602363314
602363314
602363314
1941-1946
Peter Palmer
Brasenose College
Peter Palmer
Brasenose College
Abstract One
The thesis examines in detail the application of the popular front policy among the
Catholic Croats of Croatia and Bosnia, and among the Slovenes. It describes how the
Communists avoided actions or pronouncements that would have offended the Church,
attempted to have cordial relations with the Church hierarchy and encouraged the active
participation of Catholic clergy and prominent lay people in the movement. The prime
purpose of this was to reassure the Catholic population that they had nothing to fear from
a Communist takeover.
However, the hostility between the two sides was not overcome, as revealed in the
violence of the Communists towards many of the clergy during the period immediately
before and after their takeover. Following this, the Communists' implementation of their
revolutionary programme brought them into direct conflict with the interests of the
Church, especially in their curtailing of the role of the Church in education and in their
confiscation of Church property. Relations quickly degenerated into open confrontation,
as the Church could not accept the limited role in society which the Communists were
prepared to grant it.
Abstract Two
The purpose of this thesis is to examine the development of the Communist Party's
approach towards the Catholic Church in Yugoslavia during the period of its takeover of
power, from the outbreak of war in April 1941, through the period of the consolidation of
its power in the immediate post-war period, until late 1946, when Archbishop Stepinac of
Zagreb was tried and imprisoned. For most of the war, Communist policy towards the
churches was based on the popular front line laid down by the Comintern, according to
which Communists were to build an alliance of all patriots opposed to fascism, whatever
their political, religious or national affiliation. While it was never intended that
Communists would give up their ultimate revolutionary goals, this line nevertheless
meant that those goals would be downplayed in order to emphasize the common
struggle against the occupier. The Yugoslav Communists did, with varying degrees of
success, seek to attract non-communists to their banner of national liberation, and this
included attempts to appeal to Catholics. Following the end of the war, the new
brought it into conflict with the Catholic Church in several areas, leading to opposition
Communists, this thesis examines the real motivation behind the coalition-building
strategy developed during the war, and points to a consistency of purpose in the
Communists' approach between the wartime and post-war periods. In recent years, a
comprehensive reappraisal of the period of the Communist takeover has been going on
in the countries of former Yugoslavia, with several new works focusing on Communist
policy towards, among other things, the legal system, education and culture and
economic reform, all of which issues are of relevance to the question of the Communists'
relations with the churches. In addition, several new archival sources have recently been
Croatia and Bosnia during this period, but the large majority of it has focused on the
relationship between the Church and the occupation authorities and the collaborationist
regime during the war, and on the Communist persecution of the Church after it.
Relatively little work has been focused on the relationship between the Communists and
the Church. This thesis aims systematically to chart the development of the Communists'
policy towards the Church and their relations, sometimes cordial, sometimes tense,
documentary sources.
In contrast to Croatia, very little work has been done on the Catholic Church in
Slovenia during this period. Slovenia saw a bitter civil war within the war, in which
members of the Catholic clergy played a prominent part. Bishop Rozman of Ljubljana
members of the lower clergy frequently took the leading role at the local level. Although
the Slovene Communists dealt severely with those who opposed them, they
nevertheless also followed the policy of the popular front, and in Slovenia, uniquely in
Socialist Movement, to their cause. Thus, Slovenia was witness to a complicated story of
bitter strife between Church and Communist Party, of attempts by the Communists to
establish relations with the Church hierarchy and with the lower clergy, and of relations
movement.
development of the Communist Party line, on popular front alliances in general, and its
theoretical approach towards religion and the practical significance of a policy designed
primarily to ease their passage to power; to examine in detail the application of the
popular front policy towards the Church and clergy, drawing heavily on documentary
sources; and to describe the change in the Communists' emphases in the final months of
the war and in the post-war period, as their priority shifted from the neutralization of the
Church as a potential enemy to the consolidation of their takeover, including the building
The first part of the thesis presents a detailed examination of the relationship
between the Communists and the Catholic Church during the Second World War.
Chapter one examines the positions of the Communists and the Catholic Church towards
each other. It begins with an examination of the development of the Communist Party
line during the first year of the war, a period during which Communist policy was highly
unsettled, switching between a hardline leftist emphasis on proletarian revolution and the
alliance-building popular front policy. The first of these options was predicated on the
expectation that the "imperialist war" would rapidly develop into a chain reaction of
revolutions throughout East-central Europe. It was the line followed up until the German
attack on the Soviet Union in the summer of 1941, following which Moscow pressed the
Yugoslav Communists to build the alliances foreseen by the popular front policy, and
again in the autumn and winter of that year, following Partisan reverses. Under pressure
from Moscow, the Yugoslav Communists returned decisively to the popular front line
early in 1942 (although the Slovene Party maintained the militant leftist line for a few
months longer).
The chapter then goes on to examine the position of the Communists towards
towards the churches, as a part of their strategy for gaining power. In their striving for
power, they were prepared to put their revolutionary aspirations into second place, and
to make compromises. This was, however, a temporary tactic. The Communists did not
give up their wider revolutionary goals for a transformation of society which would bring
them into conflict with the Church. Chapter one also discusses the attitude of the
Catholic Church towards Communism and the options open to the Church when faced
implement the popular front policy. The Partisan movement sought to reassure the
Catholic clergy and faithful that the Church had nothing to fear from it, hoping thus to
gain their acceptance and trust. Thus they avoided pronouncements or measures which
would offend or alarm the Church, they allowed priests to continue to operate in areas
under their control, and tried to establish cordial relations with senior Church figures.
Further, they sought to encourage the active involvement in the movement of Catholic
priests and prominent laymen, who could serve a valuable propaganda purpose in
reassuring the Catholic population that they had nothing to fear from atheistic
Communism.
Chapter two begins with a brief look at the position of the Catholic Church in
relationship to the Nazi puppet Independent State of Croatia, under the Croatian fascist
Ustashas, in order to provide the context in which relations between the Church and the
substantial contribution to the well-worn subject of the Catholic Church's relations with
the Ustashas. Also for the sake of context, the chapter looks briefly at the Croatian
Communists' policy towards the Croat national question, and how they confronted their
The core of chapter two is a detailed analysis of the Croatian Party's implementation
of its popular front policy. Although it had identified the HSS as its main rival among the
Croats, the Party leadership feared that, with the HSS weakened by the war, the Catholic
Church, which enjoyed enormous prestige in Croatia, would emerge as the principal
defender of the Croatian national interest in its place. The party therefore sought to keep
the Church in its place, well away from the political sphere. It went to great lengths to
avoid antagonizing the Church, even though the Communists knew well that Stepinac
and other Church leaders were bitterly opposed to them. The Croatian Party sought to
avoid any suggestion that it would encroach upon fields which the Church considered its
own in the social life of the country, such as education and marital matters.
In addition, this chapter looks at the efforts made by the Communists to appeal to
members of the clergy, and the uses to which they put those whom they attracted to their
movement. Particular attention is given to the role of Mgr. Svetozar Rittig, who became
behalf of the Partisans. Appealing to clergy and faithful to take the Partisan side, and
fiercely condemning those who opposed it, he nevertheless, like most clergymen who
supported the Partisans, saw himself as defending the interests of the Church.
Rittig hoped to play a key role as an intermediary between the Church and the
Partisan leadership, in order to put Church-state relations on a sound footing after the
war. The Communists' main interest in Rittig was to manipulate him as a tool in their
with the Partisan movement, that he was after the war shunned by most of the senior
The position of the Catholic Church in Slovene society was very different to the
corresponding situation in Croatia. The Church in Slovenia traditionally had a strong role
in the political as well as the social sphere, and was thus the Communists' key
competitor in their attempts to take power. Chapter three describes the descent into civil
war in Slovenia, mainly as a result of the militant leftist line which the Slovene
Communists pursued from late 1941 and through much of 1942. Embarking upon the
liquidation of the "class enemy" in preparation for the expected revolution, the Slovene
Communists attacked prominent figures in Ljubljana and at the local level, in the villages,
including many priests. Defensive measures both among clericalist leaders in the capital
and in the villages, where the initiative frequently came from the priests, led the
opponents of the Partisans into increasingly close collaboration with the Italian and later
Despite this bitter struggle, which saw the Partisans and the Church in direct
confrontation, the Communists nevertheless took steps to implement the popular front
policy and to appeal to the Catholic clergy and faithful in Slovenia as well. In Slovenia,
the Communists operated within a front organization, the "Liberation Front" (OF), which
included non-communists, among them the Christian Socialists. The Christian Socialists
were committed to the goal of proletarian revolution and acknowledged the Communists'
leading role in the OF. However, their desire for an independent profile led to friction with
the Communists. Their activities were curtailed at the beginning of 1943, when they gave
The Slovene Communists too appealed to members of the clergy, with varying
occupation regimes in the various regions of Slovenia. For much of the war, their
activities were focused on the Italian-occupied Ljubljana province, where, because of the
bitterness of the civil war there, the Partisans' success in attracting the clergy to their
banner was very limited. The opportunities were similarly limited in the German-occupied
north of the country, where the occupation regime was particularly harsh, from which
most of the clergy were expelled by the Germans, and where the Partisans found
conditions for their operations very difficult for much of the war. Only in the Littoral
region, which had been part of Italy during the inter-war period, and where the Partisans
were regarded by most of the Slovene Catholic population and clergy primarily as a
patriotic organization, offering unification with Slovenia and Yugoslavia, did the tactic of
The second part of the thesis deals with the Communists' takeover and
consolidation of power from late 1944 through to late 1946. Chapter four shows how,
towards the end of the war, the priorities of the Communist leadership changed, as they
sought to complete their takeover, centralize their control of the Party, gain international
recognition and begin to establish the contours of the revolution which they intended to
implement. This period is examined in particular through the correspondence among the
Communists leaders, which has been collected in several published volumes. This
Party went much further than the central leadership had intended in making concessions
to the Church.
As the position of the Partisans strengthened in the final phase of the war, the
communists. Its attitude to its rivals sharpened, especially towards the Catholic Church,
as the Holy See and senior members of the clergy within the country became deeply
the Communist leaders remained prepared to reach an accommodation with the Church
after the war, still seeing gains to be had from having a docile and compliant clergy. But
the brutality with which they set about consolidating their power, which included the
arrest and execution of numerous Catholic priests, and the speed with which they
reneged on their promises not to harm the position of the Church, made any real
accommodation impossible. Chapters five and six describe how the new authorities
rapidly moved to curtail the Church's role in education and the range of its philanthropic
At the root of the problem were fundamental differences as to what the Church's role
in society should be. The Communists' promises of freedom of religion effectively meant
freedom to perform the purely religious functions of the Church, its sacraments and
rituals. They gave no recognition to the role of the Church in the social life of the country,
which for the Church was a crucial part of its mission. For their part, the Communists
saw the Church's continued role in such areas as a threat to their attempts to build a
new, revolutionary society, and they could not allow it. The thesis thus concludes that the
wartime policy of the Communists to promote a popular front policy towards the Catholic
Church was essentially an expediency. The two organizations remained, with the
exception of a few individuals, hostile to each other, and given that they were to a
considerable degree competing for the same space in the life of the people whose
allegiance they both claimed, an accommodation that would have been satisfactory to
both sides could not be reached.
Acknowledgements
The list of people who helped me during my work on this thesis is too long for it
to be possible to mention everyone. Particular mention must go to Katarina Spehnjak
of the Hrvatski Institut za Povijest (HIP), in Zagreb, and to Jera Vudesek Staric of the
Institut za Novejso Zgodovino (INZ), in Ljubljana, each of whom took me under their
wing during my periods of undertaking research in Zagreb and Ljubljana. My
discussions with them about my work, and their help in pointing me in the direction of
important archival sources, were invaluable. Others for whose help I am extremely
grateful include Jure Kristo, Nada Kisic-Kolanovic and Zlatko Matijevic of the HIP;
Iskra Iveljic of the University of Zagreb; Ales Gabric of the INZ; Vojislav Pavlovic of
the University of Belgrade; and Radmila Radic of the Institut za Noviju Istoriju Srbije,
in Belgrade, all of whom were generous with their help and advice during my
research.
Special acknowledgement needs to be made to the late Phyllis Auty, who first
encouraged me to embark on academic research, and to Mark Wheeler, who helped
me to find direction in my work. I am also particularly grateful to the late Stella
Alexander, who helped to get me going by giving me the benefit of her enormous
experience of researching the position of the churches in former Yugoslavia.
I owe an enormous debt of thanks to Sonia Bicanic, who gave me a home during
my time researching in Zagreb, and thanks to whom, above all, my time as a
researcher was so happy. I am also indebted to her, as well as to Silvio Pallua, for
allowing me to use the important memoir of her late husband, Emilio Pallua.
List of Abbreviations 1
Introduction 2
Conclusions 302
Bibliography 311
List of Abbreviations
Much has been written about the Roman Catholic Church in Yugoslavia during the
Second World War, especially about the Church in Croatia and the Croat-inhabited areas
in Bosnia and Hercegovina. Much has also been written about the Communist-led
Partisan movement during the war and the Communist takeover that immediately
followed it. However, in the literature on these subjects, relatively little has been devoted
to the specific question of the relationship between the Communists and the Catholic
Church during this period. This thesis aims, through the use of primary source material
shed greater light on this theme. It is intended that this exercise should also contribute to
generally during the period of their seizure and consolidation of power in Yugoslavia.
In tackling this theme, the thesis concentrates on the situations in Croatia, Bosnia
and Slovenia. The first reason for this is that it was in these areas that Yugoslavia's
Roman Catholic population was concentrated. In the east and south of the country,
populations did exist elsewhere, among the ethnic Hungarians, Germans and Croats in
the northeast of the country, in Vojvodina, and among the ethnic Albanians in
Montenegro and Macedonia. In the Boka Kotorska area (in present-day Montenegro,
near to the border with Croatia) there was a small population of Croat Catholics, as well
as some Catholics who identified themselves as Serbs. But it was in the west of the
country that Catholics predominated, and it was there that the key developments in the
Another reason for the thesis's geographical focus is that, as will be explained later,
it was in the western and central areas of the country where, because of the nature of
the occupation regime, the conditions for insurgency were the most conducive for much
of the war. In large areas of Bosnia, Croatia and Slovenia, the Communist-led Partisan
movement was particularly active. It was in these areas that the Partisans came into
contact with the Catholic Church, it was there that the Church presented a rival to the
Communists' ambition to seize power, and it was there that they developed their policies
towards the Church. In areas to the east and the south, where the Partisans were less
active for much of the war, where the Catholic population was relatively smaller and
where the Catholic Church did not appear such a threat, the Communists' engagement
The principles underlying the Communists' approach to the Catholic Church applied
also to the other significant Christian Church in Yugoslavia, the Orthodox Church. For
much of the war the Partisans were relatively less active in the Orthodox heartland of
Serbia, and many of the Orthodox clergy in Bosnia and Croatia were hounded out by the
extreme Croat nationalist Ustasha regime put in place by the Germans. Nevertheless,
the Partisans came into contact with Orthodox clergy and, as this thesis will describe,
applied the same policy of seeking to co-opt compliant priests to their cause as with the
Catholic clergy.
The policy of enlisting the loyalty of clergy to the emerging new regime and of
confining the Church to a restricted sphere outside of the political and social domains
was to be the same for both churches. However, a key difference which from the
Communist perspective made the Catholic Church in Yugoslavia appear a much greater
threat was that it was part of the wider Catholic Church organization, with its hostility
towards Communism. As the thesis will show, the Catholic hierarchy's insistence on the
primacy of the Holy See in matters concerning the Church's position in the state was a
key reason why the Communists regarded the Catholic Church as a particularly grave
A considerable literature exists on the Catholic Church in Croatia and Bosnia during
the war. However, most of it has concentrated on the relationship between the Church
and the Ustashas in those areas. Much less has dealt with the Church and the
Communists. Stella Alexander's Church and State in Yugoslavia since 1945 (Cambridge,
1979) was a notably balanced account of the relationship between the Communist
regime and the main Christian Churches during the post-war decades. However, the
majority of the literature has been polarized between two opposed positions, with
Yugoslav Communist and much of the Serbian historiography taking a strongly critical
position towards the Catholic Church, while Croat emigre and other anti-Communist
Croatia's Communist-led authorities to investigate the crimes of the occupiers and their
domestic allies. Published in 1946, at a time when relations between the new regime and
the Church hierarchy in Croatia had sunk into open conflict, two sets of published
documents set out to demonstrate the alleged guilt of many of the Croat Catholic clergy
of collaboration with the occupation regime and complicity in its crimes. These were the
"Documents Concerning the Anti-national Work and the Crimes of a Part of the Catholic
Zagreb, 1946) and the record of the trial of Archbishop Alojzije Stepinac of Zagreb,
selectively edited to exclude speeches by Stepinac and his defence lawyer (Sudjenje
Zagreb, 1946). In 1952, at a time of particular tension between Yugoslavia and the Holy
See, a collection of documents concerning the relationship between the Vatican and the
wartime quisling regime in Croatia was published (Tajni dokumenti o odnosima Vatikana
These collections of documents set the tone for numerous other works on the role of
the Catholic Church in Croatia during the Second World War. Notable among these was
a lengthy volume by Viktor Novak, Magnum Krimen: Pola vijeka klerikalizma u Hrvatskoj,
which was first published in Zagreb in 1948. [Slovak's book, however, did more than
merely renew the indictment against the Church. Setting out to present a comprehensive
examination of the role of the clergy during the War, it also contained extensive material
on the activities of members of the clergy who opposed or resisted the Ustashas. Other,
more recent works that continued the anti-Catholic line, concentrating on the
svetac: (Dokumenti o izdaji i zlocinu), which was first published in Belgrade in 1985, with
a second, enlarged edition the following year, and Ivan Cvitkovic's Koje bio Alojzije
On the other side of the argument, numerous authors who saw the role of the
presented Stepinac as a figure who had adopted a highly moral stance towards the
Ustashas, condemning their racist ideology and trying to defend their victims, but who fell
victim after the War to the relentless campaign of the Communists against the Church.
Another notable defence of Stepinac was written by Aleksa Benigar (Alojzije Stepinac,
hrvatski Kardinal, first published in Rome in 1974). Benigar's account benefited from his
access to the diary of the parish priest of Krasic, Stepinac's birth place, where the
Zagreb Archbishop spent the last years of his life following his release from prison, under
house arrest in the home of the parish priest. The diary contains numerous details of
Stepinac's own account of his relations with the various political regimes under which he
lived. Stella Alexander's sympathetic biography of Stepinac (The Triple Myth: A Life of
Archbishop Alojzije Stepinac, New York, 1987) draws heavily upon Benigar.
Since the end of Communist rule in 1990, the literature published in Croatia
concerning the wartime role of the Church has tended to continue the pattern of
defensiveness regarding the activities of the clergy, while re-appraising the history of the
period to stress the persecution of the Church and the clergy by the Communists.
concentrated on the sufferings of the Catholic clergy at the hands of the Communists.
Jure Kristo's history of the Church in Croatia during the Second World War (Katolicka
crkva i Nezavisna Drzava Hrvatska, 1941. - 1945, Zagreb, 1998) defended the Church
and the overwhelming majority of the clergy against the attacks of Communist and
Serbian historiography
While this thesis will, for the sake of context, briefly discuss the response of the
Catholic Church and clergy to Ustasha rule, it is not the intention to make a substantial
the relationship of the Church and clergy with the Communists. The relatively small
amount of literature that has dealt specifically with the Catholic Church's relationship with
the Communists in Croatia has also tended to be confined within the pattern initiated in
the first years of Communist rule of being either highly critical or defensive of the
An important work on the activities of the clergy from the Communist standpoint was
Branko Petranovic's article on the period of the Communist takeover and consolidation of
their power ("Aktivnost rimokatolickog klera protiv sredjivanja prilika u Jugoslaviji: mart
Interpreting the activities of part of the clergy during this period as a conscious,
deliberate attempt to undermine and contribute to the overthrow of the newly installed
relations between the two antagonists. More recently, Dragoljub Zivojinovic (Vatikan,
critical portrayal of the Church's wartime role with an appreciation of the attack which the
Church experienced upon its interests, organisation and clergy during and immediately
An important source on the activities of the Catholic clergy during the War is Ciril
research, Petesic sought to counter the negative image of the Catholic clergy's wartime
role, built up through decades of propaganda in the Yugoslav media, by claiming that
actually significant numbers of priests supported the Partisans. In adopting this strategy
he was arguing within the terms laid down by the Communists. He accepted the
assumption that a good priest was one who "remained faithful to the people" and
supported the Partisans. He simply tried to show that there were many more such priests
than had hitherto been believed. As already noted, Viktor Novak had earlier
the negative propaganda against the Catholic clergy that had been the staple in
Yugoslavia for so long, Petesic's book was useful. However, as this thesis will show, in
seeking to suggest that a significant proportion of the clergy actively supported the
On the Communist takeover and the development of their policies more generally,
there are a number of works. These include Mark Wheeler's chapter on Yugoslavia in
by Tony Judt; Jill A. Irvine's The Croat Question: Partisan Politics in the Formation of the
Yugoslav Socialist State (Boulder, 1993); Ivo Banac's With Stalin Against Tito:
Kostunica and Kosta Cavoski's Party Pluralism and Monism: Social Movements and the
Political System in Yugoslavia, 1944-1949 (Boulder, 1985) and Aleksa Djilas's The
Massachusetts, 1991). While not specifically concerned with the Communists' policy
towards the Church, these works expose the development of the Communists' approach
to their seizure of power and the attainment of their revolutionary goals, and of their
policy towards their rivals and opponents. They are thus important in setting the context
the Catholic Church in particular, the thesis draws extensively on the very large number
of volumes of documents published during the post-war decades. These include two
decades, and Izvori za istoriju SKJ. Serija A, Tom II: dokumenti'centralnih organa KPJ,
8
collections of documents were published concerning the Second World War in individual
1985); and on Slovenia, Dokumenti ljudske revolucije v Sloveniji. March 1941 - June
collected works of Yugoslavia's Communist leader, Josip Broz Tito (Sabrana djela,
Belgrade, 1982).
War and the Communists' seizure of power, which in most cases do not appear to have
been selected to fit the political exigencies of later periods, is a valuable resource for this
thesis. The correspondence among Communist figures, reports from the field to the
Party leadership and instructions back to the field present fascinating insights into the
thinking of the Party. Such documents illustrate the development of the Communists'
policies, the motivation behind them and the conditions which Communist activists found
on the ground. The frequent references to the Church and clergy in these documents
On the Church and clergy in Slovenia during the period covered by the thesis, there
is less secondary material than is the case for Croatia. Just as the literature on the
Church in Croatia during the Second World War has tended to focus on the person of
Stepinac, so in Slovenia much attention has focused on the wartime role of the bishop of
Ljubljana, Gregorij Rozman. And as with Stepinac, much of the literature on Rozman has
been sharply polarized between opposing viewpoints regarding his wartime activity.
Following the war, a published account of the trial of Rozman and others, in absentia
in the case of Rozman, who had fled the country, sought to demonstrate his wartime
Kreku, Vizjaku in Hacinu, Ljubljana, 1946). This thesis uses the original record of the
trial, which is kept in the archive of Slovenia's Ministry of the Interior. Metod Mikuz, the
most prominent Catholic priest actively to support the Partisans in Slovenia, wrote a
number of pieces against Rozman and other clergy who opposed the Partisans. Among
these is a history of the Slovene clergy's relationship with the Partisan movement, written
during the war, which is kept in the archive of the Institut za novejso zgodovino in
Ljubljana. From the opposite standpoint, Jakob Kolaric's kof Rozman: duhovna podoba
velike osebnosti na prelomnici casov, written in exile and published in Klagenfurt in 1967
against him in S/cofa Rozmana odgovor, dated 30 September, 1946, and published in
Klagenfurt.
An interesting insight into Rozman's wartime role is provided by his secretary of the
time, Stanislav Lenic ("Pogovor s skofom dr. Stanislavom Lenicem" in Nova Revija, 67-
68, Ljubljana, 1987). While Lenic remained loyal to the memory of Rozman, he
acknowledged that the bishop had been at the centre of efforts to oppose the Partisans,
putting it down to the pressure of others and Rozman's political naivete. A more recent,
balanced and useful account of Rozman's wartime role and of the trial against him is
France Martin Dolinar's "Sodni proces proti Ljubljanskemu skofu dr. Gregoriju Rozmanu
od 21. do 30 avgusta 1946" (Zgodovinski casop/s, nos. 1-3, 1996, Ljubljana). On the
provides a useful narrative, as well as insights into the thinking behind Vovk's response
to Communist rule.
That the secondary sources on wartime Slovenia have been considerably thinner
than is the case for Croatia and Bosnia is in part a reflection of the fact that while the
main dramas of the Partisan struggle for much of the war played themselves out in
Bosnia and the neighbouring regions of Croatia, Slovenia was somewhat on the
periphery, fighting its own war, isolated from events elsewhere in Yugoslavia.
Nevertheless, the war in Slovenia was a bitter and brutal one, and the leading Slovene
10
Communist on the central, Yugoslav Party politburo, Edvard Kardelj, took care to keep
the Slovene Party in line with central party policy. Kardelj performed the same function
collections of documents, including instructions to the field, reports to Tito and letters to
is Metod Mikuz's Pregled zgodovine nob v Sloveniji, published in Ljubljana in 1960 and
after. More recently, Jera Vodusek Staric's Prevzem Oblasti, 1944-1946. (Ljubljana,
1992) provides a detailed and more balanced analysis of the period of the Communist
Yugoslavia."
Another useful resource used in this thesis is the memoirs of individuals who took
part in the wartime events, sometimes as key players who were witnesses to important
ground. Notable among these is Milovan Djilas's Wartime (London, 1977), which as well
as providing the insight of a senior Communist leader, offers a flavour of the atmosphere
of the times, the pressures, the dilemmas and the confusion that often characterised the
reality of life during the war. Similarly effective in evoking the atmosphere on the ground
northern Slovenia (Beacons in the Night: with the OSS and Tito's Partisans in Wartime
partizani, 1941-1945: spomini (Ljubljana, 1977), provides a telling account of the fine line
that had to be trodden by a monastery that in different times played host to both
Memoirs of key players in the events of the period include those of Jakov Blazevic
(Mac a ne mir: za pravnu sigumost gradjana, Zagreb, Belgrade, Sarajevo, 1980J, who
was the prosecutor in Stepinac's trial. Vladimir Dedijer, in his Novi prilozi za biograjiju
Josipa Broza Tita (Vol. 2, Rijeka, 1981) collected reminiscences from numerous key
figures, including the observations of leading Communists and their allies on matters
concerning the Church. The Serbian Orthodox priest and chaplain to the Partisan
Supreme Command early in the war, Vlada Zecevic, provided valuable information about
the Partisans' attitude towards the Churches and religion in the so-called Bihac Republic
The thesis also draws on various unpublished memoirs and private papers, some of
which make an important new contribution to our understanding of the theme in question.
The memoirs (Uspomene, transcripts of conversations with his wife, Sonia Bicanic) of
Emilio Pallua, are a valuable and hitherto unused source. Pallua was a lawyer and a
prominent lay Catholic who spent the war in Zagreb. Appalled by the Ustashas, as a
there was no choice but to make the most of the reality of a Communist takeover,
following the War he joined Croatia's Religious Commission and tried to use this position
to defend the Church as best he could. Closely connected with Stepinac and with Mgr.
Svetozar Rittig, the most prominent Partisan priest in Croatia, Pallua's testimony of the
war and post-war years provides a valuable addition to our knowledge of the position of
Other memoir material used extensively in this thesis includes the papers of Rittig.
These include copious writings, notes, speeches, letters and other documents written by
Rittig during and after the war, and kept in the Croatian State Archive. Rittig's papers
members of the clergy in action. A key contribution that this thesis aims to make to our
understanding of the Communists' relationship with the Catholic clergy is to explore the
12
Communists' strategy of using compliant members of the clergy, such as Rittig, to further
their aims, by seeking to persuade the Catholic populace that they had nothing to fear
from Communist rule. To achieve this aim, the thesis draws on hitherto unused papers
The papers of Ivo Politeo, who defended Stepinac, which are also kept in the
Croatian State Archive, have also provided useful insight, as have the papers of Lojze
Ude, kept in the Arhiv Slovenije, in Ljubljana. Ude undertook an initiative to stop the strife
between the Slovene Partisans and their domestic opponents during the war, before
joining the Partisans and heading the Slovene Religious Commission. Part of his
mnenje o polozaju: clanki in pisma, 1941-1944. (Ljubljana, 1994). The thesis draws on
previously unused letters by Ude that illustrate the difficulty in trying to play a meaningful
role as head of the Religious Commission at a time, late in the war, when the
emphasizing instead the takeover of power and the implementation of their revolution.
Another new and useful insight into the events before and immediately after the
Communist takeover is provided by the reports of the acting French Consul in Zagreb,
Andre Gaillard, to Paris. Gaillard had been in Zagreb throughout the war and had
The thesis draws on other archival sources in Zagreb, Ljubljana, Belgrade, Paris and
London, several of which provide a fresh contribution to the theme of this thesis. The
archive of the Hrvatski Institut za Povijest (part of the Croatian State Archive) contains
the documentary records of the ZAVNOH (Territorial Anti-Fascist Council for the National
Liberation of Croatia), which include wartime reports from the field and correspondence
with senior clergy. Additional reports on the situation on the ground are found among the
records of the local National Liberation Committees. The archive of the Central
that gave the true impressions of Communist activists, including in some cases regarding
13
the Church and the clergy, without any propaganda content. The archive of Croatia's
Religious Commission (in the Croatian State Archive), which was headed by Rittig and to
which Pallua also belonged, contains copious, previously unused material on the
difficulties facing the Church following the end of the war. Grievances from members of
the clergy, of the Church hierarchy and ordinary faithful were most often passed to the
Commission.
including the archive of the Institut za novejso zgodovino. This includes documents of the
Slovene Religious Commission, of the SNOS (Slovene National Liberation Council), and
concerning the position of the clergy in Slovenia. The archive of the Central Committee
Party politburo after the war, including its deliberations on the activities of the clergy in
Slovenia. The archive of the Archdiocese of Ljubljana contains the circulars issued by
the bishop (unlike the Zagreb Archdiocese, the circulars of the Ljubljana diocese have
An important resource in Belgrade is the archive of Josip Broz Tito, which contains
Tito's correspondence with foreign and domestic officials. This archive contains a small
regarding the position of the Catholic Church in the new Communist order. The Arhiv
Jugoslavije contains records of the central authorities concerning the Church, including
The Archives of the French Foreign Ministry and of the British Foreign Office (in the
Public Records Office) contain interesting perspectives from French and British officials
reports. A report by Evelyn Waugh to London on the position of the Catholic Church in
14
tendentious.
The thesis has not drawn directly on archives of the principal wartime occupying
powers, Italy (until 1943) and Germany. The Slovene Interior Ministry archive contains a
relating to the activities of the clergy, which have been drawn on in the thesis. Vasa
izvjescima njemackog poslanstva u Zagrebu." (in Fontes: izvori za hrvatsku povijest, no.
2, 1996) provide interesting insights from the perspective of the German Plenipotentiary
Yugoslavia since the end of Communist rule in 1990. In several books and numerous
articles, historians have re-appraised the period of the Communist takeover, with fresh
policies on education and agrarian reform and on the use of the courts, sheds new light
on matters which touched crucially on the interests of the Church. The research of
1945-1948.", in Casop/s za suvremenu povijest, no. 1, 1993, Zagreb). New light on the
Communists' agrarian reform has been shed by Zdenko Cepic, in Slovenia (including
Also on the immediate post-war period, Nada Kisic-Kolanovic, in Croatia, has made
a considerable contribution, including her survey of the big trials in Croatia in that period,
"Vrijeme politicke represije: "veliki sudski procesi" u Hrvatskoj, 1945-1948." (in Casop/s
Zagreb, 2000) has discovered new material suggesting the Communists' determination
to demonstrate the treachery of Stepinac by fair means or foul after the war.
1899-1949, Zagreb, 1996) sheds further light on the role of Croatia's wartime Communist
leader, Andrija Hebrang, whose policy towards the Catholic Church brought him into
conflict with Tito. Zdenko Cepic ("Nekoj stopinj revolucije v pluralni dobi Osvobodilne
fronte" in Prispevki za novejso zgodovino, nos. 1-2, 1998, Ljubljana) has carried out
research on the development of the Slovene Communists' policy towards their allies in
the Slovene front organization, the Liberation Front. Also on the Slovene Communists'
Prispevki za novejso zgodovino, nos. 1-2, 1998, Ljubljana) has thrown further light on the
Christian Socialists' attempt to find a distinct identity through the trade unions.
working in former Yugoslavia, as well as on the extensive use of new primary source
material, to explain the relationship between the Communists and the Catholic Church
during this crucial period. It is a relationship that has received relatively little scholarly
the thesis aims substantially to increase our understanding of the twists and turns that it
went through. The evolution of Communist policy towards the Church during the war was
outside. This thesis will chart that evolution, as well as the responses of the Church and
clergy to the Communists. The research presented by this thesis will also portray in
detail the application in practice of the Communists' policies on the ground. The thesis
will show that, throughout the period and through all the changes in approach by the
Communists towards the Church, their goal remained unswerving: to acquire and
consolidate power and to implement their revolutionary programme. The Church was
Part One
Wartime
Chapter One
The first Yugoslavia, which existed between the two world wars, from 1918 to 1941,
was from its inception an unhappy state. Never managing to accommodate the national
aspirations of its various constituent peoples, it lurched from crisis to crisis during the
1920's, until, in 1929, King Alexander did away with parliamentary rule, attempting to
impose from above a unity and Yugoslav identity which the political parties had failed to
deliver. While the royal dictatorship did indeed succeed in bringing a semblance of
Political life in inter-war Yugoslavia was poisoned by chronic divisions, which were
drawn primarily on ethnic lines. Yugoslavia had been forged out of the South Slav lands
of the former Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman Empires. In the east and south of the
country was the territory that before the First World War had comprised the Kingdom of
Serbia, from which royal Yugoslavia inherited its Karadjordjevic dynasty. In 1918, Serbia
united with the small mountainous Kingdom of Montenegro, to the north of Albania.
While both Serbia (which included present-day Macedonia) and Montenegro were
populations, including the ethnic Albanians who formed a majority in Kosovo, and also
western regions, in Slovenia and Croatia. In between was Bosnia and Hercegovina, with
its mixed Serbian Orthodox, Bosniac Moslem and Croat Catholic populations. The
smallest of these three groups, the Croats predominated in western Hercegovina, inland
from neighbouring Croatian Dalmatia, and were also scattered around central and
northern Bosnia.
17
Croatia was also characterised by diversity, geographic as well as ethnic. The long
Dalmatian coastline, with its history of Venetian, and latterly Austrian, rule, was distinct in
landscape and culture from the northern, continental regions, including Zagorje, the area
around the capital, Zagreb, and the fertile plains of Slavonia, whose historical ties were
with Hungary. Croatia's large Serb, Orthodox minority was concentrated in particular in
the Krajina (frontier) regions along the border with Bosnia, in some areas forming a local
majority, especially in the Dinaric regions inland from northern Dalmatia. But there was
Another area which needs to be taken into account is the large area over the border
in neighbouring Italy, the Julian region and Istria, which had been incorporated into Italy
following the First World War. In the Julian region, Slovenes formed a large majority of
the population, although its main prize, the port of Trieste, had an Italian majority. To the
south, in Istria, Croats predominated in the east, including the city of Rijeka (Fiume),
while Italians predominated in the west. The Second World War was to give Croats and
In inter-war Yugoslavia, The Serbs of the former Kingdom of Serbia were politically
dominant. Among the Croats, there had been no consensus about joining Yugoslavia,
and the reality of a state dominated by Belgrade rapidly brought disillusion even to those
who had initially greeted the new state with enthusiasm. Thoroughly disgruntled, for most
of the inter-war period Croatia's political leaders withdrew into indignant opposition, often
refusing to participate in institutions from which they felt profoundly alienated. The less
neighbours in Italy and Austria, adopted a pragmatic approach. The dominant Slovene
political party, the Slovene People's Party (SLS), threw in its lot with Belgrade, forming a
part of Yugoslavia's ruling coalition during most of the inter-war years. The strength of
the SLS's position in Yugoslavia depended on the sour relations between the country's
Finally, in 1939, the Regent, Prince Paul, impressed by the enduring political
strength of the Croat Peasant Party (HSS), the dominant party in Croatia, and alarmed
by the prospect of having to lead a divided country into war, appointed a new Prime
Minister, Dragisa Cvetkovic, and instructed him to come to terms with the Croatian
agreement, or "Sporazum", between Cvetkovic and the leader of the HSS, Vladko
But in spite of the hopes that the "Sporazum" might provide a satisfactory solution to
the question of Croatia's position in Yugoslavia, it proved not to be so. Firstly the Serbian
opposition parties, which had up until then joined with Macek and the HSS to form a
United Opposition to the royal dictatorship, were embittered by what they regarded as a
double betrayal. Macek was accused of betraying democratic principles by joining the
agreeing to the formation of an autonomous Croatian province that included large areas
with substantial Serb populations. In fact the "Sporazum" resulted in bitter recriminations
between Serbian and Croatian politicians such as had not been known during the period
of relative harmony of the United Opposition. Meanwhile, in Croatia, the "Sporazum" was
followed by widespread discrimination against the Serb population, while the activities of
extreme Croat nationalists, who were not satisfied with the achievements of the
"Sporazum", were stepped up. Macek, despite his solid support among the rural
population, failed to act to ensure that the "Sporazum" would succeed, and so Croat-
Serb relations actually became more poisoned than they had been before.2
relations could be set on a satisfactory footing was indicative of the wider problem of how
2Aleksa Djilas, The Contested Country: Yugoslav Unity and Communist Revolution, 1919-1953 (Cambridge,
Massachusetts, 1991), pp. 130-135.
19
to satisfy one of the two largest peoples in Yugoslavia without alienating the other.
Finally, the first Yugoslavia lacked the basic consensus behind its organization and
political system, and even its existence, which is necessary for any state to function
satisfactorily.
Belgrade in response to the signing by the government of the Tripartite Pact, the country
collapsed very quickly. While there were various reasons for the poor showing of the
Royal Yugoslav Army in the brief April War, not least among them was the fundamental
weakness of a state behind which its citizens were not united. Indeed, there were
instances of Croat units deserting and refusing to fight, and when German troops arrived
in Zagreb they received a rapturous welcome from crowds which thronged the streets,
Following its destruction, the territory that had been Yugoslavia was parcelled out
among its neighbours, the German Reich, Italy, Hungary, Bulgaria and Italian-controlled
Albania, while what remained of Serbia was placed under direct German occupation. On
the territory which today comprises most of Croatia, all of Bosnia and part of Vojvodina
an Independent State of Croatia (Nezavisna Drzava Hrvatska - NDH) was formed under
the Croatian fascist Ustasha movement, led by Ante Pavelic. A defining feature of the
Ustashas was their virulent hatred of Serbs, and they quickly set about the violent
persecution of the Serb population in the areas that they had been allotted. Much of
Slovenia was partitioned among the neighbouring Axis powers, and there was no
Slovene equivalent of the NDH. The northern part of Slovenia was incorporated into
Germany, while the southern part, including the capital, Ljubljana, was annexed by Italy,
forming the so-called Ljubljana province. In addition, a small area in the eastern corner of
Vladko Macek, In the Struggle for Freedom (New York, 1957), pp. 230-231.
20
In seeking to explain the approach of the Communists towards the Catholic Church,
Communists in general, and towards the churches in particular. Special attention needs
connected to the religious question. For Communists, religious and nationalities policies
were part of the same whole, with considerable overlap, and should not be separately
elaborated. 4
The leadership of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (KPJ) had to grapple with
these questions amidst the hurly-burly and confusion of war following the carve-up of
Yugoslavia in the spring of 1941. The reality in much of the country that summer was a
throughout Serb-inhabited areas, partly in response to the terror which the Ustashas
quickly inflicted on the Serb population in Croatia and Bosnia, and partly as a means of
redeeming wounded Serbian pride following the easy defeat of Yugoslavia in April.
The Germans, with extremely brutal methods, restored order in Serbia itself by the
end of 1941, but they never deployed sufficient forces fully to subdue the mountainous
central and western areas of the country, Bosnia, Montenegro and the Krajina regions of
Croatia, while the Italians and the quisling forces of the NDH proved not to be up to the
task. To the Germans, Serbia was important because of the communication lines which
ran through it to the southern Balkans, and the minerals which they hoped to extract
there, but in spite of periodic attempts to pacify the western regions of the country, they
Thus it was that in much of the country there was a vacuum into which insurgent
organizations could step. The most important of these were the Communist-led Partisan
Vedro Ramet, Cross and Commissar: the Politics of Religion in Eastern Europe and the USSR
(Bloomington, 1987), p. 38.
21
movement and the royalist forces of Draza Mihailovic (often known as Chetniks).
Mihailovic, an officer in the Royal Yugoslav Army, was appointed Defence Minister by
the royal government in exile in London, as well as Commander of the Yugoslav Army in
the Homeland. As such he was, for much of the war, recognized by the Allies as the
paralysed by the same national divisions which had crippled it before the war, soon
became tiresome to its British hosts, and Mihailovic's connection to it ceased to be to his
advantage. Apart from that, the largely Serbian nature of his movement and the
perception that he stood for a restoration of the substantially discredited pre-war regime
rendered him unattractive in the eyes of most of the non-Serb majority of the country,
and his largely passive "wait and see" attitude in the face of the occupiers made him an
passive stance, refusing either to cooperate with the occupation forces or to advocate
resistance to them. Some of the other senior figures in the party went into exile, where
they devoted themselves to squabbles with their counterparts from the Serbian parties.
Others, on the right of the party, threw in their lot with the Ustashas, while many on the
left later sided with the Communists. In any case, with Macek passive, the HSS offered
no effective alternative to either the Ustashas or the Communists and, like Mihailovic,
waited for the expected Allied victory, in the hope that they would then receive support
for their goals.6 The Ustashas themselves, meanwhile, through their savagery,
succeeded in discrediting their brand of strident Croatian nationalism in the eyes of many
Croats, thus aiding the attempts of the Partisans to rehabilitate the idea of Yugoslavia in
Croatia.
6Jill A. Irvine, The Croat Question: Partisan Politics in the Formation of the Yugoslav Socialist State (Boulder,
1993) (hereafter Irvine), pp. 100-102.
22
In Slovenia, the leadership of the SLS also adopted a policy of waiting for events.
There was a smaller strand, gathered around the Liberals, which was loyal to Mihailovic
and committed to the restoration of Yugoslavia. In the spring of 1942, various pre-war
political parties and factions, led by the SLS, put their earlier differences behind them
and formed the Slovene Alliance, as the political organization of the anti-Communist
forces. Like Mihailovic, the HSS and the Yugoslav government in exile, the Slovene
Alliance advocated a policy of waiting upon an Allied invasion of the Balkans. In the
meantime, it avoided actions that would provoke Axis reprisals against the population,
aiming to keep its organization intact in preparation for the hoped for arrival of the Allies.
However, in response to attacks by the Slovene Partisans' against both the Italians and
forces, including the Catholic Church, were drawn into increasingly active collaboration
with the occupiers. In the struggle against the Communist Partisans, the Slovene
Alliance placed itself behind existing anti-Communist formations and sought actively to
It was in the context of this failure of the various non-communist political forces to
provide leadership to those who wished actively to resist the occupiers, or to provide a
vision of a post-war order which would address the specific grievances of all the
Yugoslav peoples and put an end to the fratricidal strife into which they had been
plunged, that the Partisans stepped into the frame. They presented themselves as the
only force that could drive the occupiers out of the country, punish those who had
collaborated with them, and build a new Yugoslavia which would address and solve the
The process by which the KPJ arrived at a coherent policy regarding its conduct of
the war and its takeover of power was not, however, a smooth one. There had been
7Jera Vodusek Staric, "The Making of the Communist Regime in Slovenia and Yugoslavia" (presented at a
conference on The Establishment of Communist Regimes in Eastern Europe, 1945-1950: a Reassessment,
Institute of Slavonic and Balkan Studies, Moscow, 1994), pp. 4-5; Jozo Tomasevich, War and Revolution in
Yugoslavia, 1941-1945: the Chetniks (Stanford, 1975), pp. 222-223.
23
many vacillations during the inter-war period, and these continued after the outbreak of
war. These vacillations were in part caused by factionalism within the Party, but a major
cause of confusion lay in the fact that the Party, like all other Communist parties in this
period, was obliged to follow the line emanating from Moscow through the Comintern.
