Socijalisti_ki savez radnoga naroda Jugoslavije, Yugoslavian Lexicographical Institute, Zagreb, 1981., p. 547
  16. ^ (in Slovene) 60-letnica Zbora odposlancev slovenskega naroda v Kočevju (2003)
  17. ^ 60 Years Since First Post-WWII Slovenian Government[permanent dead link]
  18. ^ Vreg, France (2000). Politično komuniciranje in prepričevanje: komunikacijska strategija, diskurzi, prepričevalni modeli, propaganda, politični marketing, volilna kampanja [Political Communication and Persuasion: Communication Strategy, Discourses, Models of Persuasion, Propaganda, Political Marketing, Election Campaign] (in Slovenian). p. 138. ISBN 961-235-029-9.
  19. ^ a b Repe, Božo (2005). [Reasons for the Conflict Between the Yugoslav People's Army and the Slovenes] (PDF). Vojaška zgodovina [Military History] (in Slovenian). VI (1/05): 5. ISSN 1580-4828. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-07-21. Retrieved 2012-03-02.
  20. ^ Martinčič, Vanja (1990). Slovenski partizan: orožje, obleka in oprema slovenskih partizanov [Slovene Partisan: Weapons, Clothing and Equipment of Slovene Partisans] (PDF) (in Slovenian and English). Museum of People's Revolution. pp. 44–45, 50–52. COBISS 17009408.
  21. ^ Stewart, James (2006). Linda McQueen (ed.). . New Holland Publishers. p. 15. ISBN 978-1-86011-336-9. Archived from the original on 2017-02-02. Retrieved 2016-11-05.
  22. ^ "Histories of the Individual Yugoslav Nations". The former Yugoslavia's diverse peoples: a reference sourcebook. ABC-Clio, Inc. 2004. pp. 167–168. The former Yugoslavia's diverse peoples: a reference sourcebook.
  23. ^ a b c Keber, Katarina; Šter, Katarina, eds. (April 2008). Historični seminar 6 [Historical Seminar 6] (PDF) (in Slovenian). Scientific and Research Institute, Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts. p. 142. ISBN 978-961-254-060-9. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
  24. ^ Quote: "Po nemškem napadu na SZ so se gibanju, ki ga je spodbudila ustanovitev PIF (ta se je konec junija preimenovala v OF) ...". [After the German attack of the Soviet Union, the movement prompted by the establishment of PIF (renamed at the end of June to OF) ...". Peter Vodopivec. "Od Pohlinove slovnice do samostojne države" (in Slovene) [From Pohlin's Grammar Book to an Independent State]. Modrijan Publishing House. Ljubljana, 2006. Pg. 268. ISBN 978-961-241-130-5.
  25. ^ Quote: "In tako smo 30. 06. 1941 na plenumu razpravljali o tem, da je treba našo organizacijo preimenovati. Po dolgem ugibanju smo jo preimenovali v OF Slovenskega naroda." ["And so we discussed at the plenum of 30 June 1941 that our organisation has to be renamed. After a long guess, we renamed it as the Liberation Front of the Slovene Nation." (Josip Vidmar, Bitka kakor življenje dolga. (in Slovene) [A Battle Long as a Life]. Cankarjeva založba [Cankar Publishing House], Ljubljana. 1978. Pg. 163)
  26. ^ Repe, Božo (2 March 2011). Gregor K. (ed.). [We Did not Submit to Their Rampant Force] (in Slovenian). Radio Študent. Archived from the original on 5 November 2011.

