fbpx
Wikipedia

Radoje Pajović

Radoje Pajović (14 April 1934 – 2 June 2019) was a Yugoslav and Montenegrin historian who worked at the Institute of History at the University of Montenegro for forty years. He has been dubbed "the most prominent Montenegrin historian" of events in Montenegro during World War II by the Montenegrin historian Srđa Pavlović, and Professor Kenneth Morrison, author of the 2009 book Montenegro: A Modern History, asserts that Pajović is one of the most prominent Montenegrin historians in general.

Radoje Pajović
Радоје Пајовић
Born(1934-04-14)14 April 1934
Died2 June 2019(2019-06-02) (aged 85)
NationalityYugoslav, Montenegrin
OccupationHistorian
Years active1957–1997
Notable work
  • Kontrarevolucija u Crnoj Gori: četnički i federalistički pokret 1941–1945
  • Pavle Đurišić: kontroverzni četnički vojvoda
  • Crna Gora kroz istoriju

Pajović received the "13 July Award" from the National Assembly of Montenegro and the "19 December Award" from the city of Titograd, the capital of Montenegro. His most notable works were Kontrarevolucija u Crnoj Gori: četnički i federalistički pokret 1941–1945 [Counterrevolution in Montenegro: The Chetnik and Federalist Movements 1941–1945], published in 1977; Pavle Đurišić: kontroverzni četnički vojvoda [Pavle Đurišić: Controversial Chetnik Commander], first published in 1987 and then supplemented and expanded and re-published in 2005; and Crna Gora kroz istoriju [Montenegro Through History], also published in 2005. He was the author or co-author of twelve books and the editor of more than twenty, and he published around one hundred articles and other contributions. In the 1990s, some historians attempted to rehabilitate the World War II Chetniks who collaborated with the Axis powers; Pajović was among the historians who opposed this politically motivated historical revisionism. Towards the end of his academic career and in retirement, Pajović was a vocal advocate for Montenegrin independence and identity.

Early life, education and family edit

Radoje Pajović was born on 14 April 1934 in the village of Drenovštica in the Nikšić municipality of Zeta Banovina in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia,[1] the son of Ilija and Stana (née Perunović). He did not remember his mother because she died when he was young. His father later married a woman named Ljubica. He completed elementary school in Drenovštica.[2] His family was actively involved in the anti-fascist struggle in Montenegro during World War II, and in his childhood he associated himself closely with the movement on an emotional level.[3]

Pajović completed high school in Nikšić, then in 1957 he commenced studying at the Department of History at the University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy. He spent a year working in the archives of the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Montenegro, before commencing work the following year for the Institute of History at the Pedagogical College in Cetinje (later the Faculty of Philosophy, University of Montenegro). He received his doctorate from the University of Belgrade in 1970,[2] and his doctoral dissertation was entitled Četnički federalistički pokret u Crnoj Gori 1941–1945 [The Chetnik Federalist Movement in Montenegro 1941–1945].[4] Pajović married a woman named Ljilja and they had two children: a daughter, Tanja, and a son, Neven. Ljilja died in 2013 and the loss affected him a great deal.[2]

Career edit

Pajović worked at the Institute of History for forty years from 1958 until his retirement in 1997.[1][2] He mainly concentrated on the modern history of Montenegro, specialising in World War II, and was "highly respected both at home and abroad", according to the historian Marijan Mašo Miljić, head of the Archives of the Historical Institute of Montenegro at the University of Montenegro.[2] In his later career, Pajović explored the earlier history of Montenegro, including the medieval Duklja state and Zeta province. He authored or co-authored twelve books, the most notable of which were Kontrarevolucija u Crnoj Gori: četnički i federalistički pokret 1941–1945 [Counterrevolution in Montenegro: The Chetnik and Federalist Movements 1941–1945] published in 1977, Pavle Đurišić: kontroverzni četnički vojvoda [Pavle Đurišić: Controversial Chetnik Duke], first published in 1987 and then supplemented and expanded and re-published in 2005, and Crna Gora kroz istoriju [Montenegro Throughout History] also published in 2005. The first two works have been particularly valued by historians.[2] The prolific Yugoslav and Serbian historian Branko Petranović observed that Pajović's 1977 book was an "important analytical study" in Montenegrin historiography, the broadest examination to that point in time of the counter-revolutionary forces in Montenegro during World War II, and that it left no doubt about the motives and collaboration of Chetniks and separatists in Montenegro during the war.[5] The historian Kenneth Morrison, Professor of Modern Southeast European History at De Montfort University, described Pajović's book on Đurišić as an "excellent analysis".[6]

Pajović also edited more than twenty books,[7] published around one hundred articles and other contributions,[1] and according to Miljić he made a "significant contribution to Montenegrin historiography".[2] He participated in the writing of the history of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia and the history of the League of Communists of Montenegro. Pajović was the president of the Association of Historians of Montenegro and also a member of the presidency of the Association of Historians of Yugoslavia. He was also a member of many expert panels, committees and commissions. The recipient of many awards, Pajović received the "19 December Award" in 1977 from the city of Titograd, the capital of the Socialist Republic of Montenegro, and the "13 July Award" the following year from the National Assembly of Montenegro for his contributions to science.[a] He was a founding member of the Doclean Academy of Sciences and Arts, Matica crnogorska and Montenegrin PEN during the difficult period of the breakup of Yugoslavia. According to Miljić, as an academic Pajović made a major contribution to the Institute of History during his time there.[2]