The Comintern had for many years prior to the Second World War attached great
importance to the national question, seeing in it great revolutionary potential. From 1928
until 1935, the line was to stress the national aspirations of the oppressed nations. In the
case of Yugoslavia this meant support for the break-up of the country, encouraging the
radical nationalist movements in, for example, Croatia and Macedonia. After 1935, the
line changed in response to the perceived threat from fascism. Now the priority task for
all Communists was to contribute to the defence of the Soviet Union, the one Communist
creations of Versailles, ripe for revolution, but were rather to be bolstered as buffers
between the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany. Thus, the Yugoslav Communists were
now required to promote a Popular Front of all patriots opposed to fascism. This meant
that Communist ideology was to be underplayed, as the party sought to attract non-
At this time the leadership of the Yugoslav Party was in the hands of enthusiastic
proponents of the Popular Front line. However, following Stalin's purges of the second
half of the 1930's, which decimated the ranks of Yugoslav Communists, control passed
to a distinctly leftist leadership under Josip Broz Tito, whose commitment to the Popular
Front was far less clear. After the signing of the Nazi-Soviet Pact in 1939, and until the
attack on the Soviet Union in the summer of 1941, the line was again "Leftist". Popular
Front alliances were rejected, as with the outbreak of the "Imperialist War" the Party was
ordered to base its work on strictly class foundations. What Tito did provide was a new
8 lvo Banac, With Stalin Against Tito: Cominformist Splits in Yugoslav Communism (Ithaca and London,
1988) (hereafter Banac), pp. 60-63.
24
discipline, creating a tightly organized, centralized Party on the Leninist model, such as
Following the collapse of the country in 1941, the tension between the line being
pushed by Moscow and the leftist inclinations of most of the KPJ leadership resulted in a
great deal of confusion. In May 1941, Tito enunciated a policy of revolution on the back
of the defeat of the Axis powers. Collaboration with the Allies was abandoned and the
In the summer of 1941, following the German attack on the Soviet Union, and under
pressure from Moscow, this policy was reversed. The people were urged to unite
"regardless of political conviction and religious creed, and drive out the detested
invaders", just as the Soviet Union, Great Britain and the United States had united
against fascism. 11 Again under pressure from Moscow, approaches were made to
Mihailovic in an attempt to forge a common front. However, this line did not last either. In
the autumn of 1941 the Partisans were driven out of Serbia. Various factors combined to
suggest to the KPJ leadership that the anti-fascist struggle was yielding to class war:
there was evidence that Mihailovic was both collaborating with the Germans and
receiving support from the British; yet while Soviet forces won victories before Moscow, it
appeared that they were not receiving help from the British. The line now was "sharper
class differentiation", a symptom of which was the formation of the First Proletarian
Brigade, the nucleus of a new mobile force that would supplement the locally based
10Mark Wheeler, "Pariahs to Partisans to Power: The Communist Party of Yugoslavia" in Tony Judt (ed.),
Resistance and Revolution in Mediterranean Europe, 1939-1948 (London, 1989) (hereafter Wheeler), pp.
126-127.
"ibid. p. 132.
12/M/. pp. 137-138; Milovan Djilas, Wartime (London, 1977), pp. 118-119.
25
This "Leftist" line brought severe criticism from Moscow. The KPJ leadership was
condemned for giving the Partisans too much of a Communist character, especially in
the formation of the proletarian brigades, and for failing to unite all who wished to fight
against the occupiers. This confirmed conclusions that the Yugoslav leadership had
already drawn, and in the spring of 1942 the "left sectarian" line was repudiated in favour
of the primacy of anti-Axis struggle, the banner to which all patriots were to be drawn.
Party dominance was to be maintained, but that dominance, and also Communist
The KPJ was to maintain this line until the end of the war. It placed emphasis on
"brotherhood and unity" of the Yugoslav peoples, while at the same time tailoring its
approach to the specific circumstances in each part of Yugoslavia and appealing to the
aspirations of each individual nation. This policy was described by Tito in an article in the
The words "National Liberation Struggle" would be just a phrase - even a fraud, if they did
not include, apart from their general Yugoslav sense, a national sense for each people
separately, if they did not mean, as well as the liberation of Yugoslavia, at the same time
the liberation of the Croats, Slovenes, Serbs, Macedonians, Albanians, Moslems and so
on, if the National Liberation Struggle did not, in its content, bring liberation, equality and
brotherhood to all the peoples of Yugoslavia. In that is the essence of the National
Liberation Struggle."14
The Communists' attitude towards the churches was based in part on a theoretical,
Marxist approach towards religion, and in part on a pragmatic understanding of how their
religious policy could contribute to a successful seizure of power. In principle it was the
view of the Communist leadership that religious freedom was necessary in order to
prevent the politicization of the churches. 15 This was in accord with Lenin's view that,
while religion needed to be fought, with the elimination of the exploiting classes it would
fade away anyway. Therefore the anti-religious struggle need not be over-emphasized,
thus avoiding the risk of dividing the proletariat. As religion would disintegrate, it could in
the meantime be granted certain "bourgeois" rights and privileges, while on the other
they sometimes saw them as potential policy tools. Thus, policies towards the churches
were usually more than merely restrictive. Communist regimes took an active stance
towards religion, taking into account broader political objectives. For example, while they
would certainly seek to erode the bases of popular devotion to religion and the churches,
they would simultaneously seek to control and manipulate religious organizations and
For the Communists the key element in the regulation of the relations between
Church and state was separation. It was not considered appropriate that the Church
should have any influence in the social or political fields. The Church should be restricted
to the strictly spiritual sphere, and it should not have authority in, for example, education
and marital matters. Once separation had been effected, all churches would be equal
and none specially favoured. 18 The way in which separation was implemented was,
however, always very unequal. For their part, Communist states sought closely to control
15Manojlo Brocic, "The Position and Activities of the Religious Communities in Yugoslavia, with Special
Attention to the Serbian Orthodox Church", in Bohdan Bociurkiw and John W. Strong (ed.), Religion and
Atheism in the USSR and Eastern Europe (London, 1975) (hereafter Brocic), p. 358.
16Gerhard Simon, "The Catholic Church and the Communist State in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe",
in Bociurkiw and Strong, Religion and Atheism in the USSR and Eastern Europe, (hereafter Simon), pp. 193-
194.
17
Ramet, Cross and Commissar, pp. 4-5.
18Brocic, p. 354.
27
and national identity coincided closely in Yugoslavia, the task of eroding religious
affiliation was all the more difficult. Communist fears concerning the influence of the
peoples the churches were regarded as strongly divisive factors. 19 Separation was thus
deemed necessary in order to avoid future conflict. Thus the objectives of the
Communists' policies towards the churches were to restrict church life to the rituals of a
cult, to limit their influence in society, to control their activities and to obtain the loyalty of
However, the realization of the Communists' ideas on the position of the churches in
the new society that they intended to build was something that would have to wait until
after the war. In the meantime, the key to understanding the attitude of the Yugoslav
Communists towards the churches is to appreciate that until they were firmly in power
everything was subordinated to the acquisition and retention of that power. In this they
were following the example set by Lenin in 1917. It was a pragmatic approach, allowing
for a great deal of flexibility. It enabled them to seek tactical alliances, such as with
Mihailovic in 1941 and, as will be described later, in 1943 with Bozidar Magovac, pre-war
editor of the HSS paper, Slobodni Dom, who tried to reach an accommodation with the
Communists. And it enabled them to make promises that they did not intend to keep
once in power, such as wartime assurances that there was no intention to implement a
Communist revolution after the war. This was the essence of the Popular Front policy
that was applied consistently from the spring of 1942. Such a policy was also pursued
For the Communists the feelings of the people, whether it be their national
aspirations or their adherence to their faith, were something that they could manipulate in
their quest for power, and something that they should avoid offending unduly until they
had achieved power. Principles and ideology could temporarily be put aside. In order to
win over the mass of the Croat and Slovene populations they concealed their real
attitude towards the Catholic Church behind a false front of conciliation, with offers of
collaboration against the common enemy.21 Towards the end of the war, Fitzroy
Maclean, a British envoy to the Partisan leadership, reported to the British Foreign Office
on his expectation that the Partisans' conciliatory attitude towards the churches would
give way to a harsher attitude once they were firmly established in power and would no
longer need to have such regard for public opinion. 22 But during the war the Communists
went to great lengths to appease and attract Catholic clergy and laity.
In an article published in Pro/eferin 1936, Tito urged that Communists and Catholics
should unite in the struggle between the two main forces in the world, "fascist and
Democratic." He acknowledged that many Catholics did not identify with either side, but
suggested that Catholics and Communists had much in common, both of them basing
themselves among the poor, so that cooperation should not be excluded. He urged that
they should put aside their irreconcilable philosophical differences and unite to defend
themselves against the common peril. Therefore, "so as to make it easier for them to join
the front for peace, freedom and progress, we [Communists] must stop all that could
offend their religious feelings."23 This piece, with its stress on putting differences aside so
as to unite against the common foe, clearly implied that an alliance with the churches
21 Dragoljub R. Zivojinovic, Vatikan, Katolicka Crkva i Jugoslovenska Vlast, 1941-1958 (Belgrade, 1994)
(hereafter Zivojinovic), p. 62.
22 Report of Maclean of 25 December, 1944. Public Records Office (hereafter PRO), FO371/48910, R1262.
23Text of article, Komunisti i Katolici given in Ciril Petesic, Katolicko svecenstvo u NOB-u, 1941-1945
(Zagreb, 1982) (hereafter Petesic), pp. 7-10.
29
Early in the war, a piece on the "Fundamental Principles..." of the movement, written
by the veteran Communist Mosa Pijade in February 1942, stressed that all, without
they were "honest patriots."24 The AVNOJ (Anti-Fascist Council for the National
autumn of 1942, laid down the basic equality of all citizens regardless of religious belief
It was, however, clear from an early stage that there were to be strict limits to this
freedom of religion. In an article in January 1943, Edvard Kardelj asserted that the
promise of religious freedom was not temporary, was not just for current circumstances,
but was a fundamental, immutable Communist principle. But the limits inherent in the
Communists' position became plain when Kardelj went on to explain that while Marx and
Engels taught that religion was a private matter, the "revolutionary proletariat" must not
allow reactionary forces to use religion to serve their anti-national aims. He cited the
Soviet Union as a practical example of how the separation of Church and state could
resolve the question of the Church's place in society. However, he declared that the
the people in the back while pretending that they were defending religion. There would
be a settling of accounts with such "criminal elements in priest's garb." That did not, he
went on to claim, mean a settling of accounts with religion itself. It is clear, however, that
this freedom of religion was to exist only within the limited bounds that the Communists
were prepared to allow it, according to their interpretation of the separation of Church
and state. Kardelj finished with a promise that no priest who remained faithful to the
people (with whom he, like all Communist leaders, identified the Communist-led National
Liberation Struggle) would be harmed or prevented from going about his priestly
24 Petesic, p. 23.
25Slobodan Nesovic, Stvaranje nove Jugoslavije, 1941-1945 (Belgrade, 1981), pp. 309-310.
30
concluded ominously, other, treacherous priests would receive the fate that awaited all
traitors. 26
The broad interpretation of the meaning applied to the word "treachery" can be seen
in a report by Vlada Zecevic, an Orthodox Priest, shortly after the foundation of AVNOJ
at Bihac, following which he was appointed head of the Religious Affairs Section of
AVNOJ. While insisting that the clergy must be free to minister to the religious needs of
the people, he, like Kardelj, insisted that religious activities must not be used as a mask
for actions against the National Liberation Struggle. He added that "it is necessary that
religious officials carry out their office and use their influence upon the people solely in
the spirit of the National Liberation Struggle."27 These were the terms under which
"religious freedom" was permissible. For the priest who did not adhere to these
The development of the Partisans' struggle in Croatia and Slovenia, and of their
relationship with the Catholic Church, followed the broad patterns described above in
relation to the KPJ leadership. The Communist Parties of Croatia and Slovenia (KPH and
KPS respectively) were affected, during the early months of the war, by the same
fluctuations in policy between the hardline "leftist" stance, with its emphasis on
immediate proletarian revolution, class war and liquidation of the class enemy, and the
Popular Front policy, with its stress on coalition building. In both Croatia and Slovenia the
Communists sought to appeal to and to reassure Catholics and members of the Catholic
clergy.
environments, both in terms of the domestic political configuration and the nature of the
26Edvard Kardelj, "Komunisticka Partija, Vjera i Crkva", in Put nove Jugoslavije: Clanci i govori iz
narodnooslobodilacke borbe, 1941-1945 (2nd edition, Zagreb, 1949), pp. 315-320.
27Undated report by Zecevic, written shortly after the AVNOJ meeting in Bihac in November 1942, on the
relationship of the Partisans to religion and on the relationship of religious officials to the National Liberation
Struggle, in Nesovic, Stvaranje nove Jugoslavije, pp. 152-153.
31
occupation regime. There was a considerable difference between the positions that the
Catholic Church had traditionally held in society in Croatia and Slovenia, and that too
was to contribute to a very different unfolding of the relationship between the Church and
In Croatia, Stepinac had since before the war forbidden his clergy involvement in
politics and with political parties. In Croatia, it was the HSS, with its tradition of anti-
clericalism, which was seen by the Communists as their main rival. As to he Church, the
KPH's priority would be to keep it in its traditional sphere, outside of Croatia's political
life.
in the political life of the country. There, the Church was closely associated with the
conservative SLS, which had been the dominant party throughout the inter-war period,
and several members of the clergy were active in its ranks. Indeed, the party was led,
until his death in 1940, by a Catholic priest, Mgr. Anton Korosec. The SLS participated in
Yugoslav governments for much of the inter-war period. It was through the SLS that the
Catholic Church in Slovenia pursued its political agenda, in opposition to Liberalism and
Social Democracy. The Church also extended its influence throughout Slovene society
through the schools, the University, banks and Slovenia's highly developed system of
The key role of the Church and clergy in Slovenia's political life would be maintained
during the war, in opposition to the Communists. Thus the Communists' preference for
avoiding conflict with the Church, at least until they were firmly in power, was much
harder to apply in practice in Slovenia than in Croatia. In Slovenia, the struggle against
the anti-Communist forces gathered around the Slovene Alliance unavoidably meant
Another important difference in conditions between Croatia and Slovenia was in the
nature of the occupation regimes. In Slovenia, its territory carved up and annexed to
complicated by the fact that many Croats regarded the end of Yugoslavia and the
formation of the NDH positively. Thoroughly alienated from the inter-war Yugoslav State,
which, from their perspective, had not only discriminated against Croats, but also against
the Catholic Church, few of them, including members of the clergy, mourned its passing.
The perceived inferior position of the Catholic Church within the Kingdom of
Yugoslavia was symbolized by the failure, in 1937, of the Concordat agreement with the
Holy See, which the Yugoslav government had signed in Rome in 1935. Due to pressure
from a campaign against the Concordat by the Serbian Orthodox Church and
nationalistic Serbian politicians, it was not ratified by the Parliament, and was withdrawn
in October 1937.28 A movement that stood not only for Communism, but for the
restoration of Yugoslavia, was thus from the outset particularly handicapped in any
The response of the Catholic Church to the Communists in Yugoslavia was also
the well-established antipathy of the Church towards atheistic Communism. But, having
to come to terms with the unwelcome prospect of Communist rule, the Church too was
The Catholic Church's hostility towards Communism dated back to Pope Pius IX
(1846-78) in the middle of the nineteenth-century. This anti-Communist line was explicitly
stated by Pope Pius XI (1922-39) shortly before the outbreak of the Second World War,
atheistic Communism was "in its very essence evil", aiming to upset the social order and
28Stella Alexander, "Croatia: The Catholic Church and Clergy, 1919-1945", in Richard J. Wolff and Jorg K.
Hoensch (ed.), Catholics, the State and the European Radical Right (Boulder, 1987), pp. 38 & 48-50.
33
to undermine the foundations of Christian civilization, it forbade any cooperation with it.
The principle objection to Communism was its atheism. A Communist regime was in
general tyrannical and oppressive, but most importantly, it oppressed religion and the
Church.29
There were, however, limits to the extent to which the Church was prepared to
oppose Communism. Since the 1920s, Pius XI had insisted that priests should stay out
identification with any party and secure it from what Anthony Rhodes has called the
"whims of transient political systems."30 When the Germans attacked the Soviet Union,
the Holy See resisted calls to pronounce the war a crusade. The Under-Secretary-of
State, Mgr. Tardini, pointed out that while Communism was the greatest enemy, it was
not the only one, and the Holy See could hardly regard the swastika as the symbol of a
crusade (Pius XI had attacked Nazism in an encyclical, Mit brennender Sorge, at about
Communism was undoubted. In a wireless speech just after the attack on the Soviet
Certainly in the midst of surrounding darkness and storm, signs of light appear which lift up
our hearts with great and holy expectations -these are those magnanimous acts of valour
which now defend the foundations of Christian culture, as well as the confident hope of
victory.
Archbishop Constantini, head of the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith,
prayed for the "brave soldiers" fighting "in that immeasurable land in which Satan
29lvan Cvitkovic, Koje bio Alojzije Stepinac (Sarajevo, 1986), pp. 13-16; Sabrina Petra Ramet, Balkan Babel:
Politics, Culture and Religion in Yugoslavia (Boulder, 1992), p. 124.
30Anthony Rhodes, The Vatican in the Age of the Dictators, 1922-1945 (London, 1973), pp. 14-15.
This hostility to Communism was certainly shared by most of the senior clergy in
Yugoslavia. Stepinac followed Pius Xl's line that the Church should stay out of politics.
The Church's position was that it could live under whatever political system, so long as it
could go freely about its work.33 In the case of a Communist takeover, however, it was no
longer a question about interfering in politics, as the fundamental interests of the Church
were at stake. For the Church, the advent of Communist rule would be a disaster. In a
pre-war article, the Croatian Catholic paper Katolicki List had described the Church's
attitude, borrowing words from Divini Redemptoris: "Communism is in its very essence
evil. Therefore the person who values Christian culture will not cooperate with
Communism quite plain. Jakov Blazevic, who had the opportunity to read the official
diary of the Zagreb Archdiocese, which contains regular entries by Stepinac himself,
cited an entry by Stepinac following a meeting with Macek in October 1939, in which he
said that a Communist victory would be a "catastrophe" for Croatia, which should be
resisted with all vigour, in which the Church would give its full moral support. 35
dilemma. While some did involve themselves in efforts to avert a Communist takeover,
as that takeover became reality the need to protect their institutions and their role in
society required them to engage in a dialogue with the new authorities at some level. As
There is a curious duality in Catholic tradition. On the one hand, terrestrial life is treated as
having distinctly secondary and instrumental importance, and Catholics are exhorted to
endure present sufferings patiently, in hopes of heavenly reward. On the other hand, the
Church long ago developed a tradition ascribing great value to the earthly institutions of
33Jure Kristo, "Katolicka Crkva u II Svjetskom Ratu" (in Casop/s za suvremenu povijest, no. 3, 1995, Zagreb),
p. 470.
34 Katolicki List (24 April, 1937), quoted in Sabrina Petra Ramet, Balkan Babel: Politics, Culture and Religion
in Yugoslavia (Boulder, 1992), p. 124.
35Jakov Blazevic, Mac, a ne mir: za pravnu sigurnost gradjana (vol. 3 of Svjedocanstava revolucionarna)
(Zagreb, Sarajevo, Belgrade, 1980), p. 164.
35
the Church, and a concomitant interest in any temporal matters that affect its institutional
interests. 36
establishment of relations with the higher clergy. This was the key to settling the
relationship between Church and state in the immediate post-war period, and their aim
was to neutralize what they saw as a possible foe. Until the closing phase of the war,
coming into contact with the bishops was difficult, but the Communists did make
approaches to some, and established some form of contact with several of them. The
opportunities for contacts depended on the vicissitudes of war and the extent of the
Nevertheless, in accordance with the Popular Front line, the Communist leaders at
least sought to avoid measures or actions that would antagonize the Church. As
described earlier, the Communists envisaged that the separation of Church and state
would mean that the Church's influence in such areas as education and marital matters
would be severely restricted, thus denying the Church the central position in Croatian
society to which it had been accustomed. Clearly the bishops would look negatively upon
such an outcome. Thus, for much of the war the Communists did not insist upon the
separation of Church and state, considering it inopportune to implement it until they were
established in power, and had less reason to worry about the opposition of the Church. 37
The range of options open to the Church leaders was limited. While the Church had
considerable moral authority among the Croats and Slovenes, the ability of its leaders to
influence the outcome of events was slight. The bishops had little choice but to make the
best possible terms with a Communist government, and to operate within the framework
offered. Based upon the conciliatory tones adopted by the Communist leaders and the
promises that freedom of religion would be respected, Church leaders would try to reach
some kind of accommodation with the new authorities. However, the options of the
36Pedro Ramet (ed.), Catholicism and Politics in Communist Societies (Durham, North Carolina, 1990), p. 3.
Yugoslav bishops were further limited by the necessity that any formal agreement on the
regulation of the position of the Church in the country would have to be agreed with the
As described earlier, the compromises of the Popular Front policy were always seen
by the Communist leaders as a temporary expedient to help smooth their path to power.
Once firmly in power, they were determined to implement their revolution. As this thesis
will show, that would inevitably mean attacking the position of the Church. Faced with
this, the bishops could opt for a quiet, conciliatory approach, salvaging what they could
for the Church. Or they could conclude that little was likely to be achieved by this, and
opt for confrontation. But the power to shape events was with the Communists, and not
approaching the Church and the narrowness of the terms within which they were
prepared to grant religious freedom, the Partisans sought in several ways to gain the
trust, or at least the acceptance, of the clergy and faithful. Priests and churches
continued to operate in areas under Partisan control. A decision was taken to appoint
chaplains to Partisan units. Efforts were made to attract clergy who were sympathetic to
the Partisans, and to use them for propaganda purposes. Measures which would
encroach upon spheres that the churches considered their own were avoided. As far as
possible, pronouncements or declarations that might offend the churches were also
avoided. And efforts were made to establish cordial relations with senior church figures.
The leading Communist and member of the Politburo Milovan Djilas has written of
the Party leadership that "no one denied the tradition and vital meaning of religion and of
the divine service for the people, or their benefit for the Partisans."38 Thus Zecevic, in his
38
Milovan Djilas, Wartime, p. 201.
37
report in Bihac cited earlier, insisted that the clergy must be free to go about their duties,
and that Church property must be protected. Throughout the war much was made of the
fact that churches continued to operate and religious festivals were celebrated in
Partisan-held territory. The Partisan press, in October 1941, quoted a parish priest who
greeted liberation by the Partisans, asserting that no obstacles had been put in his
way.39 Much attention was paid to the celebration of Christmas. 40 Mladen Ivekovic, a
Right in the middle of the war, in the centre of the first Partisan state, the new authorities
wanted to show that it did not enter their heads to behave in a sectarian or leftist manner
towards religious feelings. That was not, of course, any kind of momentary or tactical
concession to Catholicism or Clericalism, but the principled position that the National
Liberation Movement had adopted towards religion in general. Religious rites were
performed in the churches and mosques freely and without hindrance. 41
Of course, the real importance of the celebration of Christmas appears in the first
sentence. It was about making an impression. As to the assertion that this was not a
mere tactical move, the clue as to what this really meant is in the last sentence.
Religious freedom meant that religious rites could be performed in the churches. The full
range of other activities which the Church was accustomed to being involved in, in the
social sphere of the life of the people, was not to be included in this religious freedom.
The granting of religious freedom was strictly limited, and the motivation for it was
political, to gain acceptance among the people, who would otherwise be fearful of
"atheistic Communism."
Zecevic was rather more forthright about the real importance of allowing Christmas
to be celebrated without hindrance in Bihac. He, together with Ivan Ribar, the President
of AVNOJ, and some other "comrades" attended the Catholic Christmas Midnight Mass,
choosing a church whose priest was reckoned to be more "progressive" than the other
Catholic priests. He explained the reason for such efforts to make a good impression on
Even Tito made his contribution to the Christmas spirit. In a speech to the Fourth
(Krajiska) Division on 7 January 1943 (the Orthodox Christmas) he noted that they were
celebrating Christmas in better circumstances than the previous year, and foretold that
they would celebrate the next Christmas in yet better conditions, freely, on their own
soil. 43 This observance of religious feasts continued throughout the war. For example, a
Croatian Partisan newspaper from the coastal, Primorje region, Primorski Vjesnik,
appeared in April 1944 with the words "Happy Easter" printed across the face of the front
Battalion sent Vladimir Nazor, a renowned poet and figurehead leader of the Croatian
Partisans' political movement, ZAVNOH (the Territorial Anti-Fascist Council for the
National Liberation of Croatia), greetings for the "People's holiday of Christmas and New
Year."45 In addition, the Partisans often took pains to see to it that the religious needs of
the population were satisfied. On one feast of the Virgin Mary they brought the parish
priest from the parish of Brstanovo, in the diocese of Split, to Postinje to celebrate Mass,
Near the end of the war, Evelyn Waugh, one of the British liaison officers with the
Partisans, sent a lengthy report on the Catholic Church in the Partisan-controlled areas
42Vlada Zecevic, "Poverenje naroda" in Bihacka Republika, 4/9/42-29/1/43, Book 1, Zbornik clanaka, (Bihac,
1965), pp. 228-229.
45 Hrvatski Drzavni Arhiv (hereafter HDA), Arhiv Hrvatskog Institute za Povijest, Zagreb (hereafter HIP),
ZAVNOH Predsjednistvo, Kut 17, NV-17/1963.
of the country to the Foreign Office. In it, he described how the traditional feast of St.
The Bishop of Kotor, who was also Apostolic-Vicar of Dubrovnik, was persuaded to
preside, in spite of the recent killing of fourteen priests in Dubrovnik. Waugh's report
revealed the dual policy of the Partisans towards the Church. On the one hand this
episode showed their desire to maintain the appearance of tolerance towards religion,
while their attitude towards members of the clergy whom they perceived as enemies was
harsh. Waugh adds that hopes for improved relations between the Church and the
Partisans were quickly dashed, as the day after the festivities fifteen theology students
as well as people of other faiths, was the decision to appoint chaplains to Partisan units.
An order of 23 June 1942, signed by Tito as Army Supreme Commander, decreed the
They would be identified by the wearing of a cross (or a half-moon in the case of
Moslems) on their uniform, and would also wear the five-pointed star, the distinguishing
badge of the Partisans, on their cap. Their duties would be to keep records of fallen
Partisans, to popularize the National Liberation Struggle and the Partisan units among
the people in the regions through which they passed, and to minister to all the religious
needs of the people, upon demand and without pay. A supplement giving detailed
Several priests supported the Partisans and helped them, and a few actually joined
them. Such priests were put to good use by the Communist leadership, as they had
great propaganda value. This was the real purpose of the involvement of priests in the
47 Report on the Catholic Church in Yugoslavia by Evelyn Waugh, up to 1 March, 1945 (hereafter Waugh
report). PRO, FO371/48910, R5927.
movement. As the decree itself implied, the key gain to be had from involving clergymen
in the Partisan movement was the appearance that the Partisans respected the Church.
It was very useful to have a few pliable priests who could reassure the people that the
position of the Church in the emerging new state was assured. The main point was not
that they should minister to the spiritual needs of the Partisan soldiers, although they did
came from the mouth of a clergyman. They were the best possible weapon for
countering the warnings from the Ustasha authorities and from some among the bishops
that the Partisans were led by atheistic Communists committed to the destruction of the
Church.
In addition to the use that pro-Partisan clergy were put to, another way in which the
clergy could be enlisted into the task of reassuring the population as to the Partisans'
attitude towards the Church and the clergy, was through the holding of meetings of
clergy, and the issuing of declarations by them. The advantage of these was that a larger
number of clergy, many of whom were at best lukewarm towards the Partisans, could be
Zecevic began organizing priests' conferences during the period of the Partisans'
stay in Bihac in late 1942. He described the purpose of a meeting of the Serbian
Orthodox clergy in Srpska Jasenica on 15 November 1942 thus: "The aim of the meeting
was that the priests should be more actively included in the movement, thus
considerably broadening the base of the uprising."49 The declaration of the meeting
called upon the Serbian people and clergy and all patriotic and freedom-loving people
and clergy of other faiths to join the "holy national liberation struggle." It commented
favourably on the position of the Orthodox Church in Russia, and noted how priests,
following the victorious Partisan units, had been able to renew the Church life of the
Serbian people, and had never been freer in carrying out their priestly duties. 50 This
piece clearly reveals the Partisan strategy, to present the position of the churches and
the clergy in the areas under their control in the best possible light, and to appeal to the
At about the same time, Zecevic also held two conferences for the Islamic and
Catholic clergy, one in Bihac and one in Cazin, at which three Catholic priests were
I explained our position towards religious faiths and officials, and called upon them
sincerely and honestly to join the national liberation struggle, and regularly to explain to the
people the need for the armed unity of the Serbs, Croats and Moslems in the struggle
against the occupiers, the Ustashas and the Chetniks. 51
relations with the Church was through the formation of the Religious Affairs
Commissions. Among the plans for the formation of a proto-government in Bihac, which
were shelved following objections from Moscow, was a proposal that one of the
during the period in Bihac in late 1942. As we have already seen, Zecevic wrote a report
on behalf of the Religious Section on 26 December 1942.53 It is not clear that this section
functioned after the Partisans retreat from Bihac in early January 1943. Throughout
much of 1943 the priority of the Partisans was the desperate struggle to survive in the
face of efforts by the Germans and their allies to wipe them out. Purely political
considerations regained their prominence only in the second half of the year, and it
seems that the Religious Section was quietly forgotten for a time.
50lzvori za istoriju SKH. Series A, part 2, Dokumenti centralnih organa KPJ, NOR i revolucija, 1941-1945
(hereafter Dokumenti centralnih organa), Book 8, pp. 686-689.
51 Report, signed by Zecevic, of the religious section of the Executive Committee of AVNOJ, dated 26
December, 1942, in Nesovic, Stvaranje nove Jugoslavije, pp. 150-151.
52 Petesic, p. 34.
By the end of the year, however, the formation of a Religious Commission was back
on the agenda. At the first session of NKOJ (the new government established by the
second session of AVNOJ in Jajce in November 1943) and the Presidency of AVNOJ on
3 December 1943, Tito's proposal that a Religious Commission should be founded under
the Presidency of AVNOJ was adopted.54 On this model the various territorial liberation
1944.
Thus the Communist leadership hoped not only to avoid antagonizing the clergy and
to gain their passive acceptance of Partisan rule, but where possible to encourage the
active involvement of members of the clergy in the movement. They made strenuous
efforts in this direction among both the Croat and the Slovene clergy, encountering
severe obstacles in both cases. As described earlier, the conditions under which both the
Communists and the Catholic Church operated in Slovenia and the Croat-inhabited lands
of Croatia and Bosnia during the war were very different. The approach of the
Communists to the achievement of their goals, and the degree of their success, in these
54
Petesic, p. 43.
43
Chapter Two
Partisans had to deal not only with widespread suspicion or hostility towards
Communism, but with the fact that the proclamation of an independent Croatian state
was widely popular. Disillusion with the Ustasha regime quickly set in, and it was the
HSS that the KPH identified as its most dangerous longer-term rival. It was against the
HSS and Macek that it focused its attacks for most of he war. However, the KPH did not
ignore the potential threat from the Catholic Church. Recognizing the prestige of the
Church, the Communists' priority was to keep it well away from the political sphere.
For the sake of context, this chapter begins by discussing the responses of the
Catholic Church and clergy to Ustasha rule. It then goes on to describe how the KPH
applied the popular front policy in Croatia. The policy of the KPH towards the Catholic
Church broadly followed its approach to its political rivals in the HSS. Aiming to isolate
enemies, it sought to co-opt pliable figures willing to contribute to the Partisan cause.
This chapter describes the functions to which the Partisans put compliant members of
the clergy. It goes on to show that the Communists were unable to throw off their
suspicion of the Church, and that relations with the clergy on the ground were frequently
The NDH presented particular dilemmas to the Catholic Church, as the Ustasha
the Church a special place in the state. However, these proffered advantages had to be
set against the brutality of the Ustasha regime and the risks inherent in being too closely
Stepinac greeted the proclamation of the NDH with an exultant and immoderate
circular on 28 April 1941, whose tone was indicative of the heady nationalism of the time,
which the Archbishop and much of the Croatian clergy shared, and of the close
To Stepinac it seemed especially fortuitous that the advent of the new Croatian state
came at the time of the celebrations to mark the thirteen-hundredth anniversary of the
link between Croatia and the Holy See. This appeared to be further evidence of the
working of Divine Providence. 2 Two days after the leading Ustasha, Slavko Kvatemik,
had proclaimed the NDH, and before the Yugoslav armed forces had capitulated,
Stepinac paid him a visit, and on 16 May 1941 he visited Pavelic, who had arrived in
Zagreb the previous day. Other bishops also publicly welcomed the formation of the
NDH, including Archbishop Saric of Sarajevo, Bonefacic of Split, Pusic of Hvar, Srebrnic
Stepinac also took steps to try to facilitate the recognition of the NDH by the Holy
See, sending his recommendation to the Vatican to that effect via an official of the
nunciature in Belgrade, who passed through Zagreb on his way to Rome. He pointed out
to Pavelic that the Holy See had not received an official approach regarding recognition.
However, his efforts were to no avail, and in a letter of 11 July, 1941, the Vatican
Secretary of State, Maglione, explained that the Holy See would follow its normal
practice of not recognizing border changes in wartime. The Holy See sent a
Viktor Novak, Magnum Crimen: pola vijeka klerikalizma u Hrvatskoj, (2nd edition, Belgrade, 1986), p. 550.
representative to the episcopate in the NDH, rather than to the Government, which
However, Stepinac's initial exultation at the formation of the NDH was soon replaced
by disappointment. The surrender of much of the Dalmatian coast to Italy, a condition for
Axis support of the Ustasha takeover, dampened the spirits of most Croats, and Stepinac
was reportedly devastated. 5 Reports of Ustasha outrages against the Serb population
soon reached Zagreb, and Stepinac protested immediately upon hearing of a massacre
in Glina on 14 May, appealing that steps be taken to ensure that such occurrences would
not be repeated. 6 In a series of letters to the Ustasha Minister Artukovic and to Pavelic
during the spring and summer of 1941, Stepinac complained about the harshness of
Catholicism. 7 The tone of these protests has caused criticism, as it appears that Stepinac
was mainly concerned for people who had converted to Catholicism or who had "Aryan
characteristics."
Also during the summer of 1941, Stepinac clashed with the Ustasha authorities over
decree simplifying the procedure for conversions that had been inherited from the
Austro-Hungarian Empire.8 In fact the motivation behind this was clearly to assimilate
part of the Serb community in the NDH as Croats, as was made explicit by the Ustasha
Minister Mile Budak in a speech on 22 June 1941, in which he stated that one third of the
Serbs in the NDH would be expelled, a third exterminated, and the remaining third
4Citing entries in the diary of the Archdiocese. Tajni dokumenti o odnosima Vatikana i ustaske "NDH"
(Zagreb, 1952), pp. 31-37; and Jure Kristo, Katolicka Crkva i Nezavisna Drzava Hrvatska, 1941. -1945.
(Zagreb, 1998), p. 142.
5Stella Alexander, Church and State in Yugoslavia since 1945 (Cambridge, 1979), p. 20.
6 HDA, Rukopisna ostavstina Dra. Iva Politea, predmet: Stepinac Dr., kut. 55 (hereafter Politeo), doc. 408.
8Stella Alexander, The Triple Myth: A Life of Archbishop Alojzije Stepinac (New York, 1987), p. 75.
46
converted to Catholicism. 9 Conversions were carried out under threat, and indeed,
conversion was in some cases not sufficient to save the hapless Serb peasants. In a
circular of 15 May 1941, in articles in the Catholic weekly paper Katolicki List of 3 June
and 11 June, and in a letter by Auxiliary Bishop Lach on 16 July, Stepinac made it clear
that the methods being used by the authorities were unacceptable, that genuine
conversion can only be on the basis of free-will, and that the process of conversion must
be in the hands of the ecclesiastical authorities, without interference from the State. 10
Following the Bishops' Conference of 17-20 November 1941, Stepinac sent a letter
the hierarchy, and that they could only be valid if carried out according to "principles of
dogma". He also urged that the civil rights of the Orthodox population should be
respected, and that crimes against them or their property, or against Orthodox Church
property should be punished severely. He cited a letter of 18 August 1941 from Bishop
Hercegovina, complaining that such brutality was actually damaging the Catholic
cause. 11
It had taken Stepinac some time to appreciate the scale of what was taking place,
and to realize that his dream of an independent Croatia was going badly wrong. But
during 1942 and 1943 he increasingly criticized the behaviour of the Ustasha regime, his
attacks becoming steadily more pointed and direct. In numerous sermons Stepinac
made clear his opposition to ideologies based on race. 12 He provoked the ire of the
9Hrvatski Narod, 26 June, 1941, cited in Alexander, Church and State, p. 22.
10Carlo Falconi, The Silence of Pius XII (London, 1970), pp. 275-286; Alexander, Church and State, pp. 26-
27.
11 Richard Pattee, The Case of Cardinal Aloysius Stepinac (Milwaukee, 1953) (hereafter Pattee), Doc. Lll, pp.
384-395.
12 For example, in sermons in May 1942 and October 1943. HDA, Politeo, docs. 79 and 84-86.
47
Ustasha regime by such statements. In November 1943, he was publicly attacked by the
Other interventions on behalf of Serb victims of the Ustashas included a protest at the
shootings of Serb hostages shortly after the foundation of the NDH; a protest at the
deportations of Serbs from the Sisak area on 20 June 1941; a protest at the plunder of
Serbs in Crkveni Bok in October 1942. 15 It was, however, always Catholics who were his
seven Slovene priests, who had been expelled by the Germans to Croatia, at the
Ustasha death camp at Jasenovac, describing it as "a crime that cries out for vengeance
from heaven". Jasenovac itself he described as "a shameful stain on the honour of the
behaviour of Ivo Guberina, a priest under his jurisdiction, he wrote to him in March 1943
informing him that he was barred from priestly functions on account of his behaviour,
which had been "contrary to his priestly calling, and to the scandal of the faithful."17
towards their regime. The Papal delegate in Zagreb, Abbot Ramiro Marcone, was
approached by Pavelic with a request that Stepinac be withdrawn. 18 There were even
15 lncluded in a memo of October 1946 from the Archbishop's palace in Zagreb to Stepinac's defence
lawyers, Ivo Politeo and Matko Katicic, listing facts and documents in defence of Stepinac, HDA, Politeo,
doc. 238.
18 lncluded in a memo of October 1946 from the Archbishop's palace in Zagreb to Stepinac's defence
lawyers, Ivo Politeo and Matko Katicic, listing facts and documents in defence of Stepinac, HDA, Politeo,
48
rumours of plans to arrest or otherwise dispose of him. During a visit to Rome he met the
renowned Croatian sculptor, Ivan Mestrovic, who reported that, as Stepinac was leaving,
a messenger from the Jesuit General warned him of a plot against his life. Stepinac
replied fatalistically that "either the Nazis will kill me now, or the Communists later."19
Stepinac's disillusion with the Ustashas was so great that, according to one source,
found that secret Serb and Jewish organizations in Zagreb regarded Stepinac highly. In
a series of interviews with Stepinac, Rapotec found that he was receptive to the idea of a
at once told him who he was and that he represented the Yugoslav Govemment-in-exile.
Stepinac declared that he was very pleased that a Yugoslav Government emissary had
come to see him, he assisted Rapotec in obtaining documents, and he promised to help
in setting up a channel for funds for Serb refugees from the NDH. As to his relations with
the Ustasha regime, he asserted that these were merely formal, that he could not break
with the regime, as then he would not be able to help anyone: "I could have withdrawn
demonstratively, and gone into a monastery, and after the war I would have emerged to
enjoy a martyr's reputation, but in so doing I would not have improved things, and would
actually have made them worse for those who are in need of help."20
However, although by 1943 Stepinac's relations with the Ustashas were very bad,
some members of the Catholic clergy were deeply compromised by their support for, and
even participation in, the activities of the Ustashas. Rapotec, while exonerating Stepinac,
stated that the Catholic Church had played a sad role in the NDH, especially in regions
of mixed population: "On it falls the dreadful responsibility for one of the greatest shames
doc. 236.
19 lvan Mestrovic, Uspomene na politicke ljude i dogadjaje (Zagreb, 1993), pp. 334-335.
20Stevan K. Pavlowitch, Unconventional Perceptions of Yugoslavia, 1940-1945 (New York, 1985), pp. 79-99.
49
In particular, the clergy have been accused of complicity in the forced conversions of
out conversions, the clergy have been accused of supporting the spiritual climate in
which Ustasha terror was perpetrated. 22 Certainly the clergy included enthusiastic
supporters of the Ustashas, including a number who were Ustasha functionaries, such
as Fr. Bozidar Bralo in Sarajevo, Fr. Petar Berkovic in Knin, Fr. Ilija Tomas near Capljina
The most notorious of the Ustasha priests, Fr. Vjekoslav Filipovic, a Bosnian
Franciscan from near Banja Luka, actually participated in massacres of Serbs. In 1941,
he helped the Ustashas in his area by identifying the Serb inhabitants, who were then
slaughtered. Under the name Miroslav Majstorovic he later served in Jasenovac, where
he is reported personally to have carried out murders. 24 In his report to the Foreign
Office, Waugh, an ardent Catholic, intended to defend the Church in Croatia, but
Ustashas included Fr. Jole Bujanovic and a Fr. Brkljanic.25 The Bosnian Franciscans in
general have often been singled out for particular criticism, as relatively large numbers of
them supported the Ustasha cause. Waugh was severe in his criticism:-
For some time the Croat Franciscans had caused misgivings at Rome by their
independence and narrow patriotism. They are mainly recruited from the least cultured
part of the population, and there is abundant evidence that several wholly unworthy men
were attracted to the order by the security and comparative ease which it offered. Many of
these were sent to Italy for training. Their novitiate was in the neighbourhood of Pavelic's
headquarters at Sienna, where Ustasha agents made contact with them and imbued them
with Pavelic's ideas. They, in turn, on returning to their country, passed on his ideas ...
21 /b/d. p. 90.
22Branko Petranovic, "Aktivnost rimokatolickog klera protiv sredjivanja prilika u Jugoslaviji (Mart 1945 -
Septembar 1946)", in Istorija XX veka: zbornik radova (Belgrade, 1963), p. 264.
23 Fikreta Jelic-Butic, Ustase i Nezavisna Drzava Hrvatska, 1941-1945 (2nd edition, Zagreb, 1978), pp. 218-
219.
The Ustasha supporters among the clergy went up to the highest level. Archbishop Saric
of Sarajevo openly adhered to them, having been in contact with Pavelic since before the
war. 26 Macek noted that many Catholic clergy "adopted the bloody Ustasha party with
lamentable eagerness."27
The numbers of clergy who supported the Ustashas should not be exaggerated,
however. Among the secular clergy (those who did not belong to a religious order) there
were very few. The Archbishop's palace estimated that of roughly five hundred priests in
the Archdiocese, about fifteen were Ustashas and thirty were sympathizers. The noted
Ustasha priest Vilim Cecelja said that the Ustashas blamed Stepinac's prohibition on
political activities by the clergy for this.28 That is not to say that many of the clergy did not
welcome the formation of the NDH. But that is something entirely different from being a
supporter of the Ustashas or of their genocidal policies. Waugh stressed that "the great
majority welcomed the new regime and attempted to work loyally under it, even when
disillusioned, performing their parochial duties and taking no active part in politics."29
As to the forced conversions, it is clear that many priests who carried them out did
so in order to save the lives of those they were converting. Rapotec spoke warmly of
Bishop Aksamovic of Djakovo, who had frankly told Serbs in his diocese that if they
wished to join the Catholic Church in order to save their lives they could do so. 30 There
are a number of documented examples of clergy who carried out conversions solely to
save lives. A Slovene priest, Fr. Franc Zuzek, in Glina, where one of the most notorious
massacres of the war had taken place immediately after the Ustasha takeover, carried
26Dokumenti o protunarodnom radu i zlocinima jednog dijela katolickog klera (Zagreb, 1946), pp. 27-28.
28 lncluded in a memo of October 1946 from the Archbishop's palace in Zagreb to Stepinac's defence
lawyers, Ivo Politeo and Matko Katicic, listing facts and documents in defence of Stepinac, HDA, Politeo,
doc. 236.
30 Pavlowitch, Unconventional Perceptions, p. 99; Others were less charitable in their estimation of
Aksamovic's motives in this appeal than Rapotec. Dokumenti o protunarodnom radu i zlocinima jednog dijela
katolickog klera, p. 55.
51
out conversions only so that people could obtain the necessary documents. Serbs
confirmed that he had explained to them that after the war they could choose whichever
faith they wished. On one occasion he obtained the release of a group of Serbs by
asserting that they were Catholics. 31 Fr. Zlatko Sivric, a Bosnian Franciscan, gave Serbs
false papers stating that they had been converted. 32 Another parish priest, Fr. Dragutin
Stimac, who spoke out publicly against Ustasha persecution of the Serbs, and was
hanged by the Germans in 1943, carried out conversions as the best way to help the
Serbs in his area, but he considered those conversions to be only formal. 33 Emilio Pallua,
a prominent Catholic layman who after the war became secretary of the Croatian
Religious Affairs Commission, was strongly against the conversions, but, he said,
Church people, such as the Zagreb canons, Baksic, Slamic, Loncar and Boric, regarded
it as a matter of sparing lives, and merely a formal conversion. Even Rittig, who was to
be the most prominent Catholic priest to join the Partisan movement, carried out formal
conversions in 1941, before his flight from Zagreb to Italian-occupied Dalmatia. Pallua
was one of those whom Rittig mandated to instruct the converts, but he regarded the
conversions as being invalid and just "on paper", though he did not consider it wise to tell
So the negative picture of the role of the Catholic clergy in Croatia and Bosnia
during the Second World War is not so simple. One can, however, point to certain
some of the clergy that they had behaved correctly over the matter of conversions. Many
saw the chance to gain converts as a great opportunity for Catholicism and for Croatia,
and, while disapproving of the use of force, grasped that opportunity. The approach to
the issue of conversions varied among the bishops. Like Stepinac, Bishop Mileta of
32ibid. p. 113.