liberation, front, slovene, nation, slovene, osvobodilna, fronta, slovenskega, naroda, simply, liberation, front, osvobodilna, fronta, originally, called, anti, imperialist, front, protiimperialistična, fronta, slovene, anti, fascist, political, party, anti, i. The Liberation Front of the Slovene Nation Slovene Osvobodilna fronta slovenskega naroda or simply Liberation Front Osvobodilna fronta OF originally called the Anti Imperialist Front Protiimperialisticna fronta PIF was a Slovene anti fascist political party The Anti Imperialist Front had ideological ties to the Soviet Union which was at the time in a non aggression pact with Nazi Germany 1 2 3 in its fight against the imperialistic tendencies of the United States and the United Kingdom the western powers 4 5 and it was led by the Communist Party of Slovenia In May 1941 weeks into the German occupation of Yugoslavia in the first wartime issue of the illegal newspaper Slovenski porocevalec Slovenian Reporter members of the organization criticized the German regime and described Germans as imperialists 6 They started raising money for a liberation fund via the second issue of the newspaper published on 8 June 1941 7 When Germany attacked the Soviet Union the Anti Imperialist Front was formally renamed 8 9 10 and became the main anti fascist Slovene civil resistance and political organization under the guidance and control of the Slovene communists It was active in the Slovene Lands during World War II Its military arm was the Slovene Partisans The organisation was established in the Province of Ljubljana on 26 April 1941 in the house of the literary critic Josip Vidmar 11 Its leaders were Boris Kidric and Edvard Kardelj Liberation Front of the Slovene Nation Osvobodilna fronta slovenskega narodaAbbreviationOFLeaderBoris KidricFoundedApril 26 1941 1941 04 26 DissolvedFebruary 19 1944 1944 02 19 Merged intoPeople s Front of YugoslaviaSucceeded bySlovene National Liberation CommitteeArmed wingSlovene PartisansIdeologyAnti fascismCommunismSlovenian nationalismYugoslavismFactions Christian socialismLiberalismPolitical positionLeft wingFlag of the LFSNPolitics of SloveniaPolitical partiesElectionsSlovene Partisans in winter 1942 Contents 1 Programme 2 Internal political situation 3 External political activity 4 Slovene Partisans 5 The Front s name 6 See also 7 ReferencesProgramme EditThe programme of the Fronta was outlined by the following fundamental points Armed struggle United Slovenia Continuity of Yugoslavia as a Slovene state further Slovene integration into Yugoslav identity and closeness with the Russian people Loyalty of all factions to the Liberation Front and by extension to the Yugoslav Partisans Adherence to democracy after the liberation Acceptance of the Atlantic Charter Outgrowth of the Partisan Units and People s Guards into a broader front of the National Liberation Struggle 12 Internal political situation EditAlthough the Front originally consisted of multiple political groups of left wing orientation including some Christian Socialists a dissident group of Slovene Sokols also known as National Democrats and a group of liberal intellectuals around the journals Sodobnost and Ljubljanski zvon 13 during the course of the war the influence of the Communist Party of Slovenia started to grow until the founding groups signed the so called Dolomite Declaration Dolomitska izjava giving the exclusive right to organize themselves as a political party only to the communists on 1 March 1943 14 On 3 October 1943 on the session known as Assembly of the Delegates of the Slovene Nation which was held in Kocevje by the 572 directly elected and 78 indirectly elected members the 120 member plenum was constituted as the highest civil governing organ of anti fascist movement in Slovenia during the World War II citation needed After the war the Liberation Front was transformed into the Socialist Alliance of the Working People of Slovenia 15 External political activity EditOn 19 February 1944 the 120 member Crnomelj plenum of Liberation Front of the Slovenian People changed its name to SNOS and proclaim itself as the temporary Slovenian parliament One of its most important decisions was that after the end of the war Slovenia would become a state within the Yugoslav federation 16 Just before the end of the war on May 5 1945 the