Views on Montenegrin independence and identity edit

Pajović belonged to a group of Montenegrin historians who consistently advocated for the independence of Montenegro and affirmed Montenegrin ethnicity.[9] Montenegro had had centuries of largely autonomous existence under the Ottoman Empire before becoming fully independent in 1878, but expansion into areas surrounding "Old Montenegro" – an area around Cetinje largely free of Ottoman incursions which developed specific Montenegrin characteristics – meant that significant parts of the population in the new areas of the state did not closely identify with Montenegrin statehood or identity, many identifying as Serbs or Muslims rather than as Montenegrins. In late 1918, Montenegro was unified with the Kingdom of Serbia and soon after, the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (KSHS, Yugoslavia from 1929), and Montenegrin opposition to the union was crushed.[10] Pajović wrote that Montenegro had been violently annexed by the Kingdom of Serbia in 1918,[9] a position supported by the Montenegrin historian Srđa Pavlović, adjunct professor and research associate at the Wirth Institute for Austrian and Central European Studies at the University of Alberta, in his 2018 book Balkan Anschluss: The Annexation of Montenegro and the Creation of the Common South Slavic State.[11]

Pajović also claimed that historical evidence confirms the existence of an autocephalous[b] Montenegrin Orthodox Church (CPC), and that it had been unlawfully abolished by force by Prince Regent Alexander of Yugoslavia in 1920.[2][9] This forms part of an argument between proponents of a separate Montenegrin church and those who oppose it in favour of the wider Serbian Orthodox Church (SPC). This was examined by František Šístek, assistant professor at the Institute of International Studies, Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic, in 2011. Šístek observes that after the Serbian Patriarchate of Peć was abolished by the Ottomans in 1766, Montenegro – which remained beyond effective Ottoman control – became a de facto sovereign territory, with all ecclesiastical power in the hands of the hereditary prince-bishops who ruled Montenegro.[13] At this point, proponents of the autocephaly of the CPC claim the church, which had already enjoyed de facto independence for a considerable time, fulfilled all the canonical conditions for autocephaly.[14] The CPC was also defined as autocephalous by several Montenegrin laws around the end of the nineteenth century and beginning of the twentieth century.[13] The SPC and its supporters claim that the abolition of the patriarchate of Peć was unlawful and uncanonical and therefore the re-establishment of the SPC as the only orthodox church in Montenegro in 1920 was merely a revival of the unlawfully abolished patriarchate.[15] In turn, the supporters of the CPC claim that its own abolition in 1920 was illegal and invalid and that its autocephalous status remains valid.[16] According to the Office of International Religious Freedom, United States Department of State (OIRF), the 2011 census indicated that approximately 72 per cent of Montenegro's population was Orthodox, but the census did not differentiate between adherents of the two churches, and there is no consensus on the estimates of numbers of their adherents. Data from 2020 collected by the non-governmental organisation the Center for Democracy and Human Rights indicates that about 90 per cent of the Orthodox population of Montenegro is associated with the SPC, with the remainder associated with the CPC. The Montenegrin government asserts that adherence to the CPC is higher than this data indicates.[17]

During the interwar period Montenegrin political parties and identity were brutally suppressed by the KSHS/Yugoslav authorities.[18] Yugoslavia was invaded and partitioned by the Axis powers during World War II and Montenegro was occupied by Fascist Italy. After the outbreak of resistance directed towards the occupiers, a civil war raged across Yugoslavia during World War II between the communist-led Partisans and those aligned with the Axis powers. In Montenegro, the latter included the pro-independence Greens and the Serb-chauvinist Chetniks. By November 1944, the Italians had capitulated and the Partisans had wrested control of Montenegro from the Germans and the collaborationist forces.[19] Pajović has been praised for his objective writing about collaboration with the Axis powers in Montenegro during World War II, which is absent any bias due to his family's active involvement in the struggle against fascism.[3][c] During the 1990s, in the countries that emerged from the dissolution of Yugoslavia, a politically motivated popular trend in historiography was the historical rehabilitation of World War II figures who collaborated with the Axis powers and were involved in massacres of civilians during the war. Pajović was one of the historians who refused to engage in historical revisionism in favour of the collaborationist Chetniks.[2][3] When reflecting on the political struggles that followed, he fiercely opposed any attempt to rehabilitate the Chetniks and those that pursued Greater Serbia policies more broadly.[20] These included attempts to erect monuments in honor of Puniša Račić and Pavle Đurišić. Račić was a Montenegrin Serb politician during the interwar period who murdered three and wounded two more Croat politicians on the floor of the National Assembly of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes in June 1928, and Đurišić was an Axis collaborator who carried out many massacres in the Sandzak region of Montenegro during World War II. Pajović also criticised the 2015 rehabilitation by the Serbian Supreme Court of the World War II Chetnik leader Draža Mihailović which, based on the evidence, Pajović considered unfounded.[9]

In 2012, the Montenegrin historian Nebojša Čagorović asserted the need for a reassessment of the history of the interaction between anti-fascism and Montenegrin identity.[21] At the conclusion of World War II, thousands of Chetniks and other collaborationist troops from Montenegro were captured by the Partisans as they attempted to escape from Yugoslav territory to surrender to the Western Allies.[22] These troops were killed by the Partisans in what the historian Jozo Tomasevich describes as "preventative defense" and an "act of mass terror and brutal political surgery, similar to that practised by the [Chetniks] earlier in the war".[23] In a paper published in the journal History, Čagorović criticised Pajović for stating, in reference to these crimes, "committing evil in order to be protected from it, is not evil at all".[24]

After World War II, Montenegro was established as a socialist republic within a federated Yugoslavia, which muted many of those who had promoted a separate Montenegrin identity, but Serb-nationalist ideas remained below the surface outside the region around Cetinje. From the mid-1970s, greater autonomy for the constituent republics of Yugoslavia resulted in the development of a stronger and more distinct Montenegrin identity including the establishment of Montenegrin cultural institutions.[25] In the 1980s, Serbian nationalism was on the rise, with claims that Montenegrins were a branch of the Serb nation, and in fact that they were, "the best of Serbs".[26] This occurred in the context of an economic crisis which enveloped Yugoslavia during the 1980s and undermined the legitimacy of the Montenegrin branch of the Yugoslav communist party, which Serbian nationalists in Montenegro exploited in late 1988 and early 1989 to take control.[27] When Croatia declared independence in 1991, Yugoslav troops from Montenegro, supported by Montenegrin reservists and the Montenegrin government, besieged and attacked Dubrovnik, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, to widespread international condemnation.[28] After briefly trying to take a line independent of the Serbian government of Slobodan Milošević, Montenegro became a constituent but subordinate part of a federation of Serbia and Montenegro known as the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia,[29] which became the political union of Serbia and Montenegro in 2003.[30] Montenegro became a fully independent country following the 2006 referendum which supported independence by a slim majority.[31]