33//)/d. p. 193.
34 Emilio Pallua, Uspomene. Transcripts of conversations with his wife, Sonia Bicanic (hereafter Pallua).
52
Sibenik interpreted the rules governing conversions strictly. In response to requests from
his priests, Mileta refused to give a general approval for conversions. Each case was to
be considered individually and each candidate must show that they were making a fully
informed, free choice. The Ordinaria was to be kept informed. Mileta ordered caution, as
it was clear that Orthodox believers were not converting out of conviction, but "because
they are forced, and because they are afraid in the present conditions." 35 In contrast, in
1942, Bishop Simrak, the Greek Catholic Bishop of Krizevci, urged his clergy to take the
from the Archbishop's See, a report regarding the large number of converts in the area.
He claimed that as far as he knew no one had been forced to change their faith, and that
the priests in the area were acting in accordance with the directives of the Church
hierarchy. 37 Yet it must have been clear to anyone that the surge of conversions
following the onset of Ustasha terror against the Serb population was no coincidence. Fr.
Andjelko Gregic from Borovo wrote in December 1942 to the Serbian Orthodox priest of
the town, who had fled to Serbia, and with whom he had clearly been on friendly terms
before the war. He lamented all that had happened, acknowledging that large numbers
of Serbs had converted out of fear for their lives, and that the rules laid down by the
episcopate had not been followed. Yet even he suggested that there was a positive
Even Stepinac's attitude reveals this ambiguity. Committed as he was to the idea of
an independent Croatian State he paid too little attention to the hand that had offered the
chance for that State to become a reality, and tended, much of the time, to be overly
35Jure Kristo, "Vjerski prijelazi u NDH - primjer Sibenske biskupije." (in Casop/s za suvremenu povijest, no. 2,
1997), pp. 239-246.
36 Herbert Butler, The Sub-Prefect should have held his tongue, and other Essays (London, 1990), pp. 277-
278, quoting the diocesan magazine.
indulgent towards the Ustasha authorities, even when it was clear what a savage reign
they had inflicted on the areas under their control. The post-war French ambassador in
Belgrade, Jean Payart, described Stepinac's position towards the Ustashas as equivocal,
in that despite his clear anti-Nazi position, "profound spirituality and elevation of thought",
he could not but be sensible to the opportunities offered by a regime which professed to
be very Catholic and which offered collaboration.39 Clearly the wartime situation was full
Appalled by the excesses of the Ustashas, Stepinac's attitude towards them was
nevertheless ambiguous. Stella Alexander wrote that "the ambiguity of his relations with
the Ustasha authorities arose out of the fact that they were Croats and Catholics,
members of his flock; they could be appealed to, the erring ones could be reproved and
chastised."40 There was no such ambiguity, however, in his attitude towards the
Communists, in spite of the great efforts on their part to reach an accommodation with
The policy of the KPH towards the Catholic Church needs to be seen in the context
of its general approach in seeking to attract Croats to its cause. KPH leader Andrija
Hebrang sought to persuade Croats that the KPH alone was fighting for Croat national
aspirations, Croatian sovereignty and statehood, in union with the other Yugoslav
peoples. Following the policy of the Popular Front, he aimed to create as broad a front as
However, the Party in Croatia initially had a problem, in that its main areas of
operation were in the Krajina regions, with their very substantial Serb population, and
39 Letter of 21 September, 1946. French Foreign Ministry Archives, Paris, Serie: Europe, 1944-
1960/Yougoslavie (hereafter FM, Paris), vol. 30, docs. 238-241.
most of the Partisan fighters were Serbs. This was not surprising. In 1941, the Partisan
leadership found itself having to react to and try to direct and gain control of what was in
fact a largely spontaneous uprising in the Serb-inhabited areas of the country. In the
spring of 1942, Tito took the decision to move the centre of Partisan activities up to
north-west Bosnia and the neighbouring regions of Lika, Banija and Kordun in Croatia
precisely because in these areas there was a ready-made rebellion by the Serb
population waiting for someone to offer it leadership. To Croats, the Partisan movement
often seemed like a Serb organization, and indeed, for the first two years of the war this
impression had considerable foundation. Thus the Croatian Party leadership had a
problem in trying convincingly to persuade the Croat population that they stood for
Croatian national aspirations when in fact most of their fighters were Serbs.42 The
problem of how to attract Croats to the movement was Hebrang's preoccupation during
his time as leader of the Croatian Party. He had to strike a fine balance, so as to avoid
alienating the Serb Partisans, upon whom the movement depended for much of the war,
In seeking to persuade Croats that the KPH alone could be trusted to struggle for
attacked the HSS for betraying the Croatian cause by its passivity in the face of the Axis
occupation and its links with the Yugoslav (which the KPH characterized as "Great
Serbian") Government in exile.44 Attempts were made during the summer of 1941 to
reach an understanding with the HSS leadership. This was during the brief period
between the attack on the Soviet Union and the Partisans' falling out with Mihailovic,
when attempts were made to build a genuine Popular Front. However, Macek persisted
in rejecting any cooperation with the Communists, continuing his passive attitude
*ibid. p. 135.
44;,
55
towards the occupation.45 For Hebrang, Macek represented, because of the devotion of
most of the Croatian population to him, the main threat to the Communists' hopes of
taking power in Croatia after the war, and he was therefore subjected to frequent
ferocious attacks in the Croatian Partisan press for his supposed treachery to the Croat
cause. 46
At the same time Hebrang sought, with his emphasis on Croatian national concerns,
to attract ordinary HSS supporters and members, trying to build up a mass following
among the Croatian population, hitherto loyal to Macek and the HSS, and to entice more
Croats to the Partisan movement. In the summer of 1943, ZAVNOH was formed as a
proto-government for Croatia, which would include non-Communists, and would be the
promising to respect private property and not to introduce major economic or social
reforms, a major theme was to stress a claimed continuity between the ideology of the
radical peasantist leader and predecessor of Macek as leader of the HSS, Stjepan
Radic, and the ideas of the KPH, claiming that Macek was not only a traitor to Croatia
Efforts were also made to co-opt pliable leading figures from the HSS to the Partisan
movement, hoping thus to neutralize the HSS as an effective competitor. Also in 1943,
an HSS organization within ZAVNOH was set up under the leadership of Magovac. This
HSS organization, the Executive Committee of the HSS, was to operate strictly within the
cells at the local level, being expected to operate solely through ZAVNOH, something
that would lead to great friction between Hebrang and Magovac. The revived Slobodni
DO/T? was to be another mouthpiece for the Partisans, laying stress on the alleged
The themes that underlay Hebrang's policy towards the HSS also determined the
attitude of the KPH leadership to the Catholic Church. In summary, these were to isolate
leaders who were perceived as a real or potential threat to the Communist takeover of
aspirations, and avoiding adopting positions or acting in a way that would antagonize
them; and to co-opt pliable leading figures to the Partisan movement, thus neutralizing
them as potential competitors, and drawing support away from other figures who were
Hebrang had identified the HSS, and Macek personally, as the Communists' main
competitor, and had concentrated the fire of the Party on him. Indeed, the HSS was
seriously weakened during the war, although this had more to do with its own passivity
and general ineffectiveness than with the attacks of the Communists upon it. The fear of
the Croatian Communists was that, with the HSS weakened, the Catholic Church might
start to assume the role of the defender of the Croatian national interest in its place. It
was seen as a potentially formidable opponent.49 Their policy was therefore born of
caution. They recognized the enormous authority that the Church traditionally wielded in
Croatia, and that its strength and prestige had not been damaged during the war. So
attacks on the Church hierarchy were avoided, as were encroachments into spheres
which the Church regarded as its own, in the social life of the country, together with any
political changes that the Church might regard as a challenge to its role. The priority was
to avoid offending the Church, and to leave it to its sphere, well away from the political
scene.
As to the lower clergy, in accordance with Tito's directive that priests should be
Zecevic, in a speech in November 1942, referred to six religious officers, apart from
himself, who were attached to particular brigades. 50 They were, however, all Orthodox
chaplains, and it appears that, in spite of Tito's decree, Catholic priests were not
appointed to Croat Partisan units. It seems that, at least in 1942, this was not for lack of
will. Zecevic, in the same speech cited above, made the following appeal to the Catholic
clergy:-
The ranks of the "NOV i POJ" (National Liberation Army and Partisan Units of Yugoslavia)
are full of Croats, and from day to day those ranks are becoming more and more solid and
firm. Therefore it is the duty of the Catholic clergy, at the last minute, to be with its people
and to join the Partisans, so that tomorrow they won't be asked where were they today, as
the Croatian people will cast traitorous priests away from itself. Catholic Priests! The
Croatian people is calling you - come to your people in the Partisan units.
The leading Croatian Communist and head of the first post-war Croatian Government,
Vladimir Bakaric, has confirmed that there were no chaplains in Croat units. 51 Evelyn
Waugh noted in his report that, from what he had seen, the statement that there were
official chaplains in the Partisan Army was incorrect. He had seen no evidence of them in
the areas of Croatia where he had been, although he had heard that there were
chaplains in Slavonia. 52 Rittig noted that a Slovene priest, Fr. Janko Petan, was chaplain
to the 40th Army division, in Slavonia. 53 However, given Bakaric's testimony, it seems
50Speech by Zecevic to a conference of Serbian Orthodox priests in Srpska Jasenica, 15 November, 1942.
Bihacka Republika, 4/9/1942-29/1/1943, Book 2, Zbornik dokumenata, (Bihac, 1965), pp. 439-442.
51 A letter from Bakaric of 7 October, 1976, cited by Vladimir Dedijer in "Istorijska gradja iz
narodnooslobodilacke borbe, 1941-1945. O Prosvjetiteljskoj ulozi Svetoga Save", in Sava Nemanjic - Sveti
Sava, istorija ipredanje (Belgrade, 1979), p. 470.
53Document regarding Petan's wartime record, dated 26 July, 1945. HDA, Komisija za vjerska pitanja
izvrsnog vijeca NRH (hereafter VK), kut. 3, doc. 302.
58
Nevertheless, although it seems that priests were not appointed to Croat Partisan
units on a formal basis, many of them did fulfil a variety of functions within the Partisan
movement. They carried out funerals and even weddings of Partisans in liberated
territory, and there were instances of them presiding over the taking of oaths by Partisan
units. 54 A photograph has survived of Fr. Kuzma Jedreticfrom Istria blessing the national
flag, complete with the five-pointed star in the centre, for a Partisan unit. 55
Foremost among the Croatian Partisan clergy was Rittig. Rittig had been prominent
in Croatian Church and political life since before the First World War. In his youth he had
for a time been secretary to Bishop Strossmayer of Djakovo, from whom he inherited his
commitment to the idea of Yugoslav unity. He entered the Croatian Sabor (diet) in 1908,
and was a Zagreb town councillor from 1917. Also in 1917, he travelled to Switzerland to
establish contact with the Yugoslav Committee, a group of mainly Croatian emigres who
had spent the war lobbying among the western powers for Yugoslav union. In 1918, he
was a member of the National Council in Zagreb, which brought the Yugoslav-inhabited
territories of the Habsburg Monarchy into union with Serbia, and in 1919 was a delegate
1934, he was one of the signatories of a memorandum to Prince Paul regarding Croat
alienation from the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. As parish priest of St. Mark's church in
Zagreb from 1917, he used the wealth of the parish to build and restore numerous other
churches. He was also a noted champion of the Glagolitic (Old Slavonic) liturgy. 56
upon the Ustasha takeover in 1941. In an effort to save himself he initially spoke in
favour of the NDH, but that did not help him. At the end of June 1941 one of Pavelic's
secretaries warned the Archbishop's palace of Rittig's impending arrest. Stepinac passed
56For biographical details about Rittig see Petesic, pp. 130-136, and Danica Pucki Kalendar (Zagreb, 1962),
pp. 51-53.
59
the warning on to Rittig, who immediately left for Italian-occupied Dalmatia. While he was
there he came into contact with local Partisan sympathizers. He was also an old friend of
Ivan Ribar, the President of AVNOJ. Following the Italian capitulation in the summer of
1943 he once again had to flee, and so he joined the Croatian Partisan leadership in
Otocac.57
Rittig had come to see the Partisans as the only group capable of reuniting the
country and putting an end to the fratricidal strife that had torn it apart since 1941. He
between the Catholic clergy and the Partisans.58 He also hoped to perform a more
exalted role as intermediary between the Church authorities and the Partisan leadership,
to interpret each side to the other and thus help set relations between the Church and
the new regime on a sound footing. 59 He was a busy propagandist, devoting a great deal
of energy to the writing of speeches and sermons, articles for the Partisan press,
pamphlets, and numerous tracts and letters to the clergy. His major concern was for the
clergy, as he tried to deflect them from what he saw as the errant path that many of them
had been following, and to persuade them to "stand with the people", which meant, of
There were two major strands in the propaganda that he directed at the clergy on
behalf of the Partisan Movement. One was to reassure them that the Church would not
would be respected, that the Church would be able to go about its work, in such fields as
religious education, without hindrance, that private property and the sanctity of the family
57 Pallua
58 Petesic, p. 145.
59 ln a note under the title "Da li je narodni oslobodilacki pokret u stvari komunizam?" ("Is the National
Liberation Movement in fact Communism?") in HDA, Rukopisna ostavstina Svetozara Ritiga (sic) (1874-
1961) (hereafter Rittig), kut. 2, 2/2, Rittig referred to his duty to remove all causes of difficulty between the
Partisan movement and the Church.
60
would be guaranteed. The other strand was to attack those clergy who had supported
the Ustasha regime, or who had acted passively, trying to stand aside from the fray,
appealing to them that they must declare themselves for the Liberation Movement
Rittig insisted that the Partisan struggle was justified according to Christian
principles. He refuted the argument of some clergymen, based on the notion that
according to the laws of war there is a duty of obedience to an occupying power, that the
authorities. The idea that the Ustasha regime might constitute a legal government he
dismissed out of hand, concluding that "in the name of Christian morality we categorically
protest against the deluded view of those priests who wish to connect the Christian
conscience with obedience to a pro-Nazi authority."60 Rittig also asserted that the Church
had nothing to fear from the Partisans, as "built into the foundations of the new
Yugoslavia are the natural rights of man, the freedom to use national names, freedom of
conscience and religion, the principle of private property and freedom of personal
He claimed that the Communists had changed, and that there was therefore nothing
Together with attempts to reassure the clergy, Rittig set out in stark terms the other side
of his appeal to the clergy, with strongly worded attacks on those priests who had
With the greatest pain in our soul we must recognize that among the young clergy were
some Ustasha cut-throats, to the scandal of the whole world and the shame of their calling.
60HDA, Rittig, kut. 2, 2/2. Piece entitled "Braco svecenici!" ("Brother Priests!").
61 HDA, Rittig, kut. 2, 2/2. Letter entitled "Katolickim svecenicima Hrvatske" ("To the Catholic Priests of
Croatia").
61
What man of human feelings is not shocked by that? A man can err, and a priest can err,
but a cut-throat priest is a criminal above criminals. A cut-throat priest is a new Judas
Iscariot. The Church will give the people full satisfaction for the great scandals of these
cut-throats. Already many of them have been cast out of their orders and off the holy altar,
but the Ustasha authorities have not allowed their names to be published. When blessed
peace comes to the world and to our country, the first duty of the Church will be to
undertake a severe and thorough cleansing of these Ustasha cut-throats from the ranks of
the clergy. 62
In this extract it can be seen that, alongside the bitter attack on the Ustasha priests, was
an attempt to distance the Church itself from them. The Church itself repudiated those
priests. The main point for Rittig was that the Church must unambiguously condemn
such priests, and thus protect itself from any insinuation that the Church itself was
Partisans. In this piece, as in many others, Rittig set alongside "traitorous priests" the
example of the priests who had "remained faithful to their people." Thus, although he had
fully committed himself to the Partisan cause, Rittig sought to defend the position of the
Church. It was a one-sided position, as his idea of what it meant to foster good relations
between the Communists and the Catholic clergy meant primarily to persuade the latter
This need for the clergy to take a definite stand in the conflict was a theme that Rittig
repeatedly returned to. In another piece, in which he attacked deluded priests who fell for
the notion that Pavelic was a good Christian, and lamented the fact that some priests
had actually participated in Ustasha crimes, he wrote to his "brother priests, you who are
remaining silent, don't you feel within yourselves the need to speak out and remove from
yourselves and from your Church the doubt that you have been accomplices ...?"63
In making these appeals to the clergy to speak out, Rittig frequently tried to impart a
sense of urgency. The Partisans would be arriving soon, and there was a need for haste
in coming out in favour of them. During 1944, he stressed that the victory of the
Partisans was assured, that a new world was being built, and that the old times would
not return. He assured the clergy that they had no reason to fear religious persecution,
63 HDA, Rittig, kut. 2, 2/2. Piece entitled "Braco svecenici!" ("Brother Priests!").
62
that the Partisans would only move against those who had sided with the occupiers or
with the Ustashas, but they could not afford to stand aside from the fray. 64 In order to
protect themselves and their Church they must make their position clear. This was in line
with the general position of the Partisans in the closing months of the war. No longer
prepared to tolerate any ambiguity, they deliberately polarized the situation in Croatia,
presenting a straight choice. Any who did not support them would be counted among
their enemies and would reap the consequences. Thus behind Rittig's warnings of the
need for the clergy to declare themselves for the Partisans was a clearly implied threat.
With this dual approach, reassurances on the one hand and attacks on members of
the clergy who opposed the Partisans on the other, Rittig constantly harked back to his
own pet themes, the age old dreams of Panslavism and of Yugoslav unification, which
were now being realized. He laid great stress on his romantic notions of the traditions of
the popular Croatian clergy, standing with their people in times of strife, whose example
those clergy who supported the Partisans were now following. And he lamented the
failure of the majority of the Croatian clergy to live up to these noble traditions.65
To a detached reader, his style seems verbose, his romanticism, with its lofty ideals,
naive, unconvincing and tiresome. Yet it appears that he was popular among the
Partisans. The published collections of speeches from the sessions of ZAVNOH record
that his speeches were received enthusiastically. Evelyn Waugh confirmed this, saying
that at Partisan headquarters "he is treated with notable respect", and that "he appears
at all official functions, where his speeches are popular."66 Clearly his message was in
tune with the mood among the Partisans. He was, however, a controversial figure. Many
Catholics were scandalized by his identification with the Communist cause. Indeed, it
does seem that he was in reality manipulated by them as a useful and obliging tool in
64 HDA, Rittig, kut. 2, 2/2. A collection of hand-written drafts under the title "Manifest svecenicima"
("Manifesto to the Clergy").
65 For example, his speech to the second session of ZAVNOH, in Drugo zasjedanje ZAVNOH-a (12-15
Listopada 1943), stenografski zapisnici, pp. 17-18.
their endeavours to neutralize the opposition of the Catholic Church. The respect and
affection they afforded him has to be seen in the light of the Popular Front policy to gain
the adherence of pliable figures from organizations, especially the HSS and the Catholic
Church in Croatia, which were perceived as potential threats. Rittig genuinely sought, in
his own way, to defend the Church. Waugh, despite his concern for Rittig's politics,
concluded that he was a sincere priest, and described him as a "valuable link between
[the Partisans] and decency."67 However, his naivety is clear from another passage of
Waugh's report-
The writer of this report spoke to Mgr. Ritoig (sic.) on many occasions; Mgr. Ritoig
refrained from criticism of his superior, the Archbishop of Zagreb, whose position he is said
by his enemies to covet, praised the moral virtues of the Partisans, and expressed the
belief that they would be won back to Christianity under a liberal democratic regime. It was
the opinion of the writer that Mgr. Ritoig was a devout and honest man; it should be added
that this is not the universal opinion.
There were other clergymen who supported the Partisans, but considerable regional
variations need to be taken into account. In certain areas of Croatia there was an
aimed at the overthrow of the pre-war order. This was especially so in Istria, where the
Croat population had endured two decades of Italian domination and persecution, and
saw in the Partisans a nationalist organization struggling for their right to join Croatia and
Yugoslavia. One Istrian priest, Fr. Zvonimir Brumnic, recalled that "Almost all the priests
in Istria (the Croats) actively helped the NOP (National Liberation Movement)."68
September 1943, but even before then the KPH had moved its organization into Istria. A
complication was that officially the Italian Communists had jurisdiction in Istria, but by the
summer of 1942, urged on by the Comintern, Croatian Partisan units had been formed
there. In March 1943, the KPH established a Provincial Party Leadership in Istria, and,
following the foundation of ZAVNOH, a District National Liberation Committee was also
67
The Diaries of Evelyn Waugh, edited by Michael Davie (London, 1976), pp. 582 and 586.
68Petesic, p. 88.
64
formed. As the Italian Communists in Istria were inactive, by the time of the Italian
capitulation Istria had only one active underground organization, and that was the KPH.
Following the capitulation was a brief period during which the Partisans took over
throughout most of the Julian region, but during September and October the Germans
The first contacts between the Partisans and the Istrian clergy also began before the
capitulation. Fr. Josip Stifanic, described as being among the clergy who were closest to
the Partisans in Istria, 70 was contacted by the Partisans in 1942. He provided them with
intelligence, hosted meetings in his flat, and served as a link between different organs of
the Partisan movement, which his freedom of movement enabled him to do. 71
Following the Italian capitulation, the District National Liberation Committee for Istria
proclaimed, on 13 September 1943, Istria's inclusion in Croatia and Yugoslavia, and this
Committee was up-graded to the status of a Regional Committee. Among the members
of the Committee was Stifanic. Present at the meeting were two other priests, Brumnic
and Fr. Josip Pavlisic. In October 1943, Stifanic was elected a member of ZAVNOH. 73
Clearly the participation of the clergy was something which the Istrian Partisans valued.
Leading Croatian Communist Jakov Blazevic (who would later be the prosecutor in the
trial of Stepinac) noted his appreciation of the positive attitude of the clergy in Istria
69 Bogdan C. Novak, Trieste. 1941-1954: the Ethnic, Political and Ideological Struggle (Chicago, 1970), pp.
66-71.
70 Minutes of a meeting of the Regional National Liberation Committee for Istria, 20-22 March, 1944. HIP,
ZAVNOH Predsjednistvo, kut. 11, NV-11/1035.
73
Petesic, pp. 84-87.
65
national consciousness and resistance, and, at the moment of the capitulation of Italy, one
can say that they completely cooperated with us. 74
In an internal Party document (in other words one that was intended as a realistic
appraisal of the situation, and which did not have any propaganda purpose), the Agitprop
of the Regional Committee of the KPH for Istria also expressed its appreciation of the
helpful role that the clergy could play: "The Croat masses are almost completely for our
movement, especially now, when it seems that the priests too have decided openly to
In fact, there was some suspicion on the part of the Istrian Partisans towards some
members of the clergy, by no means all of whom were willing uncritically to fall in with the
Partisan line. Brumnic himself was frequently regarded with a good deal of doubt and
dissatisfaction. However, in general the Partisans in Istria enjoyed much better relations
with the Croatian clergy than in other regions, and the numbers of priests who actively
supported them were unusually high there. Once the initial impact of the Germans'
imposition of their authority had worn off, many of the clergy, some of whom had been
A part of the clergy in Istria which, following the German offensive, naturally distanced
itself from the MOP and began to pursue a policy of peace, is increasingly seeking
contacts with the NOP. Whereas they previously said that they couldnt collaborate with
the National Liberation organizations, nowadays they would rather adhere to them. 76
It was reported that one Fr. Herak was invited to join a National Liberation Committee or
ZAVNOH, but that he declined, saying that it would be better that he should work on the
ground, outside the organization, maintaining that he would thus best be able to serve
the movement. It was affirmed that "Herak helps and works for the NOP. He even
promotes the NOP in the Church."77 Fr. Ferdo Senk was said to have cooperated with
74 Report by Blazevic on the situation in Istria, dated 1 December, 1943. HIP, ZAVNOH Predsjednistvo, kut.
7, NV-7/504.
75 Report of 12 October, 1944. HIP, Fond CK KPH (Central Committee of the Communist Party of Croatia),
KP-42-VI/3677.
76 Minutes of a meeting of the Regional National Liberation Committee for Istria, 18-20 February, 1944. HIP,
ZAVNOH Predsjednistvo, kut. 9, NV-9/731.
"ibid.
66
the Partisans for a long time. It was noted that the clergy allegedly did not think highly of
him, but the Partisans thought he was "very good." A Fr. Barkovic also promised to help
the Partisans and it was said that he was "close to the people, and he cooperates with
It seems that the Partisans were also quite successful in attracting priests from other
coastal regions. Rittig received a letter from a member of the Regional National
Liberation Committee for Hrvatsko Primorje (the coastal region south of Istria), which
stated that every district committee in the region contained priests, and that the clergy
were supporting the Partisans. He cited the examples of Fr. Mate Mogus (who, as we
shall see, later fell foul of the Communists) and Fr. Andrija Racki, adding that he could
not name all of the priests involved in the Liberation Movement, as those in occupied
territories would suffer as a result. 79 Ciril Petesic lists several other priests from Hrvatsko
Primorje who he identified as having cooperated with the Partisans, some of them as
members of the regional committee of the JNOF (the front organization), others by
There were also priests in Dalmatia who cooperated with the Partisans. As in Istria,
this is in large part explicable by the fact that much of Dalmatia came under Italian
occupation until the capitulation in 1943, so that here too the Partisans could appeal to
some as a patriotic movement. Again, Petesic has identified several who supported the
Partisans. One particularly important service that members of the clergy were able to
render was in allowing their houses, and sometimes even churches, to be used as
shelters for Partisans and as stores for provisions and weapons. In this they took
advantage of the fact that priests were usually regarded as above suspicion, as in
78ibid.
79Petesic, p. 146.
*ibid. p. 147.
67
hidden by priests on the Dalmatian islands of Brae and Hvar. The Italians frequently felt it
necessary to arrest members of the clergy for disseminating propaganda against them.
For example, in August 1941 Fr. Ante Ostric was prohibited by them from leaving his
parish or gathering the people. He had contacts with the Partisans, and accepted leaflets
from them. In 1943 he became President of the Local National Liberation Committee. Fr.
Franc Fister cooperated with the Partisans from the Spring of 1942, and was later
Another priest from the coastal region who actively supported the Partisans was a
Fr. Salacan, who, Petesic records approvingly, joined the Local National Liberation
Committee for the Dubrovnik Littoral in the summer of 1944, and was elected to the
behaviour was provided by Evelyn Waugh, who described how Salacan "deserted his
parish in Kotor without the authority of his bishop, joined the Partisans, served them as a
propaganda officer, and has been rewarded with a place on the governing committee of
Dubrovnik and the directorship of the Dubrovnik wireless station."82 In the example of
Salacan, we again see the value that the Partisans attached to members of the clergy for
propaganda.
became infamous for their support of the Ustashas on account of the active participation
of some of their number in some of the worst Ustasha atrocities. However, this image of
the Bosnian Franciscans does not give the full picture. Not all of them supported the
Ustashas, and some of them sided with the Partisans. Early in the war, the superiors of a
members of the order regarding the new situation. These were shortly afterwards
reaffirmed by the head of the order in Rome. They were not to join the Ustashas or to
participate in the persecution or expulsion of Serbs or Jews; they must have no part in
forced conversions, and were not to take over any Orthodox parish, even if offered to
them by a bishop; they must protest about any abuses by the authorities. 83 Any who
Among the Bosnian Franciscans who supported the Partisans, the most notable was
Fr. Josip Markusic from the Franciscan house in Jajce. The diary of the house in Jajce
includes entries by Markusic, which reveal, among other things, his disappointment at
the proclamation of the NDH and his disgust at the massacres of Serbs. By November
1943, by which time he had had a good deal of contact with the Partisans, he had come
to see the Communists as the force that was most likely to lead the country out of the
morass. He was invited to attend the meeting of AVNOJ in Jajce in November 1943, and
Petesic also lists several Bosnian Franciscans whom he has identified as being well-
disposed towards the Partisans. Fr. Bono Ostojic was a delegate to the AVNOJ meeting
at Jajce, and also at the third session of ZAVNOBiH (the Bosnian equivalent of
ZAVNOH) in April 1945. Fr. Miroslav Milosevic was a member of the first illegal National
Liberation Committee in Vares.86 A letter from a unit of Partisans to Fr. Srecko Franjkic
demonstrates that he was the President of his local National Liberation Committee. The
letter laid out his duties and told him that he should keep in contact with its members,
even though he would not personally be able to attend meetings. In another letter, the
Partisans informed him of their concerns regarding the attitude of the local Croat
population towards them. They called him to a meeting, at which Moslem clergymen
83 Petesic, pp. 200-201, citing Marko Orsolic, Angazirani svecenik, simpozij u povodu 100. obljetnice rodjena
fra Josipa Markusica, pp. 158-184.
84 Petesic, p. 265.
were also present, at which he was told that men must be mobilized and food supplied,
and was warned that attacks upon the Partisan army would not be tolerated. He was told
to pass on this warning to the Croat population, many of whom had fled to the woods, or
It is certainly fair to say that, in general, support for the Ustashas was more
widespread and opposition to the Communists fiercer among the Croat population in
Bosnia, especially in Hercegovina, than was the case in other Croat-inhabited areas of
the country. This was reflected among the Franciscan clergy as well. Relations between
the Partisans and the Catholic clergy in Bosnia were especially fraught, and many of the
most serious cases of Partisan violence against the clergy took place in Bosnia.
However, as the examples cited above demonstrate, in Bosnia too the Communists
welcomed the cooperation of priests who were inclined towards the Partisan cause, and
there too there were some among the clergy who were prepared to fit in with their plans.
Some areas of Croatia saw only very limited Partisan activity until quite near the end
of the war. This was the case in Slavonia and in the Zagorje region around Zagreb.
However, even in such areas, there were priests who actively supported the Partisans.
For example, Fr. Franjo Didovic became a member of the Regional Committee of the
JNOF for Slavonia while Fr. Josip Kockovic was a member of the Regional Committee
for Moslavina. 88
Among the Partisan clergy in Croatia during the war were a number of Slovene
priests who were expelled from the German-occupied areas of Slovenia soon after the
occupation. Fr. Janko Petan has already been mentioned. He was deported to Croatia in
1941, and during the next two years he served in four different parishes. He became
known as an opponent of the Germans and of the Ustashas, and, accused of helping the
Partisans, finally joined them in September 1943. He continued to carry out his priestly
duties in Partisan-held territory.89 He too carried out propaganda work on behalf of the
Partisans. Together with another Slovene priest, Fr. Ivo Javornik, he produced a
pamphlet, which was published by the Regional National Liberation Committee for
Slavonia, entitled The Destruction of the Church of the Mother of God in Vocin, which
was ruined in a German bombardment in May 1944. In it, the two Slovene priests called
upon the clergy and all Croatian Catholics to join the National Liberation Struggle, and
thus "to defend religious freedom and Catholic sacred objects in our dear Croatian
motherland."90
Some priests paid with their lives for supporting the Partisans. Fr. Karlo Culum, from
Dalmatia, helped the Partisans from an early stage, and encouraged people to join them.
In May 1943 the Ustashas killed him. 91 Petesic lists several others. These included a
priest near Karlovac who was shot after he read out news from the Partisan radio station
in church. In January 1943, Fr. Karlo Ivancic was shot after Mijo Stepinac (brother of
Archbishop Stepinac, and a member of his local National Liberation Committee) took
refuge in his house. Fr. Dragutin Jesih was shot near Sisak after the Ustashas
So it is clear that there were priests throughout the Croat-inhabited areas of the
country, in Croatia and in Bosnia, who actively supported, cooperated with and, in a few
cases, even joined the Partisans. They were put to good use, providing shelter for
Partisans, hosting meetings and hiding arms and provisions. They served on the
committees that formed the government apparatus set up by the Partisans during the
war. Their most valuable service, however, was as instruments of propaganda. Merely
by being seen to support the Partisans they performed a great service. By speaking and
89
Petesic, pp. 115-118.
writing in favour of the Partisans they leant credibility to claims that no one had anything
One should not exaggerate their significance, however. Petesic, in his book,
collected a great deal of evidence concerning the anti-Axis, anti-Ustasha and pro-
Partisan activities of many members of the clergy, but he goes too far. A mistake which
sentiments with support for the Partisans. Clearly it did not follow that a priest who
helped the Serbs or Jews in his area, or who was against the Ustashas, was a follower
of the Partisans. Yet Petesic repeatedly cites the examples of such priests, giving no
evidence of their having ever been pro-Partisan, but making no distinction between them
and the small number of priests who did actively support the Partisans.
As shall be shown, the Partisans mostly regarded the clergy with suspicion, and
often with hostility. The contribution to the cause of those priests who supported the
Partisans was much appreciated, and attempts to appeal to the clergy, and thus to
reassure the Catholic sentiments of the Croatian population, were given a high priority,
but the Communists had no illusions as to the numbers of priests who favoured them.
They knew that the best they could hope for from most of the clergy was grudging
acceptance, and that those priests who were altogether hostile to them were more
Following the example of Zecevic in Bihac in late 1942, further efforts were made to
organize priests' meetings. Thus, in November 1943, three priests, Frano Antunovic,
Jurica Mestrovic and Ambroz Miletic, invited priests in the region of Biograd, in Dalmatia,
"Priest and Patriot", and reported that the three priests had, on 11 November, formed an
initiative committee to organize the meeting. The invitation expressed the hope that "the
comrade priests will grasp the importance of this conference, participate in it, and
Croatian popular Roman Catholic clergy." They signed themselves with a "comradely,
72
brotherly greeting", and in a postscript suggested that any "comrade-priest" who was
prevented by good reasons from coming could send another person to represent him,
and declare his position in a letter. In this letter one can see the pressure being placed
upon the clergy at that time to declare themselves openly and unambiguously. No
excuses were acceptable.93 The meeting was held, and a statement was issued in the
name of the clergy of the Biograd area, stressing the duty of the clergy to serve God and
people, to stick with the people "for better, for worse", and to join in the struggle for the
freedom and equality of the Croat and Serb peoples in a free Croatia. 94
Clearly the meeting in Filip-Jakov was a staged event, for pure propaganda
purposes. The priests who attended were not really active participants in any meaningful
sense. Another declaration whose sole purpose was its propaganda value was issued a
month later in the nearby town of Nin. Titled "A Declaration of the Catholic clergy and
teachers of Northern Dalmatia", and dated 29 December 1943, the statement purported
to be in the name of twelve priests and eight teachers. It stressed their loyalty to the
National Liberation Movement, and expressed joy at Croatia's entry into the federal
freedom. It condemned traitors, and appealed to those in the service of the occupiers,
Ustashas and Chetniks, and who had not committed crimes, to join the liberation
struggle.95 A newspaper article in the Partisan press attacked "dirty speculators", among
them some "reactionary" priests, and contrasted them with the "honest clergy of northern
Dalmatia", who had issued a declaration that "they would, together with their people,
struggle until the final destruction of odious fascism, and the settling of accounts with all
those who had worked to the harm of the national liberation struggle."96
However, the length that the Communists were prepared to go to to enlist the clergy
can be seen from the admission by Dusan Brkic, of the Secretariat of the Central
Committee of the KPH, that the priests and teachers had not actually signed the
declaration, but had in fact issued a leaflet against the Partisans and in favour of the
Ustashas. He noted that that area was under the very strong influence of the Ustashas
on account of the "increase in activity on the part of the clergy." Clearly the reality was
with the Partisans. Asserting that they wanted to clear up their relations with the Church
hierarchy and the rest of the clergy, they explained that "the place of the whole clergy is
with the people, just as it is with the Church." They appealed to the bishops and to their
"brother priests" not to look upon them as politicians, but first of all as priests and
spiritual fathers who "lead our lives in the people and with the people."98
Some priests' meetings did, however, contain more than a propaganda element,
giving priests a chance to discuss their concerns, and addressing the question of
relations between the clergy and the Partisan authorities. On 21 February 1945, a
meeting of priests from Gorski Kotar was held under the auspices of the Religious Affairs
impossible, they elected Fr. Antun Brnad, with the prior agreement of their bishop, to join
the Religious Commission. His sole task would be to represent the interests of the
Church with the "People's Authorities" until it became possible for the authorities to come
into contact with the legitimate representatives of the Catholic Church. Also, so as to
improve their connections with the "People's Authorities", they chose Fr. Ivan Butorac to
be a religious delegate to the JNOF for Gorski Kotar. They finished by affirming that they
97Report by Brkic to the CK KPH, 1 July, 1944. Dokumenti centralnih organa, Book 19, p. 130.
stood "with the people in its struggle for freedom, and with today's People's Authorities."
Telegrammes with greetings were sent to Tito and to ZAVNOH, and one to their bishop,
Buric of Sen], in which they expressed their "obedience and filial devotion." Clearly this
statement reflected the real concerns that would have been troubling most ordinary
clergy much more honestly than the propaganda pieces cited earlier. Their first purpose
was to represent their interests and those of their Church with the authorities, rather than
to act as a mouthpiece of the Partisans to the rest of the clergy. Of crucial importance to
An even clearer example of a priests' meeting being used as a forum for the clergy
to air their concerns was a joint meeting of Catholic and Serbian Orthodox clergy, which
issued a statement on 30 October 1944. It started with the usual declaration of loyalty to
the new authorities, and condemnation of "criminal traitors." But the bulk of the
declaration was devoted to a defence of the views and interests of the churches, their
clergy and faithful. It stated that "we are witnesses to the fact that the great majority of
the people desires that the Church into which they were born remain their teacher and
sacred mother, as it has been until now." Priests who had committed crimes should pay
individually, like all others, but they appealed that the authorities should take into account
canon law when judging priests. The Church authorities should be kept informed, so that
actions against priests would be seen as being in the spirit of human and divine justice,
and not out of hatred. They expressed hopes for fruitful cooperation between the
churches and the authorities, and stated that representatives of the churches in the
Commission for Religious Affairs should freely represent the needs of their Church and
believers.
religion and private property, and expressed confidence that there was no intention to
weaken the role of the churches in the national life by abolishing religious education in
schools and church weddings. They were convinced that the authorities genuinely
sought the cooperation of the clergy, even if they did not always agree with them. While
acknowledging that intolerant people existed among the clergy, they insisted that that
was never approved of. They asked that all should have equal rights, and recommended
that the clergy trust the Partisan leaders, as this was the best way to defend the interests
Church meetings were also sometimes held for the ordinary faithful. The Agitprop
section of the District National Liberation Committee for Banija reported in August 1944
that, for the Catholic population, three such meetings had been held. It noted with
satisfaction that political meetings were better attended than these church ones, "even if
we did also use the church ones for propaganda purposes." At the meetings
"representatives of the JNOF spoke, and denounced dilettantish groups."101 Clearly such
So it appears that during the war priests' meetings in Partisan held territory did not
have to be simply propaganda exercises. There were limits of course. The meetings
cited above professed their loyalty to the emerging new authorities, and they did not
criticize them. What they did contain were appeals. Both the statement issued by the
priests of Gorski Kotar and the statement of the Catholic and Serbian Orthodox clergy
stressed that the first duty of the priests who served on the Religious Commission was to
their Church and clergy. Both revealed the concern of the clergy to maintain correct
relations with their bishops. They were not going to be used as pawns in any attempt to
divide the junior clergy from the hierarchy. So on the one hand we see how the
Communists manipulated meetings of the clergy for their propaganda aims, while on the
other the possibility remained, at that time, for the clergy to resist attempts to manipulate
Indeed, the pro-Partisan clergy often attempted to defend the Church. As we have
seen, Rittig sought to defend the Church by distancing it from the activities of members
of the clergy who supported the Ustashas or opposed the Partisans. As we shall see, in
the very last phase of the war the attitude of the Partisan leadership towards the Church
sharpened. No doubt worried by this development, Rittig appears to have toned down his
attacks on members of the clergy who had supported the Ustashas, minimizing their
numbers, and to have given greater priority to attempts to defend the Church. 102 In
December 1944, he reacted sharply to an article attacking Bishop Srebmic which had
the Roman Catholic Church and the Serbian Orthodox Church with the NOP in Croatia"
to the Presidency of ZAVNOH, dated 19 October 1944. It insisted that the churches
could not be held responsible for the sins of some individuals, and appealed that the
separation of Church and State, and stressed that the cooperation of the churches was
January 1944 the Regional National Liberation Committee for Dalmatia reported that it
had formed a Religious Section. 105 At a session of the Executive Committee of ZAVNOH
Commission under ZAVNOH, together with one Orthodox priest from Croatia and one
lawyer. 106 The decision to form the Commission was taken at the third session of the
102 HDA, Rittig, kut. 2, 2/2. In a later draft of a letter to the clergy, "Braco
svecinici" ("Brother priests"), he
altered a passage attacking priests who supported Pavelic so as to emphasize that there were very few of
them.
ZAVNOH Presidency, on 25 August 1944. 107 The tasks of the Commission were to
ensure the free and unhindered carrying on of religious rites by all of the religious
communities in Croatia; to examine and fix, in all areas of public and private life, the
relations between the church and state authorities; and to investigate the collaborationist
activities of a part of the clergy, and their incitement of hatred between Croats and
Serbs. 108 It is interesting to note that the freedom of religion is explicitly identified as
being the freedom to perform religious rites, a far narrower interpretation of its function
In fact the Religious Commission was not at all active before the end of the war.
Rittig noted that Petan joined it in October 1944. 109 However, at the fifth session of the
ZAVNOH Presidency, on 29 January 1945, it was noted that they needed to "activate the
work of the Religious Commission", which should "investigate and take care of the needs
and wishes of believers of the various faiths on the ground."110 Petesic notes that it met
very little, mostly advising the ZAVNOH Presidency on matters touching relations with
the Church, such as religious education and divorce. 111 Of course, Rittig was very active.
But it would seem that for the most part he was operating independently, and that the
Commission was not constituted formally until after the end of the war and the
We have already seen how Rittig repeatedly stressed that such things as religious
education and the sanctity of the family would not be jeopardized by a Partisan victory.
The tone of the declaration by the Catholic and Serbian Orthodox clergy cited earlier,
including its reference to religious education and church weddings, suggests that they
7 ZAVNOH, Zbornik dokumenata, 1944, III (od 10. svibnja do 31. prosinca) (Zagreb, 1975), p. 260.
108According to a draft decision on the founding of the Commission. HIP, ZAVNOH Predsjednistvo, kut. 11,
NV-11/1012.
n ZAVNOH, Zbornik dokumenata, 1945, IV (od 1. sijecnja do 25 srpnja) (Zagreb, 1985), p. 110.
had their doubts as to the intentions of the authorities, and were worried. That was in
October 1944, but for most of the war it is true that the Communists did avoid measures
A report on the work of the Religious Section of AVNOJ in December 1942 stated
that religious schools should be allowed to continue to work, and that while their position
interference in questions of faith and education. 112 A second report said that "religious
education for Catholics, Moslems and Orthodox, without hindrance, is approved. Also
approved is that pupils of religious education may attend religious schools in their free
time, if such schools exist and can function independently." 113 Here was a major
at all was a concession, and that religious schools could operate independently under
Communist rule showed the extent of their desire to appease the Church. The only
stipulation this report made was that religious education "must be taught in the spirit of
religious tolerance, religious discipline, and with due respect for other religions."
The sensitivity of the issue, and the determination of the Church to defend its
position, was shown in a letter from Bishop Josip Srebrnic of Krk to the President of
AVNOJ, Ivan Ribar, of 7 October 1943. Referring to the promises of AVNOJ that it would
not touch the position of the Church, he complained that religious education was no
longer a compulsory subject in schools in areas under Partisan control, and that priests
were being required to submit the programme of religious education for approval by the
authorities. This, he asserted, did touch the position of the Church, as religious education
had always been compulsory, and the programme had only ever been required to be
submitted to the competent Church authority. He asked that steps be taken to remedy
the situation, so that the Church could retain what naturally and by tradition belonged to
112
Nesovic, Stvaranje nove Jugoslavije, pp. 165-166.
it. 114 Srebrnic received a reply from the ZAVNOH Secretariat, dated 10 November 1943,
which insisted that the children of parents who did not wish them to receive religious
education must not be forced to do so. Officials responsible for education must be able
Bitter experience in this difficult national liberation struggle has shown that we must
exercise full control over all those persons who come into contact with our youth, because,
as you probably know, among our Catholic clergy are found very many national enemies,
who have exploited their position as priests and teachers of religious education. 115
In this exchange of letters can be seen the crux of the issue, as the battle between the
very different visions of society that the Church and the Communists represented was
being fought out over the minds of the young in the classroom. Nevertheless, the letter
from ZAVNOH assured Srebmic that no hindrance would be placed in the way of
Another issue with which the Church was very much concerned, and concerning
which the Communists recognized the need for sensitivity for the duration of the war,
was that of marriage and divorce. Again, these were matters which, according to the
principle of separation of Church and State, the Communists would expect to lie in the
domain of the latter. Divorces were, on occasion, granted by the Partisan authorities. 116
The difficulties inherent in the Communists' position on this were expressed very clearly
in a letter by a lawyer, Ante Mandic, to the ZAVNOH Presidency of 20 April 1944. He had
been appointed to a kind of supreme court under ZAVNOH, and was not satisfied, as he
For example, the question of divorce! The word is: "do not in any way touch the rights of
the Church!" And on the other hand the right to divorce is one of the basic principles of the
NOP!
