About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 33. Chapters: Milovan ilas, Jovanka Broz, Vladimir Velebit, Dobrica osi, Veljko Kadijevi, uro Pucar, Arso Jovanovi, Vlado Dap evi, Svetozar Vukmanovi -Tempo, Vasko Popa, Mihailo Markovi, Ko a Popovi, Branko opi, Veselin uranovi, ikica Jovanovi panac, Mo a Pijade, Petar Stamboli, Petar Drap in, Ivo Lola Ribar, Bo ko Palkovljevi Pinki, Petar Gra anin, Nikola Ljubi i, Rade Kon ar, Oskar Danon, Simo Dubaji, Aleksandar Rankovi, Branko Mamula, Milo Mini, Vladimir Rolovi, Bo ko Buha, Vladimir Peri Valter, Rodoljub olakovi, Nada Dimi, Mladen Stojanovi, Marija Bursa, Veselin Masle a, Bo idar Ad ija, Kosta Na, Ljubomir Tadi, Peko Dap evi, Veljko Vlahovi, or ije Pajkovi, Petar Zinai, Nada Naumovi, arko Zrenjanin, Milentije Popovi, Anka Butorac, Budislav o ki, Savo Pre a. Excerpt: Milovan ilas (pronounced ) (Serbian Cyrillic: ) (June 4, 1911, Podbi e (Mojkovac) - April 20, 1995, Belgrade) was a Yugoslav Communist politician, theorist and author from Montenegro. He was a key figure in the Partisan movement during World War II, as in the post-war government. A self-identified Democratic Socialist, ilas became one of the best-known and prominent dissidents in Yugoslavia and the whole Eastern Bloc. He is best known for the establishment of the Montenegrin nation in 1945 and the republic of Montenegro as a constituent republic along with other Yugoslav republics, though he did not deny the Montenegrins' ethnic Serb origins. Born in Podbi e village (Mojkovac municipality) in the Kingdom of Montenegro, he joined the Communist Party of Yugoslavia as a Belgrade University student in 1932. He was a political prisoner from 1933 to 1936. In 1938 he was elected to the Central Committee of the Communist Party and became a member of its Politburo in 1940. In April 1941, as Nazi Germany, Fascist Ita...