Pajović advocated for Montenegro to be a "free, civil democratic, socially just and multi-religious and multicultural society".[9] In January 2019, Pajović stated that Serbian clero-nationalist circles were spreading false information claiming that the human rights of Serbs in Montenegro were in danger. He condemned as gross and false propaganda the 2019 assertion by the Patriarch of the Serbian Orthodox Church, Irinej, that the situation of Serbs in Montenegro was worse than in the genocidal Independent State of Croatia during World War II. Pajović also condemned the insults by Amfilohije, the Serbian Orthodox Metropolitan of Montenegro, about Montenegrins who asserted their Montenegrin identity, in which Amfilohije stated that such people were "bastards" of the World War II Montenegrin communist and Partisan leader Milovan Djilas. Amfilohije also described these Montenegrins as "oxen" and "faeces".[32] Pajović accused the same clero-nationalist groups of historical revisionism against the anti-fascist struggle in Montenegro and its legacy.[32]

Death and legacy edit

Pajović died suddenly on 2 June 2019,[2] aged 85, and was buried the following day at the Čepurci cemetery in Podgorica.[1] In December 2019, the Association of Fighters and Anti-Fascists in Nikšić organised a tribute to Pajović, led by the historian Živko Andrijašević. Andrijašević – the author of the standard historical dictionary of Montenegro, Istorijski Leksikon Crne Gore – stated that Pajović's most significant work was his 1977 book Kontrarevolucija u Crnoj Gori: četnički i federalistički pokret 1941–1945 [Counterrevolution in Montenegro: The Chetnik and Federalist Movements 1941–1945], and asserted that its conclusions had stood the test of time.[3] This has subsequently been echoed by Nada Tomović – head of the history department at the University of Montenegro – who referred to the book as a "masterpiece".[33] Andrijašević went on to say that Pajović did not modify his historical conclusions for political purposes, but remained true to the facts. At the same event, Adnan Prekić – assistant professor of history at the University of Montenegro – stated that no-one explained Yugoslav political movements during the interwar period and World War II as well as Pajović. Andrijašević concluded by decrying the fact that the event had to be organised by the Association of Fighters and Anti-Fascists and not by the Institute of History. He continued, condemning Pajović's former colleagues at the Institute who specialised in World War II history for not attending the event, stating that this was indicative of a malaise within the study and teaching of history in Montenegro.[3]

According to Miljić, Pajović's historical work constitutes a significant legacy.[2] Pajović has been acknowledged by Pavlović as "the most prominent Montenegrin historian"[34] of the events of World War II in Montenegro.[2][34][d] Morrison, author of the 2009 book Montenegro: A Modern History asserts that Pajović is one of the most prominent Montenegrin historians in general.[35]

Selected bibliography edit

Pajović's works were published in both the Cyrillic and Latin scripts of Serbo-Croatian throughout the former Yugoslavia and its successor states.[36]

As sole author edit

  • Kontrarevolucija u Crnoj Gori: Četnički i federalistički pokret, 1941–1945 [The Counter-revolution in Montenegro: The Chetnik and Federalist Movements, 1941–1945]. Iz prošlosti Crne Gore [From Montenegro's Past] (in Serbo-Croatian). Cetinje, Yugoslavia: Obod. 1977. OCLC 5351995.
  • Pavle Đurišić: kontroverzni četnički vojvoda [Pavle Đurišić: Controversial Chetnik Duke] (in Serbo-Croatian). Zagreb, Yugoslavia: Centar za informacije i publicitet. 1987. ISBN 978-86-7125-006-1.
  • Pavle Đurišić: kontroverzni četnički vojvoda [Pavle Đurišić: Controversial Chetnik Duke] (in Serbo-Croatian). Podgorica, Montenegro: Grafo Crna Gora. 2005. ISBN 978-86-85499-01-2.
  • Crna Gora kroz istoriju [Montenegro Throughout History]. Edicija Svjedočanstva [Testimonial Edition] (in Serbo-Croatian). Cetinje, Montenegro: Obod. 2005. OCLC 234157553.

As co-author edit

  • Lakić, Zoran; Pajović, Radoje; Vukmanović, Gojko (1963). Narodnooslobodilačka borba u Crnoj gori: 1941–1945 chronologija događaja [The National Liberation Struggle in Montenegro: 1941–1945: Chronology of Events] (in Serbo-Croatian). Titograd, Yugoslavia: Istorijski Institut SR Crne Gore. OCLC 1090344538.
  • Marković, Vlado; Pajović, Radoje (1996). Saradnja četnika sa okupatorom u Crnoj Gori: dokumenti 1941–1945 [Chetnik Cooperation with the Occupier in Montenegro: Documents 1941–1945] (in Serbo-Croatian). Podgorica, Yugoslavia: Istorijski Institut Republike Crne Gore. OCLC 43226152.