We have hundreds and hundreds of Catholic couples who have split up, whose
marriages are, according to Canon Law, indissoluble, and who cannot therefore be
divorced, as marriage is a holy sacrament. Should one, according to the new principle of
the NOP, dissolve these marriages, and thus provoke a severe conflict with the Catholic
116For example, a decision of the local National Liberation Committee for a village near Bihac to grant a
divorce to a Moslem couple. Bihacka Republika, Book 2, p. 473.
80
Church, or give priority to Canon Law, at the expense of the proclaimed principle regarding
divorce, and thus deny to Catholic Croats that right which is given to an Orthodox Serb?
Later on in 1944, ZAVNOH was to go much further in its attempts to appease the
that there should be no civil marriage, but only church marriages, and that divorce should
be prohibited. As we shall see, this was to be the cause of a sharp conflict between the
Croatian and central, Yugoslav Party leaderships. But the policy pursued by ZAVNOH
and the Croatian Communist leadership is plain: to avoid conflict with the Catholic
Church at all costs, steering clear of any measures that might provoke the bishops into
open opposition.
Following the Italian capitulation, the Partisans had the chance to come into direct
contact with some of the bishops in the coastal areas. We have already seen that Bishop
Srebrnic of Krk wrote to Ivan Ribar, and received a reply from ZAVNOH, concerning
religious education in the autumn of 1943. Ribar also visited Srebrnic twice in September
of the same year, once in the company of Zecevic, and once with Rittig. 118 Zecevic said
afterwards that he was saddened by his meeting with Srebrnic. He knew that he was
against the Partisans, and found him cold and reserved. 119 Ribar and Rittig tried to
assure Srebrnic that the emerging "People's Authorities" had no intention of touching the
historical position of the Catholic Church, and that they sought good relations with the
Church authorities. They asked him if he could release any of his priests to act as
These meetings were also used for propaganda purposes. The Partisan press
reported that a contributor (probably Rittig) had visited Srebrnic, who had said that "the
people of our islands have looked upon the National Liberation Movement from the
118Petesic, p. 137.
120Rittig, "Odgovor krckom biskupu, na njegovu osudu oslobodilackog pokreta" ("Reply to the Bishop of Krk,
to his condemnation of the Liberation Movement"), HIP, ZAVNOH Predsjednistvo, kut. 41, NV-41/4639.
81
beginning as a struggle for freedom from foreign oppression. Therefore that movement
has won over the mass of the people..."121 Given that Srebmic was, as we shall see later,
to be one of harshest critics of the Partisans among the bishops, it is highly unlikely that
he actually said those words. Zecevic's report of his reserve towards them is much more
likely to have reflected the real tone of the meetings. This was most likely one of Rittig's
Partisans, probably exaggerating things that Srebrnic actually did say, and filling in some
gaps himself.
At about the same time, the Partisans came into contact with Bishop Miho Pusic of
Committees of Hvar, at which Pusic and some other priests were guests. Later some
members of the committees returned the visit. Pusic thanked them for their concern for
the clergy, particularly in providing food, and he promised the loyalty of the clergy,
especially in case that the Partisans might have to withdraw from Hvar. 122 Also at this
In the summer of 1944, the Partisans again came into contact with Pusic. On 15
August of that year, he wrote to ZAVNOH, complaining about the fact that religious
education was not compulsory in schools, and expressing his disappointment that the
National Liberation Movement was not living up to its promises that it was based on
democratic principles and would respect freedom of conscience and religious belief. He
received a reply from the President of ZAVNOH, Vladimir Nazor, dated 4 September
1944, promising to raise the matter with the ZAVNOH Presidency, assuring him that the
local educational authorities must be acting in accordance with the decisions of AVNOJ
121 Primorski Borac, 3 October, 1943; Naprijed, 29 September, 1943, as recorded in Petesic, p. 137.
122 Drago Gizdic, Dalmacija 1943 (1962), pp. 807 and 884.
and ZAVNOH, and asking him to acquaint himself with the whole spirit of the liberation
In spite of Pusic's obvious misgivings regarding the Partisans, Rittig seems to have
identified him as a bishop who was relatively well-disposed towards the movement, or at
least relatively non-hostile. He decided to send copies of the declaration of the Catholic
and Serbian Orthodox clergy to all the Catholic bishops, together with a commentary on
it, in which he appealed to the Church authorities to work to find an accommodation with
the emerging state authorities. He warned that priests would not be exempt from the
punishment of those who were responsible for crimes. They should accept that as the
hard truth, and be assured that no innocent priests would be harmed. The Catholic
Church and clergy must give satisfaction for the crimes of Catholics against innocent
Serbs. They should prepare material for the defence of the clergy, but should not allow
the position of the Church and innocent clergy to be determined "by the fate and
appalling errors of some fanatical Church officials." The onus for establishing good
relations between Church and State he clearly saw as lying with the Church, which
should do all that was necessary to avoid aggravating the internal situation, not grieving
for the past, but cooperating in the building of the future. 125
He selected Pusic, the first bishop whose diocese had been liberated, for a special
role, writing him a letter in which he complimented him on his "worthy" behaviour during
the war. He recommended the contents of the declaration of the clergy, and appealed for
his help in efforts to establish a modus vivendi between the Church and the emerging
new authorities. He referred to the visit of the leading Slovene Christian Socialist and
member of NKOJ, Edvard Kocbek, to the Holy See, and to the formation of the religious
commissions as causes for optimism that relations between the Church and State
authorities could be put on a sound footing, and as evidence of the good will of the
124HIP, ZAVNOH Predsjednistvo, kut. 13, NV-13/1387, and kut. 38, NV-38/4138.
Partisan leadership. Finally he asked Pusic to sign the declaration or, if he did not
consider that appropriate, at least to translate it and to send it to the Holy See, with
comments on his hopes for good relations between the Holy See and the new Yugoslav
authorities. 126 It seems that this letter was sent to Pusic (in spite of a note on it saying
that it was not), as a letter from Rittig of 30 November 1944, probably to Vladimir
Bakaric, who was by that time secretary of the KPH, noted that it had been sent, and that
copies of the letter to all the bishops had been sent to Pusic and to the Archbishop's See
in Zagreb. 127
Rittig also managed to keep up his links with people in Zagreb, through indirect
means, and these included contacts with the Archbishop's See. After the war it emerged
that he had been in regular contact with Canon Nikola Boric. Boric noted that he had
kept Rittig informed about the situation in Zagreb, and these contacts were confirmed by
Canon Pavao Loncar, who had also been aware of them. 128 It was through Boric that
Rittig sent the letter to all the bishops and the declaration of the Catholic and Serbian
addressed as "Toncek", that he had passed the letter to the "Spiritual See." He also
noted that he was trying to acquire some salt and petrol for him, and asked if he had
been receiving his salary regularly, and also his post, which they forwarded to him. 129
Emilio Pallua noted that he had kept in contact with Rittig through Boric. At the
beginning of 1944, Rittig invited Pallua to come to Partisan-held territory. Pallua declined
on account of his family, but he discussed with Stepinac the implications of the
impending Communist takeover. Stepinac gave Pallua dispensation to make contact with
128 HDA, VK, kut. 1, unsigned letter to Rittig, dated 19 January, 1996, document 10; and a letter from Boric to
Rittig, document 268.
the Communists, with the proviso that he must not become a member of the Party. 130
After the war, Stepinac recalled that the Partisans had made contact with him. In 1943, a
Partisan emissary asked him if he would be Military Vicar for the Partisan forces, as he
had been for the Royal Yugoslav Army. Stepinac replied that he would accept the offer if
The Partisans also made contact of one form or another with a number of other
education, and asked the Holy See to give him jurisdiction in areas of other dioceses
which were under Partisan control, and whose clergy were unable to keep in contact with
their own bishop. 132 In a Lenten pastoral letter of 4 February 1945, Mileta gave thanks for
"our brave fighters", who "with unprecedented self-sacrifice are on the front, defending
and winning freedom for our exhausted people."133 In November 1944, ZAVNOH
corresponded with Bishop Kvirin Klement Bonefacic of Split, regarding the use of the
building of the seminary of his diocese as a Partisan hospital. 134 In the spring of 1944,
Bishop Santin of Trieste, an Italian who would be a bitter opponent of the Communists
and of Yugoslavia, met a Partisan near Pazin, in Istria, who greeted him in a friendly
manner, and invited him to visit a nearby Partisan stronghold. Santin accepted the
invitation, and met a senior Partisan officer who, he said, treated him politely, and
explained that they only killed traitors, and did not destroy churches unless they had
to. 135
Of great importance from the point of view of the clergy was the question of what to
do when it became difficult to maintain contact with their bishop, when they were on the
130Pallua.
132Petesic, p. 149.
134
HIP, ZAVNOH Predsjednistvo, kut. 38, NV-38/4138.
135
'Petesic, pp. 82-83.
85
other side of the front line from him. We have already seen that a meeting of the clergy
of Gorski Kotar in February 1945 elected one of their number to represent the interests
of the Church until it became possible for direct contact to be re-established with their
bishop and how Mileta applied to have jurisdiction over areas of other dioceses under
Partisan control. The Slovene priest, Petan, sought and received the approval of the
Archbishop's See in Zagreb to carry out his priestly functions. 136 Aksamovic gave
jurisdiction to the Partisan priest Fr. Franjo Didovic, who did not leave his parish without
-1-37
permission.
The Partisans' dealings with the bishops were not always happy. On 17 October
1944, Srebrnic issued a circular forbidding his priests any cooperation with the
Partisans:-
It should be clearer than the sun to anyone of good will and sound mind that the Partisan
movement, the so-called movement of national liberation, is, for all practical purposes,
completely dependent upon the Communist Party of Yugoslavia, and that it serves that
party in the implementation of a Communist order among the South Slavs. From that
follows that it is not permitted to any Catholic or believer to participate in or help this
organization in any way. 138
He referred to Divini Redemptoris in support of this stand, and reminded his priests that
three of their number from his diocese had already been killed by the Partisans. He
forbade any connection with the Partisans on the part of his priests, on pain of
suspension. Rittig was much vexed by this public pronouncement against the Partisans.
He noted that it made the Church's position more difficult, and was a crucial factor in
determining the "incorrect attitude" of many of the clergy towards the Partisans. 139 He
also published pieces in defence of the Partisans, refuting Srebrnic's arguments. 140 It
would seem that Srebrnic was particularly compromised by his connections with the
136/6/d. p. 117.
137/6/d. p. 149.
140 Most notably, a piece entitled "Odgovor krckom biskupu, na njegovu osudu oslobodilackog pokreta"
("Reply to the Bishop of Krk, to his condemnation of the Liberation Movement"), HIP, ZAVNOH
Predsjednistvo, kut. 41, NV-41/4639.
86
occupiers, and later with the Ustashas. A report by an Ustasha official, Vladimir Zidovec,
of 21 June 1944, noted that Srebrnic had requested that a permanent garrison be
stationed on Krk, to protect the population from the Partisans. 141 His opposition to the
Partisans was particularly open, but was certainly shared by others among the bishops.
The Croatian Communists were well aware that most of the bishops and clergy
were, despite whatever mask some of them might put up, essentially hostile to the
Partisans. But in their contacts with the Church, in their courting of sympathetic clergy, in
their occasional contacts with members of the hierarchy and in their care to see that
normal Church life continued unhindered in areas under their control, their main
audience was the Catholic Croat population, whom they sought to reassure that they had
In spite of the Popular Front policy and of all the promises of the Communists and
their front organizations (AVNOJ, ZAVNOH etc.) that they had no intention of harming or
hindering the Church, the reality on the ground was frequently very different. The
Communists did not always manage to conceal their deep suspicion of and hostility
towards the Church and the clergy. Apart from that, the frequent occurrences of hostile
activities against them on the part of many members of the clergy did not make relations
easy, and often elicited a sharp response from them. Their courting of Rittig and other
pro-Partisan priests, and the emphasis placed on the positive attitude of part of the
clergy towards them notwithstanding, they had no illusions as to the attitude of most of
Early in the war, following the retreat of the main Partisan body from Uzice, and
before the Popular Front policy had finally and definitely been adopted in the spring of
1942, the "left sectarian" line followed by the Communists meant that they were less
cautious towards the Church than was to be the case later on. Thus, in December 1941,
the Regional Committee of the KPH for Dalmatia reported that they had carried out two
attacks on parish houses, and had "liquidated" a parish priest. They acknowledged that
this did not make a good impression on the Bishop of Split, who, as a result, attacked the
In a report of 27 October 1942 on his observations in the area around Glamoc and
Mrkonjic Grad, in Bosnia, Zecevic pointed out the negative consequences of the hostile
The Krajina comrades struggle against the Church, and have behaved incorrectly towards
the clergy, to the detriment of the national liberation struggle itself. They have not
managed to differentiate between the traitorous activity of nearly all Serbian priests and
the popular religion of the people itself. That generalization has also applied to the Moslem
and Catholic clergy, and as a result the fear of religious officials has been transmitted to
the masses of the simple-minded faithful. That has harmed us a lot, and will harm us
further, because the ignorant people are still exposed to the lies of the enemy. 143
Hostile attitudes towards the clergy, as described here by Zecevic, appear to have been
very common, and priests were frequently regarded with suspicion. In September 1941,
a report from the Regional Committee of the KPH for Dalmatia blamed its failure to win
over the population of the Sinj area on the fact that "the Ustashas and the Sinj priests
have succeeded in convincing the peasants that the Partisans are Serbian Chetniks."144
In April 1942, the Croatian Communist official Anka Berus, in a report on the situation in
Hrvatsko Primorje and Gorski Kotar, bemoaned the fact that the population was inclined
towards the HSS, with its policy of waiting on better times, and were in addition under
"the unusually strong influence of the clergy and the Church."145 Such attitudes could still
be found in the same area near the end of the war. In a report from the District National
Liberation Committee for Gorski Kotar on the situation in December 1944 it was noted
maintaining contacts with non-liberated territory." 146 Meanwhile a report from the
In the towns we have the greatest difficulty with the clergy, which is often the centre of
reaction, and very well connected. In Pozega they wrote a slogan, while in Daruvar they
held a vote as to whether there should be a crucifix in the school or not. In Virovitica, on
the feast of All Saints, they even invited the people to pray for dead Ustashas and
Germans. Many of our comrades rose to their provocations, and engaged in useless
discussions on religion etc. We put a stop to that. 147
Even in Istria, where, as we have seen, relations between the Partisans and the
clergy were relatively good, there was suspicion towards the clergy, including towards
priests with whom the Partisans were cooperating. Bishop Santin claimed that priests
were forced to host meetings, that the Partisans did not trust the clergy, but that they
wanted them to join their movement, and that Istrian priests lived in fear and privation. 148
One priest with whom the Istrian Partisans had a lot of contact was Fr. Zvonimir
Brumnic, who has already been mentioned. In a meeting of the Regional National
Liberation Committee for Istria on 23 January 1944, it was noted that Brumnic had
"promoted a policy of peace in church." He had been given a warning by the Partisans,
to which he replied that those were the instructions from the high Church authorities. A
group of priests headed by him was accused of using "the same words as the occupier."
After being warned about this, Brumnic promised that he would in future act only
according to the directives of the Partisans. 149 At another meeting, in February 1944, two
members of the Regional Committee for Istria reported a meeting they had held with
Brumnic to discuss matters concerning the clergy. It was noted that they had information
that he not only promoted a policy of peace, but that he had read out a German decree
against the Partisans in church. 150 He was also accused of black market activities,
147Report dated 15 December, 1944. HIP, ZAVNOH Predsjednistvo, kut. 17, NV-17/1913.
148 Letters from Santin to the Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal Maglione, cited in Petesic, pp. 81-82.
150.
JMinutes of the meeting. HIP, ZAVNOH Predsjednistvo, kut. 9, NV-9/731.
89
although it seems that he merely distributed food which had been seized from the
Italians, and which the Partisans considered their own, to the inhabitants of a village
which had been burned by the Germans. 151 Brumnic's complicated relations with the
Istrian Partisans would seem to reveal the difficulties experienced by priests in areas
which often changed hands, and in which they were having to deal with different sides in
the conflict. One of the members of the Regional Committee who had met him noted that
Brumnic had explained that "the priests say that they find themselves in a difficult
position these days, as on one side the fascists hate them, while on our side they are
It seems that the Communists were unable to cast off their hostility to the Church,
even though the Party line told them that they should do so. Djilas noted the burning by
the Partisans of Scit Monastery, at Prozor in Bosnia, which had allowed the Ustashas to
use its belfry as a post from which to shoot at the Partisans. He added that "as a rule the
Partisans never touched churches. But they were more than happy that the necessity of
destroying the Ustashi meant burning down a monastery, rather than just a secular
building."153
Instances of violence against members of the clergy by the Partisans were common.
Evelyn Waugh noted a number of cases in his report to the Foreign Office. 154 Often
priests simply disappeared, such as happened to Fr. Ivo Kranje in December 1941, and
to Fr. Ante Cvitanovic during the night of 28 November 1944, after he had been accused
of being an Ustasha informer. 155 Waugh also cited cases of priests who were killed while
going about their parish duties. The parish priest of Vojnic-Gardun was shot outside his
151 Report by Jakov Blazevic on the situation in Istria, dated 1 December, 1943. HIP, ZAVNOH
Predsjednistvo, kut. 7, NV-7/504.
152Minutes of the Regional Committee meeting in February 1944. HIP, ZAVNOH Predsjednistvo, kut 9, NV-
9/731.
154The following examples are taken from Waugh's report, PRO, FO371/48910, R5927.
church in September 1942, and the parish priest of Podgradje was called out to attend a
sick person during a night in August 1942, and was shot on his doorstep. In May 1944,
Fr. Ivan Romac was shot on his way to Mass. Still others were tried by "Peoples' Courts",
and many, especially later on, were tried and executed in secret by OZNA (the secret
police). Priests who were executed were usually described as Ustashas, collaborators or
informers.
In some cases their accusers no doubt had cause, although suspicion towards the
the case of Fr. Petar Perica, a Jesuit from Dubrovnik, against whom there was no
evidence of any political activity, who was shot in November 1944. Upon making
enquiries Waugh found that he had been accused of instigating Ustasha massacres in
accusation a Catholic priest had "no defence except silence." A similar case was that of
Fr. Ante Pavlov, who was accused of betraying someone to the Italians in the
confessional, and was shot by the Partisans. Petesic asserts that Pavlov had previously
cooperated with the Partisans. 156 There were other cases of priests of whom it was
claimed that they had helped the Partisans, but who were later "liquidated". Fr. Ante
Zjajcic was said to have supplied arms to the Partisans, but was later killed as a traitor.
Petesic claims that the parish priest in Svitovac constantly cooperated with the Partisans,
but he was shot after he was accused of directing the Ustashas to some fleeing
Partisans. 157
The difficulties experienced by many priests in coping with the complicated situation
in areas which were not fully under the control of any particular side have already been
alluded to in the case of Istria. Djilas noted the ambiguous position of frontline areas. Of
a visit to Slavonia he wrote that "it was all an unheard of, inconceivable jumble, the kind
156
Petesic, pp. 197-198.
91
that only real life could concoct: by day the Ustashi ruled, and by night the Partisans." 158
In Moslavina the situation seemed even more complex: "Consisting of low, gentle
uplands near Zagreb and other towns, this free territory extended as far as the enemy's
vigilance or our own vanguards permitted. That territory could change at any time, and it
In such situations it was very hard for priests to avoid falling foul of one side or
another. The District National Liberation Committee for Lika reported that a priest who
had earlier helped out in an Ustasha mobilization, was now seeking contact with them,
and guarantees that would enable him to receive the Partisans, so that he would not
have to flee. 160 One can find conflicting testimonies regarding the attitude of several
priests. The Partisans in Hercegovina expressed doubts about Fr. Pasko Baric, but at
other times there were good reports about him. 161 Fr. Mate Mogus, from Hrvatsko
Primorje, who had been praised for his cooperation with the Partisans, was sentenced to
death after the war for having earlier supported the Ustashas. 162
frequently found themselves is provided by the diary of Fr. Ivo Suic, a parish priest in a
village near Zagreb. He came into contact with the Partisans as early as 1941 and 1942.
They often called at his house, usually at night, and usually for food. He also received
visits from Ustasha officers, and he entertained them as well. To questions as to why the
Partisans had not taken him away, he replied that he received them too, as they also had
guns, and there was no one there to protect him from them. He gave money and food to
the Partisans, and in 1943 they sought information from his parish registers. On one
158
Milovan Djilas, Wartime, p. 323.
159/b/d. p. 328.
160 Report of 1 January, 1944. HIP, ZAVNOH Predsjednistvo, kut. 11, NV-11/956.
162Letter of 5 November, 1945 from Rittig to the Supreme Court of Croatia, appealing for clemency. HDA,
VK, kut. 4, doc. 914.
92
occasion, a Partisan asked him about his political views, in reply to which he pointed to a
crucifix. A senior Partisan officer scolded the questioner for asking about politics of
someone who was not concerned in that. He noted that the Partisans did not object to
his saying a midnight Mass for Christmas 1943. In 1944, he managed to excuse himself
from administering the Ustasha oath by saying that he did not wish to intrude upon the
competency of the military chaplain. The Ustashas were suspicious of him after some of
them were killed by the Partisans outside his house, while the house itself was not
attacked, although there were Ustashas inside as well. Following that incident, several of
his parishioners were arrested, and Pavelic himself came to the village. Suic refused to
ring the bells, but he introduced himself to Pavelic, and gave him a tour of the church. He
pleaded with Pavelic for the arrested parishioners, assuring him that they were not
Partisans, although he knew that some of them were. At the end of 1944 and early in
1945, he appealed to the Archbishop's See to intervene to prevent the Ustashas from
Suic was treading a very fine line. The suspicions of the Ustashas regarding his
contacts with the Partisans might have resulted in his being arrested. In the summer of
1944, the Partisans warned him that his arrest by the Ustashas was imminent, and
recommended that he come over to them. On the other hand, in spite of his cooperation
with the Partisans, if he had been required to administer the Ustasha oath, the Partisans
might very well have killed him. Certainly the use of his church tower as a gun
emplacement would have been a good enough reason for a fatal visit by OZNA, even
So the picture of the attitudes of the ordinary clergy during the war was extremely
state, but few were supporters of the Ustasha movement. Mostly they just tried to carry
on with their duties as normally as possible. In some areas, notably among the
163
Petesic, pp. 173-185.
93
Franciscans of Hercegovina, there was much greater support for the Ustashas, while the
strong anti-Communism of the Catholic Church led many to collaborate with any who
opposed the Communists, be they Italians, Germans or Ustashas. On the other hand,
disgust with the savagery of the Ustashas led some into opposition to them, and some of
those cooperated with the Partisans. In some areas, which were not included in the
NDH, but were part of Italy, or were annexed to Italy in 1941, some priests supported the
Partisans as a patriotic organization. This was notably the case in Istria, but was also the
case with some of the Dalmatian clergy. Dalmatia was particularly polarized, as all of the
different forces in this many-sided war, Italians, Germans, Ustashas, Chetniks and
Partisans, passed through at various times. Many of the most active campaigners
against the Partisans among the clergy could also be found there. Even Rittig
Yugoslavia, the British ambassador in Belgrade, Sir Ralph Skrine Stevenson, took issue
with several points. He thought that Waugh had minimized "quite arbitrarily" the role
played by the clergy in the Ustasha movement. He considered that given the
collaborationist record of the clergy in some Dalmatian towns (he cited Dubrovnik and
"was generally expected, and was not considered as an atrocity." He accused Waugh of
omitting passages from the testimonies which provided the source of most of his report
(which had been translated into English by one of the embassy staff), in which the
Dubrovnik clergy said that the NDH was vital to the existence of the Catholic Church,
and was a bulwark against Communism, and that because of that many of the clergy had
164Minutes of a meeting of the Territorial Committee of the JNOF for Croatia, 24 January, 1945. HIP,
ZAVNOH Predsjednistvo, kut. 37, NV-37/3898.
165Stevenson's comments on Waugh's report, dated 2 May, 1945. PRO, FO371/48910, R5927.
94
However, if Stevenson was inclined to accept that the Partisans had good reason to
be dissatisfied with the clergy, clearly the Germans had not been satisfied with the
attitude of the clergy towards them. In April 1944, they held a meeting of fourteen priests
in Imotski, at which they reminded them of the need to serve Croatia and the German
authorities, as the German army was the protector of the Catholic Church against the
Communists. Later on, some of the priests held a secret meeting, at which it was noted
As this chapter has shown, the wartime situation was one that was full of
ambiguities, uncertainties and fears for most of the clergy. The choices were often
difficult, and could lead to fatal consequences. Yet they were pressurized from different
sides to come down unambiguously one way or another, and those who would choose to
stay out of the fray and just get on with their pastoral duties were often not allowed that
choice.
The Communists recognized the importance of the Church and the clergy to the
Croat population. Fearful that the Church could be a formidable opponent, they sought to
neutralize it. However, as this chapter described, their policy towards the Church was an
active one, seeking to use and manipulate members of the clergy as propaganda
instruments. Their success in winning over members of the clergy was limited, and the
perception of the Church as a potentially hostile force remained. As the war approached
its end, pressure on the clergy would be stepped up, as the Communists increasingly
166
Petesic, p. 100.
95
Chapter Three
The central position of the Church and the clergy in the social and political life of
Slovenia meant that they were the main force to be reckoned with by the Communists in
their attempt to seize power. This was unlike the situation in Croatia, where the
Communist leadership identified the HSS, with its traditions of anti-clericalism, as the
main competitor. Whereas in Croatia Hebrang chose to avoid confrontation with the
Church, hoping that the Church could be kept in its traditional place, outside the political
domain, in Slovenia confrontation with the Church was almost unavoidable for the
Communists, given that the Church was itself at the centre of political life there.
This chapter describes the development of the Communists' relations with the
Catholic Church under the varying conditions in the German- and Italian-occupied areas
of Slovenia and the Slovene-inhabited territory that had, since the First World War, been
part of Italy. It describes the unfolding civil war in Slovenia, as the violent policy of the
Slovenes, with Catholics in the forefront. The chapter considers the extent of the
at mediation between the Communists and their opponents, as well as persistent efforts
A special feature of the war in Slovenia was the inclusion in the Communist-led front
organization of a distinct, organized Catholic group, the Christian Socialists. This chapter
charts the ups and downs in the relationship between the Communists and the Christian
Socialists. This relationship illustrates the uses to which the Communists hoped to put
Catholic allies in their movement and also the limitations on the level of cooperation that
they were prepared to entertain with their Catholic allies. The chapter also shows the
clergy, as well as the limited success that they experienced on the ground in this respect.
96
In the German-occupied areas the occupation regime was especially harsh, as the
occupiers sought to Germanize the population, snuffing out any traces of Slovene
presence and individuality. After a visit to Maribor immediately following the occupation,
the chief of the Nazi SS, Heinrich Himmler, decreed that all "alien" elements must be
removed from Lower Styria, and that "all educated Slovenes must be evicted."1
Prominent figures, intellectuals and priests were rounded up in the early period of the
occupation, and expelled to Croatia or German-occupied Serbia, if they did not first
manage to escape to the Italian-occupied Ljubljana province, where the regime was
much less severe. For the population that remained there was a reign of terror, in which
any defiance or opposition to the German writ was met with ruthless brutality.
operate were very limited for much of the war. Although the Partisans did operate in the
German-occupied areas of the country, they did not hold areas of liberated territory, in
which they could move about freely and openly, until quite late on. They were mostly
restricted to operating in small groups, hiding in the forests, depending upon the support
against isolated German outposts or the German lines of communication, and then
The Catholic Church was also severely constrained, as much of its clergy had been
expelled. The Germans identified the Church and clergy as having a central position in
Slovene life, in protecting and nurturing the Slovene identity. In their attempts to wipe out
the Slovene identity in the areas which they had taken over, they could not tolerate such
1 Milos Ribaf, "Nacisticni ukrepi zoper duhovscine lavantinske skofije", in Zbornik ob 750-letnici Mariborske
skofije, 1228-1978 (Maribor, 1978) (hereafter Ribar), pp. 50-51.
2A good description of the life of the Partisans in Styria is provided by Franklin Lindsay, an American OSS
agent who spent much of 1944 with them. Franklin Lindsay, Beacons in the Night: with the OSS and Tito's
Partisans in Wartime Yugoslavia (Stanford, 1993) (hereafter Lindsay).
97
a competitor, and so they eliminated it. Thus, in the summer of 1941, more than three
hundred priests were expelled from the Maribor diocese, most of them being settled in
Croatia.3 In addition, the use of the Slovene language in church services was prohibited,
as only Latin and German were allowed. In order at least to partly make up for the
shortfall in the number of priests in his diocese, the bishop had to bring in German
priests. 4
The Bishop of Maribor, Ivan Tomazic, found himself in a nearly impossible position.
His attempts to reverse the decisions regarding the expulsion of the clergy and the
prohibition of the use of the Slovene language in church having failed, he was left almost
alone in his palace, isolated and no longer in real control of the ecclesiastical affairs of
his diocese. The canons and other priests and attendants had been expelled, leaving
just one Cathedral parish priest. While making his protests to the new German
authorities, he nevertheless adhered to the teaching of St. Paul that authorities come
from God. Therefore, although wrong, the occupation authorities must be obeyed, and
It was upon this principle that he based his attitude to the Partisans, who began to
operate in the summer of 1941. In December 1941 he issued a circular, in Latin, telling
his priests that they should avoid illegal or subversive activities and connections with
such activities. Milos Ribaf suggests that Tomazic issued this circular under pressure
from the occupation authorities, although Tomazic himself told the Germans that he did it
of his own volition, after they had reproached him regarding the support being afforded
by his clergy to the Partisans. For most of the war, Tomazic simply kept a low profile,
and he avoided overt participation in opposition to the Partisans. Later in the war, Fr.
Franc Blatnik, from the Ljubljana diocese, visited Tomazic, and tried to persuade him to
support the Slovene quisling forces, the "Domobranstvo", in the same manner as the
Church authorities in Ljubljana province. Tomazic rejected this, insisting that conditions
in Maribor were different to those in Ljubljana. Towards the end of the war, on 25
January 1945, Tomazic issued a pastoral letter condemning the Communists, referring to
So the general picture of Tomazic's attitude in the war is of a bishop trying his best
to get by in appallingly difficult circumstances, following the line of his Church's Canon
Law regarding the duties owed to an occupying authority, and, while adhering to the anti-
Communist line handed down from Rome and shared by most in the Catholic Church,
avoiding direct involvement in any activities against the Communist-led resistance to the
occupier. In this, his behaviour was similar to that of Stepinac and in marked contrast to
It was in the Italian-occupied Ljubljana Province that the Partisans' activities were
focused for much of the war, and they quickly found themselves in conflict with the
Catholic Church there. As in other parts of Yugoslavia, the Communists were initially
quite inactive, restricting themselves to preparations. This was in line with the policy up
until the German attack on the Soviet Union, which saw the war as an Imperialist venture
They had, however, even at this early stage, already organized a front organization,
including other, non-communist groupings, under their control. Its name, the Anti-
Imperialist Front, reflected the line being pursued at that time, that in the imperialist war
the centres of reaction were to be found in London as well as in Berlin. This front built on
contacts that had already been made in the months before the outbreak of war. In the
summer of 1940, a group of left-wing intellectuals had formed the Society of the Friends
of the Soviet Union.8 In addition, the leftist wing of the Christian Socialist movement had
already made contact with the Communists before the war. In the spring of 1940, a
conference of leading Christian Socialists was held to discuss the need for a "united bloc
of working people." It was decided to approach the Communist Party, talks were held,
and cooperation established. 9 These, joined also by the Sokoli (Falcons), a patriotic
sports organization, and individuals from some other parties made up the Anti-Imperialist
Front, which after the German invasion of the Soviet Union changed its name to the
Now the line was to emphasize the breadth of the coalition of patriots against the
occupiers. More will be said about the nature and composition of the OF and the
development of the Popular Front policy later on. For the time being it is enough to be
aware that from the beginning the Communist leadership expected that, whatever the
slogans, real control of the Front would be in their hands. This limited the possibilities for
bringing more groups into the united Front. In September 1941, the Communists
sharpened their stance towards those who did not join the OF. All of those who formed
other organizations were declared to be harming the liberation movement, and were thus
national traitors. It was not to be permitted that anyone should fight the occupiers outside
of the OF. 10 This attitude on the part of the Communists quickly led to disagreements
within the OF. Liberal groups also objected that the Communists were insufficiently
committed to the restoration of Yugoslavia, and they defended the legitimacy of the
Yugoslav Government in exile, refusing to believe stories reaching Slovenia from Serbia
8Stephen Clissold, Whirlwind: an Account of Marshal Tito's rise to Power (London, 1949), p. 165.
9Undated piece entitled "Kratekzgodovinski oris skupine krscanskih socijalistov" ("A Brief Historical Survey
of the Christian Socialists"). Arhiv Slovenije, Institutza Novejso Zgodovino, Ljubljana (hereafter INZ), PC - IO
OF, fasc. 441/VI.
10Ljubo Sire, Between Hitler and Tito: Nazi Occupation and Communist Oppression (London, 1989)
(hereafter Sire), p. 27.
100
in the autumn of 1941 concerning the alleged treachery and collaboration of Mihailovic.
Finally, at the end of that year the OF expelled the liberal groups. 11
This sharpened stance on the part of the Communists quickly took on a more violent
aspect, which was also connected with the shift of the Yugoslav Party back to a more
militant leftist line at the end of 1941. The Slovene Communists had already adopted a
more militant approach when, on 1 January 1942, instructions were sent to them from
the central Yugoslav leadership, warning that the forces of reaction were consolidating.
reactionaries, for hiding their links with the Soviet Union, for equating Moscow with
London, for submerging the Party within the OF. They should not be making concessions
to reactionaries within the OF, but should concentrate on preserving unity among the
masses, and isolating them from reactionary elements. 12 Now the Popular Front was to
be built from below, among "the masses", and not from above, in cooperation with the
The Slovene Communists zealously embarked upon class war. In mid-August 1941
they had set up a Security and Intelligence Service (VOS), the first of its kind in
Yugoslavia. At the end of 1941, VOS started a campaign of violence against any it
considered as traitors, which meant anyone opposed to the OF. 13 They included the
liquidation of the class enemy, in the expectation that proletarian revolution was at hand.
Prominent early victims included the pre-war leader of the Chetnik organization in
Slovenia, killed in December 1941, and the industrialist Avgust Prapotnik, killed in
February 1942. 14 It included numerous attacks on and killings of opponents at the local
11 Vodusek Staric, The Making of the Communist Regime in Slovenia and Yugoslavia, pp. 3-4.
12Wheeler, p. 139.
13Vodusek Staric, The Making of the Communist Regime in Slovenia and Yugoslavia, pp. 3-4.
15Vodusek Staric, The Making of the Communist Regime in Slovenia and Yugoslavia, p. 6.
101
The killings and the polarization enforced by the militant Communist line elicited a
response from anti-Communist Slovenes. This response led many into collaboration with
the occupation authorities. In it, the Catholic clergy and Bishop Rozman of Ljubljana
played a prominent role. The extent of Rozman's role has been a cause of much
controversy, and there are still matters which remain uncertain and in the realms of
speculation. His trial, "in absentia", after the war, as a traitor and collaborator, was
clearly a show trial, with a propaganda purpose, but there was nevertheless much
substance in the evidence put before the court which it is difficult to refute. 16 Rozman's
response to the case against him, 17 in which he denied almost all of the charges, is a
valuable testimony, but is not always credible. Parts of it are contradicted by other
activity from the very start. The indictment at the trial stated that shortly before the Axis
attack on Yugoslavia there was a meeting of leading figures of the SLS, at which a
division of responsibilities was agreed, which would be put into practice in the event of
the expected occupation of the country. According to that plan some, including Rozman
and the Ban (Governor) of the Dravska Province (i.e. Slovenia), Marko Natlacen, would
stay behind, and would cooperate with the occupiers. Meanwhile others would go abroad
and make contact with the Allies. These included Miha Krek, leader of the SLS and a
pre-war member of the Yugoslav Government, Alojzij Kuhar, also of the SLS and, like
Korosec, a Catholic priest, and Fr. Franc Gabrovsek. Thus they hoped to ensure their
position whatever the outcome of the war. According to this account, the two groups kept
in contact through the Vatican, which was, naturally, in regular contact with Rozman. 18
16A record of the trial and copies of documents which were presented as evidence are held in the Archive of
the Slovene Ministry of the Interior- Ministarstvo za Notranje Zadeve (hereafter MNZ).
17S/cofa Rozmana odgovor, dated 30 September, 1946, Klagenfurt, and sent to the Pope, it was published in
Zbornik Svobodne Slovenije, 1965, and also released as a pamphlet, which latter is cited here.
18
MNZ, Proces Rozman, file 1, p. 3.
102
That such a meeting did indeed take place was confirmed by Franc Snoj, a leading
SLS figure who later in the war sided with the Partisans. He himself was present at the
meeting, and he listed other participants. He did not, however, include Rozman in his list.
Gabrovsek was one of the participants, and was indeed one of those who it was decided
should go abroad. 19 Rozman himself denied any involvement in such a meeting, or even
knowledge of it, insisting that he never participated in any political meeting. He did,
however, confirm one part of the meeting, in that he acknowledged having given
and Gabrovsek did not discuss the reason for the letter's departure, and thus his denial
of all knowledge of the meeting seems unlikely, even if he was not actually present.
Rozman also denied having had any connections with Krek via the Vatican, or that
he ever received any instructions of a political nature from Rome. But this assertion is
contradicted by a secret report of the American intelligence service, the OSS, that in
November 1944 Rozman sent a request to Krek, in Rome, via a secret channel. He
allegedly requested that Krek pass on a message to the Pope regarding Communist
terror in Slovenia, and appealing that he intervene with the British and Americans to ask
that they occupy Slovenia, and that they not cooperate with the Partisans at all. 21
The Communist account claims that Rozman began his open collaboration with the
occupation forces shortly afterwards, when on 22 April 1941 he visited the Italian High
Commissioner in Ljubljana, Emilio Grazioli, and promised the full cooperation of the
expressed joy at the inclusion of Slovene territory in Italy, and promised unconditional
loyalty and cooperation. 22 These accusations were certainly at variance with the truth.
19Minutes of a meeting on 12 August, 1946, at which Franc Snoj gave his testimony at the Public
Prosecutor's office. MNZ, Proces Rozman, file 1, pp. 3124-3127.
20,?.
Skofa Rozmana odgovor, p. 3.
21 Secret OSS report, dated 1 December, 1944, in Serbo-Croat - presumably a translation. MNZ, Proces
Rozman, file 3, p. 3581.
22
MNZ, Proces Rozman, file 1, pp. 22 & 53.
103
Rozman's secretary, Stanislav Lenic, has asserted that far from welcoming the Italians,
Rozman avoided them when they first arrived, remaining hidden in his palace. It was the
arrival of refugees from the German-occupied zone that prompted him to make contact
with the Italians, so as to seek help for them. But the Italians surrounded the visit with full
pomp. 23
Rozman insisted that the visit, and Grazioli's return visit, were just customary
courtesy calls. The report which appeared in the press came from the High
Commissioner's office, and he was not given the opportunity to influence or correct it.
The report of the visit which appeared in the diocesan newsletter (giving the date of the
visit as 20 April) did indeed record the promise of cooperation, referring to the stipulation
of Canon Law regarding the obligation of obedience to the authorities, which originate
with God. But it stressed the Italian promise of free cultural development for the Slovene
forwarded. The text that was passed on, and which appeared in the press and in the
indictment, was composed at the High Commission, and was, he claimed, in terms such
as he would never have expressed. The original stressed Italian guarantees of freedom
of religion and the use of the Slovene language. As such, he saw it as an indirect protest
against the very different behaviour of the Germans in the areas they had annexed.25
Indeed, the text of the original letter, as provided to the court by the Vicar-General of the
diocese of Ljubljana, was different from the one which was published, appealing for free
development in the cultural and religious spheres, promising loyalty, and blessing the
In fact, Rozman's early behaviour did not reveal any enthusiasm for the occupation.
According to Lenic, he regarded the Italians as a lesser evil than the Germans, but an
23"Pogovor s skofom dr. Stanislavom Lenicem", (in Nova Revija, 67-68, 1987), p. 1931.
evil nevertheless. 27 As to the Germans, he poured out his despair concerning the fate of
that part of his diocese which had fallen under their occupation in a circular of 24
October 1941. Most priests and monks had been expelled, their property seized, and the
people left without their pastors, without the sacraments, without spiritual guidance. 28
course adopted by the Communists towards the end of 1941 and in the spring of 1942.
This outbreak of guerrilla activity roused conservative elements in Slovenia. There was
defend the villages against Partisan attacks, and, unlike most other parts of Yugoslavia,
in Slovenia the Partisans were a powerful urban force, carrying their war into the heart of
Ljubljana. 29
Communists were vulnerable. Priests were especially targeted. From an early stage,
even before the appearance of organized resistance to them among the population, the
Partisans referred to opponents as the White Guard (Bela Garda - BG), and they
identified the Church and clergy as having a prominent role. Thus, in a report of
December 1941, the Slovene Communist leaders reported that the BG was supported by
"Bishop Gregorij Rozman and the whole Church apparatus."30 During his trial Rozman
was accused of presiding at meetings in his palace of committees of the Village Guards,
In reality, the Village Guards were often set up in response to Partisan attacks on
prominent villagers and priests. Lenic noted that there was no possibility of cooperation
30Letter from Boris Kidric and Franc Leskosek to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of
Yugoslavia (CK KPJ). Dokumenti centralnih organa, Book 2, p. 258.
31
MNZ, Proces Rozman, file 1, pp. 25-26.
105
between the Church and the OF given that so many people were being killed in the
villages at that time. He asserted that there would have been no Village Guards, no BG
and no "Domobranstvo" (Home Guard - the Slovene auxiliaries formed after the German
"Domobranstvo" - the regular NDH army) if it was not for that bloody beginning, which
was the main determinant of relations between the OF and the Church. 32 This was also
The population, although religious, had been in its heart for the insurrection, but then
political and military mistakes were made. Many people were murdered quite needlessly,
and others were mysteriously disappearing... Not only the priests, but the Partisans
themselves helped to create the White Guard. 33
There can be no doubt, however, that members of the clergy did indeed frequently
play the crucial role in the formation of the Village Guards. Metod Mikuz, a priest from
Ljubljana, and one of the very rare priests who actively supported the Partisans, wrote a
history of "The Slovene Clergy and the Liberation Front" before the end of the war. In it
he tried to explain why it was that most of the clergy were opposed to the Partisans,
while strongly condemning them for it. He gave the impression of a clergy that was
manipulated by "clericalist" leaders, and led down the path of "treachery." He records
that the anti-OF agitation by the clericalists was such that by the spring of 1942 there
was no priest either in Ljubljana or in the countryside who did not know that the OF was
Communist, and that they must defend themselves against it. Mikuz also implicitly
acknowledged the violence of the Partisans against the clergy, noting their fear that the
Mikuz described how the priests went about setting up Village Guards. The men of a
village would be asked to remain behind after Sunday Mass. Then they would be
addressed, often by a stranger to them, concerning the threat to their livelihoods, homes
32,,
Pogovor s skofom dr. Stanislavom Lenicem", p. 1932.
34 Metod Mikuz, Slovenska Duhovscina in Osvobodilna Fronta, p. 6. INZ, PC - SNOS, fasc. 516a/l.
106
and faith from the Communists. Thus they should organize for their self-defence. They
should accept arms and other supplies from the Italians, even though they would
ultimately use them against them when the British arrived. Joining the Village Guards
was also offered as a means of avoiding internment, as the Italians would then leave
them alone. He explained the effect on the peasantry of being told from the pulpit to
defend themselves against the Partisans, especially when they knew of the liquidations
of priests. Thus they could easily come to believe in the martyrdom of the clergy and the
As noted earlier, it was not only in the villages that there was a response to Partisan
activities, as the Slovene Alliance was formed by leading pre-war political figures to
oppose the Communists. Rozman was accused of playing a central role in this as well, of
initiating the formation of the Alliance. 36 This he also denied, insisting that he neither
initiated nor participated in the move, although he did welcome it. 37 Leading Slovene
figures started to organize in order actively to counter the threat from the Partisans, and
in so doing they sought to co-ordinate their actions with the Italian authorities. A key
figure in these developments was Lambert Ehrlich, a professor at the theology faculty in
Ljubljana. Ehrlich mobilized young men of the students' organization of Catholic Action,
"Straza", as zealous opponents of the OF, who assisted the Italians in arrests and house
searches. 38
In February 1942, a conference was held, which produced a list of proposals for the
Italians, with the aim of formalizing cooperation. In particular, the participants sought
permission to destroy the "Communist menace" themselves, as the Italians were proving
incapable of doing it, and to organize the youth, so as to deliver them from the "danger of
38Report from the CK KPS to the CK KPJ, 16 May, 1942. Dokumenti ljudske revolucije v Sloveniji, Book 2,
pp. 75-77.
