Revision as of 21:42, 18 July 2014 editCarrite (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Page movers, New page reviewers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers97,903 edits removes religious category; not demonstrated← Previous edit | Revision as of 22:01, 14 February 2015 edit undoViktorengström (talk | contribs)162 editsNo edit summaryNext edit → | ||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
He was born in the small ]n village of Šegotići (part of ]). Istria was then the ] (now in ]). Ciliga became a member of the Central Committee and Politbureau of the ] (KPJ), as well as chief editor of ''] newspaper'' and Regional Secretary for Croatia. After moving to ] in 1925 as the local representative of the KPJ, he settled in the Soviet Union, where he lived from October 1926 to December 1935. His first three years in the USSR were spent in Moscow, where he worked as a teacher at the party school for émigré Yugoslav Communists. He was a sympathizer of the ]. He wrote that one possible reason for the rise of ] was that many Soviet politicians, even committed communists, believed that the Soviet Union consists of backward, Asiatic peoples who need a dictatorship. | He was born in the small ]n village of Šegotići (part of ]). Istria was then the ] (now in ]). Ciliga became a member of the Central Committee and Politbureau of the ] (KPJ), as well as chief editor of ''] newspaper'' and Regional Secretary for Croatia. After moving to ] in 1925 as the local representative of the KPJ, he settled in the Soviet Union, where he lived from October 1926 to December 1935. His first three years in the USSR were spent in Moscow, where he worked as a teacher at the party school for émigré Yugoslav Communists. He was a sympathizer of the ]. He wrote that one possible reason for the rise of ] was that many Soviet politicians, even committed communists, believed that the Soviet Union consists of backward, Asiatic peoples who need a dictatorship. | ||
In 1930, he taught at the ]. Arrested by the ] because of his opposition to the policies of the Soviet government, he was deported to a |
In 1930, he taught at the ]. Arrested by the ] because of his opposition to the policies of the Soviet government, he was deported to a labor camp in ]. | ||
For the rest of his life, Ciliga lived in ] and ]. Already expelled from the Yugoslav Communist Party in 1929, he later resigned from his position. | For the rest of his life, Ciliga lived in ] and ]. Already expelled from the Yugoslav Communist Party in 1929, he later resigned from his position. |
Revision as of 22:01, 14 February 2015
Ante Ciliga | |
---|---|
Born | February 20, 1898 Šegotići |
Died | October 21, 1992 Zagreb |
Nationality | Croat |
Ante Ciliga (20 February 1898 - 21 October 1992) was a Croatian politician, writer and publisher. Ciliga was one of the founders of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (KPJ).
He was born in the small Istrian village of Šegotići (part of Marčana). Istria was then the Austrian Littoral (now in Croatia). Ciliga became a member of the Central Committee and Politbureau of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia (KPJ), as well as chief editor of Borba newspaper and Regional Secretary for Croatia. After moving to Vienna in 1925 as the local representative of the KPJ, he settled in the Soviet Union, where he lived from October 1926 to December 1935. His first three years in the USSR were spent in Moscow, where he worked as a teacher at the party school for émigré Yugoslav Communists. He was a sympathizer of the Left Opposition. He wrote that one possible reason for the rise of Joseph Stalin was that many Soviet politicians, even committed communists, believed that the Soviet Union consists of backward, Asiatic peoples who need a dictatorship.
In 1930, he taught at the Communist University of Leningrad. Arrested by the GPU because of his opposition to the policies of the Soviet government, he was deported to a labor camp in Siberia.
For the rest of his life, Ciliga lived in France and Italy. Already expelled from the Yugoslav Communist Party in 1929, he later resigned from his position.
Few of Ciliga's extensive writings have appeared in English translation. His pamphlet The Kronstadt Revolt was published by Freedom Press in 1942. The first part of his account of his time in the Soviet Union, The Russian Enigma, was distributed by the Labour Book Service in 1940, and the complete text was published under the same title by Ink Links in 1979.
He later abandoned communist politics, becoming an "ardent nationalist." He contributed to the Ustaše ideological newspaper Spremnost, later criticizing Ante Pavelić in the following manner: "With one word, Pavelić disunited the Croats, united the Serbs, strengthened the Communist Partisans, and blindly tied the Croatian cause to those who were bound to lose the war. It is difficult to imagine a more suicidal policy." Writing years later he also noted that, "I was for the ustasha state, I was for the Croatian state. And I defend that thesis. The ustasha state needed to be reformed, not destroyed."
Works
- The Russian Enigma (1940, 1979)
- Štorice iz Proštine (1944, 2004) (Published under the pseudonym of Tone Valić)
- Lenin and Revolution (1948)
- Sibérie, Terre de l'Exil et de l'Industrialisation (1950)
- The Southern Slavic people between East and West, in La Révolution prolétarienne (1950)
- Dokle ce hrvatski narod stenjati pod srpskim jarmom? (1952)
- La crisi di stato nella Jugoslavia di Tito (1972)
- State Crisis in Tito’s Yugoslavia (1974)
- Sam kroz Europu u ratu (1954, 1978)
- U zemlji velike laži (2007)
- Posljednji hrvatski argonaut dr. Ante Ciliga - razgovori - publisher Matica hrvatska Pazin (2011)
External links
Offline sources
- "From Tito and the Comintern", Revolutionary History, Vol.8 No.1.
- Anton Ciliga, The Russian Enigma, Ink-Links, 1979.
References
- Johnstone, Diana. Fools' Crusade: Yugoslavia, NATO and Western Delusions. London: Pluto Press. 2002. p. 289.
- Tomašević, Jozo. War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941-1945: Occupation and Collaboration. Stanford: Stanford University Press. 2001. p. 407.
- Bulajič, Milan. Tudjman's "Jasenovac myth". Belgrade: Stručna knjiga. 1994. p. 66.