Notes edit

  1. ^ The concept of "historical science" as providing "definite analysis and evaluation" of events and personalities using arguments and explanations in the "spirit of science" was a facet of socialist ideology in the former Yugoslavia.[8]
  2. ^ Autocephaly means that a church is independent of external and especially patriarchal authority.[12]
  3. ^ Perošević wrote, "Rjetkost je da neko ko je iz partizanske porodice, ko je emotivno i kao dijete osjećao taj pokret kao svoj, emotivno piše ali bez ostrašćenosti o protivničkoj ideologiji." [It is rare that someone who came from a partisan family, and who closely identified with that movement as a child, wrote about the opposing ideology with emotion but not anger.][3]
  4. ^ According to Pavlović's review of Elizabeth Roberts' 2007 book Realm of the Black Mountain: A History of Montenegro, "when it comes to analyzing Montenegro during World War Two there is no mention of the scholarly works of the most prominent Montenegrin historian of this period, Radoje Pajović. As a consequence, Roberts glances over the very sensitive issue of the collaboration between Krsto Popović, the former leader of the independent-minded Greens, and the Italian occupying force, limiting the analysis to a single explanatory footnote."

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Radio Televizija Crne Gore 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Miljić 8 June 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Perošević 5 December 2019.
  4. ^ Pajović 1969.
  5. ^ Petranović 1977, pp. 163–164.
  6. ^ Morrison 2009, p. 241.
  7. ^ Miljić 2019, p. 160.
  8. ^ Malešević 2013, pp. 279–280.
  9. ^ a b c d e Adžić 20 February 2020.
  10. ^ Morrison 2018, pp. 3–11.
  11. ^ Pavlović 2018, pp. 1–5.
  12. ^ Merriam-Webster 2023.
  13. ^ a b Šístek 2011, p. 119.
  14. ^ Šístek 2011, p. 120.
  15. ^ Šístek 2011, pp. 119–120.
  16. ^ Šístek 2011, pp. 120–121.
  17. ^ OIRF 2022.
  18. ^ Morrison 2018, p. 9.
  19. ^ Morrison 2018, pp. 11–20.
  20. ^ Miljić 2019, p. 161.
  21. ^ Čagorović 2012, p. 589.
  22. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 760.
  23. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 766.
  24. ^ Čagorović 2012, pp. 589–590.
  25. ^ Morrison 2018, pp. 20–25.
  26. ^ Morrison 2018, p. 27.
  27. ^ Morrison 2018, pp. 32–40.
  28. ^ Morrison 2018, pp. 45–48.
  29. ^ Morrison 2018, pp. 48–53.
  30. ^ Morrison 2018, pp. 91–95.
  31. ^ BBC 2006.
  32. ^ a b Adžić 24 February 2020.
  33. ^ Tomović 2020, p. 97.
  34. ^ a b Pavlović 2008, p. 172.
  35. ^ Morrison 2009, p. 9.
  36. ^ Tomović 2020, pp. 95–98.

References edit

  • "2022 Report on International Religious Freedom: Montenegro". United States Department of State. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
  • Adžić, Novak (20 February 2020). "Sjećanje na prof. dr Radoja Pajovića (1934–2019)" [In Memory of Prof. Dr. Radoje Pajović (1934–2019)]. Vijesti (in Serbo-Croatian). Retrieved 24 July 2023.
  • Adžić, Novak (24 February 2020). "Prof. dr Radoje Pajović u odbrani Crne Gore i Crnogoraca od velikosrpske negacije i asimilacije (1934–2019)" [Prof. Dr. Radoje Pajović in Defence of Montenegro and Montenegrins against Great Serbian Negation and Assimilation (1934–2019)]. Radio Antena M (in Serbo-Croatian). Retrieved 17 July 2020.
  • "Autocephalous". Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 5 August 2023.
  • Čagorović, Nebojša (2012). "Anti-fascism and Montenegrin Identity since 1990". History. 97 (4): 578–590. doi:10.1111/j.1468-229X.2012.00562.x. JSTOR 24429498.
  • Malešević, Siniša (2013). Ideology, Legitimacy and the New State: Yugoslavia, Serbia and Croatia. London: Frank Cass. ISBN 978-0-7146-5215-3.
  • Miljić, Marijan Mašo (8 June 2019). "Pouzdan tumač i protivnik pokušaja revizije istorije" [A Reliable Interpreter and Opponent of Attempts to Revise History]. Vijesti (in Serbo-Croatian). Retrieved 19 July 2020.
  • Miljić, Marijan Mašo (2019). "In Memoriam – Radoje Pajović (1934–2019)". Montenegrin Journal for Social Sciences. 3 (1): 159–163. OCLC 1003892306.
  • "Montenegro Declares Independence". BBC News Online. 4 June 2006. Retrieved 24 July 2023.
  • Morrison, Kenneth (2009). Montenegro: A Modern History. London: I.B. Tauris. ISBN 978-1-84511-710-8.
  • Morrison, Kenneth (2018). Nationalism, Identity and Statehood in Post-Yugoslav Montenegro. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4742-3520-4.
  • Pajović, Radoje (1969). Četnički federalistički pokret u Crnoj Gori 1941–1945 [The Chetnik Federalist Movement in Montenegro 1941–1945] (in Serbo-Croatian). Titograd, Yugoslavia: Radoje Pajović. OCLC 442240416.
  • Pavlović, Srdja (2008). "Realm of the Black Mountain: A History of Montenegro". Balkanistica. 21: 172.
  • Pavlović, Srdja (2018). Balkan Anschluss: The Annexation of Montenegro and the Creation of the Common South Slavic State. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press. ISBN 978-1-55753-465-1.
  • Perošević, Ratko (5 December 2019). "Naučnik koji nije mijenjao strane" [A Scientist Who Did Not Change Sides]. Pobjeda (in Serbo-Croatian). Retrieved 17 July 2020.
  • Petranović, Branko (1977). "Radoje Pajović, Kontrarevolucija u Crnoj Gori – Četnički i federalistički pokret 1941–1945., Cetinje 1977, str. 616". Časopis za suvremenu povijest. 11 (2–3). Croatian Institute of History: 159–164.
  • "Preminuo Radoje Pajović" [Radoje Pajović Passed Away] (in Serbo-Croatian). Radio Televizija Crne Gore (Radio Television Montenegro). 2 June 2019. Retrieved 17 July 2020.
  • Šístek, František (2011). "Clericalization of Nationalism". In Máté-Tóth, András; Rughiniş, Cosima (eds.). Spaces and Borders: Current Research on Religion in Central and Eastern Europe. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-022813-7.
  • Tomasevich, Jozo (2001). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-3615-2.
  • Tomović, Nada (2020). "Prava strana istorije" [The Right Side of History]. Montenegrin Journal for Social Sciences (in Serbo-Croatian). 4 (1): 95–98. OCLC 1003892306.