107
extremism." The Italian report on that meeting asserted that it was held at the bishop's
palace, and that the leadership of the committee that was established was taken on by
Again Rozman denied all involvement, claiming that there was no such meeting at
his palace. 40 Indeed Rozman denied any part in almost any political meeting (he
acknowledged having been present at one in the spring of 1942 and one just before the
Representatives of various parties gathered around him [Rozman], as there was at that
time in Ljubljana no more obvious political leader. Ban Natlacen had somehow withdrawn
into the background. The other parties, the Democrats and the Liberals, had greater
confidence in Rozman than in Natlacen, and they came to him with the request: you are
the only one who can unite us at this moment, and help us, that we may all survive
together. And thus they somehow obliged Rozman to become the appointed leader, the
national leader in Ljubljana at that time, although we know that Rozman was never by
nature nor by inclination any kind of politician.
Lenic, as a senior Church figure, was in general defensive of Rozman. But having been
secretary in the bishop's palace during the war, he knew as well as anyone what was
actually happening, and he did not seek to deny Rozman's political involvement. Rather
he excused him on account of his lack of political sense and his clumsiness. Whichever
meetings Rozman did or did not attend, Lenic's testimony confirms that he was indeed
included in discussions with the political leaders who in 1942 were trying to find ways of
countering the Partisan threat. Lenic confirms the reports of Italian intelligence and of the
At the beginning of April 1942, Ehrlich presented the Italians with a memorandum
proposing cooperation over security and intelligence. So that they could help in the
destruction of the Partisans, the Slovenes should be allowed their own intelligence
service, in the form of an "Academic Formation". The Slovene police should be armed,
39 From an Italian report on the meeting, contained in a memorandum of 17 February, 1942. MNZ, Proces
Rozman, file 2, pp. 3139-3143.
and should come under the control of a higher Slovene police authority, to be appointed
administration. A Civil Guard and Village Guards should be allowed, and should come
According to another Italian document, there was another meeting at the bishop's
palace at about the same time, which also discussed how to help the Italians to restore
order and to destroy the OF.43 The report, described as coming from "usually well
informed sources", described a plan devised at the meeting to send a letter to Rome,
listing the mistakes of the Italian administration in the Ljubljana Province. These were
that they allowed many officers of the former Yugoslav Army to remain in Ljubljana; that
they allowed Slovene refugees from the German zone of Slovenia into the Ljubljana
Province; that they did not introduce identity cards; that they allowed radio equipment to
remain in private hands; that their propaganda was inadequate; that they had kept
Slovenes in the State administration, the police, postal service, railways etc. This story
was further supported by a report from Italian military transport concerning a priest
Unsurprisingly, Rozman denied that there was such a meeting, or that such a letter
was sent to Rome. 45 And indeed, the story does seem unlikely. Firstly, the only record of
the meeting and the letter comes from Italian documents. The original has not come to
light. The report on the priest travelling to Rome does not mention the content of the
letter he was carrying, and so there is no real evidence that he was carrying the letter
42 Metod Mikuz, Pregled zgodovine nob v Sloveniji (vol. 1, Ljubljana, 1960), p. 337; MNZ, Proces Rozman,
file 1, p. 57.
43 Letter of 10 March, 1942 from Orlando to Robotti, in Italian, with a Slovene translation. MNZ, Proces
Rozman, file 2, pp. 3144-3147.
44 Report of 12 March, 1942, in Slovene - presumably a translation. MNZ, Proces Rozman, file 3, p. 3454.
Secondly, it does seem strange that the leading Slovene politicians or Rozman
would have composed a letter with that content. At a time when they were trying to
persuade the Italians to allow a bigger role in the administration of the province and the
fact that Slovenes had continued to be employed in the administration and in the state
sector? Would Rozman, who had taken steps to care for refugees from the German
occupied zone, really have objected to their having been allowed into the Ljubljana
Province?
Upon receiving the report, General Mario Robotti, commander of the Italian XI Army
Corps, noted that he had been asking for those measures to be implemented for some
time. 47 And indeed, action followed shortly afterwards. Yugoslav Army officers were
interned, identity cards were introduced, radios were confiscated and numerous
employees in the postal service, railways etc. were arrested and interned. 48 But finally, it
has not been established that these actions were a result of a request from the Slovene
leaders. It is a matter for speculation, but the fact remains that the content of the alleged
letter does not fit at all into the general picture of the way that things were moving at the
time.
beginning of May 1942. Representatives of three parties asked him to hold a meeting at
his palace, to discuss the situation under the occupation. He agreed to chair the meeting,
so as to reduce the risk to the others, who believed that the Italians would be unlikely to
move against Rozman. According to Rozman, they drafted a memorandum regarding the
misdeeds of the occupiers, which he presented to the High Commissioner, who was
furious, threatening to arrest the representatives of the political parties. Rozman claimed
47ibid. p. 334.
that this meeting, far from being an act of collaboration, was rather an act of resistance
to Fascism. 49
But although many of the accusations directed at Rozman may not have been
justified, even if he was not present at all of the meetings in which he was alleged to
have participated, and although the alleged letter to Maglione in Rome may not have
been as Italian intelligence reported it, his protestations that he was not involved in
discussions on cooperation with the Italians in suppressing the OF in the spring of 1942
are not credible. Such moves to establish cooperation were made, and it was Ehrlich of
the theology faculty, members of Catholic Action and of the clericalist SLS who played
the leading roles. Lojze Ude, who later joined the Partisans, but was at this stage
uncommitted and critical of both sides in the unfolding civil war, condemned the
show that neither the Italians nor the Partisans had any doubt that Rozman was himself
involved in these moves, and Lenic's testimony confirms that he was included in the
other sources. There was at least one other meeting of leading figures from the political
and cultural fields in either August or September 1942, at which Rozman presided.
Rozman denied that there was such a meeting, insisting that the only such meeting
which took place was the one in April or May. 51 However, more than one source speaks
of the later meeting, and they agree that Rozman was present. However, far from being
a key figure in formulating a response to the Partisans and in developing a policy on links
with the Italians, it seems that Rozman was very much under the influence of others.
49*
Skofa Rozman a odgovor, pp. 5-6.
50Letter to the Executive Committee of the OF (IO OF) of late April 1942. Lojze Ude, Moje Mnenje o Polozaju
(Ljubljana, 1994, edited by Boris Mlakar) (hereafter Ude), pp. 24-25.
regarding the demand of the Italian military leadership that resistance movements must
be stopped. Rozman gave an introduction, and summed up the proceedings at the end.
Others gave their views, some, such as Natlacen, favouring organizing resistance to the
Partisans, and others against it. Rozman's contribution did not add anything to the
debate. 52 Viktor Damjan spoke of a meeting in September 1942, which may in fact have
been the same meeting, in spite of the confusion over the date. He lists other
participants, including Suklje and Natlacen, as well as other key figures on the Partisans'
list of their enemies, such as leading SLS figures Albin Smajd and Ivan Avsenek, the
latter of whom was a prime mover behind he Slovene Alliance. Damjan noted Rozman's
anxiety, and judged that "he was personally not independent, was extremely sensitive,
and under continual pressure from his much more active political surroundings."53
University and a leading figure in the so-called "Sredina" ("Centre"), which tried to stay
aloof from the civil war, opposing the methods of the Partisans, while also disapproving
of collaboration with the occupier. He described a meeting at which there was a lecture,
after which Rozman gave his views on the Communists, saying that the time had come
for Slovenia to have martyrs for the faith. Gosar came away with the impression that
So the impression given by these testimonies, which confirm the view of Lenic, is of
politically naive, who was drawn into the political manoeuvrings of those who sought to
counter the Partisans through collaborationist activities. It seems that the impression
shared by the Partisans and the Italians that Rozman was the key figure was mistaken,
52Report on interrogation of Suklje on 3 December, 1945. MNZ, Proces Rozman, file 1, p. 3132.
53Report on interrogation of Damjan, 6 August, 1946. MNZ, Proces Rozman, file 1, pp. 3128-3129.
54Minutes of a meeting at the Commission for the discovery of criminals of the occupation and their
accomplices, 5 December, 1945. MNZ, Proces Rozman, file 1, p. 3120.
112
that he was in fact more of a tool in the hands of others, and that he did not take the
initiative.
He was, however, a willing accomplice. There is evidence that following the meeting
Rozman's name, was sent to Robotti, containing suggestions on how order could be
villages. These guards would be used exclusively against subversive elements. They
would be able to establish order more effectively than the army, whose soldiers did not
know the people or speak their language, and who had failed to track down rebels who
had hidden in the woods or in the villages. The formation of such units would also
increase the trust of the population in the Italian authorities. Of course, such units, the
Village Guards, already existed, as Robotti noted, remarking that they did an excellent
job, both from the military and from the political standpoint.
The memorandum also proposed that units should be formed under the command of
former Yugoslav officers which would operate in the woods, preventing the formation of
Partisan groups there (further pointing to the unlikelihood that the alleged letter sent to
Rome, with its criticisms of the Italian authorities for their failure to intern Yugoslav
Slovene secret police should be formed, which would in six weeks be able to find, seize
and hand over to the authorities all dangerous elements. They would also be able to
avoid instances in which the innocent suffered with the guilty, as happened when the
Italians punished the families of subversives, resulting in hostility towards the Italians,
55Memorandum from Rozman to Robotti of 12 September, 1942, and Robotti's comments upon it. In
German, from the Archives and Records Service, Washington DC, microcopy T-821, roll 252, with Slovene
translation. MNZ, a 4th file on Rozman, pp. 3825-3829.
113
This memorandum, though in Rozman's name, may well have been principally a
result of the initiative of others. In the closing passage, Rozman noted that General
Roatta, commander of the Italian Second Army in occupied Yugoslavia, had demanded
that the people must choose between order and Bolshevism. This would seem to confirm
the connection between the memorandum and the meeting noted by Suklje and Damjan,
as Suklje noted that the meeting was held following the demand of the Italian generals to
that "we have chosen order, and propose what according to our humble opinion is the
only effective and sure way, in active collaboration with the authorities, to maintain
complete order." Robotti, having noted the good work being done by the Village Guards,
agreed that it would be a good idea to increase their number and to accept the
collaboration offered.
Rozman's hostility towards Communism cannot be doubted. Lenic attested that for
violence increased. On 16 March 1942, Franc Zupec, a leading member of the "Straza"
organization and of the student body set up by the Italians, was assassinated by the
VOS in Ljubljana. Two days later, Jaroslav Kikelj, president of the students' organization
of Catholic Action, was also killed. 57 Rozman himself conducted Kikelj's funeral, and his
oration included the words "thanks be to God for the first Martyr that he has been
pleased to give to our Catholic Action. As with that he has given us the guarantee of
blessed success." And he prayed that "the martyr's blood of the fervent apostle of
Catholic Action will awaken ever more numerous and more fervent ranks of young
apostles."58
57Mikuz, Pregled zgodovine nob v Sloveniji (vol. 1), p. 335; note on Zupec and Kikelj in Dokumenti ljudske
revolucije, Book 2, p. 34.
58Report in Slovenski dom, 22 March, 1942; MNZ, Proces Rozman, file 1, p. 60.
114
By this time, Rozman and the clergy had been identified as implacable foes by the
Partisans. In a report to Tito just after the assassinations of Zupec and Kikelj, Kardelj
noted that:-
The Bishop of Ljubljana pronounced two students - denunciators and Italian agents who
have recently been liquidated by the security service of the OF - as Christian martyrs, and
now leads a bitter campaign against the OF and the KP [Communist Party], hand in hand
with a wave of fierce Italian terror, which now covers the whole of the "Ljubljana Province."
The priests and church readers curse the OF, and call down divine vengeance upon it ... 59
The civil war into which Slovenia had plunged became still more bitter. On 26 May,
Ehrlich was killed in Ljubljana. 60 In July 1942, the Italians launched an offensive to clear
Communists reported that the clergy played a key role in organizing resistance to the
Partisans. In September 1942, Kardelj reported to Tito on the activities of "bands" in the
pay of the Italians, fighting the Partisans in the name of King Peter, which "patrol through
the villages, most often with an armed priest at their head, alongside a Yugoslav active
officer."62 A few days later Kardelj wrote to leading Communist Ivo Lola Ribar that the BG
was now armed, and given a freer hand by the Italians. They presented themselves as
followers of the exiled Government in London and of King Peter, but needed to
cooperate with the Italians in the meantime, in order to destroy the Partisans.
In the main it involves reactionary clericalist elements, with priests at their head, and
connected with them also open followers of Mihailovic, who are closely connected with the
clericalists. They have formed the so-called "Slovene Legion", the "Legion of Death", the
"White Legion" etc. They are quite openly in with the Italians, they drive their lorries, and
have armed patrols through the villages and through the city of Ljubljana, killing followers
of the OF, terrorizing the population etc. The main leaders are the priests, who,
themselves armed, patrol at the head of these bands. 63
Mikuz described the involvement of the clergy in the offensive against the Partisans
during the summer and autumn of 1942. As well as organizing the formation of Village
Guards, they denounced OF activists and sympathizers, wounded Partisans and people
whom they simply regarded as dubious. 64 Numerous Italian documents also speak of the
involvement of members of the clergy in the fight against the Partisans. A notable
example was Fr. Blatnik, of the Salesian order. Several Italian documents speak of a Fr.
B, who passed them information regarding people who were working for the Partisans,
who were then arrested. It is apparent from a hand-written note on one of them that Fr. B
was Blatnik.65 It was Blatnik who carried the alleged letter for Maglione in March 1942. 66
He travelled to Rome with a boy who had been placed in a Salesian institution in
Ljubljana by the Communists as a spy, but who had then revealed the truth of how he
came to be there. 67 It was also Blatnik who visited Bishop Tomazic in Maribor and tried
Sardegna" division, wrote a report to the command of the Italian Eleventh Army Corps
regarding the demands of the clergy. They expressed the wish to cooperate in anti-
Communist actions, and especially sought authorization for their freedom of movement,
so that they could carry out their tasks and cooperate in the work of pacification.68 In
another report, Orlando described a speech by a local curate on the occasion of a public
holiday: "In his speech he compared the efforts of the Italian army in the cause of peace
and civilization with the foul and criminal acts carried out by the Communists."69
In a letter in September 1942, Robotti wrote regarding the desire of the Slovene
clergy to be issued with arms: "The priests of the region, who are for the most part the
founders and leaders of the units of the MVAC [Anti-Communist Volunteer Militia, as the
65Three Italian memoranda dated May 1942. MNZ, Proces Rozman, file 2, pp. 3162-3167. An undated
memorandum refers to Blatnik. File 2, pp. 3280-3281.
68Report of 5 August, 1942, with Slovene translation. MNZ, Proces Rozman, file 2, pp. 3182-3183.
69Report of 30 August, 1942, with Slovene translation. MNZ, Proces Rozman, file 2, pp. 3184-3185.
116
Italians called the Village Guards] have expressed the wish to be armed with
revolvers."70 In October 1942, a group of local noteworthies from Sodrazice, including the
mayor and the parish priest, sent an appeal to the High Commissioner, asking for help in
their defence against the Partisans, either by sending a unit there or by returning local
men who had been interned, and arming them. 71 In November the parish priest of Zimlje,
near Ig, sent a letter to the command of the Second Army, asking that the men who had
been interned in August be returned. All of them were anti-Communist, and could be
The Partisans frequently took violent measures against members of the clergy. Later
in the war, a group of leading OF figures admitted to the Prior of the Carthusian
monastery at Pleterje that there had been many killings of priests and Catholic believers
at the beginning, putting it down to haste, clumsiness, personal revenge and criminal
elements. They blamed the excesses on what they described as a lot of "scum"
("izmeckov") in the Partisans at that time, who were out of control. But they
acknowledged that "traitors" were certainly liquidated. 73 In reality the violence of that time
Rozman was also accused of having had a direct involvement in the organization
and recruitment of Village Guards, intervening to secure the release of men from
internment, so that they could serve in the Guards. The prosecution in his trial cited a
letter from one Avgustin Karner, appealing that Rozman secure his release from
internment, so that he could join the White Guard, and "fight with our boys and men
against those godless Communists ... for Christ the King." The indictment stated that
70 Letter of 1 September, 1942, with Slovene translation. MNZ, Proces Rozman, file 2, pp. 3186-3188.
71 Letter of 29 October, 1942, with Slovene translation. MNZ, Proces Rozman, file 2, pp. 3210-3214.
72Letter of 12 November, 1942, with Slovene translation. MNZ, Proces Rozman, file 2, pp. 3220-3222.
73Account of a meeting of Josip Edgar Leopold-Lavov with leading OF figures Josip Vidmar, Marjan Brecelj,
Edvard Kocbek, Metod Mikuz and Vito Kraigher. Josip Edgar Leopold-Lavov, Kariuzija Pleterje in Partizani,
1941-1945: spomini (Ljubljana, 1977) (hereafter Leopold-Lavov), pp. 104-105.
117
Rozman did intervene, and that Kamer was released. 74 That he wrote to Rozman, it was
alleged, demonstrated that it was widely believed that Rozman was the organizer of the
BG. Rozman acknowledged that he did receive the request from Karner. He claimed that
he was suspicious of it, and tore it up. Therefore, that the court had a copy meant that
there must have been a duplicate, confirming his suspicion that it had been a deliberate
attempt to ensnare him. He denied that he ever intervened on behalf of people who
Rozman made no secret of his hostility towards Communism, but he insisted that a
distinction needed to be made between the ideological, spiritual struggle against atheistic
Communism, which was seen as a threat to the Catholic Slovene people, and armed
defence against the Communists. Given that opposition to religion was in the essence of
Communism, it was the duty of every priest to oppose it, on the basis of Christian moral
teachings, and to warn of its danger. But he denied that he or the Church were involved
in actual armed defence, which the people turned to in 1942 when the Communists
started removing opponents and "taking up arms against their anti-Communist fellow
countrymen."76
Whatever the extent of his involvement in actual resistance to the Partisans, as the
polarization in Slovenia became sharper and the civil war more bitter, Rozman joined the
"spiritual and ideological struggle" with increasing resolution. He made a lengthy and
30 November 1943. 77 It was an especially fierce attack, and Rozman seems by this time
to have forgotten any responsibility on the part of the occupiers for the afflictions of the
76
Skofa Rozmana odgovor, pp. 14-15.
Who is it, dear faithful, who has plunged you into such misfortune that the people is
threatened with the danger of destruction? It is the most dangerous enemy of Christian
peoples: atheistic Communism, which has deceived many among us with national slogans,
and behind the mask of the Liberation Front and the National Liberation Army tries to seize
power, so as finally to accomplish their bloody revolution and organize society according to
atheistic principles, as it has done everywhere where it has been able, if only temporarily,
to come to power. It is the chief culprit for all the woes which it has either directly caused
itself, or indirectly provoked.
He defended himself against the criticism that this pastoral letter might be inappropriate
meddling in affairs which should not concern a bishop: "The struggle against atheistic
Communism is not political, but a religious matter, as it concerns the faith and God, the
most fundamental truths of every religion, and especially of our Christian faith." After a
detailed exposition of the Church's view of the dangers and falsehoods of Communism,
supported by citations of the words of various Popes, Rozman issued, under the heading
"All as One - to the Fight", a call to the Catholic laity and to Catholic organizations to join
the struggle: "God and his Church expects of all of these that they will take the lead
among our people in an earnest and resolute struggle against the greatest danger of our
time ..."
This call upon the Catholic faithful perhaps shows where Rozman saw the line
between the "ideological struggle", in which the Church was bound to involve itself, and
active participation in armed struggle. It was apparently permissible for the Church and
clergy to call the faithful to arms, to show them where their duty lay as faithful Catholics.
Clearly at some level Rozman believed that he and his clergy had a role in providing
leadership, in showing the Slovene people the correct course in face of a threat to the
So in the course of 1942 and 1943 Rozman, a large proportion of the Catholic
clergy, and leading Catholic lay people had become involved in a bitter civil war, pitting
them against the Communist dominated OF and Partisans. Initially it was in response to
the militant and violent course adopted by the Communists at the end of 1941 and the
beginning of 1942, but they quickly came to view the Communists as their principal
enemy, and were thus drawn into close collaboration with the Italian occupiers. The
militant leftist line adopted by the KPJ leadership for a few months from the end of 1941
119
until the spring of 1942 was implemented with particular vigour and ruthlessness in
Slovenia (as was also the case in Montenegro and Hercegovina), and it is therefore not
surprising that the civil war was particularly bitter there. There were however many who
were disturbed by the spectacle of Slovenes expending their energy on fighting each
other while the country was occupied, and attempts were made to bring the two sides
Attempts at Mediation
It seems that there were some contacts between the OF and the Slovene Alliance
as early as the summer of 1942, but that these came to nothing. 78 Kardelj wrote to Lola
Ribar in September 1942 that the OF's intelligence service had learned that some
nationalists and clericalists had received instructions from London that they should enter
into discussions with the OF. He also noted that Radio Free Yugoslavia (which was
based in the Soviet Union) had spoken of "approval of some kind of negotiations among
the Slovenes", although he knew nothing about that. He went on to say that such
developments could help them "in smashing the White Guard, which is trying to unite all
those outside the OF." Clearly Kardelj was not thinking of any serious negotiations with
Further efforts were made the following year. A key figure in these was Lojze Ude,
who was later to join the Partisans, but was at this stage still uncommitted. Ude was a
left-leaning intellectual who had had contacts with the Communists before the war, but
had fallen out with them over their support for the Nazi-Soviet pact. Early in the war he
opted for resistance to the occupying forces, but he was worried that the rash actions of
the OF were achieving little and doing a lot of damage, causing a rift among the
78Boris Mlakar, "Lojze Ude kot kriticni spremljevalec osvobodilne fronte" (hereafter Mlakar), in Ude, p. 160.
Slovenes. He warned of the risk of civil war, which would lead to collaboration. 80 In a
letter to the Executive Committee of the OF at the end of April 1942, while condemning
the traitorous activities of Ehrlich's group, he appealed for an end to the shootings of
traitors, and that the OF should rather seek to win support through persuasion. 81
Ude was in contact with a diverse range of people during the first two years of the
war. These included leading members of the OF. In late 1941, the leading Slovene
Communist Boris Kidric stayed in his house, and he was also in touch with Edvard
Kocbek of the Christian Socialists. He also maintained contacts with individuals from
other groups, including the "Sredina", and with Albin Smajd of the SLS. He had been in
regular contact with Smajd from the autumn of 1941 until the spring of 1942, when it
became clear that they were on different sides in the developing civil war, and relations
between them ceased. Ude supported the OF, while strongly criticizing the tactics of its
Again it was an initiative from outside of Slovenia which prompted further moves
Kuhar, started calling for national unity and an end to conflicts. Ude responded first by
turning to several priests. He pointed out to them the admonishments coming from
London, but they replied that they had other secret instructions. They would not say from
where they had received these instructions, but Ude thought it possible that they came
from the Vatican. It is interesting that Ude chose to go to members of the clergy in his
search for reconciliation between the parties to the civil war. Clearly he recognized that
the clergy were key players in the battle against the Partisans. But seeing that he was
not going to make any progress with them, he decided to reopen contact with Smajd. 83
He met Smajd on 7 April 1943, and found that he was interested in discussing
peace. However, in spite of this encouraging beginning, things did not proceed smoothly.
He wrote a series of letters to Smajd. The first of these, of 21 April 1943, warned of the
terrible harm being done to the Slovene people by the civil war. It appealed that things
be seen in the light of the agreement between the western Allies and the Soviet Union
and the call for unity from the Slovene leaders in exile. Finally it set out conditions that
would have to be fulfilled before contact could be made with the OF, and conditions
which the OF itself would have to fulfil. They must cease attacks on each other, they
must stop handing people over to the Italians, and the OF should stop forced
mobilization and avoid occupying inhabited areas or carrying out actions that could bring
Smajd spoke to Ude as a representative of the SLS, but the picture was more
complicated than Ude was at first aware. In fact Smajd represented only one part of the
SLS, and the discussions within the Slovene Alliance on the possibilities for a truce
included other initiatives apart from Ude's. Smajd was not in the leadership of the
Slovene Alliance, in which the SLS was represented by Milos Stare. The Slovene
Alliance had to take account of the demands from London, and prepared draft proposals
for an agreement with the OF. A first draft proposed complete unity, while a second
settled for mutual tolerance. In mid-April 1943, Smajd received another offer of
mediation, from the Christian Socialist Janez Marn-Crtomir, who told Smajd that there
existed within the OF a real will for agreement. The leadership of the Slovene Alliance
received from London, via Rome, the suggestion that if the possibility of an agreement
existed, both sides should stop the killings and collaborate, with the aim of bringing
Slovenia into a federal Yugoslavia. The Alliance was ready, but did not expect any result,
believing that only pressure from Moscow would make an agreement possible. There
84
Ude, pp. 68-75.
122
were also approaches to Rozman by some members of the "Sredina" and the OF. 85 The
leading Christian Socialist, Edvard Kocbek noted that "the White Guard clergy has
Ude received no immediate response to his letter of 21 April, and when an article
appeared in the newspaper Jutro on 2 May 1943, rejecting any truce with the
Communists, he took it as a reply to his letter.87 In response, Ude wrote Smajd another
letter, upbraiding him for not meeting him again, as they had agreed, and attacking the
Ude, and assured him that he had nothing to do with the article in Jutro, and that it did
not represent the views of those on behalf of whom he was speaking. He promised that
At the end of May, the Slovene Alliance received a new demand for unity from
London. On 5 June Smajd visited Ude again, and informed him that his group was ready
for talks. He stressed that the desire for negotiations did not arise out of any weakness
on their part, and that they could defend themselves if necessary. It was the need for
unity in approaching the question of Slovenia's borders which was uppermost in his
mind. Ude had a number of further meetings with Smajd, the last of them on 24 August
QQ
In fact, given the attitude of the Communist leaders, there was no chance of
agreement being reached. The Partisan press attacked Smajd even while the
discussions were going on. 90 The Communists still saw such approaches as they had the
86 Letter dated 15 June, 1943. Arhiv Slovenije, Privatni arhiv L Ude (hereafter AS, Ude), sk. 3.
89 Mlakar, in Ude, p. 162, and Ude's report of 20 August, 1943, pp. 105-108.
90As noted by Ude in a letter to Smajd of 29 July, 1943. Ude, pp. 89-90.
123
a leading figure in the Ljubljana Party, reported the approach from Ude and Smajd in a
letter to the Executive Committee of the OF on 12 May 1943. In July Kidric informed
Kardelj, adding that: "We, of course, will do everything for their [the BG's] further
disintegration, including through such offers, that is through the exploitation of such
In principal it is obviously impossible for us to soil ourselves with negotiations with the BG
leaders. But we should certainly exploit their difficulties, maintaining indirect links with
them with the aim of further disorganizing their ranks. In the case of complete capitulation
an amnesty of such people is certainly also possible.
instructions to Tomsic, and agreed that they would have no direct negotiations. They
would, however, arrange a meeting with Ude and Joze Dolenc, who had assisted Ude in
making his contacts. 92 The leading Christian Socialist Tone Fajfar wrote in his diary of
Smajd's attempt to make contact with the OF through Ude, who, he said, believed in the
illusion that there could be reconciliation.93 Reconciliation was far from the minds of the
Smajd also wrote a report on his contacts with the OF, which he sent to Krek in
London, reporting that the negotiations were in deadlock, and asking for instructions on
how to proceed further. But Krek only received the report after a long delay, by which
time the Italians had capitulated and the civil war had entered a new phase. Ude did not
give up his mission at once, and in September 1943 he finally went to Partisan territory,
hoping to have discussions with Kidric and Kocbek on the matter. But he found that they
avoided the subject, and with the Italian capitulation the Partisan leaders had no more
91
Letter of 22 June, 1943. Dokumenti ljudske revolucije, Book 7, pp. 600-605.
92 Minutes of the session and letter from Kidric to Tomsic of 22 June, 1943. Dokumenti ljudske revolucije,
Book 7, pp. 666-667.
negotiations with their foes in the Slovene Alliance, among the clericalists of the SLS and
the various forces which they knew collectively as the White Guard, they were open to
contacts with non-Communists who could be fitted into their schemes. The policy was to
draw malleable groups and individuals into their organization, without giving them any
real power. They sought to divide such elements from those whom they regarded as
their implacable enemies, thus undermining them, and causing them to disintegrate, just
as Kardelj and Kidric had explained. This was in line with the policy of the Popular Front,
As described earlier, the OF had been formed early in the war. Its aim was to
the policy of the dominant Communists towards it was unsettled during the first two years
While front organizations were set up elsewhere in Yugoslavia, nowhere else did
this happen as early as was the case with the OF in Slovenia. Djilas noted that only in
Slovenia was the participation of non-Communists more than symbolic, but even there it
was only so at the beginning. He explained that they never had "the influence, much less
the organizational strength or militancy of the Party." But he recognized the value of
including other groups and individuals, in that they "broadened the base of the uprising."
Djilas stressed that the Communist Party had particular strengths which gave it the edge
95
Report from Kardelj to Tito, 2 August, 1941. Dokumenti centralnih organa, Book 1, pp. 178-183.
125
over others in the OF. It was "the most ideological, the most resolute, the best organized,
the most realistic."96 Josip Vidmar, a leading independent figure in the OF, also
that they took the lead in the OF from the beginning: "It [the Communist Party] put at the
disposal of the liberation struggle all its organizational experience, its whole organization,
its technical expertise and all its knowledge regarding illegal and conspiratorial
activities."97
Like others among the leading non-Communists in the OF, Vidmar accepted many
of the Communists' convictions. Djilas noted that he was not a Marxist, but that "he
accepted the revolution as a historical opportunity for the Slovenian people, while he
looked upon Marxism as the most significant modern social teaching, albeit a defective
one."98 Djilas described him as a liberal, a patriot and "a fierce opponent of clericalism
and fascism." The leading Christian Socialist Tone Fajfar identified even more strongly
with the Communists' cause. In 1943 he declared to a meeting of OF activists that the
aim of the Christian Socialists was a classless society, which was achievable only
through social revolution and the dictatorship of the proletariat. Thus their place was with
the Communist Party, the "avant-garde" of the revolutionary proletariat. He asserted that
Christianity must not be an obstacle to the realization of these aspirations. As to the role
Given the powerful position of the Catholic Church within Slovene society and
political life, the participation in the OF of the Christian Socialists, prominent Catholics
97Speech by Vidmar, 28 April, 1943. AS, Ude, sk. 46, file 705.
"Minutes of a meeting of OF activists, 28-30 April, 1943, paper by Fajfar. Dokumenti ljudske revolucije,
Book 6, pp. 326-334.
126
and local Catholic activists, was very useful to the Communists. They could give the OF
a legitimacy among the bulk of the population which the Communists could not hope to
achieve alone. Kidric fully recognized the value of the participation of the Christian
Socialists: "In the current situation, with armed attacks by the White Guard, and its
demagogy about the Catholic Faith, the Christian Socialists are for us a real 'gold
mine. 1 "100
Fajfar was not alone among the Christian Socialists in sharing many of the
revolutionary aims of the Communists. Early in the war, Kocbek asserted that:-
The Christian group in the OF represents all those Slovene Christians who have, in face of
the new insights and tasks of mankind, decided to remain Christians, and who, upon the
occupation of Slovenia, as one of the founding groups, helped found the OF, on the basis
of immediate resistance to the occupier and the revolutionary aspiration for a new Slovene
order. 101
Later on Kocbek described the significance of the Christian Socialists as lying in the fact
within the Catholic camp, which could draw support away from the official Catholic
leadership. 102 Kocbek's commitment to sincere cooperation with the Communists within
the united front was clear. Djilas commented that Kocbek had a vision of a socialist,
popular Catholicism, but that its prospects were weakened by the appearance of the
collaborationist White Guard, which was based among the Catholic population:-
The Catholics who joined the OF were assimilated, engulfed and absorbed. The
dissolution was in progress of those social and national visions of a Catholicism which
Kocbek had evidently seen as something popular and Slovenian, and this was his
personal tragedy. 103
The sincere and equal cooperation which many Christian Socialists like Kocbek
sought was less easy during the Communists' militant leftist period, during which the
KPS was required to place more emphasis on the Party, and not to make concessions
100Report on the OF to the CK KPJ of 14 December, 1942. Jesen 1942; korespondenca Edvarda Kardelja in
Borisa Kidrica (Ljubljana, 1963) (hereafter Jesen 1942), pp. 575-589.
101 Untitled piece from the autumn of 1941. Edvard Kocbek, Osvobodilni Spisi, volume 1 (Ljubljana, 1991), p.
20.
102Circular no. 6 to the Christian activists in the OF, 11 January, 1943. Kocbek, Osvobodilni Spisi, volume 1,
pp. 256-266.
103
Milovan Djilas, Wartime, p. 336.
127
for the sake of coalition building. The KPJ leadership switched back to the Popular Front
line in the spring of 1942, but, judging from the rebukes from the central party leadership
for the alleged "sectarianism" of the Slovene Party, it took the Slovene Communists a
little longer to fall back into line with the Popular Front policy.
There was friction between the Communists and the Christian Socialists, with many
of the latter finding it difficult to accept their subordinate position within the OF and
objecting to the violent methods being used by the Communists. The head of the
Slovene Partisans' main command, Franc Leskosek, reported to the central Party
As to our relations with our allies, there has also been a bit of a crisis, which we have
satisfactorily overcome. Various lawyers among the Catholics in the OF began to follow
the policy of the "Sredina", and to push for the development of their group into a party.
With the help of workers among the Catholics in the OF we overcame the resistance of the
Catholic group to the liquidation of White Guards, insisted that the group formulate a public
stand against the "Sredina", and brought about a reorganization of the leadership of the
group, so that the lawyers were excluded. 104
In order to impose greater discipline on the Christian activists, and to bind them
more closely into the OF, it was decided in the Summer of 1942 to start a weekly
circular, which would keep the activists on the ground informed and in line. The
emphasis in these circulars was on discipline and the need to concentrate efforts on
Recognition of the absolute correctness of the ideas and programme of our group and of
the OF, and recognition of the need to carry it out resolutely and efficiently, with all vigour.
In particular it is necessary that the secretaries warn that all the activists must
unconditionally trust the leadership ... 105
But, as Leskosek had noted in May, not all of the Christian activists accepted such tight
controls easily.
A report from an activist in the field in July 1942 complained bitterly about atrocities
and liquidations carried out by the Partisans in his area, some of which were motivated
by "social" considerations (meaning the elimination of the class enemy). The local
curate, who had run the clericalist organization in the area, was among those killed. As a
105Decision of the Christian Socialist leadership to start the circular, and instructions regarding the second
128
result of such actions by the Partisans the BG was strengthened, leading to fighting in
which fifteen people were killed, including two priests. The injustices being carried out
only served to harm the movement, losing it sympathy in the eyes of the people. Apart
from that, he objected that "we Catholics in the OF have not in collaborating with the OF
given up our moral and religious principles. The end does not justify the means." He also
alluded to his dissatisfaction with the inferior role played by the Communists' partners in
the OF: 'Where are the political commissars of the Christian Socialists and the Sokols?
Communists never intended to give anything approaching an equal role to the other
groups in the OF, the Communist leaders had nevertheless come to the conclusion that
their tactics had been counter-productive. In an article in July 1942 on the role of the
Communist Party in the OF, Kidric warned of the danger of "sectarianism" in the dealings
V
of some Party members and organizations with their partners in the OF. 107
In an article which appeared at the same time, Kardelj also warned against
sectarianism. If they did not stay in tune with the mood of the people the Party risked
becoming a sect, isolated from the masses. To Kardelj, the avoidance of sectarianism
did not mean that real concessions would be made to the other groups in the OF, or that
they would be allowed an equal role in determining its direction. On the contrary, he
insisted that activists must understand that the OF was not a coalition of parties, but
rather a popular mass movement, composed of a whole range of groups and individuals.
Only the Communist Party, with its leading role, was to be allowed its own, separate
organization. He went on to explain that it was natural that not all within the OF or among
106Report from the field, dated 18 July, 1942, appended to the instructions for circular no. 3 of the Christian
group in the OF. INZ, PC - IO OF, fasc. 441/VI.
107Article in De/o, no. 4, July 1942, "Polozaj osvobodilne borbe in naloga partije". Dokumenti ljudske
revolucije, Book 2, pp. 423-426.
129
the masses had reached the level of maturity to be able to "understand and accept the
The avoidance of sectarianism meant that there should be greater sensitivity to the
views and attitudes of non-Communists than had been the case during the recent period
revolutionary aims, and avoid alienating the people, a large majority of whom had no
desire to see any kind of Communist revolution. This was the essence of the Popular
Front policy, and it was based on pragmatism, not on any sincere intent to share power
worry Kardelj. In August 1942, he informed Lola Ribar that he had replaced all of the
"There have, for example, been cases of our "vojvode", as we have christened certain of
our commanders and political commissars, arresting and even shooting the activists of
our allies, the Christian Socialists, causing the whole crisis in the OF."109 By October
1942 Kardelj seems to have been satisfied that the crisis caused by the leftist
Kardelj was satisfied that activists on the ground were OF people first, rather than
had made it clear that the tactic of stressing the OF was a mere expediency, and he had
no intention that Communists would submerge themselves in it. For the moment Party
108Article in De/o, no. 4, July 1942, "Odlocen boj proti sektastvu". Dokumenti ljudske revolucije, Book 2, pp.
427-430.
109 Letter from Kardelj to Lola Ribar, 12 August, 1942. Zbornik , Tom II, book 5, pp. 271-279.
110 Report from Kardelj to Tito, 7 October, 1942. Dokumenti centralnih organa, Book 7, pp. 547-559.
130
discipline required of its members that they work through the OF and avoid offending
their collaborators in the OF. But their first loyalty was still to the Party.
But for the time-being efforts were made to appease the Communists' partners,
especially the Christian Socialists. A larger amount of freedom was conceded to other
groups in the OF, and it was even agreed that at some stage posts would be established
for three assistant political commissars in the army - one for each of the three main
groups (though this never actually happened). 111 One way in which the Communists tried
to improve and strengthen their relationship with the Christian Socialists was through the
revealed the strain in attempting to reconcile the desire to appease the Communists'
The basic condition of Workers' Unity' is the complete equality of all its participating
constituent parts, and also the individuals in the group. In that regard the group of
Christian Socialists affirms and acknowledges the KPS's role as the 'avant-garde' of the
proletariat, while the KPS and the free professional organizations recognize the class
standpoint and revolutionary spirit of the Christian Socialists, which has been expressed in
their participation in the struggle of the National Liberation Movement. 113
Indeed, this strain could not be sustained. Whereas the Communists saw the
workers, the Christian Socialists themselves saw it as a vehicle for the fulfilment of their
pre-war ambitions. 114 Hardly had the Slovene Party turned from its "leftist" line than it
once again re-appraised the relations among the different groups in the OF, and
especially with the Christian Socialists. In mid-December 1942, Kidric wrote a lengthy
report on the OF, and Kardelj sent Tito an even lengthier one on the situation in
Slovenia, much of which was also devoted to the OF. Kidric was satisfied that the
111 Vodusek Staric, The Making of the Communist Regime in Slovenia and Yugoslavia, pp. 7-8.
112As affirmed by Kidric in a report on the OF to the CK KPJ of 14 December, 1942. Jesen 1942, pp. 575-
589.
113Theses and resolution of the conference of "Workers' Unity", Ljubljana, 7 November, 1942. Jesen 1942,
pp. 263-266.
114 Bojan Godesa, "Krscanski socijalisti in ustanovitev enotnih sindikatov" (in Prispevki za novejso zgodovino,
131
leading role of the Party in the OF had been in every sense realized. He noted the recent
crisis, caused by the "opportunistic tendencies" of the Christian Socialists and the
sectarian response of the Party's activists too that, but steps had been taken to put
things in order. The Christian Socialists acknowledged the leading role of the Communist
Party, and had renounced any notion of forming their own party. But he was not content.
It seemed to him that in spite of their assurances to the contrary, the Christian
Socialists were nevertheless developing into a new party, and there were frequently
tensions with them in the field. They were pro-Soviet, and continued collaboration with
them ought to be possible. But he feared that at the decisive moment the "bourgeoisie"
might use the Christian group as a focus around which to gather the forces of reaction. 115
Kardelj had similar doubts. He made what may have been a shrewd judgement as to
why relations with the Christian Socialists had gone through a difficult period in the
summer of 1942, noting that at the time of the summer offensive by the Italians and their
Slovene collaborators the Christian Socialists seemed to lose faith in the ultimate victory
of the Communists. That the Communists had prevailed had restored their belief, and
now the unity of the OF was considerably stronger. The leading non-Communists
promoted the OF line and recognized the Party's leading role. But he was still concerned.
There had recently been many discussions with the Christian Socialists, who had been
warned that the forces of reaction would try to break the unity of the OF through them.
The Christian Socialists had given assurances that they would not allow that, and that
they would go with the Communists all the way to the Soviet revolution and the
dictatorship of the proletariat etc. 116 But the Communists soon decided that such
In January, the central KPJ leadership sent Lola Ribar to Slovenia, with the task of
strengthening the ties between the central and Slovene parties. Lola Ribar
115 Report on the OF to the CK KPJ of 14 December, 1942. Jesen 1942, pp. 575-589.
116Report from Kardelj to Tito, 14 December, 1942. Zbornik, Tom II, book 7, pp. 55-101.
132
acknowledged that the policies of the Slovene Party had had positive results, in that the
stress on the OF had broadened the movement. But he warned that this had undermined
the role of the Party, which was not leading the struggle. The fight against sectarianism
had led to mistakes in the opposite direction, and now the people did not recognize the
Party as the leader of the OF. He criticized "rotten democracy" in the army. 117 This
confirmed the fears which had been expressed by Kidric and Kardelj in December. So
the policy of appeasing the Christian Socialists was now reversed, as the Communist
leaders moved to deny them any capacity for independent action, and to institutionalize
The Christian Socialists, having taken heed of the warnings referred to by Kardelj,
and seeing that the Communists were not satisfied with the way that things were
developing in the OF, took steps to try to meet the Communists' objections. In the sixth
issue of the circular to the activists of the Christian group in the OF in January 1943,
Kocbek stressed that the Christian Socialists did not seek, and would not seek, to form
their own party. The times demanded united political action, not competition between
parties in a coalition. The partners in the OF had issued a declaration on the freedom of
opinion and religion, and the upholding of those principles need not be dependent upon
the existence of an organized political force, as Christianity did not depend on having a
Christian political formation. He also warned of the danger that, having formed their own
party, differentiated from other progressive groups on the basis of their beliefs, they
might slip back into some kind of clericalism, which was such a strong tendency in the
Kocbek also addressed the question of why the Communists did not adhere to the
principle that the various groups within the united front would not maintain their own,
Party, and thus could not unilaterally renounce their party organization. Secondly, they
117
Vodusek Staric, The Making of the Communist Regime in Slovenia and Yugoslavia, p. 8.
133
were the first force to rise against reaction, and the only one which consistently stood
against it. Therefore they had earned their "avant-garde" role among the progressive
forces. The Christian Socialists had joined the Communist Party in the liberation
struggle, and had to recognize its right to continue as a party, while foregoing that right
themselves.
Kocbek then turned to the question of the organization of the Christian group in the
OF. They remained an independent group, united in their political and cultural outlook.
He defended their right to remain independent on the basis of the "new humanism"
which he saw as being at the root of what the "progressive forces" in Slovenia were
trying to achieve, and of the special and important contribution that the Christian group
made to the OF, in countering the influence of the reactionary Catholic camp, and
demonstrating that the place for the Christian was with the progressive forces in the
struggle for the new order. So the Christian Socialists had decided:-
on the one hand to renounce a mass political organization, that is, a political party, but on
the other hand to organize, as a Slovene political, progressive force, and as Christians, in
an independent group, which as an elite organization, with its own leadership, is restricted
to the recruitment and instruction of activists.
Kocbek went on to stress again that the Christian Socialists worked for a united
political organization of all progressive forces, which he saw becoming a united political
party after the liberation. They had their own leadership, executive committee, regional
secretaries and activists. He emphasized the need for discipline among the activists,
But while Kocbek was careful to assuage the fears of the Communists, there was
nevertheless much there that merely confirmed their suspicions. It might indeed have
seemed that in the independent group, with its own leadership and activists, there lay the
seeds of a new political party, in spite of assurances to the contrary. This is certainly the
view that Kidric took, and so the talks with the Christian Socialist leaders continued,
118Circular no. 6 to the activists of the Christian group in the OF, 11 January, 1943. Kocbek, Osvobodilni
Spisi, volume 1, pp. 256-266.