SNOS met for the last time in the town of Ajdovscina in the Julian March then formally still part of the Kingdom of Italy and established the Slovenian government with Boris Kidric as its president 17 The Liberation Front led an intensive and specific propaganda system It printed flyers bulletins and other material to persuade people about its cause and slander the occupying fascist forces and local nazi collaborators who were supported by the Catholic Church 18 The Front s radio called Kricac Screamer was the only one of its kind in the occupied Europe It emitted from various locations and occupying forces confiscated the receivers antennas from the local population in order to prevent listening to it citation needed Slovene Partisans EditMain article Slovene Partisans The Slovene Partisans were the armed wing of the Liberation Front 19 which fought in the beginning as a guerilla and later as an army It was mostly ethnically homogenous and primarily communicated in Slovene 13 These two features have been considered vital for its success 13 It was the first Slovene military force 13 Its most characteristic symbol was the Triglav cap 13 20 Contrary to elsewhere in Yugoslavia where on the freed territories the political life was organized by the military itself the Slovene Partisans were subordinated to the civil political authority of the Front 19 The partisan activities in Slovenia were initially independent of Tito s Partisans in the south The merger of the Slovene Partisans with Tito s forces happened in 1944 21 22 The Front s name EditIt has been traditionally claimed by Slovene historians that the term Anti Imperialist Front was the first to occur 23 This may be read for example in a work by Peter Vodopivec from 2006 24 In 2008 the historian Bojan Godesa published a peer reviewed discussion about the name He mentions a leaflet from the end of April 1941 with liberation front non capitalised written on it two months before the first known mention of the anti imperialist front non capitalised on 22 June 1941 23 He also mentions that Josip Rus who represented the Slovene Sokol Society in the founding meeting of the OF always claimed they had only discussed the organisation as the Liberation Front 23 That s contrary to the opinion by Josip Vidmar also a founding member who stated that the organisation was renamed as Liberation Front only on 30 June 1941 25 The claims by Godesa have been cited in a seminar by Bozo Repe another eminent historian who added that the name Anti Imperialist Front written with capital letters was used particularly in the communication with the Communists of the Soviet Union He attributed this to the desire of the Slovene Communists to demonstrate that their work corresponded to the aims of the Comintern 26 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Liberation Front of the Slovene Nation AVNOJ Slovene Home GuardReferences Edit Alexander Robert J 1970 The Communist Parties of Latin America Problems of Communism 19 4 38 the Soviet Union was formally allied with Nazi Germany Sandbu Martin 2015 Europe s Orphan The Future of the Euro and the Politics of Debt Princeton NJ Princeton University Press p 1 The Soviet Union was still allied with Nazi Germany Cuk Ivan Vest Aleks Leo January 14 2020 Prevarani Sokoli anatomija sovraznega prevzema Novice Retrieved May 10 2021 komunisti so se za upor odlocili sele po nemskem napadu na Sovjetsko zvezo 22 junija 1941 dotlej sta bili drzavi z Ribbentrop Molotovovim paktom zaveznici Komu Pahor postavlja spomenik siol net in Slovenian Retrieved 2021 05 03 je bila OF najprej usmerjena tudi proti zahodnim silam Zuzek Ales April 27 2021 Od Drustva prijateljev Sovjetske zveze do Osvobodilne fronte SiolNET Retrieved May 10 2021 je bila organizacija usmerjena tudi proti Veliki Britaniji Renton 1941 Slovenski mediji med prvim letom okupacije https www renton si slovenski mediji 1941 Slovenski porocevalec image of second war issue https upload wikimedia org wikipedia commons 4 47 Slovenski porocevalec 1941 06 08 URN NBN SI DOC V7BF33W2 jpg Cena 1 din za osvobodilni fond Beltram Vlasta Plahuta Slavica 1978 Zgodovinski mejniki za prikljucitev Primorske k Jugoslaviji Koper Pokrajinski muzej Koper Protiimperialisticna fronta ki se je po napadu Nemcije na SZ 22 junija 1941 preimenovala v Osvobodilno fronto Spostovati je treba