radoje, pajović, april, 1934, june, 2019, yugoslav, montenegrin, historian, worked, institute, history, university, montenegro, forty, years, been, dubbed, most, prominent, montenegrin, historian, events, montenegro, during, world, montenegrin, historian, srđa. Radoje Pajovic 14 April 1934 2 June 2019 was a Yugoslav and Montenegrin historian who worked at the Institute of History at the University of Montenegro for forty years He has been dubbed the most prominent Montenegrin historian of events in Montenegro during World War II by the Montenegrin historian Srđa Pavlovic and Professor Kenneth Morrison author of the 2009 book Montenegro A Modern History asserts that Pajovic is one of the most prominent Montenegrin historians in general Radoje PajovicRadoјe PaјoviћBorn 1934 04 14 14 April 1934Drenovstica Niksic Zeta Banovina Kingdom of YugoslaviaDied2 June 2019 2019 06 02 aged 85 NationalityYugoslav MontenegrinOccupationHistorianYears active1957 1997Notable workKontrarevolucija u Crnoj Gori cetnicki i federalisticki pokret 1941 1945 Pavle Đurisic kontroverzni cetnicki vojvoda Crna Gora kroz istoriju Pajovic received the 13 July Award from the National Assembly of Montenegro and the 19 December Award from the city of Titograd the capital of Montenegro His most notable works were Kontrarevolucija u Crnoj Gori cetnicki i federalisticki pokret 1941 1945 Counterrevolution in Montenegro The Chetnik and Federalist Movements 1941 1945 published in 1977 Pavle Đurisic kontroverzni cetnicki vojvoda Pavle Đurisic Controversial Chetnik Commander first published in 1987 and then supplemented and expanded and re published in 2005 and Crna Gora kroz istoriju Montenegro Through History also published in 2005 He was the author or co author of twelve books and the editor of more than twenty and he published around one hundred articles and other contributions In the 1990s some historians attempted to rehabilitate the World War II Chetniks who collaborated with the Axis powers Pajovic was among the historians who opposed this politically motivated historical revisionism Towards the end of his academic career and in retirement Pajovic was a vocal advocate for Montenegrin independence and identity Contents 1 Early life education and family 2 Career 3 Views on Montenegrin independence and identity 4 Death and legacy 5 Selected bibliography 5 1 As sole author 5 2 As co author 6 Notes 7 Footnotes 8 ReferencesEarly life education and family editRadoje Pajovic was born on 14 April 1934 in the village of Drenovstica in the Niksic municipality of Zeta Banovina in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia 1 the son of Ilija and Stana nee Perunovic He did not remember his mother because she died when he was young His father later married a woman named Ljubica He completed elementary school in Drenovstica 2 His family was actively involved in the anti fascist struggle in Montenegro during World War II and in his childhood he associated himself closely with the movement on an emotional level 3 Pajovic completed high school in Niksic then in 1957 he commenced studying at the Department of History at the University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy He spent a year working in the archives of the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Montenegro before commencing work the following year for the Institute of History at the Pedagogical College in Cetinje later the Faculty of Philosophy University of Montenegro He received his doctorate from the University of Belgrade in 1970 2 and his doctoral dissertation was entitled Cetnicki federalisticki pokret u Crnoj Gori 1941 1945 The Chetnik Federalist Movement in Montenegro 1941 1945 4 Pajovic married a woman named Ljilja and they had two children a daughter Tanja and a son Neven Ljilja died in 2013 and the loss affected him a great deal 2 Career editPajovic worked at the Institute of History for forty years from 1958 until his retirement in 1997 1 2 He mainly concentrated on the modern history of Montenegro specialising in World War II and was highly respected both at home and abroad according to the historian Marijan Maso Miljic head of the Archives of the Historical Institute of Montenegro at the University of Montenegro 2 In his later career Pajovic explored the earlier history of Montenegro including the medieval Duklja state and Zeta province He authored or co authored twelve books the most notable of which were Kontrarevolucija u Crnoj Gori cetnicki i federalisticki pokret 1941 1945 Counterrevolution in Montenegro The Chetnik and Federalist Movements 1941 1945 published in 1977 Pavle Đurisic kontroverzni cetnicki vojvoda Pavle Đurisic Controversial Chetnik Duke first published in 1987 and then supplemented and expanded and re published in 2005 and Crna Gora kroz istoriju Montenegro Throughout History also published in 2005 The first two works have been particularly valued by historians 2 The prolific Yugoslav and Serbian historian Branko Petranovic observed that Pajovic s 1977 book was an important analytical study in Montenegrin historiography the broadest examination to that point in time of the counter revolutionary forces in Montenegro during World War II and that it left no doubt about the motives and collaboration of Chetniks and separatists in Montenegro during the war 5 The historian Kenneth Morrison Professor of Modern Southeast European History at De Montfort University described Pajovic s book on Đurisic as an excellent analysis 6 Pajovic also edited more than twenty books 7 published around one hundred articles and other contributions 1 and according to Miljic he made a significant contribution to Montenegrin historiography 2 He participated in the writing of the history of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia and the history of the League of Communists of Montenegro Pajovic was the president of the Association of Historians of Montenegro and also a member of the presidency of the Association of Historians of Yugoslavia He was also a member of many expert panels committees and commissions The recipient of many awards Pajovic received the 19 December Award in 1977 from the city of Titograd the capital of the Socialist