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Bogdan Ogrizović

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Croatian political activist (1913–1943)

Bogdan Ogrizović
Born(1913-03-30)30 March 1913
Zagreb, Croatia-Slavonia, Austria-Hungary
(now Croatia)
Died20 December 1943(1943-12-20) (aged 30)
Zagreb, Independent State of Croatia
(now Croatia)
Resting placeMirogoj Cemetery
Alma materUniversity of Zagreb
OccupationTeacher
Political partyCommunist Party of Yugoslavia
Communist Party of Croatia
RelativesMilan Ogrizović (father)

Bogdan Ogrizović (pronounced [bǒgdan ogrǐːzovit͡ɕ]; 30 March 1913 – 20 December 1943) was a Croatian and Yugoslav activist and educator.

Early life

Ogrizović graduated mathematics and physics from the University of Zagreb in 1933. He worked for one and a half year as a teaching assistant to university professor Stanko Hondl [hr] before teaching physics at the I Gymnasium and then the V Gymnasium in Zagreb. In 1934, Ogrizović became a member of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia. In 1941, following the World War II invasion of Yugoslavia and establishment of the Axis puppet state of the Independent State of Croatia (NDH), Ogrizović supported the Yugoslav Partisans by gathering intelligence and providing other forms of aid. He became the secretary of the 4th district committee of the Communist Party of Croatia. In May 1943, Ogrizović became the head of the National Liberation Committee (narodnooslobodilački odbor) of the city of Zagreb. Ogrizović, nicknamed Grizi by personal friends, married Slava Vrinjanin [hr].

Arrest and execution

Ogrizović was arrested on 2 July 1943. While in detention, he was transferred from the Petrinjska Street prison to the Savska Street prison and then to the Rebro Hospital. Finally he was returned to the Savska Street prison and designated a hostage, intended as a protection against attacks of the Partisans against the NDH targets. While he was imprisoned, Slava unsuccessfully contacted several officials of the NDH government to obtain her husband's release.

In the night of 18/19 December 1943, the Partisans destroyed an ammunition storage in the Sopnica [hr] area near Sesvete (a present-day district of Zagreb). The next day, Ogrizović and fifteen other hostages were taken to the Dubrava area of Zagreb. The hostages were either communists or supporters of the Partisans or anti-fascists. Ogrizović and most of the hostages were summarily executed by hanging (two of the hostages managed to flee their executioners). Contemporary Party of Rights politician Ivan Peršić [hr] noted that the killings were met with grief and outrage in Zagreb — especially the public execution of Ogrizović, the only son of Milan Ogrizović, in Peršić's words, deemed one of the "most deserving Croats" in the field of literature. Ogrizović is buried at the Mirogoj Cemetery.

Legacy

According to historian Tvrtko Jakovina, Ogrizović's position in the Communist Party of Croatia meant that he would have likely become the Mayor of Zagreb had he survived the war. A monument was erected to commemorate the killings, referred to as the December Victims [hr] (Prosinačke žrtve) in Dotrščina in 1960. A plaque commemorating the killings was placed there, but it was removed since. The V Gymnasium was renamed after Ogrizović from 1946 to 1990. A plaque commemorating Ogrizović and the student Predrag Heruc [hr] is still found in the entrance hall of the Gymnasium. A library in the centre of Zagreb is named after Ogrizović.

References

  1. Paver 1984, p. 279.
  2. Čunko 2024, p. 55.
  3. ^ Paver 1984, p. 280.
  4. Marinić 2019.
  5. ^ Jakovina 2018.

Sources

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