134
complete capitulation by the Christian Socialists to the Communists, as they gave up any
pretence of independence.
Shortly before the promulgation of the agreement, Kidric wrote to Mira Tomsic in
Ljubljana, informing her about it. While he accepted the assurances of the Christian
Socialist leaders that the tendency of their group to develop into a party was against their
will, that tendency had nevertheless become more noticeable in recent times. He was
especially concerned by the attempts of the leadership of the Christian group to renew
the group's organization, its control over its activists, with its own discipline etc. He
probably had Kocbek's circular, cited above, in mind. Clearly Kocbek's attempt to soothe
the fears of the Communists had not worked. They wanted much more than he had
realized. Kidric referred again to the fear that the forces of reaction would try to retrieve
their position through manoeuvrings within the OF itself, focused on the Christian
Socialists. He did not imagine that the Christian Socialists in the OF would make contact
with the exiles in London, but the fact remained that the reactionaries would seek to
exploit any weakness in the liberation movement, and they could not be blind to the
possible consequences of the tendencies they had noticed within the Christian group.
Among his complaints was that the Christian Socialists increasingly worked for
themselves rather than for the OF; that they tried to turn the committees of "Workers'
Unity" to the advantage of their group; that their activists were frequently hostile to the
Communist Party, trying to compete with it, insisting on adopting their own positions, and
spreading their organization; that their line on the ground increasingly came into conflict
with the line of the OF, for example in their attempts to win support for themselves
among the peasantry; that they accused the Party of having an incorrect policy towards
the peasantry, being too much inclined towards the proletariat, reflecting their attempt to
build their own class base for their own political party.
135
The leadership of the Party had decided to take firm measures. They demanded that
the Christian Socialists either liquidate their group's political organization in practice, or
else openly declare that they were a party. Kidric noted that if they had chosen the latter
option, the Communist Party would not have ceased collaboration with them within the
OF at that stage of the liberation struggle, but they would rapidly have been obliged to
liquidate their party on the ground. 119 No doubt the Christian Socialist leaders were
aware of this, and they agreed to the Communists' demands under pressure. Finally they
probably felt that they had little choice, as, having become so enmeshed in the
Communist dominated movement, they would have had no prospects at all if they had
distanced themselves from it. To fall out of favour with the Communists would have been
dangerous indeed.
Shortly afterwards, Kardelj informed Djilas that he and Kidric had had "long and
painful discussions" with Vidmar and Kocbek to convince them to accept the leading role
of the Party. 120 Thus, however the agreement was presented to the followers of the OF, it
is plain that the Christian Socialist leaders fought hard to try to preserve their
to as much as possible. It did not work. The pressure applied to Kocbek at this time is
also suggested by an assertion by Ljubo Sire that Kocbek later described how the
Communists "forced themselves upon the others [Christian Socialists] as real leaders",
and spoke of the "silent terror" applied by the Communists as they persuaded their allies
to accept the agreement. 121 Kocbek clearly felt that he had been misled. Much later he
claimed that early in the war the OF had been conceived as a real coalition, in a phase
leading towards a merger ("spajanje") of its partners. He also had the impression that up
until early 1942 the OF was not thinking in terms of the resurrection of Yugoslavia,
119Letterfrom Kidric to Tomsic, 17 February, 1943. Dokumenti ljudske revolucije, Book 5, pp. 457-461.
speaking only of the Slovene people, and that the KPJ was truly federal. 122 In these
impressions he was certainly mistaken, and his disappointment at the course which the
OF took from 1943 was a result of his misunderstanding of the nature of the Communist
Party.
The agreement was promulgated on 1 March 1943, and is known as the "Dolomite
Declaration", after the range of hills near Ljubljana where the Slovene Partisan
leadership was based at the time. It was signed by representatives of the KPS, the
Christian Socialists and the Sokols. It expressed satisfaction with the achievements
made possible by the cooperation of the three groups up until then, but the coming tasks
required still closer unity. That was how the complete submergence of the other groups
within the Communist dominated OF and their loss of independence was presented.
The declaration affirmed that the OF was a united, popular, political and national
organization, with a united leadership. The KPS had the leading role in the movement,
as the "avant-garde" of the most progressive Slovene class, the proletariat, as the only
party not compromised since the occupation, and on account of its leadership in the
liberation struggle. As such, the KPS must develop its organization throughout Slovenia,
and in all areas of Slovene public life. The other groups of the OF undertook not to form
their own political parties or organizations, as this was unnecessary, given that their
national, political and social aims were identical to those of the Communists. The
Christian Socialist group represented the expression of the conversion of the Slovene
Catholic masses to a progressive national and social position. The Christian Socialists
renounced any organization of their own activists, who would work exclusively for the
OF. The leaders of the Christian Socialists retained the ideological leadership in the
122Conversation between Kocbek and Vladimir Dedijer in 1961, recorded in Dedijer, Novi prilozi za biografiju
Josipa Broza Tita, volume 2 (Rijeka, 1981), p. 1213.
123"Dolomite Declaration", 1 March, 1943. Zbornik, Tom VI, Book 5, pp. 185-189.
137
Each of the three groups also issued a circular to its activists, explaining the
declaration. The one issued by the Central Committee of the KPS expressed satisfaction
at a "great political success for our Party." It stressed that the declaration did not affect
the cooperation with all patriotic groups within the OF, nor did it deny them their
ensured that the OF would remain a united, popular organization, and guaranteed the
The tone of the circular produced by the Christian Socialists was very different to
that of the earlier one in January. Much of it was vague and general. In it Kocbek
contrasted the record of the Communists with that of the traditional parties and of the
churches. The former had been the first to raise a protest against social injustice, had
formed a vigorous, disciplined movement of the working masses of the world, and had
provided leadership in the liberation struggle when the traditional parties had failed the
Slovene people. The Catholic Church could not provide moral and political leadership, on
account of its past failings. Finally, near the end, Kocbek turned to the Dolomite
Declaration, noting that the leadership of the Christian group had repeatedly warned that
the job of the activists was to strengthen the OF, and not to strengthen a part of it at the
expense of the whole. He briefly explained the declaration, addressing his remarks to the
Thus was the demise of the only independent Catholic group to have allied itself with
the Communists in Yugoslavia. While the Communists did seek to include Catholics,
and Bosnia, the case of the Christian Socialists in Slovenia was special. There they were
not only admitted to the Partisan movement because of their usefulness as instruments
124Circular of the KP KPS of 1 March, 1943 on the application and interpretation of the "Dolomite
Declaration." Zbornik, Tom VI, Book 5, pp. 190-194.
125Circular no. 9 to the activists of the Christian group in the OF, 1 March, 1943. Kocbek, Osvobodilni Spisi,
volume 1, pp. 291-298.
138
of propaganda on behalf of the Communists, as was more or less the case in Croatia.
While it is true that they never achieved a position approaching equality with the
Communists in the OF, they were nevertheless an independent group, with their own
There were various reasons why this phenomenon came about only in Slovenia.
The Slovene Communists were much quicker in putting into practice the Popular Front
line of the Comintern, with its insistence on the need to build an alliance of patriots
opposed to fascism, than was the case elsewhere, and in Croatia the Communists were
less successful in finding groups that were prepared to cooperate with them. The
conditions did not exist in Croatia for the appearance of an organized Catholic political
group in alliance with the Communists. In Croatia the tradition of political Catholicism
was very weak. There had been right-wing Catholic groups in the 1920s and 1930s
which had tried to play a part on the political stage, but they had made little impact, and
finally Stepinac had suppressed them, insisting that there was no place for organized
Catholic political action. 126 In Croatia, the anti-clericalist HSS reigned supreme.
involvement on the part of the Church and of Church organizations. As already noted,
Kocbek and Fajfar had been quite explicit in asserting that the task of the Christian
sense, and in spite of their attacks on clericalism, the Christian Socialists were a product
of the same Slovene political tradition and culture, a Catholic grouping involved in the
political sphere.
The Communists were glad to have them on their side. In Slovenia the Catholic
Church and lay Catholic social and political organizations were the Communists' bitterest
opponents in their bid for power. It was thus even more important to them than it was to
their Croatian comrades to counter the influence of the Church on the people by
attracting Catholics to their cause. In Slovenia they went further, co-opting a specifically
Catholic political grouping. After the Dolomite Declaration, the Christian Socialists were
demonstrating to a suspicious public that there was a place for Catholics in the
Communist dominated movement. But it was not only through the Christian Socialists
that the Slovene Communists sought to reassure the religious feelings of the people. As
The Communists had identified the Catholic clergy as being among their bitterest
foes in Slovenia from an early stage. Nevertheless, they and their partners in the OF
produced a stream of propaganda to try to appeal to those members of the clergy who
were perhaps not fully committed to the anti-Communist struggle, to reassure them, and
to divide them from the 'White Guard" forces in which priests played such a prominent
part. As Kocbek noted in his circular to the Christian activists, it was particularly
important to counter the influence and propaganda of the clergy, the Church hierarchy
Ljubljana, noted that a declaration of the OF in February 1942 that the religious feelings
of Catholics would be respected and that freedom of religion would be guaranteed, was
issued because anti-Communist propaganda was being carried out "under the banner of
religion."127
at Catholics, and especially at the clergy, as their influence over their flocks was crucial.
In a letter to the Executive Committee of the OF in December 1942, Kardelj told them
that they must step up their propaganda regarding the position of the OF towards religion
and the Church. In that regard, they should use the Christian Socialists, and should draw
127Speech by Snuderl to second session of SNOS, 9-10 September, 1946. AS, Predsedstvo SNOS-a, sk. 14,
file 2.
140
attention to the position in the Soviet Union. In particular he suggested that a conference
of priests should be convened, which would issue a declaration welcoming the OF, and
giving their suggestions and advice. They should enable the clergy actively to participate
in the movement. 128 In a letter to Tone Toman, a Christian Socialist and leading member
of the OF in Ljubljana, in January 1943, Kardelj instructed him to "develop agitation and
propaganda to the utmost." He particularly stressed work among the clergy. 129 In August
of the same year he told the Central Committee of the KPS that they should "make
contact especially with the clergy". 130 Another example was the instruction from the
District Committee of the KPS for Materija-Bistrica to its local committees and agents to
distribute the literature of the OF to all of the parish priests, and especially the literature
that was aimed specifically at the clergy. It mentioned "Slovenska Revolucija", the organ
of the Christian Socialists, and a circular by Mikuz, the chaplain to the Main Command of
There were certain key themes which appeared repeatedly in the propaganda
material directed at the clergy and at Catholics generally. Traitorous members of the
clergy, especially Rozman, were attacked. Condemnation of the use of religion as the
basis for propaganda against the OF and the Communists was a particular
preoccupation. The hold of the clergy over much of the population was potentially a great
threat to the Communists' progress towards power, and they had to counter it or, if
possible, channel it into support for their own movement by winning members of the
clergy to their cause. For the same reason the clergy were reassured that the OF, the
Partisans and the Communists did not threaten religion or the Church, and that priests
and Catholic faithful whose conduct was blameless had nothing to fear. Those who kept
silent and stood aside were also at fault, and should declare themselves for the OF.
129 Letter of 5 January, 1943. Dokumenti ljudske revolucije, Book 5, pp. 45-46.
130 Letter of 12 August, 1943. Zbornik, Tom II, Book 10, pp. 189-197.
131 Instructions dated 25 March, 1943. Dokumenti ljudske revolucije, Book 6, pp. 107-112.
141
was directed at the clergy, and written from the point of view of clergymen cooperating
with the OF (although it is not clear that it was actually written by a priest). The article
listed the woes of the Slovene people, and concentrated particularly on the sufferings of
In Slovene schools our youth learns in a foreign language, a new religion is forced upon
them, the most vulgar pagan religion known to History. In our churches the sanctuary
lamps are extinguished, the bells and organs are silenced, the divine service has ceased,
and God's words are no longer proclaimed. Our people die without the holy sacraments,
are buried without a blessing. Our priests have been expelled from their parishes,
imprisoned, humiliated, trampled and derided.
This was quite a remarkable piece, appearing as it did in the organ of a Communist
dominated movement. It continued in the same vein, pointing out how the Germans had
violated the religious freedom of the people and the rights of the Church, how "godless
Nazism" had de-christianized Germany, and was now the grave of Catholicism and the
Slovene identity. And while conditions in the Italian occupied part of the country were
undoubtedly much better than under the Germans, the aim was the same, to
denationalize the Slovene people. In order to resist the threat to the Slovene identity and
to the freedom of religion, unity among the Slovene people was essential. It appealed to
the tradition of the Slovene clergy, that it stood with its people, and so should they now
cooperate in the liberation movement: "You must be aware that you do the faith and the
Church great harm if in these momentous times for the nation you, in whatever way, try
to use your influence, or even the faith, to weaken the national resistance and its
unity."132
Attacks on the alleged treachery of a large part of the clergy were very common.
The "Easter message of the Catholics in the OF" in 1942 attacked as nonsense the idea
that collaboration with the occupier could be justified on the grounds that it was to save
the faith. Rozman was singled out, attacked for his connections with the occupier and his
132Article entitled "Slovenski duhovscini" ("To the Slovene Clergy"), in Osvobodilna Fronta, December 1941.
AS, Ude, sk. 46, file 704.
142
role in the initiative to form the BG. 133 In another piece, later on in the war, traitorous
members of the clergy were blamed for the "anti-national" behaviour of part of the
Catholic people. Rozman was accused of misusing the religious feelings of the people,
of spreading the lie that religion was under threat, and of calling for a crusade against the
1943's New Year circular of the Christian group in the OF also attacked
no threat to the faith. For example, "Slovenska Revolucija", the organ of the Catholic
group in the OF, carried a declaration that the OF guaranteed that it would everywhere
respect the religious feelings of the people, and allow their free expression. 136
Alongside these assurances and attacks on priests who opposed the OF were
repeated appeals to the clergy to declare themselves openly for the OF. Thus a piece
that appeared in mid-1942 bemoaned the fact that "the one group which has not
responded to the call to the community in the national liberation struggle in large
numbers is the Slovene clergy." It referred to all the means which the leadership of the
OF, and especially the Catholics in the OF, had employed to appeal to the clergy to
cooperate with the OF, in the Partisan press, through circulars, in radio broadcasts, with
invitations to meetings. But the results were unsatisfactory. They had stressed the
guarantees of freedom of religion, but still there was no response. They had warned of
the consequences if the clergy deliberately obstructed the Slovene people's revolution,
or even joined the forces ranged against the people. They had appealed to the need for
134 Piece entitled "Beseda slovenskim katolicanom" ("A Word to the Slovene Catholics"). INZ, PC - IO OF,
fasc. 441 A/I.
national unity. But those clergy who cooperated with the OF had seen no change. The
majority of the clergy wilfully remained outside of the OF, and had lately even begun to
join the "band-wagon of national and social reaction." It went on to insist that the time
had come when members of the clergy must make their position clear, one way or the
other. If they opted for the people's forces, but had some doubts and hesitations, then
they should put those within the OF, and their criticisms would be welcome. If they chose
those who were against the people, then they should make that clear. 137
Thus the OF leaders were deliberately insisting upon a clear cut polarization, and
were in effect intensifying the civil war, which by the time of this letter was already
raging. This deliberate polarization was also to take place in Croatia, but it happened
much earlier in Slovenia. Whereas in much of Croatia the clergy were mostly able to stay
above the fray until quite late on, going about their normal duties and as far as possible
avoiding antagonizing the warring factions, the clergy in Slovenia were being required to
take sides from an early stage. That was the nature of the civil war in Slovenia, in which
the Church and the clergy were deeply involved. With Bishop Rozman taking a robust
stand against the Partisans and many priests taking a leading role in the battle against
them, the option of staying silent was not to be allowed to the clergy by the OF leaders.
In a later piece, this choice was again put in stark terms. Apart from the priests who
collaborated with the occupier, there was a second group, "who stay silent and, as if they
are blind, do not see the occupier's violence." Priests who had collaborated with the
occupier must recognize their crime and accept the punishment of the people. Such a
recognition could mitigate the punishment, and enable them to be "morally cleansed".
Apart from open opponents of the OF, this piece referred to "Catholics who try to
obstruct the national liberation struggle, who wait, or quietly make pacts with the
occupier." This so-called "Centre" ("Sredina"), while they could not be equated with the
national traitors, were going down a path which led to the same treachery. For them too
137Piece entitled "Slovenski katoliski duhovscini" ("To the Slovene Catholic Clergy"). Kocbek, Osvobodilni
Spisi, volume 1, pp. 154-158.
144
Efforts to appeal to the clergy also included attempts directly to include priests in the
Partisan movement. In this the Slovene Partisans followed the example being set by the
central leadership. Zecevic's work as chaplain to the Supreme Command and head of
the Religious Section of AVNOJ during the period of the Bihac Republic, taking the
initiative in trying to win over the clergy in the area, visiting them and holding meetings,
made a positive impression upon Kardelj, who in a report to Leskosek in December 1942
noted that:-
In connection with the proclamation of the Orthodox clergy, and their position at the
Supreme Command, it has come to my mind that we should also establish a priest as an
officer for religious affairs at the Main Command. I think that that would be a devilish blow
to the White Guard if we could succeed. Apart from that it would bring us far closer to the
masses. 139
As luck would have it, Mikuz had recently come from Ljubljana, had approached the
Partisans and signalled his desire to join them. Leskosek wrote to Kardelj in early
November that Mikuz had arrived. Kocbek knew him, but did not know what his position
was. 140 Kardelj had already heard about Mikuz, and informed Leskosek that he was
good, but would be of more use in Ljubljana. He told Leskosek to visit Mikuz, to reassure
him, and to send him back. Very revealing of the dangers faced by members of the
clergy in areas of Slovenia where the Partisans were active was Kardelj's warning to
Leskosek that he should make sure that the Partisans did not liquidate Mikuz. 141 Kardelj
changed his mind about sending Mikuz back to Ljubljana. His letter to Leskosek in
December 1942, with its enthusiasm about the possible advantages to be gained from
having a chaplain, also suggested that they should at once bring Mikuz to their territory.
A reliable patrol should be sent for him, to which it should be explained "that it concerns
138"Beseda slovenskim katolicanom" ("A Word to the Slovene Catholics"). INZ, PC-IO OF, fasc. 441 A/I.
During the period of the Bihac Republic, Kardelj was especially interested in
promoting the OF among the clergy. In his letter to the Executive Committee of the OF,
shortly after the letter to Leskosek, he devoted several paragraphs to the need to appeal
to the clergy, and again mentioned the advantage of appointing Mikuz as religious officer
with the Main Command, who would be especially responsible for relations between the
army and the Church. That would be "a powerful blow to the BG, and the best proof of
the democratic relationship of all the groups in the OF to religion and the Church." He
added that Mikuz would be brought to the Partisans under conditions which they would
agree with him. 142 His function would be to work for them.
As Kardelj had noted, the existence of Partisan chaplains could make a very
favourable impression upon the Catholic population. The Communist leaders hoped that
this would bring immediate practical benefits. Kidric wrote to Leskosek that:-
It would be good if we could employ that priest [Mikuz] here, about whom Kr. [Kristof -
Kardelj] wrote. An illegal priest, who could say Mass for the peasants, which they long for
terribly, and could at the same time agitate for the OF and for Partisan mobilization, would,
in the conditions we have here, help enormously in the national uprising. 143
This report shows that there was a lack of priests in Partisan controNed-territory in
Slovenia.
The formal decision to appoint chaplains to Partisan units in Slovenia was taken by
the Executive Committee of the OF on 12 January 1943. The main Command appointed
Mikuz as its chaplain on the same day. 144 In joining the Partisans, Mikuz was going very
much against the flow, in the context of the confrontations which had frequently seen
members of the clergy taking the lead in resisting them during 1942. It caused some stir.
The District Committee of the OF for Ribnica - Velike Lasce reported that people had
initially thought that Mikuz had been abducted and shot by the Partisans. When they
143Report on the position in Upper Carniola, 1 December, 1942. Jesen 7942, pp. 495-497.
144
Dokumenti ljudske revolucije, Book 5, p. 145.
146
heard that he had joined them voluntarily, they said that he was one of the worst priests.
The report added that that was "obviously as a result of propaganda from above." 145
Apart from the benefit that could accrue simply from the fact that there was a priest
with the Partisans, Mikuz was also active as a propagandist on their behalf. An important
example was a pamphlet he wrote, in which he attacked the attempts to portray national
traitors as "martyrs for the faith." On the other hand "our martyrs" died for love of the
people, at the hands of the enemies of the people. 146 In March 1943, Radio Free
Yugoslavia broadcast a declaration by Mikuz, in which he said that Catholic priests were
participating in the struggle, but that some had joined the traitorous BG bands of
Mihailovic, and were fighting under the banner of a crusade against Communism, in the
name of Christ the King. Thus the forces of reaction were putting the Catholic faith in the
service of the occupier. He declared that Slovene Catholics would not be divided from
our joint liberation struggle is just, and is in accord with the demands of Catholic morality.
We know that in the future too complete freedom of conscience and religion is guaranteed
to us. Slovene Catholics have, in cooperation with the Communists in the struggle, seen
through the diabolical lie of the enemies of the Communist Party.
The declaration concluded that the eyes of honest Catholics looked to Stalin and the Red
Army. 147
But though the Slovene Partisans recognized the value of attracting members of the
clergy to their banner, their success was limited. There was considerable regional
variation in this picture, which reflected the variety of experiences in the different zones
where the civil war, the involvement of much of the clergy in it and the frequently violent
response of the Partisans to them made it unlikely that many priests could be attracted to
the OF, or persuaded that it did not represent a threat to the Church.
147Declaration of 3 March, 1943 for Radio "Slobodna Jugoslavia", which was based in the USSR (in
Russian, with Slovene translation). Dokumenti ljudske revolucije, Book 5, pp. 34-37.
147
Ciril Petesic, in his attempt to portray most of the Catholic clergy as having actively
supported the Partisans, lists few examples in the Ljubljana region. Apart from Mikuz, he
lists Stanko Cajnkar, a professor in the theology faculty in Ljubljana, who went to
liberated territory in 1944, and Andrej lie, who was appointed as Vicar-General for the
areas under Partisan control by Rozman. Petesic also records that a group of
Franciscans supported the Partisans, and that the Carthusian monastery at Pleterje was
a Partisan stronghold. 148 The Prior, Josip Edgar Leopold-Lavov, first came into contact
with the Partisans in the spring of 1942. They stored supplies at the monastery, and
used it for workshops and shelter, and Partisan patrols frequently called there for
refreshment. 149 The monks also carried out religious services for the Partisans, who
called upon one of them to conduct the funerals of their dead whenever possible.
The example of Pleterje illustrates the problems and dilemmas faced by the Catholic
clergy during the war. Having enjoyed good relations with the Partisans during the
summer and autumn of 1942, when the monastery was temporarily in liberated territory,
the Italians arrived in November 1942, and were quickly followed by the BG. Indeed, the
area repeatedly switched hands as the tide of the war ebbed and flowed. In December
1942, the Partisans issued an open letter to the monastery, warning that they could not
take responsibility for any damage that would be caused if they were forced to attack it,
to destroy what had become a BG stronghold. In a letter to Leopold, they said it would
upset them to have to destroy the monastery, which had given them such support, but if
the BG did not withdraw they would have to do so. The Partisans did attack Pleterje in
February 1943, and caused extensive damage. 151 Following that, the monastery
150,-j.
"ibid. p. 93.
continued to have regular contact with both the Italians and the Partisans, who usually
came at night. The Italians knew about their contacts with the Partisans, and sometimes
searched for them there. Leopold explained that the Partisans broke in by force. 152
But such relations between the Partisans and the clergy were not the norm. Mikuz
noted that when the Partisans started to control areas of liberated territory in the spring
of 1942, their first contacts with the clergy were not happy, as the latter had already been
informed from Ljubljana as to "who and what are the Partisans", and no amount of
persuasion or demonstration to the contrary could change their view. The Partisans were
Communists, they represented a direct threat to the lives of priests and to the faith
itself. 153 Clearly the fear was real enough, as during the period of the Italian offensive of
the summer and autumn of 1942, in which several members of the clergy played a
prominent role, many priests fled their parishes in Partisan-controlled areas. Upon the
Italian capitulation, when the Partisans briefly controlled large swathes of formerly Italian-
occupied Slovenia, an even larger flight took place, as the clergy was gripped by what
Mikuz described as a "real panic-stricken fear", and even priests who had never done
anything against the OF fled to the relative safety of Ljubljana, which the Partisans did
not take. 154
Mikuz described how, following the capitulation, the parishes were empty. But some
priests, in time, returned. There they began to behave "loyally", but not satisfactorily from
the OF's point of view. They attended meetings and accepted positions in the local
authorities set up by the Partisans, the National Liberation Committees (NOOs), and in
the Red Cross. But they did not, on the whole, become active supporters of the Partisan
movement. They did not give sermons in the "national spirit", and did not teach their
flocks that "the struggle for the liberation of the country and obedience and loyalty to the
This dissatisfaction with the clergy included a general suspicion that they were
experience. Mikuz noted that even those members of the clergy who had secretly
sympathized with the aims of the OF, and who did not join those who collaborated with
the Italians during the 1942 offensive, were brought into line by other priests, so that the
Partisans could not count on them. 156 In particular he complained about the behaviour of
priests who, following the Italian capitulation, were brought to a meeting at Kocevje,
where they signed a declaration "regretting everything and promising everything", and
then began to "pelt the OF with mud and, upon the German offensive, fled to
Ljubljana."157
Mikuz noted that some of the priests who had signed that declaration in Kocevje had
been captured at Turjak. Many of those who had been resisting the Partisans had taken
refuge in the fortress of Turjak following the Italian capitulation. The Partisans used
artillery taken from the Italians to capture Turjak, together with some seven hundred
defenders, including two dozen priests and seminarians. Many of those captured were
killed. 158 According to Mikuz, some of the clergy captured at Turjak were spared and
brought to Kocevje, in the hope that they could, by being persuaded to issue a
declaration in support of the OF, be used for propaganda purposes. Given the extreme
bitterness which had come to characterize the civil war, as revealed by the events at
Turjak, it was hardly surprising that these priests, having done what was required in
order to save their lives, took the first opportunity to get away from their Partisan foes.
155//d. p. 13.
156//b/d. p. 7.
157//d. p. 13.
As testimony to the failure of the Partisans to attract many priests to their banner
stands a report from the Executive Committee of the OF to the Supreme Plenum of the
OF in Ljubljana in May 1943. It reported the decision to appoint chaplains in the army,
asserting that every Partisan who wished to attend Mass was permitted to do so. But in
spite of the repeated invitations of Mikuz, no other priest had come forward to join the
army, on account of the official opposition of the senior Church circles in the Ljubljana
Province. 159 Leopold reported that the Professor of theology, Janez Fabijan, who
sympathized with the OF, suggested a priest who might be willing to become a chaplain.
Leopold visited the priest, who said he would gladly do so if only Rozman would not
suspend him. He also feared that the Partisans might liquidate him. Finally he did not
go. 160
Despite the lack of success of their attempts to win over the clergy, the Communists
persevered, using pressure if sincere cooperation was not forthcoming. The example of
the priests brought to Kocevje from Turjak was not unique. The secretary of the District
Committee of the KPS for Baska Dolina reported that a Partisan patrol visited Fr. Peter
Sorli, and he had signed a statement undertaking that he would "in no way impede the
Slovene people in their struggle for freedom." 161 Yet this was the same Fr. Sorli whom
Maks Rejc, a Party activist, regarded as an organizer of the local BG. 162 Sorli, of course,
denied the accusations against him, but it is nevertheless clear that his promise not to
obstruct the OF was not out of any commitment to it. The secretary of the Party in Baska
Dolina, who obviously took his efforts to appeal to the clergy seriously, also reported
having met two other "honest" priests who, he asserted, supported the Partisans in their
sermons.
159'Report of 8 May, 1943, from Vidmar and Kidric. Dokumenti ljudske revolucije, Book 7, pp. 72-79.
161 Report of 6 February, 1943. Dokumenti ljudske revolucije, Book 5, pp. 370-372.
162Report from Rejc of 7 February, 1943, on the OF organization in the Baska and Tolminsko areas.
Dokumenti ljudske revolucije, Book 5, pp. 375-379.
151
were very different. The majority of the clergy had been expelled, and the Partisans'
presence was, for most of the war, far less widespread than was the case in the Italian-
controlled regions. There were therefore fewer opportunities for the Communists and the
clergy to come into contact with each other there. Kardelj noted that, given that there
were few Slovene priests left in the German-occupied zone, they were trying to despatch
one or two OF priests there, who would work illegally, saying Mass etc., and countering
any actions by the BG. But there were very few of them, and he did not expect great
results. 163
But some contacts there were. Milos Ribar considers that Bishop Tomazic issued his
activities, after the Germans complained that the clergy were supporting the Partisans.
He has also noted that, following that warning, priests continued to be arrested and even
shot for their connections with the Partisans. The support of part of the clergy for the
Partisans was in part a result of the fact that in Styria the OF was the only Slovene
Fr. Mihael Gresak was arrested and shot by the Germans in Celje in July 1942 for
his connections with the OF. Fr. Izidor Zavrsnik was arrested several times for his work
for the OF. He was tortured, and was shot in Maribor in March 1943. Fr. Ivan Povh joined
the Partisans in July 1944. In December of the same year he was arrested with ten
others, and was found to be carrying Partisan identity papers. He and the others were all
shot. 165
Several priests who were expelled from the German occupation zone to Croatia
joined the Partisans there. Joze Lampret had left Slovenia even before the start of the
163Report from Kardelj to Tito, 14 December, 1942. Zbornik, Tom II, book 7, pp. 55-101.
ibid. p. 64.
152
war. Since his days as a student in Celje and in the seminary in Maribor he had been
politically active, forming a Christian Socialist group, and coming into contact with the
Communists. Having fallen foul of the police and the Church authorities in the Dravska
Banovina (Slovenia), he moved to Croatia, and found a place in Lika. There he came into
contact with the Partisans early in the war, and joined them in 1942. In 1943, a Slovene
delegation visiting the Croatian Partisans invited him to return to Slovenia, which he
did. 166
On 1 October 1943, there took place in Kocevje an assembly of the OF, which was
designed as the first representative national body of the new Slovenia. Lampret was
among the speakers, in what was another clear attempt to demonstrate that the Church
and clergy would be respected in the new Slovenia. Lampret later also joined the
Slovene National Liberation Council (SNOS), which was formed early the following
year. 167 Kardelj referred to him in a letter to Leskosek in May 1944, by which time he had
moved back to his native Styria, where he was chaplain to the Fourteenth Yugoslav
Army Division and a member of the Regional Committee of the OF for Styria. 168
Another priest who joined the Styrian Partisans was Franc Smon, who had been
connected with Lampret's political activities before the war. Smon was in touch with the
OF from 1942, and provided them with intelligence. He joined the Partisans in June
1944, and was chaplain of the Fourth Operational Zone, which covered Styria. As such
he ministered to the religious needs of Partisans and the civilian population in areas
through which they passed. He also, like all priests who joined the Partisans, had an
important propaganda role. He addressed meetings, explaining why he had joined the
Partisans, and he prepared a prayer book, which included notes on the relationship
168Letter of 6 May, 1944. Zbornik, Tom II, Book 13, pp. 48-51.
153
between the people's authorities and the Church, between religion and Socialism and
Franklin Lindsay, an American OSS agent who spent much of 1944 with the Partisans in
Styria. He described the work of a priest who travelled with the Styrian Partisans, almost
A Slovene priest who had joined the Partisans was an important part of the effort to win
the support of the peasants. He often travelled with us, and heard confessions and
conducted services in the little chapels as we moved through the mountain hinterlands. He
also spoke at political meetings organized by the Agitprop section to counter the peasant
fears of Communism. I had the feeling he was on a very short tether and was given
detailed instructions on the Party line before each meeting. 170
In the Slovene Littoral, the conditions were different to those in either the Ljubljana
Province or the German-occupied areas. As with the Croat population of Istria to the
south, a great many Slovenes in this region regarded the Partisans primarily as a
patriotic organization, which gave them the chance to throw off the burden of Italian rule
and join with Slovenia and Yugoslavia. The Slovene Communists were quicker than their
Croatian comrades to the south to cross the pre-war border into Italy, moving in during
Although jurisdiction in the area formally belonged to the Italian Party, the Slovene
the Yugoslav, Italian and Austrian Communist parties, which recognized the Slovene
right to self-determination. Early in the war, the Italian Communists were less well
organized than their Slovene neighbours, who helped them materially and with
communications. Umberto Massola (Quinto) of the Central Committee of the Italian Party
spent much of 1940 and 1941 in Ljubljana as a guest of the Slovene Party. Before
leaving for Italy he agreed that the OF could operate in the Slovene Littoral, though he
insisted that Italian Communists in the region should remain under the jurisdiction of the
Italian Party.
In fact, only the KPS and the OF were organized in the Slovene-inhabited areas of
the Littoral, while in the coastal towns, such as Trieste and Koper, both parties existed.
The Comintern confirmed this arrangement. In January 1942 a declaration by the Italian
unification, although it did not specify the extent of Slovene territory. Another advantage
that the Slovene Communists enjoyed here was the lack of opposition to them in the
political and cultural organizations had long been suppressed in fascist Italy. 171
The Slovene Partisans had more success in attracting members of the clergy to their
banner in the Littoral than within the pre-war boundaries of Yugoslavia. One of the most
notable clergymen to support them in the region was Ivo Juvancic, a professor at the
theology faculty in Gorizia. He explained that in areas in Italy national liberation came
before social revolution. 172 In 1943 he roused the ire of Bishop Santin of Trieste, whose
diocese was also served by the faculty in Gorizia, for his alleged support of the
Partisans. A report written in Ljubljana on the clergy in the Trieste diocese recorded that,
Juvancic denied the accusations, but he was required to write a letter condemning
atheistic Communism. But in another paper entitled "Christ and the Galilean Liberation
that he was against the participation of the clergy in politics, although they could be in
contact with he OF and support the Partisans, so long as they did not accept functions in
172 lvo Juvancic, "Goriski Nadskof Carlo Margotti in narodnoosvobodilni boj", in Goriski letnik, zbornik
goriskega muzeja, no. 3, 1976, p. 156.
155
certainly opposed the Italians, but he also acknowledges having had links with the
"Sredina."173
For their part, the Communists appreciated the support they received from the clergy
in the Littoral. In a report in February 1943, an agent of the Regional Committee of the
KPS for the Littoral wrote that "the clergy is compactly for the OF, the only exception
being a parish priest who has been in contact with Ljubljana."174 Kardelj compared the
situation as regards the clergy in the Littoral favourably with other areas of Slovenia,
noting that "If one can believe our activists in the Littoral, the great majority of the priests
there are for the OF, and are very hostile towards the White Guard and the priests in the
Ljubljana Province who have gone over to the White Guard."175 In a propaganda piece,
directed at the clergy later in the war, the "great majority of the priests of the Slovene
Littoral" were again praised for having "remained faithful to their people and stood in the
first ranks in the struggle against the worst Fascist oppression" and for having made their
contribution in bringing the people of the Littoral to the OF. 176 Priests who cooperated
with the Partisans in the Littoral included Fr. Joze Petric, who was a chaplain in the
Gorizia area. Fr. Ivan Crnetic was chaplain to the Yugoslav Army's Ninth Corps. 177
Mikuz, in a piece in February 1943, congratulated the clergy of the Littoral for their
"enthusiasm for our holy cause of liberation", and for helping to "redeem" the "true
Catholic faith" which the clergy of the Ljubljana diocese had "disfigured." He went on,
however, to appeal to the clergy of the Littoral not to be seduced by propaganda, even if
it came from people in priests' garb, that "the Liberation Front wants to destroy all
religion, as it is nothing but Communism in disguise." They should tell their parishioners
175Report from Kardelj to Tito, 14 December, 1942. Zbornik, Tom II, book 7, pp. 55-101.
176"Beseda slovenskim katolicanom" ("A Word to the Slovene Catholics"). INZ, PC - IO OF, fasc. 441 A/I.
177Petesic, p. 80.
156
about the OF, should advise them to support and join the Partisans, and should
themselves become chaplains in Partisan units. They should not follow the example of
their colleagues in Ljubljana "down the path of Judas Iscariot." This piece clearly
reflected a fear that while the clergy of the Littoral, isolated from the rest of Slovenia for
two decades, instinctively favoured a Slovene national movement, they could be open to
This fear also appeared in instructions sent by Kardelj to the Regional Committee of
the KPS for the Littoral in April 1943. His comments on the clergy and on the Christian
Socialists also reflected the preoccupations of the Slovene Communist leaders at that
time, shortly after the Dolomite declaration. In spite of the "more or less sincere
cooperation of one part of the clergy with the OF", they would undoubtedly be "the basis
on which reaction will tomorrow place its cards." They therefore had to work at dividing
the clergy from the BG and especially from the "Sredina", and further activate priests
who were sympathetic towards the OF in concrete work for the Partisans. They must "be
awake to all occurrences which could tomorrow develop into an open threat to the
OF." 179
Later on, the Communists noted variations within the region of the Littoral, noting
that the supporters of Mihailovic, the "Blue Guard", had established links with the
Catholic "Sredina" in Gorizia, while in Trieste, where the "Sredina" had never gained a
foothold, the forces of reaction had been overcome. 180 At the very end of the war, large
region, hoping to link up with the British forces which were advancing northwards
through Italy. A report on the situation at that time noted the role played by the Vatican in
178 Letter of 20 February, 1943 from Mikuz to the clergy of the littoral. Dokumenti Ijudske revolucije, Book 5,
pp. 510-511.
179 lnstructions of 6 April, 1943. Zbornik, Tom II, Book 9, pp. 31-36.
180Report from the CK KPS, 6 June, 1944. Dokumenti centralnih organa, Book 18, pp. 50-55.
157
supporting efforts to prevent a Yugoslav takeover of the Julian region, and that it was
While the Slovene clergy in the Littoral did in previous years participate in the national
liberation movement, or at least tolerate it with benign neutrality, there has lately been a
definite change. That change, which is revealed in an expressly negative orientation on the
part of the clergy of the Littoral towards the national liberation movement, support for the
occupier and speculation regarding help from the western Allies, we must not attribute to
any possible incorrect attitude of the national liberation movement towards the clergy. The
change is a clear consequence of the Vatican's systematic activities. 181
So in the Littoral too, although relations were certainly much easier than in the
Ljubljana Province, the Communists were distinctly wary of the clergy. This was the
general picture in Slovenia. Although a handful of priests did support and join the
Partisans, and they were put to good use in the work of propaganda, the Communists
were always suspicious and cautious in their dealings with them, even with priests who
had never done anything overtly hostile towards them. In Slovenia, unlike in Croatia, the
Church and clergy were identified as a key active enemy, not just as a potential one, and
in such a situation passivity on the part of the clergy was difficult and, from the Partisans'
A key element in the efforts of the Slovene Communists to gain acceptance among
the clergy was their attempts to establish links with Bishop Rozman, and at least to win
his neutrality in the conflict. This was especially difficult, given the principled hostility of
the Catholic Church towards Communism and the fact that so many members of the
clergy fell foul of the Partisans during the developing civil war. Clearly their endeavours
were ultimately unsuccessful, but the perseverance with which they stuck to the task is
interesting. It indicates the importance which they attached to the Church hierarchy, their
appreciation of its influence, and their belief that in order to win acceptance among the
lower clergy and the Catholic faithful the attitude adopted by the bishop was crucial.
Mikuz noted that "the OF would have succeeded in winning over the clergy only if it had
181 Report entitled "Trenutna situacija na Primorskem" ("The Current Situation in the Littoral"), written just
before the end of the war. INZ, PC - SNOS, fasc. 451/11.
158
managed to win over the bishop and the higher clergy, whom almost all the clergy would
have followed like sheep. The OF did try with the bishop, but without success."182
towards them early in the war, which they sought to exploit, in the hope of winning him
back from the clericalist political leaders under whose sway they believed he had fallen.
Mikuz speculated about Rozman's attitude towards the OF, that at first he was open to
all, but believed that resistance to the occupiers was futile and dangerous because of
their strength, but that gradually he came under pressure from people such as Ehrlich
and Natlacen, and began to doubt the justice of the OF's cause. This doubt was
confirmed by the stories he was receiving from the first liberated territory in the spring of
1942 of killings, and attacks upon the clergy etc. According to Mikuz, he was still willing
to accept that the intentions of the OF were good, but he did not believe that they would
liberate the people, and it seemed to him that they had lost control over their members
Of course, Rozman would hardly have looked favourably upon the Communist
element in the OF leadership. He was, as almost all senior clergymen, consistent in his
partnership, and Rozman was struck by the fact that many people whom he regarded as
good had joined the OF. Lenic noted that Rozman was often torn within himself on
account of that, although he was clear that it was impermissible to cooperate with
Communists. 184
It was on the basis of this perceived indecisiveness and hesitancy that OF leaders
considered it worthwhile to contact Rozman and to put their case before him. Efforts to
183//?/d. p. 15.
184 Pogovor s skofom dr. Stanislavom Lenicem, p. 1932.
159
establish contact were made early on. During his trial it was noted that the Executive
Committee of the OF sent him two letters in 1941, explaining the significance and aims
of the liberation movement, and seeking the cooperation of the clergy. The Christian
Socialist group sent him two similar letters at about the same time. No response was
received. Rozman was also asked to receive a representative of the OF, but again did
Following these early approaches, efforts to contact Rozman appear to have been
less intensive, and this would seem to coincide with the period of the militant leftist line,
which lasted among the Slovene Communists from late 1941 through the summer of
1942. The Partisan newspaper, Slovenski porocevalec, in April 1942, published an open
letter to Rozman, attacking him for declaring that Zupec and Kikelj were martyrs and for
supporting the occupier, which had lately introduced the taking of hostages. The letter
asked how was this in accord with his Christian conscience? But this open letter was no
attempt to establish contact or to reach an understanding with him. It was rather more of
a public attack, designed to undermine his standing among the Catholic public. 186
Towards the end of 1942, after the Italian offensive of that summer, when the
Slovene Communists had abandoned their "left sectarian" line and the emphasis was
once again upon forging alliances, fresh attempts were made to contact Rozman. 187
Kardelj and Kidric reported to the Executive Committee of the OF in October 1942 on the
confusion among the BG following the assassination of Natlacen by the VOS, and that
there was no one who could wield such authority as he had, except for the bishop. Thus
the BG were pressurizing Rozman, in the hope of using him as the ultimate authority,
185 MNZ Proces Rozman, file 1, p. 69. France Martin Dolinar refers to a letter of 30 November, 1941 from the
Executive Committee of the OF to Rozman. "Sodni proces proti Ljubljanskemu skofu dr. Gregoriju Rozmanu
od 21. do 30. avgusta 1946." (in Zgodovinski casopis, nos. 1-3, 1996, Ljubljana, hereafter Dolinar). part 3,
pp. 417-418.
186 Slovenski porocevalec of 28 April, 1942. Dokumenti ljudske revolucije, Book 2, pp. 34-35.
and were gathering around him "rather against his will". Kardelj and Kidric recognized
The report went on to note that the Christian Socialists, who had sent four letters to
Rozman, 189 had held back a letter to him, considering that the time for another letter was
wrong, so soon after the killing of Natlacen. Kardelj and Kidric disagreed, and noted that
the Communists had themselves made indirect contact with Rozman. They had had to
refute rumours that they intended to shoot him, which had been fuelled by a letter which
someone (either a "BG provocation" or "some hot head") had sent him. They did not
expect any concrete result to come of their contacts, except that perhaps Rozman's
Boris Ziherl, secretary of the Commission for Agitation and Propaganda of the CK
KPS, reported to Kardelj a few days later that he had three intermediaries who were in
contact with Rozman. It seems that these were Stane Mikuz (brother of Metod Mikuz),
Karla Mrak-Bulovec and Anton Brecelj. 190 They were all of the view that he was not a bad
man, but very open to bad influence. Ziherl had strongly denied that the threatening
letter, mentioned above, came from them, and had given guarantees regarding
"liquidations." The intermediaries all had the impression that Rozman did not believe that
any from the OF intended him harm. Brecelj had noted that he had lately started to
waver a little. It was reported that he had, in a sermon on the Feast of Christ the King (in
October), indicated that Germany was the "source of godlessness", which had been cut
This view that Rozman was hesitating, and that there was still a chance that he
could be persuaded to look more indulgently upon the OF, persisted for some months
longer. As noted earlier, Kardelj was, at the end of 1942 and the beginning of 1943,
189Note on the report by Kardelj and Kidric of 28 October, 1942. Jesen 1942, pp. 125-126.
190 Report of 31 October 1942. Jesen 1942, pp. 147-149. A note on p. 147 lists the three intermediaries.
Brecelj, a member of the supreme plenum of the OF, had actually died in Ljubljana the previous month, as
noted in Dokumenti ljudske revolucije, Book 3, p. 423.