Republic of Montenegro and the 13 July Award the following year from the National Assembly of Montenegro for his contributions to science a He was a founding member of the Doclean Academy of Sciences and Arts Matica crnogorska and Montenegrin PEN during the difficult period of the breakup of Yugoslavia According to Miljic as an academic Pajovic made a major contribution to the Institute of History during his time there 2 Views on Montenegrin independence and identity editPajovic belonged to a group of Montenegrin historians who consistently advocated for the independence of Montenegro and affirmed Montenegrin ethnicity 9 Montenegro had had centuries of largely autonomous existence under the Ottoman Empire before becoming fully independent in 1878 but expansion into areas surrounding Old Montenegro an area around Cetinje largely free of Ottoman incursions which developed specific Montenegrin characteristics meant that significant parts of the population in the new areas of the state did not closely identify with Montenegrin statehood or identity many identifying as Serbs or Muslims rather than as Montenegrins In late 1918 Montenegro was unified with the Kingdom of Serbia and soon after the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes KSHS Yugoslavia from 1929 and Montenegrin opposition to the union was crushed 10 Pajovic wrote that Montenegro had been violently annexed by the Kingdom of Serbia in 1918 9 a position supported by the Montenegrin historian Srđa Pavlovic adjunct professor and research associate at the Wirth Institute for Austrian and Central European Studies at the University of Alberta in his 2018 book Balkan Anschluss The Annexation of Montenegro and the Creation of the Common South Slavic State 11 Pajovic also claimed that historical evidence confirms the existence of an autocephalous b Montenegrin Orthodox Church CPC and that it had been unlawfully abolished by force by Prince Regent Alexander of Yugoslavia in 1920 2 9 This forms part of an argument between proponents of a separate Montenegrin church and those who oppose it in favour of the wider Serbian Orthodox Church SPC This was examined by Frantisek Sistek assistant professor at the Institute of International Studies Faculty of Social Sciences Charles University in Prague Czech Republic in 2011 Sistek observes that after the Serbian Patriarchate of Pec was abolished by the Ottomans in 1766 Montenegro which remained beyond effective Ottoman control became a de facto sovereign territory with all ecclesiastical power in the hands of the hereditary prince bishops who ruled Montenegro 13 At this point proponents of the autocephaly of the CPC claim the church which had already enjoyed de facto independence for a considerable time fulfilled all the canonical conditions for autocephaly 14 The CPC was also defined as autocephalous by several Montenegrin laws around the end of the nineteenth century and beginning of the twentieth century 13 The SPC and its supporters claim that the abolition of the patriarchate of Pec was unlawful and uncanonical and therefore the re establishment of the SPC as the only orthodox church in Montenegro in 1920 was merely a revival of the unlawfully abolished patriarchate 15 In turn the supporters of the CPC claim that its own abolition in 1920 was illegal and invalid and that its autocephalous status remains valid 16 According to the Office of International Religious Freedom United States Department of State OIRF the 2011 census indicated that approximately 72 per cent of Montenegro s population was Orthodox but the census did not differentiate between adherents of the two churches and there is no consensus on the estimates of numbers of their adherents Data from 2020 collected by the non governmental organisation the Center for Democracy and Human Rights indicates that about 90 per cent of the Orthodox population of Montenegro is associated with the SPC with the remainder associated with the CPC The Montenegrin government asserts that adherence to the CPC is higher than this data indicates 17 During the interwar period Montenegrin political parties and identity were brutally suppressed by the KSHS Yugoslav authorities 18 Yugoslavia was invaded and partitioned by the Axis powers during World War II and Montenegro was occupied by Fascist Italy After the outbreak of resistance directed towards the occupiers a civil war raged across Yugoslavia during World War II between the communist led Partisans and those aligned with the Axis powers In Montenegro the latter included the pro independence Greens and the Serb chauvinist Chetniks By November 1944 the Italians had capitulated and the Partisans had wrested control of Montenegro from the Germans and the collaborationist forces 19 Pajovic has been praised for his objective writing about collaboration with the Axis powers in Montenegro during World War II which is absent any bias due to his family s active involvement in the struggle against fascism 3 c During the 1990s in the countries that emerged from the dissolution of Yugoslavia a politically motivated popular trend in historiography was the historical rehabilitation of World War II figures who collaborated with the Axis powers and were involved in massacres of civilians during the war Pajovic was one of the historians who refused to engage in historical revisionism in favour of the collaborationist Chetniks 2 3 When reflecting on the political struggles that followed he fiercely opposed any attempt to rehabilitate the Chetniks and those that pursued Greater Serbia policies more broadly 20 These included attempts to erect monuments in honor of Punisa Racic and Pavle Đurisic Racic was a Montenegrin Serb politician during the interwar period who murdered three and wounded two more Croat politicians on the floor of the National Assembly of the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes in June 1928 and Đurisic was an Axis collaborator who carried out many massacres in the Sandzak region of Montenegro during World War II Pajovic also criticised the 2015 rehabilitation by the Serbian Supreme Court of the World War II Chetnik leader Draza Mihailovic which based on the evidence Pajovic considered