vse zrtve padle v NOB 24ur com April 27 2011 Retrieved May 10 2021 Protiimperialisticna fronta se je v OF slovenskega naroda preimenovala po nemskem napadu na Sovjetsko zvezo 22 junija 1941 Razdvajanje slovenskega naroda Radio Ognjisce December 20 2017 Retrieved May 10 2021 Sele po nemskem napadu na Sovjetsko zvezo 22 junija 1941 ko je SZ ki je zacela vojno na strani Tretjega Rajha stopila na stran zahodnih zaveznikov se je situacija za KPS spremenila V interesu SZ je bilo da se PIF preusmeri v boj proti okupatorju zato se je iz takticnih razlogov preimenovala v OF Godesa OF je ob koncu vojne predstavljal vecino Slovencev Towards the End of the War the Liberation Front Represented the Majority of Slovenes MMC RTV Slovenija in Slovenian RTV Slovenija 26 April 2011 Yugoslavian Encyclopaedia articles Slovenci and Slovenija Yugoslavian Lexicographical Institute Zagreb 1981 pp 505 528 a b c d e Vankovska Biljana Wiberg Hakan 2003 Slovene and the Yugoslav People s Army Between Past and Future Civil Military Relations in the Post Communist Balkans I B Tauris p 165 ISBN 978 1 86064 624 9 Gow James Carmichael Cathie 2010 Slovenia and the Slovenes A Small State in the New Europe Revised and updated ed Hurst Publishers Ltd p 48 ISBN 978 1 85065 944 0 General Encyclopaedia article Socijalisti ki savez radnoga naroda Jugoslavije Yugoslavian Lexicographical Institute Zagreb 1981 p 547 in Slovene 60 letnica Zbora odposlancev slovenskega naroda v Kocevju 2003 60 Years Since First Post WWII Slovenian Government permanent dead link Vreg France 2000 Politicno komuniciranje in prepricevanje komunikacijska strategija diskurzi prepricevalni modeli propaganda politicni marketing volilna kampanja Political Communication and Persuasion Communication Strategy Discourses Models of Persuasion Propaganda Political Marketing Election Campaign in Slovenian p 138 ISBN 961 235 029 9 a b Repe Bozo 2005 Vzroki za spopad med JLA in Slovenci Reasons for the Conflict Between the Yugoslav People s Army and the Slovenes PDF Vojaska zgodovina Military History in Slovenian VI 1 05 5 ISSN 1580 4828 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 07 21 Retrieved 2012 03 02 Martincic Vanja 1990 Slovenski partizan orozje obleka in oprema slovenskih partizanov Slovene Partisan Weapons Clothing and Equipment of Slovene Partisans PDF in Slovenian and English Museum of People s Revolution pp 44 45 50 52 COBISS 17009408 Stewart James 2006 Linda McQueen ed Slovenia New Holland Publishers p 15 ISBN 978 1 86011 336 9 Archived from the original on 2017 02 02 Retrieved 2016 11 05 Histories of the Individual Yugoslav Nations The former Yugoslavia s diverse peoples a reference sourcebook ABC Clio Inc 2004 pp 167 168 The former Yugoslavia s diverse peoples a reference sourcebook a b c Keber Katarina Ster Katarina eds April 2008 Historicni seminar 6 Historical Seminar 6 PDF in Slovenian Scientific and Research Institute Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts p 142 ISBN 978 961 254 060 9 Retrieved 25 February 2012 Quote Po nemskem napadu na SZ so se gibanju ki ga je spodbudila ustanovitev PIF ta se je konec junija preimenovala v OF After the German attack of the Soviet Union the movement prompted by the establishment of PIF renamed at the end of June to OF Peter Vodopivec Od Pohlinove slovnice do samostojne drzave in Slovene From Pohlin s Grammar Book to an Independent State Modrijan Publishing House Ljubljana 2006 Pg 268 ISBN 978 961 241 130 5 Quote In tako smo 30 06 1941 na plenumu razpravljali o tem da je treba naso organizacijo preimenovati Po dolgem ugibanju smo jo preimenovali v OF Slovenskega naroda And so we discussed at the plenum of 30 June 1941 that our organisation has to be renamed After a long guess we renamed it as the Liberation Front of the Slovene Nation Josip Vidmar Bitka kakor zivljenje dolga in Slovene A Battle Long as a Life Cankarjeva zalozba Cankar Publishing House Ljubljana 1978 Pg 163 Repe Bozo 2 March 2011 Gregor K ed Mi pa se nismo uklonili njih podivjani sili We Did not Submit to Their Rampant Force in Slovenian Radio Student Archived from the original on 5 November 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Liberation Front of the Slovene Nation amp oldid 1117019247, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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