161
particularly enthusiastic about the possibilities for fruitful contacts with the clergy. In his
lengthy report to Tito in December 1942 he noted that a conference of priests was being
prepared in Slovenia. But the conference did not take place, reportedly because Rozman
was still hesitating openly to take the side of the occupiers, and it was put off while they
When Metod Mikuz arrived in liberated territory, he took up the task of trying to win
impressions of the Partisans, rejecting as lies the negative portrayal of them which was
given in the press in Ljubljana. He gave great stress to their moral uprightness, refuting
stories of orgies within the Partisan ranks. He emphasized the guarantees of freedom of
religion, asserting that these were being put into practice, as he was given freedom to
carry out his priestly duties. Regarding the matter of liquidations, he acknowledged that
some had been carried out for revolutionary motives, and were thus regrettable and not
in line with the "ethical norms of the OF." But other liquidations were justified and carried
out according to proper legal procedures. He insisted that the struggle of the OF against
Partisan units. He guaranteed secrecy, but sought that the pastoral work of Partisan
priests should be in harmony with Church law. He also promised that his involvement in
the appointment of Partisan chaplains would not be used to show that the Partisans were
supported by the bishop. He suggested that it would be most practical if the Partisans
Rozman. Finally Mikuz asked to be sent the materials required for administering the
sacraments, adding that they could be handed to the deliverer of the letter (who was
191 Report from Kardelj to Tito, 14 December, 1942. Zbornik, Tom II, book 7, pp. 55-101. Note on why the
conference not held is at p. 80.
162
Stane Mikuz). He concluded with an assurance that at stake was the good of the
Mikuz later recorded Rozman's responses to his overtures, brought to him in reports
of the conversations which the intermediaries had with the bishop. 193 These show that
Rozman was initially at least open to discussion, but that his attitude hardened. On 21
January 1943, he said that it was senseless for a small people to resist the imperial
powers, and that only secret preparations for the final reckoning could be countenanced.
He believed that the OF leadership intended well, although some individuals were out of
control. On 26 January, he announced that he was very concerned about Mikuz, and
prayed for him a lot. He said that he understood Mikuz's actions, because the Partisans
also had souls, but he would not be involved in politics. On 6 February, he said that he
did not believe the reports in the press about Partisan atrocities against Catholic
Slovenes, but neither did he believe stories about crimes of the BG, and demanded proof
of them.
So up to this point Rozman had still not given a definite response, and this lack of a
negative reply prompted the OF leaders to offer him the chance to visit Partisan-held
territory to meet with members of the Executive Committee of the OF and the Main
Command. They proposed a way in which it could be done in complete secrecy, so that
Rozman would not be compromised. Invitations were sent in the name of the CK KPS
and of the Main Command. On 11 February, Rozman gave his response to the
intermediary who had carried all these messages, again Stane Mikuz (as is clear from a
note at the bottom of the report that Metod Mikuz's letter had had to be censored, as he
The report of this, referring to Rozman as "Sef" ("the Boss") noted that when
Rozman read of the proposed visit he immediately declared "but that is a suggestion
192l_etter from Mikuz to Rozman, 11 January, 1943. Dokumenti ljudske revolucije, Book 5, pp. 117-121.
193Mikuz "Slovenska Duhovscina in Osvobodilna Fronta", pp. 16-17. INZ, PC - SNOS, fasc. 516a/l.
163
before which my mind completely comes to a stop." His full antipathy towards the
Communists then came out, as he asked what good would such a visit do? What could
they tell him about the deaths of people killed by the Partisans? He declared that he had
proof that the Partisans tortured people. He compared the situation in Slovenia with that
in the Soviet Union, saying that claims that religion was not persecuted there had been
shown by the Holy See to be untrue. The report shows that there was a lively argument,
during which the OF's agent came to the conclusion that Rozman had "no idea about
conditions in the Soviet Union, still less about Communism, still less about true
democracy." In any case, Rozman was not persuaded by his arguments, but he did not
Rozman gave his reply on 17 February, and it was negative. He said that his
reasons were based on principle, and that he had again heard things that meant that he
could not think well of the OF, namely that it was enough for a man to be a member of
Catholic Action for him to be killed, although Catholic Action was not a political
atheistic Communism", but not "in a political and organized way"). Stane Mikuz added
that "You know the bishop well, so you will also know how hesitant and under influence
he is ... you know how impossible it is in conversation with him to keep to the subject,
whatever it is."195
Others were also in contact with Rozman. Kocbek wrote to him just after Mikuz, on
20 January 1943. He upbraided Rozman for his indecision, complaining that he was
giving the appearance that there was a conflict between him and the OF. He did not
accuse Rozman of intentionally opposing the OF, but rather rebuked him for allowing
himself to fall under the influence of those who "can no longer represent Catholicism
among the Slovenes." Listing some of the grievances of the OF against him, Kocbek
195 Mikuz, "Slovenska Duhovscina in Osvobodilna Fronta", p. 17. INZ, PC - SNOS, fasc. 516a/l.
164
asked whether he was aware that "you have connected your own and the episcopal fate
with such a traitorous and criminal circle among the Slovenes?" He appealed to Rozman
to break with the clericalists gathered around him, to forbid his clergy participation in the
BG, to send clergy to the Partisans, and to condemn the excesses of the occupier. 196
This letter was also handed to Rozman by Stane Mikuz, and, according to him, Rozman
It seems that Rozman was quite prepared to meet and talk to representatives of the
OF, but February 1943 marked a decisive watershed in these contacts. Rozman
wavered no longer, and had decisively rejected any accommodation with the OF. For
their part the OF abandoned any hope of trying to prise Rozman away from their
enemies. In reality, as has been shown, Rozman had been closely involved with those
who were engaged in the struggle against the Partisans since early 1942, so the
Not long afterwards, Rozman turned against Mikuz, about whom he had earlier
question concerning Mikuz that "among twelve apostles there was one traitor, and
among seven hundred holy priests there was found only one." He refuted the claims of
Mikuz and Kocbek that the Partisans had some support among the clergy. As to Mikuz's
position as chaplain, those who appointed him had not the authority to confer such
198
spiritual powers.
Indeed, shortly afterwards, in June 1943, Rozman suspended Mikuz. This was
suspension was accepted as valid, and Mikuz would appeal in the regular way. In the
meantime, they sent a protest to Rozman, ordered a protest campaign against the
decision, and decided, as a response, to publish a pamphlet "To the Slovene Clergy",
with articles by Mikuz and the OF leaders, Christian Socialists, Communists and Sokol.
The letter of protest described the suspension as an act against the liberation movement
as well as against Mikuz personally. It declared that they had done all that they could to
avoid a division between the "Slovene people" and the "official Church". However, they
still accepted that his hostile attitude was a result of the slanders and pressures of
So, in spite of all their criticisms, the OF leaders were still trying to hold a door open
for Rozman, giving him the benefit of the doubt that he was simply under bad influence.
Kidric had, slightly earlier, acknowledged that their main attacks were concentrated on
the Italians and the BG rather than Rozman. 200 Indeed, although attacks on him
continued, and were stepped up, the channels of communication were kept open. In July
1943, Leopold was invited to hold discussions with a group of leading OF figures, to
discuss a trip to Rome he had just made, during which he had an audience with the
Pope. Although Leopold had declined to hand a memo to the Pope on behalf of the OF,
The meeting was held at the house of a parish priest, Fr. Franc Smit, who, Leopold
noted, appeared to have good relations with the Partisans. In attendance were Vidmar,
Kocbek and Mikuz, as well as other senior OF figures, Marijan Brecelj, the OF's
organisational secretary, and Vito Kraigher. Among other things, they expressed a desire
to meet Rozman, and asked Leopold to try to arrange it. In a clear indication that
Leopold had reservations about the Partisans, in spite of his support for them, he sought
reassurances regarding their treatment of the Church and the clergy, but he agreed to
carry out their assignment. On 28 July 1943, he visited Rozman. Rozman rejected any
possibility of his cooperating with the OF, because "they speak in a different way, and
199Record of the decisions of the IO OF, taken at a meeting on 28-29 June, 1943, and the text of the letter of
protest. Dokumentiljudske revolucije, Book?, pp. 666-671.
200Letter from Kidric to Kardelj, 22 June, 1943. Dokumenti ljudske revolucije, Book 7, pp. 600-605.
166
think and behave in a different way." He did not trust them, and feared they would kill
him. His conversation with Leopold again showed his desire to please whoever he
the OF by saying that it would be impossible to evade the Italian detectives who
protected him. And he softened his attitude towards Mikuz, saying that he could
administer the sacraments, if there was no other priest available. But he firmly refused
Even in 1944, the OF still had channels of communication with Rozman. Kidric
informed a meeting of the clergy of the Crnomelj deanery in April 1944 that all of their
contacts with Rozman, since the summer of 1941, had failed. He noted that their
intermediary was Fr. Janko Arnejc. It was decided to send Rozman a request that Fr.
Andrej lie be given ecclesiastical authority in the area, which was under Partisan control,
as Vicar-General for Bela Krajina. Rozman was informed that the clergy were not
hindered in going about their work, and priests who had been interned in their houses
had been released by an order of the District Committee of the OF for Bela Krajina. They
were free to travel about the deanery, and some had permits to travel throughout
liberated territory. The letter was sent to Rozman through OF channels, and he replied
Coming at this late stage in the war, it appeared that Rozman's stance may have
been softening, and that perhaps he was getting ready to accept the reality of life under
a Communist Government. That impression also came from other sources. Mira Svetina
Vlasta, commissar of the CK KPS with the Executive Committee of the OF for Ljubljana,
201
Leopold-Lavov, pp. 99-108.
Loize-Joze Zabkar "Cerkev med NOB na osvobojenem ozemlju (ob 40-letnici verske Komisije in
202
generalnega vikariata za Belo Krajino)", (in Mohorjev koledar, 1984) pp. 94-96.
167
Communist Yugoslavia. That declaration did not, allegedly, have a hostile ring. We will
soon look into the situation. 203
So the Communists had not completely given up on Rozman, even at that late
stage. On 19 August 1944, another OF figure, Izidor Cankar, wrote to Rozman asserting
that the Partisans were not Communist and that there would not be a revolution. Rozman
replied to Cankar on 20 October 1944, saying that everything he did was for the good of
the people. 204 During these latter stages of the war the situation in Slovenia changed
dramatically, and the attitudes and priorities of the Communist leaders also changed, as
will be discussed below. But their attempts to appeal to the clergy and to draw them into
the struggle did not cease. Rather they were re-activated with new vigour.
Attempts to gather the clergy under the OF banner through the holding of priests'
meetings had been made even in the earlier stages of the war. As noted earlier, Kardelj
strongly pressed for the holding of such a meeting at the end of 1942. Mikuz noted a
failed priests' conference which took place when the Partisans first established an area
Committee of the OF. He attributed its failure to the hostility towards the OF which the
Efforts to include the clergy in the Partisan movement were renewed in 1944,
especially with the formation of a Religious Affairs Commission, in accordance with the
decision of December 1943 to form a central Religious Commission under the auspices
of AVNOJ. As has already been mentioned, in October 1943 there took place in Kocevje
an assembly of the OF, as a representative body which would send Slovene delegates to
the AVNOJ session in Jajce, expressing Slovenia's desire to enter into the new federal
Yugoslavia. A few months later, in February 1944, this body, the Slovene National
203 Letter to the CK KPS of 19 September, 1944. Dokumenti centralnih organa, Book 20, pp. 53-60.
204 Dolinar part 3, p. 427. An undated letter from Rozman, recorded as being to Ivo Cankar, in Serbo-Croat
translation, may be the letter of 20 October 1944. MNZ, Rozman, file 3, p. 3579. Referring to Kuhar's appeal
for unity, Rozman described such unity as impossible. Nevertheless, it is interesting that he was prepared to
engage 'in a friendly discourse with an OF figure even then.
205 Mikuz, "Slovenska Duhovscina in Osvobodilna Fronta", p. 6. INZ, PC - SNOS, fasc. 516a/l.
168
Liberation Committee (SNOO) was upgraded at the first session of the Slovene National
Liberation Council (SNOS). Among the decisions of this session was one to form a
Religious Commission under SNOS. Kidric explained the decision to found the
In view of the fact that the national traitors shamelessly attribute an anti-religious
standpoint to our national liberation movement it is necessary to establish a Religious
Commission of the Presidency of the Slovene National Liberation Committee. The tasks of
the Religious Commission will be twofold: firstly the foundation and operation of a
Religious Commission should again guarantee the unhindered carrying out of divine
worship and the full realization of religious freedom, and secondly the Religious
Commission should settle all questions between the Slovene peoples' authorities and the
Church. 206
The published decision to found the Commission added that it should research the
relationship between the Church and peoples' authorities up until that time, and should
advise the authorities on matters concerning the Church. 207 This dual role, to guarantee
religious freedom and to assist the authorities in matters concerning the Church clearly
held out the possibility of ambiguity in cases of dispute between the religious and state
authorities, especially given that the meaning of religious freedom was not defined and
was understood differently in different quarters. The direction that the Commission would
In fact there was a delay in implementing the decision to found the Commission.
Clearly the Communist leaders still attached importance to the clergy, but they had
greater priorities. Kidric's speech to a priests' meeting in April 1944 has already been
mentioned. Boris Mlakar has noted a speech he made to a meeting of the clergy of Bela
Krajina, which was probably the same one. He declared that "we will win even without
you, although we would like to settle the relations between Church and State." Kocbek
pressed for the Commission to be constituted, and in May 1944 warned Marijan Brecelj
206/ zasedanje Slovenskega Narodno Osvobodilnega Sveta. Boris Kidric o graditvi narodne oblasti in
slovenske drzavnosti v okviru federativne Jugoslavije: referat na I. zasedanju SNOS, dne 19/2/1944,
(publication of the Presidency of SNOS, 1944), p. 16.
207Prvo zasedanje slovenskega narodnega osvobodilnega sveta: sklepi in odloki, (Ljubljana, 1945), p. 20.
169
that things were being allowed to slide as regards the clergy. When the Commission was
discussions on an end to the civil war having failed, Ude had been drawn into the
Partisan movement, being involved in the spheres of culture, international law, Slovene
border questions and the Commission for the investigation of the crimes of the occupiers
and their accomplices. But Ude had nevertheless maintained his independence. When
Kidric asked him, in August 1944, to be President of the Commission he said that "a
Communist would not be suitable, neither a Clericalist, while the Liberals would start a
cultural struggle. But you, as a Slovene democratic nationalist, would know how to
accommodate these opposites and maintain the correct course."209 Ude's approach to
his work as President of the Commission was very different to that of Rittig, his
counterpart in Croatia. He set out seriously to carry out the tasks which the Commission
had been assigned, and did not intend to be any kind of puppet of the Communists.
meeting was held on 13 September. In his report to the meeting, Ude made harsh
criticisms of the clergy, the majority of whom, including the high Church functionaries,
had, he said, taken the side of the occupiers against the people. As a result, he
acknowledged, there had been actions against individual priests, and some churches
had been damaged because they were used for military purposes. But, he asserted in a
lengthy discussion of the relationship between Communists and religion, there would be
the persecution of religion, and the Slovene Communists were determined not to do
210Letters of 9 September, 1944 from Ude to three district committees of the OF. INZ, PC - SNOS, fasc.
526/V.
170
anything that would divide the Slovene people. Thus, he insisted, the establishment of
the Commission was not a mere tactical move on the part of the Communists. 211
The priests who were present were alarmed at the harsh view of the clergy
expressed by Ude, and Fr. Stanko Cajnkar, who later became a member of the
Commission, reproached him for only speaking of the faults on one side, and saying
nothing of the faults of the OF. 212 Clearly Ude was constrained to follow the basic OF
line, and, after all, he was a supporter of the OF, in spite of his critical approach. But his
work for the Commission soon led to tensions, especially with OZNA, the secret police.
The holding of a session of the Commission was delayed, Brecelj saying that they
needed to wait for the word from Belgrade. Belgrade had recently been liberated, and
the central Party leaders were increasingly seeking to centralize the movement and to
bring all of the regional Party organizations into line with a centrally determined policy.
As for the question of Church - State relations, they wanted to leave that until after the
war. 213
account of the particular conditions which existed there, which were different from the
rest of predominantly Orthodox Yugoslavia.214 Ude felt that he was being hampered in
his attempts to set the work of the Commission in motion. In February 1945, he wrote to
the Presidency of SNOS, enclosing a copy of the report on the work of the Commission
which he had intended to present to its first session, which had still not taken place. He
complained that the various organs of the Slovene peoples' authorities were not
cooperating with the Commission, and were not responding to requests that it be
211 Report to a meeting of priests and OF activists of Bela Krajina, 13 Sept, 1944. Ude, pp. 132-152.
informed about matters which concerned the Church. Part of the problem was that the
Commission, not having held a session, had not received approval of its statutes. The
absence of a clear direction in the policy towards the Church, for which they were waiting
Ude was particularly concerned about the attitude of OZNA, which, he asserted,
"obviously has very incorrect ideas as to the tasks of our Commission. It obviously thinks
that we understand our role as being to save, at any price, those priests who have
occasion to come into contact with it." He insisted that the Commission must be informed
of any case where a priest had given OZNA cause to proceed against him. 215 Finally, the
first session of the Commission was held on 19 February 1945. It discussed various
issues of relevance to relations with the Church, but its main task was to discuss the
statutes of the Commission. A point which provoked particular discussion was the
provision in the original draft claiming the right of the Commission to intervene in cases
brought against priests. Mikuz said he had the impression from Brecelj and Kidric that
the Presidency of SNOS was against that. So it was decided to reduce the claim, so that
it would only include the right to see the documents related to cases. Mikuz suggested
that if it was necessary to intervene in a case, they could still do so, without any need for
behalf of priests who fell foul of the emerging new regime remained sensitive. Later, just
before the end of the war, Ude reported to the Presidency of SNOS concerning the
problems the Commission was experiencing.217 He complained that both Church circles
and organs of the peoples' authorities seemed to have a mistaken view of the
216 Minutes of the session of the Religious Commission of 19 February, 1945 and copies of the statutes of the
Commission. INZ, PC - SNOS, fasc. 458/IV.
primarily established for the benefit of the Church, to defend its interests in face of the
organs of the Slovene peoples' authorities." Thus it was that priests had persistently
turned to the Commission, although it soon became apparent to them that the
Commission would be of no help. Ude noted that that probably meant that "the Religious
Commission no longer enjoys the confidence of the clergy which it had enjoyed at the
beginning." Neither did the organs of the authorities trust the Commission. As to OZNA,
which clearly did not wish to have any contact with the Commission, he despaired. He
did not see any point in further efforts to get a response from them.
The difficulties which Ude and the Commission were experiencing were
symptomatic of the time. The changing situation in the closing stages of the war resulted
in a marked shift in emphasis on the part of the Yugoslav Party leadership. This in turn
affected their attitude towards the Church. In general there was a sharpening of the
Communists' attitude towards the Church and clergy, making for a very difficult and
This chapter has shown that in much of Slovenia the Communists' relations with the
Catholic Church and clergy were highly fraught, due both to the particularly harsh policy
of the Communists towards their opponents early in the war and the active part played
efforts by the Partisans to appeal to the clergy and bring them into the service of their
cause had some, all be it very limited, success. However, the coalition-building strategy
was strictly limited, and was not to be at the expense of the Communists' absolute
control of the Partisan movement, as was starkly demonstrated by the treatment meted
Part Two
Chapter Four
commanding position. With victory in sight, it was making the switch from being an
after the war. Tito's main concerns now were to gain international acceptance and
This chapter describes how this shift in emphasis on the part of the Communists
went hand in hand with a sharpening of the central leadership's stance towards the
Catholic Church. With victory at hand, the time for compromises with potential rivals was
over. This change had a profound impact on the direction in which Hebrang was leading
the Croatian Party. It led to a sharp dispute between him and the central Party
leadership, in which the question of policy towards the Catholic Church loomed large.
leadership was the involvement of senior Catholic clergy, including Rozman and
Stepinac, in efforts to forestall their progress to power. And as the Yugoslav Partisans
prepared to push into the Julian region and Istria, they also had to reckon with opposition
from the Holy See. The chapter analyses the shift in Communist policy towards the
Church in the last phase of the war and the extent of the senior clergy's involvement in
A particular priority in mid-1944 was the need to establish Partisan control in Serbia,
without which the Communist hold on power would be insecure. In Serbia, the movement
was in a very different position from that which it had experienced in Croatia and
174
Slovenia. Since the suppression of the Serbian uprising against the occupation during
the summer and autumn of 1941, the Partisans had been a negligible force there. They
did not have the opportunity to prepare the ground for their takeover with political
activities, such as they had developed with great care in the western parts of the country.
The takeover in Serbia was effectively a military operation, an invasion, as with the help
of arms supplied by the western Allies and with direct Soviet support in the liberation of
with Ivan Subasic, the last Prime Minister of the Yugoslav Government in exile (and Ban,
or Governor, of Croatia before the outbreak of war), concerning the formation of a new
first post-war government, with Subasic as Foreign Minister. In addition, Tito agreed that
no decision would be taken regarding the future of the Monarchy in Yugoslavia until after
a referendum had been held on the subject. 1 The common element in these agreements
was that Tito was trying to present a moderate face for the benefit of the western
powers, to pretend that he was not seeking to establish a Communist dictatorship, but
opportunity to participate.
Thus care was taken by the Communists to hide their revolutionary goals. The
emphasis was on the breadth of the movement, as Kardelj reminded the Slovene
August 1944, an amnesty was declared, to encourage people to transfer their allegiance
to the Partisans.3 However, the central leadership was becoming concerned at the
2Letter to the CK KPS of 29 July, 1944. Dokumenti centralnih organa, Book 18, pp. 353-361.
tendency of the Slovene and Croatian leaderships to follow their own paths, which was
not in accord with its desire, in the second half of 1944, to centralize the movement. In
Slovenia, this concern revealed itself in Kardelj's repeated reproaches to the leadership
for alleged nationalism. In June 1944, Kidric was temporarily suspended on account of a
loan which the Slovene leadership had decided to accept from the Allies, thus appearing
In Croatia, while the KPH did, under Hebrang, have some success in developing a
broadly based movement, his emphasis on purely Croat concerns and tendency to act
independently of the central, Yugoslav, leadership brought him into conflict with Tito
during the latter phase of the war. It was not that the central leadership was completely
out of sympathy with the line being pursued by the Croatian party. Indeed, it was
institutions under the auspices of ZAVNOH. At a meeting of the Central Committee of the
KPH on 24 March 1944, Vladimir Bakaric, apparently with Tito's blessing, attacked
Hebrang's tactics in dealing with the HSS. Kardelj, who was present, declared that it was
Given their lack of a firm political base in Serbia, the Communists needed to show
sensitivity to Serb concerns, not wishing to stir up resentment toward themselves while
they were still unsure of their hold on the situation there. In a letter to Hebrang in August
1944, Kardelj explained that in this last phase of the war their line could not be as
decisive as it otherwise should be, as the situation in Serbia was not yet resolved.6 The
effort to win mass support in Croatia and to undermine the HSS no longer had such a
5 lrvine, p. 181.
6Letter from Kardelj to Hebrang of 8 August, 1944. Dokumenti centralnih organa, Book 19, p. 87.
176
high priority. Tito no longer saw the need to make compromises in order to attract the
supporters of the HSS. Now it was the unitary nature of the new state that needed to be
emphasized, so as to appease the Serbs, with their concern for the large Serb
It was a confusing time for Hebrang, who failed to grasp the consequences of the
changes in the wider situation in Yugoslavia as a whole for the tactics of the KPH in
Croatia. Still thinking primarily in terms of the political struggle with the HSS, he was
distressed by the apparently conciliatory attitude being taken as regards the Monarchy,
fearing that it would appear to the mass of Croats that the National Liberation Movement
was in fact going to return the old order in Yugoslavia, complete with the King, Serbian
hegemony etc. 7 Similarly, he found it hard to appreciate that he should tone down the
attacks on Macek so that it would not appear to the Western Allies that the Communists
were in fact excluding their main competitor in Croatia. Kardelj explained to Hebrang that
these apparent concessions were for external consumption only and would not affect the
reality of power on the ground,8 but still Hebrang found it hard to make the leap in
imagination from thinking in terms of internal Croatian politics to the wider question of the
Apart from this, the central leadership decided in the second half of 1944 that it
Croatia. Tito's alarm at Hebrang's tactics had been growing steadily throughout 1944. In
January of that year, he ordered Hebrang to tone down the attacks on Macek and
Magovac, and not to let parochial Croatian concerns damage the entire Partisan
7These fears expressed in a letter from Hebrang to Kardelj of 18 August, 1944. Dokumenti centralnih organa,
Book 19, p. 161.
8 Letter from Kardelj to Hebrang of 8 August, 1944. Dokumenti centralnih organa, Book 19, p. 87.
9 lrvine, p. 178.
177
deviations" and of failing to emphasize Croatia's link with Yugoslavia strongly enough in
Party propaganda. 10
But although Tito insisted that attacks on the HSS and Macek should be avoided, he
did not want the KPH to make any concessions to non-Communists on fundamental
questions of ideology. Yet in the summer of 1944 it seemed that such concessions were
being made. At issue was how far Hebrang was prepared to go to avoid antagonizing the
Catholic Church. We have already seen that it was Party policy to avoid unnecessary
confrontations with the Church, not wanting an open conflict with the Church hierarchy
until the Communists were ready for it. Among the issues of crucial importance here was
the Catholic Church's role in social matters, such as education and marriage. Up until the
summer of 1944, there had been limits to the concessions that the Communists were
prepared to make to the Church. It had been understood that religious education would
be a voluntary subject in schools, and that civil marriage and divorce would be
As regards marriage, on 17 June 1944 the Justice section of ZAVNOH issued draft
that there was no wish to interfere in the purely internal affairs of the Church or its views
on marriage. It acknowledged that a marriage is for life, but recognized that if it breaks
down to the extent that it threatens the well-being of those involved, then divorce can
follow. The right of the state authorities to supervise marital matters was established.
The directives dealt with the detailed procedures of how a divorce may be obtained.
They included the stipulation that if both parties agreed to bring their grievances before a
Church court, they could do so. If one party wished to go before the People's District
Court, then that court should try to reach a decision which was in harmony with that of
the Church court. The decision of the People's Court would, however, take precedence.
"ibid. p. 181.
Ferdo Culinovic, who, as head of the Justice section, signed the directives, later
maintained that the section had drawn them up after receiving oral instructions from the
Presidency on 24 - 25 August 1944, Hebrang vetoed this draft proposal, ordering that
undertaken. 13 Kardelj was present on the first day of this session of the ZAVNOH
Presidency, and he only narrowly prevented the passing of legislation requiring church
marriages. During the discussion of the Justice section's draft directive on divorce
Hebrang proposed that "no kind of civil marriage should be recognized, and all should
recognized."14
Kardelj went on to note that Rittig welcomed Hebrang's proposal with enthusiasm,
putting him in a very uncomfortable position. But Kardelj nevertheless opposed it, and
taken yet was accepted. Clearly that did not prevent Hebrang from including the decision
to ban divorce among the final decisions of the session, which were agreed after Kardelj
had left.
Another decision of this session of the ZAVNOH Presidency, also taken after Kardelj
had left, was that religious education in primary schools should be compulsory. 15 This
really brought matters to a head. Firstly it seemed like a wholly unwarranted concession
to the Catholic Church. Apart from that, both Kardelj and Tito had explicitly said that
12Note on the text of the directives. ZAVNOH, Zbornik dokumenata, 1944, III, p. 87.
14Letter from Kardelj to Tito of 30 September, 1944. Dokumenti centralnih organa, Book 20, p. 43.
16Recalled by Kardelj in his letter to Tito of 30 Sept, 1944. Dokumenti centralnih organa, Book 20, p. 43.
179
1944, he sent Hebrang a message which severely upbraided him, and revealed his
It really surprised me that you could have adopted such a decision in ZAVNOH, that in
Croatia religious education should be introduced as a compulsory subject. This is a very
stupid error, for which you and the other comrades, above all, bear responsibility. No
democratic country has religious education as a compulsory subject in its schools.
Endeavour by every means to withdraw this decree. The Vatican is in any case very
hostile towards us, and works full steam to damage us, gathering and supporting all the
anti-national elements in Yugoslavia. With such a rotten concession you will not serve our
national liberation struggle or our sons at all, but will rather introduce regressive elements
into the achievements of our struggle. 17
Another decision which brought on Tito's wrath was the decision to set up a Croatian
telegraph agency, which went against the centralization of the movement that Tito was
trying to impose as the war drew to its close, as he tried to establish the patterns of the
impatiently ordering him to halt the work of this agency, and demanding an immediate
Hebrang replied the same day, denying responsibility for the telegraph agency, and
informing Tito that its work had been stopped. Regarding the decision on religious
education, he said that another senior member of the Croatian Party, Pavle Gregoric,
Tito was not satisfied, and on 18 September sent a message to Kardelj, ordering
On 30 September 1944, Kardelj wrote his report. Apart from its passages on religious
19//>/d p. 180.
180
nationalism, of insensitivity towards the Serbs in Croatia, of laxity in his relations with the
of the Croatian Party by Bakaric. 20 Tito agreed, and sent Kardelj and Djilas to effect
Hebrang's removal. While it was presented in a positive light, and Hebrang was given a
senior post in the government in Belgrade, Djilas recalled that he was unhappy. His new
responsibilities "did not even approach the status of an authoritarian leader of a people.
At the root of the dispute were Tito's and Hebrang's differing views of what
federalism should mean. Tito at this time followed the ideas of Stalin on the national
question, that a state that is federal in form would in fact be under central control through
a centralized, disciplined single Communist Party. For Hebrang, federalism meant that
Croatia and the Croatian Party would enjoy real autonomy. This also meant that the
Croatian Party would decide on policy towards its rivals, whether they be the HSS or the
Tito had tolerated Hebrang for a long time. In the earlier stages of the war the
certain extent. Hebrang had pursued a policy which was essentially in tune with the
Party's coalition-building line, while attacking Macek unremittingly. But by 1944 the
territory, it was possible for centralized Party control to be extended over the regional
Party organizations. Tito was frequently concerned that Hebrang was jeopardizing the
Partisan movement as a whole in his pursuit of a policy that concentrated on Croatia and
ignored the larger Yugoslav framework. That he tolerated him for so long no doubt had
much to do with the success of Hebrang's policies within the Croatian context. But after
the agreement with Subasic, AVNOJ's and the KPJ's position was significantly
strengthened, and Hebrang's approach threatened the centralization of Party and State.
Clearly Hebrang had gone further than was intended by the central Party leadership
in his attempts to keep peace with the Church. In his proposals regarding religious
education and marriage and divorce at the third session of the ZAVNOH Presidency, he
went much further than the Partisans had until then, and it was too much for Tito to
stand. However, it was also an inopportune time for Hebrang to be making such
concessions, as this was a period in which Tito was in any case sharpening his attitude
towards the Church and becoming less inclined to compromise. We have already seen
his hostility to the Vatican as a centre of "reactionary" forces seeking to undermine the
Partisan movement in his angry message to Hebrang of 15 September 1944. This was in
part another example of Hebrang's failure to keep up with the changing situation in the
closing stages of the war, and to adapt his policy in Croatia to the requirements of the
The shift in Tito's attitude towards the Catholic Church in the summer of 1944 can
be seen in the story surrounding Kocbek's mission to Rome. Kocbek was sent to Rome
by Tito and Kardelj, with the intention off countering the influence of Croatian and
Slovene Catholic groups there. His brief was to inform the Holy See about the position of
the liberation movement towards the Catholic Church, and to seek to change the
Vatican's position towards Yugoslavia. In order to improve relations with the Holy See,
Kocbek was mandated to promise that NKOJ would recognize the pre-war juridical
the Holy See, and before doing so sent a copy of it to Tito for approval.22 Tito's response,
of 26 August 1944, revealed a sharp change in attitude towards the Catholic Church
since Kocbek had received his initial instructions in May. 23 Sharply critical of the Church
and clergy in Yugoslavia, it stated that no guarantees had been made regarding the
internal position of the Church, and insisted that the onus was on the Church to correct
itself. Tito threatened to make changes in the position of the Church under pressure, and
without consulting the Holy See. These instructions effectively made Kocbek's original
Tito's sharpened attitude towards the Catholic Church was in part another result of
the changing position of the Partisans, internally and internationally. He no longer felt it
was necessary to make concessions. But it also revealed his fear of the damage that the
Church could do. Kardelj wrote scathingly about Kocbek's efforts to the Slovene Party
leadership, accusing him of naivete for believing that anything could be gained from the
Vatican. He also feared that it could have dangerous consequences, and cautioned
Evidently our standpoint against the clergy was not too sharp, as Catholic Reaction is
generally trying to strengthen itself on our positions. Any hesitation in that regard, or
relaxation in the face of such tendencies as Kocbek is trying to promote could only be
dangerous in the current situation, and would lead to a new concentration of Reaction.
of the wartime efforts to achieve an accommodation with the Church: "In the whole thing
the only positive outcome is that tomorrow we will be able to say to the Vatican and the
whole Catholic hierarchy here, which will try to consolidate its position: too late. We sent
you Kocbek when it was the time for that, but now it is too late."24
During 1944, the Slovene Communists too had to adapt to the changing priorities of
the central Party leadership, as it prepared for its seizure of power. In the autumn of
1944, the central leadership was insisting on a much greater degree of Party discipline
and close adherence to its line. There were particular reasons as to why the situation in
Slovenia was especially sensitive. As the end of the war approached, a major
preoccupation of the Communist leaders was with the rush to secure the claim to
territory in the Littoral, and close attention was therefore paid to the activities of the
24 Kardelj to the CK KPS, 1 October, 1944. Dokumenti centralnih organa, Book 20, pp. 162-170.
183
Slovene leadership. The fear was that the western Allies might make a landing in Istria,
and thus thwart Yugoslavia's ambitions in the whole Julian region, and perhaps even
interfere in the implementation of the revolution.25 Allied liaison officers noted the anxiety
of the Slovene Partisans on this account, and the resulting uncooperative attitude
towards them. 26
In this tense atmosphere there was a general sharpening in the attitude of the
Communists towards all their foes, as they adopted a "closed doors" policy, according to
which those who had not declared for them were to be regarded as enemies of the new
order that they were now engaged in building.27 The Catholic Church was a particular
object of their fear. The American OSS agent, Franklin Lindsay, keenly observed the
changes among the Slovene Partisans. In late 1944, they halted offensive operations
against the Germans. The BG, its morale high, was more aggressive, carrying the war to
the Partisans, under German direction: "The Germans had effectively mobilized the
It seemed that Catholicism was again being used to mobilize opposition to the
Partisans. Worse still, it appeared that the Church itself was intimately involved in efforts
to prevent a Communist takeover. Rozman sent a message to the Pope, with the
as the Yugoslav Communists assumed that their attempts to expand at the expense of
Italy would be vigorously resisted by the Holy See. It was in this context that the more
25Vodusek Staric, The Making of the Communist Regime in Slovenia and Yugoslavia, pp. 17-18.
hostile attitude towards the Holy See, which was revealed by the fate of the Kocbek
The sharpened attitude towards the Church also frustrated Ude's efforts to carry out
the tasks set the Religious Commission. It was in the remit of the Commission to advise
the authorities regarding the settlement of questions affecting relations with the Church.
Thus the Commission sought to examine such issues as the separation between Church
and State and religious education. Ude tried to enter into correspondence with the
relevant sections of SNOS on these issues. 30 They were discussed at a session of the
Commission on 16 April 1945, a lengthy report of which was sent to the Presidency of
SNOS. 31 But Ude found that little interest was being shown in the work of the
Commission. His frustration boiled over in his letter to the Presidency of SNOS on 22
April 1945 (cited earlier), when he suggested that the Commission, in its present form,
was not suited to carry out the functions which had been set it. 32
The Communist leaders had decided to deal with the question of relations with the
Church after the war. The situation had changed since the decision to found a Religious
Commission in February. Policy towards the Church was no longer primarily about
winning the support or acquiescence of the clergy. Now it was about establishing the
conditions for the Communist regime which the leadership was already starting to build.
Slovenia too was having to adapt to this new reality, even though a large occupation
force still remained there. The Communists had a policy on matters appertaining to the
Church. For example, in February 1945, Kocbek, who had been moved to Belgrade and
appointed Minister of Education following his debacle in Rome, wrote to the Education
30e.g. Letter of 7 February, 1945 to the Education Section; letter of 8 February, 1945 to the Internal Affairs
Section. INZ, PC - SNOS,'fasc. 458/IV.
voluntary subject,33 The leadership was also clear that the sphere of the Church's
activities should be severely restricted. But the Religious Commission was being
bypassed. It was not considered appropriate that these matters should be open for
discussion at that stage, and certainly not at the level of the emerging federal units. The
point was to develop a uniform, centralized policy, and at a time which the central
The determination of the leadership not to allow the Slovene Religious Commission
to take any initiative may also in part have been a reaction to the experience in Croatia.
Kardelj had played the central role in removing Hebrang and bringing the Croatian Party
into line, and he was determined that the same thing would not happen in Slovenia. In a
Bear in mind that that decision was completely wrong, and reject all attempts in any way to
cite that decision in Slovenia. You should adopt a decisive stand in favour of the division of
Church from state. Obviously there is no need to speak of that, to take decisions etc. That
is the line. According to that line you should resolve everything by means of administrative
regulations, without formal decisions. In one of your papers (probably in the Littoral's
Partizanskt Dvevnik) I read that the school year in the Littoral began with the usual "Holy
Mass". If such a stupidity occurred on the ground, at least do not report it in our papers.
Warn the Littoral people at once of that fact, and do not allow yourselves to be drawn
down the path of such political posturing. You must adhere to our old decisions, namely
that religious education is only for those whose parents wish it, and not in school hours,
but separately. Do not underestimate that, as later on it could come back to haunt us 34
This passage clearly demonstrates that the Communists had by this time no interest in
Ude's or the Commission's work. By the time it was constituted, in the autumn of 1944,
Earlier in the war the traditional Mass to start the school year was just the sort of thing to
By the end of the war, the harsher direction of the Communists' post-war policy was
already defined in general terms, while they wished to leave the specifics until after the
Kardelj to the CK KPS, 14 October, 1944. Dokumenti centralnih organa, Book 20, pp. 275-280
.
186
war was over. They would then deal directly with the Catholic hierarchy themselves,
The increasingly polarized situation made for a bitter climax to the war in both
Croatia and Slovenia. The acting French Consul in Zagreb, Andre Gaillard, who had
been there throughout the war, noted that by the summer of 1944 news of Partisan
excesses and the approach of the Russians had raised feelings of terror. He noted that
Croats were in a state of confusion, not knowing which way to turn, with both sides
demanding their absolute allegiance. Many of them did not dare to cross over to the
Partisans up until the last. Gaillard described the affect of this polarization on the
The Croats did not know how to choose any more between what they considered two
evils, one almost as bad as the other: Ustasha tyranny or the unknown of the Communist
dictatorship of Marshall Tito. The hope, nourished through months and years, of English
help evaporated. The Croats were going to confront their destiny alone: Pavelic in Zagreb,
with Ljuberic the killer, with Jozo Rukavina and all the persecutors; a few kilometres away,
the Partisan troops, to whom the popular rumour attributed infamies similar to those of the
Ustashas. 35
As the war reached its conclusion, the sharpening of relations between the Church
and the new Communist authorities became even more explicit, as the Ustashas and the
collaborationist regime in Ljubljana sought to enlist the hierarchy in their efforts to stave
off a Communist takeover. There were various schemes afoot to resist the Partisans, all
of them based upon the premise that the western Allies would not allow a Communist
takeover in Yugoslavia. 36 The Ustashas sought to persuade the Allies to send a military
and Rozman, proposing common action to continue the war and to bring about a
situation which would provoke Allied intervention. They appealed that Macek, as the
35Reports by Gaillard of 3 June and 18 August, 1945. FM, Paris, vol. 30, docs. 11-48.
Committee of National Resistance of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. 38 The Ustasha
General Moskov reported that, just before the end of the war, two Slovene priests arrived
in Zagreb and visited Macek. He was told by another leading Ustasha, Rukavina, that
they were seeking that a Croatian force should be sent to join the Slovenes trying to halt
the Partisan advance towards Ljubljana.39 It has also been reported that representatives
of Mihailovic met Pavelic in April 1945 and brought a letter to Stepinac, urging that,
whatever divided them, all his efforts should be directed to the struggle against
Bolshevism.40 Certainly a representative of Mihailovic did visit Zagreb near the end of the
war, and had contacts with the Ustasha authorities. Gaillard alleged that they signed an
letters to Pavelic and Stepinac, dated 15 April 1945, but he claimed that the letters were
not his, and that he was in the habit of giving out blank pieces of paper with his signature
on them.42 Stepinac also denied the authenticity of the letter, although his secretary, Ivan
acceptable face of the NDH to the western Allies, stressing Croatia's traditional cultural
links with Europe. Pope Pius XII reportedly expressed interest in a proposal to preserve
the NDH under Macek, viewing Croatia as a staunchly Catholic country and a bulwark
against schismatics and Communism. 44 A campaign in the Ustasha press asserted that
38 Sudjenje Lisaku, Stepincu, Salicu i druzini, ustasko-krizarskim zlocincima i njihovim pomagacima (Zagreb,
1946), pp. 49-52.
40Petranovic, "Aktivnost rimokatolickog klera", p. 270; Hrvoje Matkovic, Povijest Nezavisne Drzave Hrvatske
(Zagreb 1994), p. 201.
^Sudjenje Lisaku, Stepincu, Salicu i druzini, pp. 53-54; Reports from Gaillard of 20 May and 3 June, 1945.
FM, Paris, vol. 30, docs. 5-27.
42Josip Hrncevic, Svjedocanstva (hereafter Hrncevic), pp. 189-190, citing the official record of Mihailovic's
trial in 1946.
all European, anti-Bolshevik forces, the Ustashas, HSS and Catholic Church, should
stand together. 45
It was in this context that five of the bishops (those who were able to reach Zagreb)
issued a pastoral letter in March 1945, in which they defended themselves for having
acknowledged the desire of the Croatian people for their own state, and condemned
the attempts of the Ustashas to preserve themselves, particularly as the initiative for the
conference came from senior Ustashas, who also made the arrangements to bring the
bishops to Zagreb. At the same time, the Ustashas were encouraging others, such as
Zagreb University and other religious communities, to issue similar declarations, the
purpose of all of them being to appeal to the western Allies, to demonstrate that most
Croats did not wish to return to a Yugoslav state. An Ustasha functionary, Vladimir
Zidovec, described how the statements were translated into several languages for
distribution around the world, and how Radoslav Glavas, who was responsible for
religious affairs in the NDH administration, told him that Stepinac's secretary, Stjepan
Lackovic, was especially anxious for confirmation that the bishops' letter had been sent
abroad. 47
although it should be stressed that his efforts on behalf of the NDH did not imply support
for the Ustashas. Certainly he favoured an independent Croatian state, and the looming
Communist takeover ended any ambiguity regarding his commitment to the maintenance
of that state. A Communist takeover represented a threat to the Church, and therefore
Stepinac's strictures against interference by the Church and clergy in politics no longer
applied. It was only the imminence of the Communist takeover which finally brought him
out clearly against them. The German Plenipotentiary General in Croatia, Glaise von
Horstenau, noted in 1943 that Stepinac refused to instruct his clergy to speak against the
Communists in their sermons, observing also that at heart Stepinac was on the side of
the Allies. 48
Jakov Blazevic shrewdly recognized that the distance which Stepinac placed
between himself and the Ustashas for most of the war was in part due to his continued
recognition of Macek as the legitimate leader of the Croatian people, and appreciation of
Macek's policy of waiting, remaining untainted by collaboration with the Germans or the
Ustashas until the expected victory of the Allies would enable him to re-emerge. Thus,
Blazevic suggested, the disagreements between Stepinac and Pavelic were in part due
to divergent interests, with Pavelic dependant on the Axis, while Stepinac was looking to
a future after the defeat of the Axis. But as the end of the war approached, the conflict
became irrelevant, as the Ustashas too realized that the only hope for the preservation of
an independent Croatia was to turn to Macek, as a leader who might curry some favour
Stepinac seems to have taken a keen interest in the idea of re-orientating the NDH
towards the West, which was first seriously discussed in 1943. In the summer and
autumn of that year, leading Ustasha representatives opened contacts with HSS
members. The main figure in these talks on the Ustasha side was NDH minister Mladen
Lorkovic, while their collocutors on the HSS side were Avgust Kosutic and Josip Torbar.
The talks foundered, as the HSS was unwilling to risk compromising itself by entering
into a formal coalition with the Ustashas, arguing for a non-party government of
48Vasa Kazimirovic, NDH u svetlu nemackih dokumenata i dnevnika Gleza Fon Horstenau, 1941-1944
(Belgrade, 1987), p. 280.
The contacts were reopened the following year. A key element in both the earlier
and the later talks was the part to be assigned to the NDH army, the Croatian
Domobranstvo, which the HSS hoped would play a key role in the final stages of the war.