unfounded 9 In 2012 the Montenegrin historian Nebojsa Cagorovic asserted the need for a reassessment of the history of the interaction between anti fascism and Montenegrin identity 21 At the conclusion of World War II thousands of Chetniks and other collaborationist troops from Montenegro were captured by the Partisans as they attempted to escape from Yugoslav territory to surrender to the Western Allies 22 These troops were killed by the Partisans in what the historian Jozo Tomasevich describes as preventative defense and an act of mass terror and brutal political surgery similar to that practised by the Chetniks earlier in the war 23 In a paper published in the journal History Cagorovic criticised Pajovic for stating in reference to these crimes committing evil in order to be protected from it is not evil at all 24 After World War II Montenegro was established as a socialist republic within a federated Yugoslavia which muted many of those who had promoted a separate Montenegrin identity but Serb nationalist ideas remained below the surface outside the region around Cetinje From the mid 1970s greater autonomy for the constituent republics of Yugoslavia resulted in the development of a stronger and more distinct Montenegrin identity including the establishment of Montenegrin cultural institutions 25 In the 1980s Serbian nationalism was on the rise with claims that Montenegrins were a branch of the Serb nation and in fact that they were the best of Serbs 26 This occurred in the context of an economic crisis which enveloped Yugoslavia during the 1980s and undermined the legitimacy of the Montenegrin branch of the Yugoslav communist party which Serbian nationalists in Montenegro exploited in late 1988 and early 1989 to take control 27 When Croatia declared independence in 1991 Yugoslav troops from Montenegro supported by Montenegrin reservists and the Montenegrin government besieged and attacked Dubrovnik a UNESCO World Heritage Site to widespread international condemnation 28 After briefly trying to take a line independent of the Serbian government of Slobodan Milosevic Montenegro became a constituent but subordinate part of a federation of Serbia and Montenegro known as the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 29 which became the political union of Serbia and Montenegro in 2003 30 Montenegro became a fully independent country following the 2006 referendum which supported independence by a slim majority 31 Pajovic advocated for Montenegro to be a free civil democratic socially just and multi religious and multicultural society 9 In January 2019 Pajovic stated that Serbian clero nationalist circles were spreading false information claiming that the human rights of Serbs in Montenegro were in danger He condemned as gross and false propaganda the 2019 assertion by the Patriarch of the Serbian Orthodox Church Irinej that the situation of Serbs in Montenegro was worse than in the genocidal Independent State of Croatia during World War II Pajovic also condemned the insults by Amfilohije the Serbian Orthodox Metropolitan of Montenegro about Montenegrins who asserted their Montenegrin identity in which Amfilohije stated that such people were bastards of the World War II Montenegrin communist and Partisan leader Milovan Djilas Amfilohije also described these Montenegrins as oxen and faeces 32 Pajovic accused the same clero nationalist groups of historical revisionism against the anti fascist struggle in Montenegro and its legacy 32 Death and legacy editPajovic died suddenly on 2 June 2019 2 aged 85 and was buried the following day at the Cepurci cemetery in Podgorica 1 In December 2019 the Association of Fighters and Anti Fascists in Niksic organised a tribute to Pajovic led by the historian Zivko Andrijasevic Andrijasevic the author of the standard historical dictionary of Montenegro Istorijski Leksikon Crne Gore stated that Pajovic s most significant work was his 1977 book Kontrarevolucija u Crnoj Gori cetnicki i federalisticki pokret 1941 1945 Counterrevolution in Montenegro The Chetnik and Federalist Movements 1941 1945 and asserted that its conclusions had stood the test of time 3 This has subsequently been echoed by Nada Tomovic head of the history department at the University of Montenegro who referred to the book as a masterpiece 33 Andrijasevic went on to say that Pajovic did not modify his historical conclusions for political purposes but remained true to the facts At the same event Adnan Prekic assistant professor of history at the University of Montenegro stated that no one explained Yugoslav political movements during the interwar period and World War II as well as Pajovic Andrijasevic concluded by decrying the fact that the event had to be organised by the Association of Fighters and Anti Fascists and not by the Institute of History He continued condemning Pajovic s former colleagues at the Institute who specialised in World War II history for not attending the event stating that this was indicative of a malaise within the study and teaching of history in Montenegro 3 According to Miljic Pajovic s historical work constitutes a significant legacy 2 Pajovic has been acknowledged by Pavlovic as the most prominent Montenegrin historian 34 of the events of World War II in Montenegro 2 34 d Morrison author of the 2009 book Montenegro A Modern History asserts that Pajovic is one of the most prominent Montenegrin historians in general 35 Selected bibliography editPajovic s works were published in both the Cyrillic and Latin scripts of Serbo Croatian throughout the former Yugoslavia and its successor states 36 As sole author edit Kontrarevolucija u Crnoj Gori Cetnicki i federalisticki pokret 1941 1945 The Counter revolution in Montenegro The Chetnik and Federalist Movements 1941 1945 Iz proslosti Crne Gore From Montenegro s Past in Serbo Croatian Cetinje Yugoslavia Obod 1977 OCLC 5351995 Pavle Đurisic kontroverzni cetnicki vojvoda Pavle Đurisic Controversial Chetnik Duke in Serbo Croatian Zagreb Yugoslavia Centar za informacije i publicitet 1987 ISBN 978 86 7125 006 1 Pavle Đurisic kontroverzni cetnicki vojvoda Pavle Đurisic Controversial Chetnik Duke in Serbo Croatian Podgorica Montenegro Grafo Crna Gora 2005 ISBN 978 86 85499 01 2 Crna Gora kroz istoriju Montenegro Throughout History Edicija Svjedocanstva Testimonial Edition in Serbo Croatian Cetinje Montenegro Obod 2005 OCLC 234157553 As co author edit Lakic Zoran Pajovic Radoje Vukmanovic Gojko 1963 Narodnooslobodilacka borba u Crnoj gori 1941 1945 chronologija događaja The National Liberation Struggle in Montenegro 1941 1945 Chronology of Events in Serbo Croatian Titograd Yugoslavia Istorijski Institut SR Crne Gore OCLC 1090344538 Markovic Vlado Pajovic Radoje 1996 Saradnja cetnika sa okupatorom u Crnoj Gori dokumenti 1941 1945 Chetnik Cooperation with the Occupier in Montenegro Documents 1941 1945 in Serbo Croatian Podgorica Yugoslavia Istorijski Institut Republike Crne Gore OCLC 43226152 Notes edit The concept of historical science as providing definite analysis and evaluation of events and personalities using arguments and explanations in the spirit of science was a facet of socialist ideology in the former Yugoslavia 8 Autocephaly means that a church is independent of external and especially patriarchal authority 12 Perosevic wrote Rjetkost je da neko ko je iz partizanske porodice ko je emotivno i kao dijete osjecao taj pokret kao svoj emotivno pise ali bez ostrascenosti o protivnickoj ideologiji It is rare that someone who came from a partisan family and who closely identified with that movement as a child wrote about the opposing ideology with emotion but not anger 3 According to Pavlovic s review of Elizabeth Roberts 2007 book Realm of the Black Mountain A History of Montenegro when it comes to analyzing Montenegro during World War Two there is no mention of the scholarly works of the most prominent Montenegrin historian of this period Radoje Pajovic As a consequence Roberts glances over the very sensitive issue of the collaboration between Krsto Popovic the former leader of the independent minded Greens and the Italian occupying force limiting the analysis to a single explanatory footnote Footnotes edit a b c d Radio Televizija Crne Gore 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Miljic 8 June 2019 a b c d e f Perosevic 5 December 2019 Pajovic 1969 Petranovic 1977 pp 163 164 Morrison 2009 p 241 Miljic 2019 p 160 Malesevic 2013 pp 279 280 a b c d e Adzic 20 February 2020 Morrison 2018 pp 3 11 Pavlovic 2018 pp 1 5 Merriam Webster 2023 a b Sistek 2011 p 119 Sistek 2011 p 120 Sistek 2011 pp 119 120 Sistek 2011 pp 120 121 OIRF 2022 Morrison 2018 p 9 Morrison 2018 pp 11 20 Miljic 2019 p 161 Cagorovic 2012 p 589 Tomasevich 2001 p 760 Tomasevich 2001 p 766 Cagorovic 2012 pp 589 590 Morrison 2018 pp 20 25 Morrison 2018 p 27 Morrison 2018 pp 32 40 Morrison 2018 pp 45 48 Morrison 2018 pp 48 53 Morrison 2018 pp 91 95 BBC 2006 a b Adzic 24 February 2020 Tomovic 2020 p 97 a b Pavlovic 2008 p 172 Morrison 2009 p 9 Tomovic 2020 pp 95 98 References edit 2022 Report on International Religious Freedom Montenegro United States Department of State Retrieved 5 July 2023 Adzic Novak 20 February 2020 Sjecanje na prof dr Radoja Pajovica 1934 2019 In Memory of Prof Dr Radoje Pajovic 1934 2019 Vijesti in Serbo Croatian Retrieved 24 July 2023 Adzic Novak 24 February 2020 Prof dr Radoje Pajovic u odbrani Crne Gore i Crnogoraca od velikosrpske negacije i asimilacije 1934 2019 Prof Dr Radoje Pajovic in Defence of Montenegro and Montenegrins against Great Serbian Negation and Assimilation 1934 2019 Radio Antena M in Serbo Croatian Retrieved 17 July 2020 Autocephalous Merriam Webster Retrieved 5 August 2023 Cagorovic Nebojsa 2012 Anti fascism and Montenegrin Identity since 1990 History 97 4 578 590 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229X 2012 00562 x JSTOR 24429498 Malesevic Sinisa 2013 Ideology Legitimacy and the New State Yugoslavia Serbia and Croatia London Frank Cass ISBN 978 0 7146 5215 3 Miljic Marijan Maso 8 June 2019 Pouzdan tumac i protivnik pokusaja revizije istorije A Reliable Interpreter and Opponent of Attempts to Revise History Vijesti in Serbo Croatian Retrieved 19 July 2020 Miljic Marijan Maso 2019 In Memoriam Radoje Pajovic 1934 2019 Montenegrin Journal for Social Sciences 3 1 159 163 OCLC 1003892306 Montenegro Declares Independence BBC News Online 4 June 2006 Retrieved 24 July 2023 Morrison Kenneth 2009 Montenegro A Modern History London I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 84511 710 8 Morrison Kenneth 2018 Nationalism Identity and Statehood in Post Yugoslav Montenegro London Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 4742 3520 4 Pajovic Radoje 1969 Cetnicki federalisticki pokret u Crnoj Gori 1941 1945 The Chetnik Federalist Movement in Montenegro 1941 1945 in Serbo Croatian Titograd Yugoslavia Radoje Pajovic OCLC 442240416 Pavlovic Srdja 2008 Realm of the Black Mountain A History of Montenegro Balkanistica 21 172 Pavlovic Srdja 2018 Balkan Anschluss The Annexation of Montenegro and the Creation of the Common South Slavic State West Lafayette Indiana Purdue University Press ISBN 978 1 55753 465 1 Perosevic Ratko 5 December 2019 Naucnik koji nije mijenjao strane A Scientist Who Did Not Change Sides Pobjeda in Serbo Croatian Retrieved 17 July 2020 Petranovic Branko 1977 Radoje Pajovic Kontrarevolucija u Crnoj Gori Cetnicki i federalisticki pokret 1941 1945 Cetinje 1977 str 616 Casopis za suvremenu povijest 11 2 3 Croatian Institute of History 159 164 Preminuo Radoje Pajovic Radoje Pajovic Passed Away in Serbo Croatian Radio Televizija Crne Gore Radio Television Montenegro 2 June 2019 Retrieved 17 July 2020 Sistek Frantisek 2011 Clericalization of Nationalism In Mate Toth Andras Rughinis Cosima eds Spaces and Borders Current Research on Religion in Central and Eastern Europe Berlin Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 022813 7 Tomasevich Jozo 2001 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Occupation and Collaboration Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 3615 2 Tomovic Nada 2020 Prava strana istorije The Right Side of History Montenegrin Journal for Social Sciences in Serbo Croatian 4 1 95 98 OCLC 1003892306 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Radoje Pajovic amp oldid 1185818938, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.