This was especially important to the HSS leaders in the context of the contacts which
they were simultaneously maintaining with the Croatian Partisans, and in which Kosutic
was once again the key figure. In order to have any kind of bargaining position in those
talks, the HSS needed to have a military force at its disposal. The talks with the
Ustashas in Zagreb were thus vital in the wider context of the talks with the Partisans. 51
Pavelic himself authorised the renewed talks in 1944, in which Lorkovic again took
the lead on the Ustasha side, together with the NDH defence minister, Ante Vokic. On
the HSS side, the leading figure was Ivan Farolfi, while Kosutic was kept informed. The
talks envisaged an abrupt shift away from the Axis camp, in which a change in
accompanied by approaches to the Allies. Following Romania's switch to the Allied side
in August 1944, Lorkovic and Vokic stepped up their plans. However, the plan was foiled
when Pavelic, who had been kept informed about the progress of the talks, but who was
unwilling to acquiesce in a plan which pre-supposed his ouster, moved to stop it. In
consultation with the German minister in Zagreb, Siegfried Kasche, he had Lorkovic and
Vokic arrested, purged the Ustasha ranks and rounded up numerous HSS figures.52
The extent of Stepinac's interest in these events is uncertain. There were reports
from both German and Partisan intelligence sources that he was pushing the idea of a
Danubian union of Catholic states during 1943. Certainly it seems that Stepinac was kept
informed about the various political machinations in 1944, and that his counsel was
sought. Torbar apparently kept him informed about events, and he was in indirect
contact with Kosutic. On 28 August, just before Pavelic moved against Lorkovic and
51 Jozo Ivicevic, "Politick! program ratnoga HSS-a i 'puc Vokic-Lorkovic"' (in Casop/s za suvremenu povijest,
no. 3, 1995, Zagreb) (hereafter Ivicevic), pp. 494-495.
52Jelic-Butic, Ustase i Nezavisna Drzava Hrvatska, pp. 289-293; Ivicevic, pp. 494-495.
191
Vokic, he held a long discussion with Vokic. 53 The Partisans had been aware that
something was afoot in Zagreb, and near the end of August, Hebrang informed the
central leadership that a coup was being prepared, adding that "Stepinac has gone to
Rome via Switzerland. He is carrying a proposal from the Macekists, a section of the
concerning the attempted coup that it involved sections of the Ustashas, Macekists,
Domobran officers and clergy. 54 Rumours that Stepinac had carried a proposal to the
Vatican had been circulating in Zagreb for some months,55 and were brought up again at
his trial after the war, when an alleged report of very doubtful authenticity was
involvement, it is clear that he took a lively interest in the political manoeuvres to forestall
a Communist takeover.
It seems that Stepinac's involvement was stepped up at the very end of the war.
Just before the arrival of the Partisans, he visited Macek in the company of Moskov.
There are various reports as to what they discussed. Macek recalled only that Moskov
pleaded with him to flee, and at Stepinac's trial his defence lawyer claimed that they
discussed how to avoid bloodshed when the Partisans arrived in Zagreb.57 These
accounts only give a very incomplete picture. The Ustasha government had concluded
that they would have to try to include Macek and the HSS if they were to persuade the
British and Americans to look differently upon the NDH. The Ustasha minister
Alajbegovic reported during his interrogation that they informed Pavelic of their opinions,
and that he asked them to send Stepinac to talk to Macek, and thus it came to their
53Kristo, "Katolicka Crkva u II Svjetskom Ratu" (in Casop/s za suvremenu povijest, no. 3, 1995, Zagreb), pp.
470-471.
55Kristo, "Katolicka Crkva u II Svjetskom Ratu" (in Casop/s za suvremenu povijest, no. 3, 1995, Zagreb), p.
470.
57Macek, In the Struggle for Freedom pp. 258-259; Pattee, Doc. B, p. 218.
192
meeting. Stepinac came away saying that Macek desired to talk to his people from the
HSS, and he took trouble to make sure that this should be enabled.58
Stepinac's critics regarded this visit as a last desperate effort at mediation between
the Ustashas and Macek to try to persuade the latter to take over the reigns of the
NDH. 59 Indeed, the idea that at such a critical moment Stepinac would have confined his
discussion with Macek to the Partisan arrival is not credible. Macek had been in isolation
for most of the war, and his first desires were for information as to the state of affairs and
for contact with his old political associates. It seems that Stepinac was, as usual, not
prepared to engage directly in the various political manoeuvrings. In that he was always
consistent. But seeing Macek as the legitimate political leader of the Croats and the man
best placed to hold back the Communists, it was only natural that he should have been
At about the time of his visit to Macek, Stepinac was, at Pavelic's initiative, offered
reservations of Stepinac and Macek were not the most important reason for the failure of
plans to form a new government. The key problem was that they did not see any
guarantee of intervention or support by the British and American forces. 60 In any case,
Stepinac's refusal of the regency did not diminish the belief among Communist leaders
that he had been intimately involved in efforts to save the NDH. The concealment in the
Archbishop's palace of NDH documents and the personal belongings of some high
Ustasha officials suggested to them that he was taking care of them until an expected
Ustasha return, even though Stepinac actually informed Bakaric about the matter at their
attempts to save the NDH. On 2 May, he discussed the situation with Stepinac until late.
The following evening he discussed with Pavelic how to reach an agreement with the
British, so that they would occupy Zagreb and prevent a Communist takeover. On 5 May,
he had been ready to go by aeroplane to the Allies, to invite them to come to Zagreb and
to assure them that they would meet no resistance, but Marcone forbade him to go. 62
As the war came to a close, desperate efforts were also made by the Communists'
foes in Slovenia to avoid their takeover. As we have seen, these included attempts to
forge an all-Yugoslav anti-Communist front. Since the Germans had replaced the Italians
in the Ljubljana Province and the Littoral in late 1943, a collaborationist administration
had operated under the leadership of Rupnik, whose main goal was to avoid a
Communist takeover. Rozman and much of the clergy were also accused of close
involvement in this later collaborationist activity. In particular, Rozman was attacked for
his participation at ceremonies to swear in recruits for the Slovene Domobranstvo in April
1944 and January 1945, in the presence of senior members of the German military.63
Indeed, the German commander in Ljubljana, General Ervin Rb'sener, confirmed that
Rozman had supported German policies.64 In June 1944, presumably with Rozman's
denouncing Communism, and asserting that they would help those whose duty it was to
maintain security, order and peace in the country, and to fight against Communism.65
In the last days of the war, there was an attempt to effect a transfer of power from
62Giuseppe Masucci, Misija u Hn/afstay (Madrid, 1967) (hereafter Masucci), pp. 195-196.
63 MNZ, Rozman, file 1, p. 86; Boris Mlakar, "Domobranska prisega", in 27. zborovanje slovenskih
zgodovinarjev: zbornik (Ljubljana, 1994), pp. 114-116.
65 Foreign Office Research Department report of 28 June, 1945. PRO, F0371/48911, R11125.
194
April 1945, at which Rupnik was also present. 66 The hope was that with the
Domobranstvo and help from the western Allies, they could resist the approaching
Partisans. But it was to no avail, and Rozman fled rather than face the Partisans.
As these various machinations to prevent a Communist takeover were going on, the
Croatian Communist leadership, now under Bakaric, rose to the challenge, caution gone,
competitor and an enemy. Bakaric had spent a good deal of the war with the central
Party leadership, his views were close to Tito's, and he could be relied upon to adhere
closely to Tito's line. In a special session of the ZAVNOH Presidency in Split on 14 April
1945, which formally constituted the first post-war Croatian government, he spoke at
length about the treachery and crimes of the clergy, attacking the bishops for allowing
the Church to be used by the Ustashas in their preparations to continue the struggle. He
nevertheless insisted that there would be no attack upon the Church, and that no
To emphasize that attempts to reach an accord with the Church had not yet been
abandoned, Bishops Pusic of Hvar and Mileta of Sibenik were present at the meeting,
agency, Tanjug, reported that Mileta made a short speech of welcome to the new
This chapter has shown how, with a Communist takeover imminent, the inherent
rivalry between the Communist Party and the Catholic Church came into sharper focus.
As the Partisans approached Zagreb, a brutal settling of accounts with large numbers of
the clergy was already under way. However, the Communists had not yet abandoned
their efforts to reach an accommodation with Church leaders. The commitment of both
sides to reaching that accommodation was about to be put to the real test. With Rozman
gone, the focus of attempts to arrive at an understanding between the Church and the
new regime moved decisively to Zagreb and the President of the Conference of Bishops
of Yugoslavia, Stepinac.
196
Chapter Five
Despite the sharpening of relations between the Communists and the Catholic
Church in the last phase of the war, after the Communist takeover a period of settling in
ensued. The heightened antagonism of the Communist leadership towards the Church
conciliatory approach. The Church was to be given a second chance. The outcome
would depend on the response of Church leaders. They could quietly accept a limited
existence within the new Communist order or, if they chose defiance, a confrontation
could be expected.
This chapter describes the early attempts at conciliation in Croatia after the war and
the deterioration in relations as it became apparent that the terms on which the new
regime was prepared to reach an accord amounted to an attack on the very bases of the
Church's accustomed role in Croatian society. It discusses the reasons for the mounting
antagonism of the regime towards Stepinac during 1945 and 1946, which finally led to
On 8 May 1945, the Partisans entered Zagreb. In the town there was much
uncertainty and foreboding, but Gaillard, who was regarded by other foreigners as the
best-informed person in Zagreb, 1 noted that the fear was mixed with a certain hope; "the
ice was broken." He reported that the uncertainty lasted for two weeks, as life was
"suspended" in the town, all commerce halted. Only OZNA was active, confirming fears
ry
2Reports by Gaillard of 20 May and 18 August, 1945. FM, Paris, vol. 30, docs. 11-27 and 34-48.
197
Emilio Pallua noted that they sought out any who had served in the Domobranstvo,
and that those they caught were mostly killed, arbitrarily, and without any written record.
A little later the Government arrived from Split, and some of the forms of legality were
established. At least people were no longer seized and killed without any formalities,
although that too continued in some what Pallua calls "insurrectionary areas", where
priests continued to disappear. He believed that the Minister of the Interior in Zagreb was
not responsible for that, but rather over-zealous elements on the ground. 3
The Communist leaders now had various priorities. Firstly they had to consolidate
their control of the country. The conviction existed among the various anti-Partisan
groups that the struggle would not end with the war itself. All were determined to
continue the fight. The remnants of the Ustashas, trying to escape to Austria, had it in
mind to replace German assistance with that of the western Allies. Such a strategy
depended on a break between the western Allies and the Soviet Union, and an outbreak
of armed conflict between them. 4 At the time this seemed to many to be a very real
possibility, particularly in Yugoslavia, given the great tension between British and
Yugoslav forces in Trieste, which lasted until the latter withdrew on 12 June.5 This issue,
and the prevention of any attempt by their Yugoslav opponents to take advantage of the
situation, was the top priority for several weeks after the end of the war. Thus it was that
the liquidation of their domestic foes was carried out so ruthlessly in this period.
The Communists also sought to establish a certain normality, to restore order and to
begin to govern. Up until the autumn of 1945 the Yugoslav Government included
members of the pre-war parties, according to Tito's agreement with Subasic. According
to this, a provisional government was to operate until the holding of free elections to a
Constituent Assembly. This exercise in power sharing was not to Tito's liking, and was in
4Jozo Tomasevich, "Yugoslavia during the Second World War", in Wayne S. Vucinich (ed.), Contemporary
Yugoslavia: Twenty Years of Socialist Experiment (Berkeley, 1969), pp. 111-112. (hereafter Vucinich).
any case only cosmetic. In order to ensure absolute Communist control Tito sought to
marginalize this "legal" opposition, effectively restricting all political activity outside the
In spite of assurances during the war that the Partisan movement was about
national liberation, and not about Socialist revolution, it was quite clear that the
Communists were intent on taking power and implementing their programme in their own
way. Whatever the promises made at the time of the agreement with Subasic, that was
merely for external consumption. The Communists did not intend to give any other
political forces any quarter in matters of substance. There would be no liberalization that
might allow the pre-war parties to thwart the revolutionary aims of the Communists. 7
used the armed forces, police and judiciary as instruments with which to achieve their
political monopoly.8 In Croatia, they were helped in their aims by the fact that Macek had
fled. With him gone, the remnants of the HSS disintegrated rapidly. With other HSS
leaders and supporters arrested or killed, the erosion of the party, which had gone on
throughout the war, was completed. And with the Domobranstvo destroyed in the spring
of 1945, there was, in the absence of outside intervention, no force left to offer real
Having consolidated their grip upon the country, the Communist leaders could start
to implement their revolutionary programme. There was no doubt of their intent. For
example, Kardelj made it clear early on that there could be no compromise as regards
land reform. This was justified on social grounds, to give land to those who tilled it, while
7Branko Petranovic, Politicks i pravne prilike za vreme privremene vlade DFJ (Belgrade, 1964), p. 136.
doing away with the last vestiges of feudalism through the expropriation of large estates.
It was, however, clear that there was a considerable political content. During the
discussions of the reform in the provisional assembly, much of the debate was devoted
to the need to connect the peasantry with the proletarian revolution, and to give them a
stake in it. It was thus a part of the new regime's consolidation of its power and of the
the new order was the reform of education and control over the sphere of cultural
activities, through which the Communists intended to break the vestiges of the old order
The Communist rulers aimed to impose their control over all aspects of public life,
and to suppress all autonomous institutions in society. 13 Thus several aspects of their
programme inevitably impinged upon the realm of the Catholic Church, which was
accustomed to a central role in the life of the country. As noted earlier, Fitzroy Maclean
had reported in December 1944 that he did not expect the Communists' conciliatory
attitude towards the churches long to survive the end of the war. He observed that while
Tito was keen to establish an understanding with the Catholic Church, he insisted that
war criminals and collaborators must be punished and that the churches would not be
permitted any political influence. Maclean concluded that "it is safe to assume that any
deviation from this on the part of either individuals or religious communities will
eventually lead to a curtailment of their activities, especially once the movement is firmly
established in power and need have less regard for public opinion."14
11 Zdenko Cepic, "Agrarna reforma po drugi svetovni vojni -znacaj, ucinki, posledice" (in Prispevki za novejso
zgodovino, nos.'l-2, 1992), pp. 173-176; Zdenko Cepic, "Agrarna reforma in politika" (in 27. zborovanje
slovenskih zgodovinarjev: zbornik, Novo Mesto, 1994), p. 125.
13Nada Kisic-Kolanovic, "Problem legitimeta politickog sustava u Hrvatskoj nakon 1945". (in Casop/s za
suvremenu povijest, no. 3, 1992, Zagreb), pp. 177-178.
In their early contacts, both the Catholic Church leaders and the new authorities in
Croatia were feeling their way, neither side sure of its strength. Just before the arrival of
the Partisans in Zagreb, Tito had ordered the chief of the Army's counter-intelligence
service to arrest Stepinac (some officials have stated that the possibility of liquidating
him was discussed). Bakaric, however, was reportedly against the move, fearing the
effect it would have on the public mood in Croatia. However, on 15 May the order for
Stepinac's arrest reportedly came from Belgrade, and Aleksandar Rankovic (a Serbian
communist, who, with Djilas and Kardelj, made up the inner circle of power around Tito)
ordered the collection of material about his hostile activities. 15 Stepinac was arrested on
17 May.
The new regime rapidly moved to eradicate the social influence of the Church, local
authorities taking over buildings and seminaries, while in some areas local Party
functionaries encouraged peasants to take over Church lands without waiting for any
legal sanction. 16 The Archbishop's palace experienced repressive measures for several
days, with cars requisitioned, telephone lines cut and the arrest of Stepinac. Such
menacing steps were matched by efforts at conciliation, which revealed the hesitancy of
the authorities. Bakaric was personally hostile to Stepinac, regarding him as pro-
Ustasha, and believing that there was little likelihood of cooperation with him, but only
conflict. 17 Nevertheless, unsure of the Party's grip on power, he recognized the damage
that too harsh a policy towards Stepinac could cause. The authorities thus drew back
from the repressive measures and reaffirmed their commitment to religious freedom.
Bishop Salis-Seewis, met Tito and Bakaric. Both sides were conciliatory, while clearly
15 lvan Muzic, Pavelic i Stepinac (Split, 1991), pp. 83-84. (hereafter Muzic); Jure Kristo cites an article by
Ljubo Boban'in Danas (Zagreb, February 1992) concerning the orders to arrest and collect material against
Stepinac. Katolicka Crkva I Nezavisna Drzava Hivatska, 1941. -1945. (Zagreb, 1998), pp. 18-19.
17Per letter from Bakaric to Dedijer, cited in Dedijer, Novi Prilozi za biografiju Josipa Broza Tita, Vol. 2, p.
563.
201
stating their positions. Salis hoped that the Government would put into practice its
expressed principles of freedom of religion, and would allow the Church to carry out its
mission. Tito was critical of the attitude of the clergy during the war, but expressed the
view that matters concerning religion should be settled through discussion rather than by
decree, and asked that the clergy should prepare a detailed report on their view of how
relations between Church and State should be settled. He added that, however much
they might disagree with him, they must not interfere in the consolidation of the state.
Tito also expressed the view that the Catholic Church should be more national and more
Following this meeting, Stepinac was released, and on 4 June he met Tito himself.
Stepinac emphasized that only the Holy See could make decisions regarding relations
between church and state, and recommended a concordat, or at least a "modus vivendi"
on the pre-war Czechoslovakian model. Tito again alluded to his desire that the Church
should follow a more independent, "national" course, expressing his fear that the Holy
See was not well inclined towards Yugoslavia, and his wish that the Church should
Although these first contacts were cordial, there were already signs that positions
were being staked out, and the contours of future disagreements were taking shape. Tito
saw Stepinac as a strong opponent and, preoccupied as he was with the confrontation in
Trieste at that time, feared that he might take advantage of the difficulties of the new
regime and the possibility of intervention by the western Allies to confront it on the
domestic front as well. This was indicated by his response when one of Salis's
delegation, Mgr. Zivkovic, told him that Stepinac lacked a political nose, which explained
the anti-Partisan letter of 25 March. Tito replied that, on the contrary, he had a very good
18Aleksa Benigar, Alojzije Stepinac, hrvatski kardinal (2nd, improved and enlarged edition, Zagreb, 1993)
(hereafter Benigar), pp. 461-466. Bakaric later confirmed that Benigar's account of the meeting is correct,
Dedijer, Novi prilozi za biografiju Josipa Broza Tita, Vol. 2, p. 563.
19
Benigar, pp. 467-469.
202
70
one. Tito saw the threat as very real, and evidently feared that Stepinac could exploit it,
As to Stepinac's meeting with Tito, it seems that it was tense. Afterwards, Stepinac
told Pallua that he had found Tito very charming, 21 but neither he nor Tito was content
with its course or its outcome. The Chief Federal Public Prosecutor, Josip Hrncevic, was
waiting to see Tito when Stepinac emerged from the meeting, and reported that he was
visibly excited, while Tito was clearly dissatisfied.22 Stepinac later declared that they had
spoken "man to Man". 23 The senior Communist Vladimir Velebit, who enjoyed close
relations with western diplomats in Belgrade, confirmed that there was a sharp
For a time the show of cordial relations continued, and the developing confrontation
was hidden from view. Stepinac attended the celebration of the "day of the uprising", a
major date in the Communist calendar, appearing alongside Bakaric and other Croatian
leaders.25 For their part, the Croatian authorities were keen to avoid harming relations
with the Church unnecessarily. In August 1945, the Regional Committee of the KPH for
Dalmatia informed the KPH Central Committee that they did not intend to accept an
invitation to send an official representative to the procession in Split to mark the feast of
the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, but that they would send someone to the celebration
in Sinj, as the Lady of the Assumption was the patron of the Sinj region. The Central
Committee responded that they should send representatives to both Split and Sinj, so as
not to exacerbate tensions with the clergy.26 But with large numbers of priests being
21 Pallua, tape 2, p. 38. Numerous world leaders and celebrities attested to Tito's charm.
22Hrncevic, p. 193.
23,
"'muski smo razgovarali". Muzic, pp. 84-85.
24Remarks by Velebit at a dinner at the American embassy in Belgrade, reported by the French ambassador,
Jean Payart in a telegramme of 9 February, 1946. FM, Paris, vol. 34, doc. 152.
25Pallua, tape 3, p. 1.
arrested and tried or summarily executed, and with the new regime beginning to
implement its programme, a conflict could not be avoided. In the face of an attack upon
the Church, Stepinac was not timid or cautious. He would face down the enemies of the
Relations Deteriorate
In their letter of 24 March 1945, the five Croatian bishops had clearly recorded their
hostility to "materialistic Communism". 27 Stepinac did not believe that there was any real
the basis of the wartime promises of the National Liberation Movement regarding the
freedom of religion, there appeared to be some grounds for hope that relations could be
set on a good footing. The bishops were prepared to give the new regime a chance, to
see if a satisfactory accommodation could be reached. Thus they stressed the promises
of the Partisans in their early meetings with the authorities, which had begun with the
contacts made by the Dalmatian bishops shortly before the end of the war.
In spite of his grave doubts, Stepinac too was ready to acknowledge the new
authorities, to deal with them and to try to reach agreement with them. But he had little
Church in our country still remains firm. An agreement which would have any lasting
meaning is impossible without the Holy See. She is always ready for agreement with all
people of goodwill, but never by fiat. That is a term unknown in the dictionary of the
Catholic Church." When pressed as to whether the Church could reach an agreement
with the State, Stepinac replied: "This is not to be printed ... It is just between you and
me. It will not! That is to say, Communism, in order to reach an agreement, would have
to renounce its main principles. It will not do that. Therefore there will not be an
inv. br. 2214, knj. 1. Despatch no. 967, from Regional Committee of KPH for Dalmatia to CK KPH, received
11 August, 1945, and reply of 12 August, 1945, despatch no. 969.
agreement."28 Stepinac expressed similar views shortly after the Communist takeover.
On 6 June, two days after his meeting with Tito, he told Masucci of his grave concern at
the anti-religious measures of the Communists, and his lack of confidence in their
promises. 29
As relations between the Church leaders and the Communist authorities sharpened
during the summer months of 1945 there were certain key issues for the Catholic
Church. Most important were the treatment of the clergy by the authorities; the
upbringing and religious education of the young; and the application of land reform to
Church property. Among other issues were the questions of civil marriage and divorce;
Catholic publications; the takeover by the authorities of religious buildings and the
hindrance and harassment of religious orders; and the question of priests' pensions.
In their letter of March 1945, the bishops protested "before God and mankind
against the systematic murder and persecution of innocent Catholic priests and faithful,
most of whom lived truly saintly lives, which the haters of the Church have ended by
illegal sentences, based upon fictitious crimes."30 Indeed, arrests of members of the
clergy were widespread, on a wide variety of pretexts, such as having cooperated with
an Ustasha official, or for helping someone to flee the country. 31 In a letter to Bakaric on
21 July 1945, Stepinac objected to the large number of priests being held in prison, to
the conditions in which they were held, and to the procedures of the military courts
before which they appeared. They were not allowed to call defence witnesses or to
accusation until they actually appeared in court. He cited the cases of several who he
28 lnterview with a journalist of the Associated Press news agency, quoted in Benigar, pp. 672-673.
29Masucci, p. 205.
31 Pallua,tape2, p. 39.
205
considered had suffered injustice. He concluded that these courts had lost all credibility
The proceedings at these trials, and the executions which often followed them, were
frequently very rapid. Where possible, attempts were made to mount some kind of a
defence, and to appeal against the sentence. The desperation of the situation is revealed
1945, in which he appealed for mercy to be shown to two priests who had been
sentenced to death, whose alleged crime was not even known to him. In the same letter
he appealed on behalf of Fr. Petar Kovacic from Zagreb, who had in fact already been
killed on 6 July. He was sentenced to death for having received a decoration from
Pavelic, for having carried out the conversion of an Orthodox to Catholicism, for allegedly
speaking out against Communism, and for having warned parents not to allow their
for such alleged crimes accord with Tito's assurance that nothing would happen to
people who had not "bloodied their hands", asked Stepinac? The arbitrariness of the
"justice" being meted out at the time is indicated by the fact that Kovacic was initially
sentenced to six years imprisonment, appealed against the sentence, and then saw it
increased to death. 33
These trials were different in character from the later show trials. Rather than
political lessons, these were swift and ruthless retribution against those who had
collaborated with the enemy during the war, and been responsible for their crimes. 34
Under this pretext, thousands of people were killed simply because the new regime saw
in them potential opponents. In terms of scale the violence fell especially heavily on the
32Nada Kisic-Kolanovic, "Pisma zagrebackoga nadbiskupa Alojzija Stepinca Predsjedniku Narodne Vlade
Hrvatske Vladimiru Bakaricu godine 1945", (in Croatica Christiana, no. 29, year XVI, Zagreb, 1992), pp. 143-
155.
33HDA, VK, kut. 3, doc. 404; Stjepan Kozul, Spomenica zrtvama ljubavi zagrebacke nadbiskupije (Zagreb,
1992),'p. 70.
34Stella Alexander, Church and State, p. 62, and The Triple Myth, p. 122.
206
Croatian Domobrani, upon whom a real slaughter was visited immediately following the
end of the war. 35 Numerous priests were caught up in the violence, often summarily
executed, in secret by OZNA, without even the form of a trial. One Fr. Pasicek from
Vrapce wrote how, having been arrested, he was nearly lynched. A "People's Mass
Meeting" had been planned, with the intention of judging him and hanging him on the
spot. It had, however, been decided to hand him over to a "higher authority" after all. 36
Djilas has described the atmosphere of revenge mixed with revolutionary ardour
which prevailed at the end of the war in seeking to explain this mass extermination.
OZNA continued with the killings "according to its own often local and inconsistent
criteria" until late in 1945, when Tito finally cried "enough" (Djilas did not believe,
however, that such mass collective retribution could have been undertaken without
approval from the top). 37 For many Partisans, it was a matter of just revenge for the
persecution of the Serbs in the NDH, for which the clergy were widely believed to hold a
major share of the responsibility. The repression of the Catholic Church was thus
education. He objected to the fact that religious instruction had been abolished in the
higher classes of the secondary schools and reduced to an optional one hour per week
in the lower classes and in the elementary schools, and to the proposed abolition of
private schools. Thus, he protested, "the Catholic Church has been deprived of nearly
The question of religious education was of vital interest to both sides, lying as it did
at the heart of the battle for the allegiance of the Croatian people. The Communists saw
the education system as one of the most important elements in their transformation of
society, and the Ministry of Education kept a very tight control on the appointment of
teachers, especially in the first year following the end of he war. It was to be an
education infused with ideology. A crucial aspect of this was the "struggle against
This question was a constant preoccupation of the bishops, who complained bitterly
to the authorities, as in Stepinac's letter cited above, and acted to counter the measures
taken by them. Thus Stepinac issued a pastoral letter on 14 June 1945 concerning
religious education and the Christian upbringing of the young. He forcefully reminded
parents, including citations from Canon Law and an encyclical of Pope Pius VI (1775-
99), of their duty to ensure that their children receive a Christian upbringing. This was an
inalienable right, "which takes priority over every right of the national or state
In our homeland, in opposition to divine and natural law and against the explicit decrees of
the Holy Church and all the Christian traditions of the Croatian people, religious instruction
has been completely abolished in the higher classes of the secondary schools, while it is
voluntary in the lower ones and in the primary schools, upon which the parents of the
children have to decide.
He warned parents that they were obliged to seek religious instruction for their children,
as was their right and duty. 40 In its tone and content, and in the fact that it was a pastoral
letter, aimed at all of the faithful of the diocese, the letter represented an open challenge
to the education policy of the authorities, and it clearly revealed the very great
emphasizing again in a circular to the clergy of 6 July 1945 that parents must be sure to
opt for religious instruction in the schools, as the authorities allowed them to do, and that
A major concern of the Church was that the existing regulations allowing religious
education were not always implemented as intended at the local level, and a variety of
40Copy of letter at Arhiv Josipa Broza Tita, Fond kancelarija Marsala Jugoslavije (hereafter JBT), II -10/6.
means were used to hinder the work of the catechists in practice. In principle, catechists
were to be state employees, appointed with the approval of the local authority for primary
schools and of the Ministry of education for secondary schools. 42 The reality was
catechists complained that they were not paid, and that by being voluntary and usually in
the last hour of the school day religious education had been debased. 43 Further,
teachers in some schools sent pupils home immediately before the religious education
class, and told them that it was best not to attend.44 Another means of obstruction was to
object to some priests being catechists on account of their alleged political activities, as
was the case with Fr. Ivan Trstenjak, a parish priest near Daruvar, who was accused of
agitating against the People's Front and of having links with armed opponents of the
regime.45
1945 that in Sibenik it was obstructed by a variety of means. One headmaster would not
allow teachers to register whether parents desired children to receive religious education
or not, insisting that parents should come individually to him. There were cases when
parents who did so were roundly rebuked by him. In cases when parents had opted for
their children to receive religious education, teachers sometimes came into the class and
invited the children to leave, telling them they were not obliged to attend. 46
43Letter of 20 October, 1945 from catechists in Zagreb to the Religious Commission. HDA, VK, kut. 4, doc.
846.
44For example, complaint of 20 September, 1946 from the Vicar-General of the Zagreb diocese. HDA VK,
kut 7, doc. 1576.
45Letter from the NO for Daruvar to the Religious Commission of 24 June, 1946, following complaint from
Lach of 20 May, 1946. HDA, VK, kut. 7, doc. 1072.
46 Report to the Religious Commission of 29 August, 1945. HDA VK, kut. 3, doc. 574.
209
he complained that in the school year 1944-1945 no school in the town of Split had
lessons in religious education, although almost all parents had opted for it and the
bishop's Ordinaria had repeatedly raised the matter with the town authorities. Outside of
Split, in the villages, the priests had been able to hold classes in religious education, but
remain in the class to supervise during religious education lessons, and some of them
Things did not improve in the following school year. On 14 May 1946, the Croatian
Religious Commission asserting that he did not expect this regulation to make any
difference in practice, any more than earlier decisions of the Education Ministry. In the
area around Sinj there had been no religious education since the autumn of 1944, as
various artifices had been employed to avoid it. In the Trogir district it was taught in some
places, until in May 1945 the local authority had issued an instruction to teachers not to
allow religious education, as "it is not necessary today to hold lessons in religious
education in the schools, nor prayers before or after the lessons." Since then it had not
been taught. Bonefacic noted that it was especially the recently appointed teachers (i.e.
appointed on ideological grounds) who hindered religious education, while some local
officials intimidated priests to keep them from teaching. In Split itself there were
catechists, but they worked unpaid, and most of the more experienced ones had not
been accepted. In the secondary schools certain "progressive" pupils posted attacks on
the catechists on the notice boards, which the school authorities allowed in the name of
freedom.49
As will be described later, in the course of 1946 even the show of tolerance towards
the Church was increasingly abandoned, and Bonefacic's contention that the fine
promises made in Zagreb made little impact on the ground received further confirmation.
One priest from his diocese complained that someone (the priest specified that the
person was an Orthodox, i.e. a Serb, indicating the feeling of many Croats that
persecution of the Church was linked to ethnic antagonism) had told him not to enter any
school or to teach religious education any more, and claimed that it was the order of the
People's Committee in Split. In fact there was no such ban directly from the authorities,
Not all areas experienced such obstruction. Buratovic wrote in November 1945 that
in the Krk diocese and in the Susak deanery catechists were not hindered in any way.51
It remained, however, a very sensitive matter. Both the Communists and the Church
were thinking in terms of a long-term struggle for the realization of their vision of society,
and the upbringing of the young was thus a key battle ground.
As relations between the two sides became more and more fraught in the course of
1945, this battle came out into the open. In a speech in Dubrovnik in July 1946, Tito, in a
fierce attack on the clergy, explicitly stated the crucial place which the struggle for the
youth had in the Communists' attempts to build their new society. He appealed to the
Communist youth organization to uproot the influence of the clergy and of reaction, and
not to allow them to engage the youth in the service of "this black force" which struggled
against the regeneration and well-being of the new Yugoslavia: "We must save our
50Letter from the priest of 30 July, 1946, to Bonefacic. HDA, VK, kut. 7, doc. 1282.
youth, as cunning and perfidious reaction, which receives its instructions from abroad,
and which tries to halt the path of our History, wants to tear it from us."52
The bishops felt obliged to respond to this assault, and in a circular of 27 August
1946 asserted the right of the Church, in harmony with parents and schools, to bring up
children in the Christian spirit. Thus one hour of religious education was insufficient, but
rather the whole education must be infused with Christianity, so that the schools, family
bishops concluded with an assurance that they did not seek conflict with the authorities,
but, bearing in mind the purposes for which the Communists wanted to use education, it
July 1945, having read in the newspapers that a law on agrarian reform was being
prepared. He asserted that the Church was not against land reform in principle, and the
bishops' conference had in 1919 recognized the justice of the liquidation of large estates.
But the lands which the Church possessed were the minimum that was required for the
Church to be able to maintain itself. It served for the upkeep of seminarians, the central
Church institutions, colleges etc. Agrarian reform, coupled with the separation of Church
and State, would leave the Church without income, and would amount to persecution.54
The following month the law was passed, its contents fulfilling Stepinac's worst
fears. Among a series of protest letters, on 17 August 1945 he wrote to Tito and Bakaric,
complaining that his letter of 10 July had been ignored, and that he had found out about
the law only from sketchy newspaper articles. He repeated his contention that by means
of its properties the Church supported its clergy, offices and institutions. He was
"Reported by Payart in a letter of 31 July, 1946. FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 190-192.
particularly aggrieved by the fact that Tito's promises that matters touching upon the
affairs of the Church would be settled by consultation had not been kept. The law on
agrarian reform revealed, he complained, "that the Catholic Church in this state has
systematic persecution, all under the guise of freedom of religion, freedom of conscience
Assembly in Belgrade and to Tito on 20 August 1945. In the letter to Tito he drew
particular attention to the lack of consultation of the Church on this matter and a whole
series of other measures, asserting that he had tried to put the Church's view, but that
this had not been given any consideration. He finished his protest at the law on agrarian
reform with a warning that it could only harm relations between Church and State, for
which the Church was in no way responsible. The urgency of the matter is indicated by
the fact that four days later he sent another protest to the Presidency of the Provisional
preparation of the law on agrarian reform and in the discussion of it in the Provisional
Assembly there had always been complete agreement that church lands must be
letter to a man whom he must have known would be unconvinced, that this unanimous
view was the "result of the mood of the broad peasant masses." He refuted Stepinac's
assertion that he had broken his promise made to the senior representatives of the
clergy in June, claiming disingenuously that he had been awaiting a report from the
55
'JBT, II -10/5 and Kisic-Kolanovic, "Pisma zagrebackoga nadbiskupa", pp. 165-169.
56Letter and telegramme to the Presidency of the Provisional People's Assembly at Arhiv Jugoslavije
(hereafter AJ), Fond 15, Prezidijum narodne skupstine FNRJ, fasc. 20/348. Letter to Tito at JBT, II, 10-5.
213
bishops' conference, which had unfortunately not yet been held. He again expressed his
hope that the Church and State could agree on questions relating to their relations. 57
Stepinac's reply reminded Tito of the letters he had sent to the competent state
authorities and to Tito himself, explaining the Church's objections to the law on agrarian
reform. Thus the Church had made every effort to ensure that matters concerning the
Church would be dealt with in consultation between Church and State. Stepinac
particularly picked Tito up on his assertion that the law arose out of the mood of the
"broad peasant masses". The "gentlemen" who had framed the law were not peasants,
but senior Communist Party members. He revealed that he had taken trouble to know his
enemy, citing Stalin's The Foundations of Leninism, with its espousal of the leading role
of the Party and exclusion of any spontaneity on the part of the masses. Further, he
informed Tito that in parishes around Zagreb where the authorities had not waited for the
law to begin dividing the Church's lands, the peasants had resisted such measures. He
finished with a warning that the Church would never be reconciled to this unjust law.58
Such complaints were rejected by the authorities. The interests of the Church had
not been ignored, they asserted, as ten hectares had been left to each church, and thirty
forest. That the needs of the Church had been considered, it was contended, was shown
by the fact that the original limit of five hectares and twenty for historical institutions had
been raised. The view was that the Church had not acquired its properties through its
own work, and therefore the Community had the right to take them without
compensation. The Church, it was contended, exaggerated the extent to which its
material basis was damaged by the reform, and it would still be able to perform its
spiritual function.59
57JBT, 11-10/5.
58Undated copy of Stepinac's letter at AJ, fond 144, Savezna komisija za verska pitanja (hereafter SKVP),
fasc. 1/4.
The bishops and religious institutions tried to avoid the reform. Having vigorously
protested against the measure in principle, they proceeded to try to defend the interests
of the Church as best they could within the confines of the law as it stood. Bishop
Aksamovic of Djakovo led the way, appealing against the application of agrarian reform
1945. Aksamovic was more flexible than most of the bishops in his dealings with the
Communist authorities, hence his readiness to adapt to the new reality and to work
within the limits and possibilities set by them. This flexibility was evident in his finishing
the letter with the usual Partisan slogan (which appeared at the bottom of all their letters)
"Death to Fascism - Freedom to the People". It would have been hard to imagine
Aksamovic appealed that the great historical significance of the Djakovo See
(Bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer had been one of his predecessors) for the Croatian
people should be taken into account, and that it should be treated as a special case.
Indeed, he claimed to have been told by the President of the Federal Assembly in
Belgrade that special arrangements would be made for the cathedral in Djakovo. He
pointed out that the law envisaged that the reform would be carried out in the federal
units upon the basis of laws framed in those units, based on the federal law. As no such
law had been passed in Croatia, he believed that the authorities there were acting
concluded with a reference to all the institutions for which the diocese's property
provided. 60
Contained in Aksamovic's appeal were elements which were common in many other
appeals in late 1945 and early 1946. In March 1946, the Zagreb Archdiocese made a
detailed appeal against the decision of the city Commission for Agrarian Reform of the
previous month regarding its properties. It too emphasized the perceived injustice of not
60
HDA, VK, kut. 3, doc. 603.
215
significance. It was supported in its claim by Rittig (at the request of Stepinac), who
claimed in a letter of 10 February 1946 that it deserved such special treatment as the
first high school in Croatia. The city Commission for Agrarian Reform chose to see this
as meaning that it was an educational, and not a religious institution, and therefore not
entitled to any special treatment. The seminary hastily sought to extract itself, insisting
that it was a religious establishment, and should be allowed the maximum for a religious
November 1945 that peasants, urged on by the local authorities, had already started
parcelling out land and livestock even before a decision on expropriation had been
taken. Their Provincial had written to Bakaric, pointing out that their land was farmed
entirely by the sisters (i.e. it was owned by those who tilled it) and fed 300 members of
the order. She also pointed out the work that the order did in the fields of education and
hospitals, and asked that the order be afforded special treatment.63 Aksamovic made a
similar appeal on behalf of the Sisters of the Holy Cross in Djakovo, who also worked
their land themselves. The Provincial of the order complained bitterly that the order had
already lost seven buildings, without compensation, and that while the Presidency of the
Croatian Government had promised that the convent in Djakovo would not be taken
61 Decision of 26 February, 1946 and appeal of 13 March, 1946 at HDA, VK, kut. 6, doc. 731. Detailed
documentation from February to August 1946 regarding the application of agrarian reform to the Archdiocese
is at HDA, VK, kut. 7, doc. 1290.
62Appeals by the seminary of 15 February and 12 March, 1946, HDA, VK, kut. 5, doc. 301 and kut. 1, doc.
47. Letters of support from Rittig at HDA, VK, kut. 4, doc. 827 and kut. 5, doc. 423.
63Letterto Bakaric of 14 Sept, 1945, HDA, VK, kut. 3, doc. 688; letter to Rittig of 10 Nov, 1945, HDA, VK, kut.
4, doc. 944; letter to Ministry of Agriculture of 5 Feb, 1946, HDA, VK, kut. 5, doc. 191.
216
over, it had been announced that it would be turned into a children's home. The loss of
its mother house, she concluded, would represent the persecution of the order. 64
Stepinac also employed more guileful means of avoiding the reform. Taking
advantage of the fact that each parish would be left a maximum of ten hectares, on 31
August 1945 he announced the creation of a new parish at Zapresic, just outside Zagreb,
dividing it off from the parish of Brdovac, and the division of the property between the two
parishes accordingly. There followed, during September 1945, several other decisions
regarding the creation of new parishes.65 As we shall see later, this measure to avoid the
reform met with a very vigorous response. Seeing the strength of the objections of the
Communists to this tactic, Stepinac sought to show that the formation of new parishes
was not just aimed at avoiding the reform, but was part of a policy going back to before
the war of increasing the number of parishes in the Zagreb Archdiocese. Thus, in a
stressed that it had been considered for forty years.66 Stepinac had indeed been very
active in founding new parishes before the war, but few were fooled by the assertion that
there was no special reason for so many to be created just at the time when agrarian
Stepinac's assertion to Tito that the application of agrarian reform was entirely
contrary to the mood of most of the Croatian peasantry was quite justified. Maurice
Rivoire, who replaced Gaillard at the French Consulate in Zagreb, noted that in accusing
the Church of trying to avoid agrarian reform, the Communists were seeking to appeal to
the interests of the Croatian peasantry and to break their attachment to their Church and
64Letter of 22 Feb, 1946 from Aksamovic to the Ministry of Agriculture, HDA, VK, kut. 5, doc. 326; and of 22
Feb 1946 from the Provincial of the order to the Ministry of Social Policy, HDA, VK, kut. 5, doc. 339.
65 Decisions regarding the creation of fifteen new parishes, at HDA, VK, kut. 5, docs. 590, 592-595, 636-642,
686, 721-722.
67 Maurice Rivoire of the French Consulate in Zagreb had no doubt that the accusations of the authorities on
this point were justified. FM, Paris, vol. 34, doc. 72.
217
to their priests. From the information he had it appeared that the Croatian peasants were
refusing the benefits of agrarian reform when it was Church land that was its subject, and
On 17 March 1946, a mass meeting was held in the school at Sv. Klara, which was
attended also by people from the surrounding district. Its purpose was to draw up a list of
those interested in agrarian reform, but the assembled local inhabitants decided that
Church property should not be touched, and demanded that the crucifix which had been
removed from the school wall should be replaced. In this case the will of the peasantry
counted for nothing, as on 2 May 1946 the parish priest complained to the Religious
Commission that the appeal of the local people had been ignored.69 The Communists
were aware that the application of agrarian reform to Church land sometimes met with
resistance, believing that the peasants were being encouraged to refuse land taken from
the Church. 70 Some priests were accused of using more direct means of resistance,
such as Fr. Stjepan Mlinaric, who was accused of brandishing a pistol at an official
The Church authorities took the issues of the treatment of the clergy, religious
education and agrarian reform especially seriously, because in each of these cases it
appeared that the Communists were threatening the Church's ability to carry out its
mission in a fundamental way. But a number of other issues were the subject of repeated
complaints by the Church. One such was the ability of the Church to publish religious
publications. Upon the end of the war the religious press practically ceased to be. The
68
letter from Rivoire of 27 January, 1946. FM, Paris, vol. 34, doc. 140.
69 Minutes from the meeting, HDA, VK, kut. 1, doc. 323; letter of complaint from parish office, HDA, VK, kut.
6, doc. 747.
71 Letter from Zlatko Kuntaricto Pallua of 6 Sept, 1946 on the subject, HDA, VK, kut. 1, doc. 208.
218
available. In July 1945, a request was made for permission for a fortnightly Catholic
paper, as there were no Catholic papers. Rittig recommended the request, suggesting
that Canon Pavao Loncar should be editor, as he would ensure that it would be "in the
A heavy blow to the Church was the confiscation of a printing house, "Narodna
tiskara dionicarskog drustva u Zagrebu", which had served the Archdiocese, and a
majority of whose shares had been transferred to the Church just before the end of the
war. The courts took the view that the transfer was void, as it had taken place during the
occupation, and the confiscation proceeded, as part of the property of a man sentenced
to forced labour. 73 As a result the official news bulletin of the Zagreb Archdiocese was in
serious difficulties, as other printers would not print it. In May 1946, Rittig, increasingly
exasperated by the range of harsh measures taken against the Church, complained that
the laws on press freedom were not being adhered to, and that "reactionary circles"
abroad had been handed an apparently true argument against the State, that freedom of
Another issue which concerned the Church was that of civil marriage and divorce.
On 5 July 1945, Stepinac issued a circular on the subject, in response to the introduction
of laws on civil marriage and on the settling of marital disputes before the civil courts. To
be read out in all churches, it set out the Church's position in stark terms. Catholics could
only be validly married in a Catholic Church by a Catholic priest; only the Church's
marriage is indissoluble and for life; any marriage contracted by Catholics outside of the
Church is mere concubinage. 75 Here too Stepinac was setting a challenge to the
72Request of 20 July, 1945 from "Nasa Draga Svetista", supported by Stepinac in note of 21 July, 45, and by
Rittig in letter of 26 July, 1945. HDA, VK, kut. 3, doc. 313.
^Correspondence on the matter at HDA, VK, kut. 1, doc. 22 and kut. 5, doc. 210.
74l_etter of complaint of 29 March, 1946 from Canon Nikola Kolarek to the Commission, and from Rittig to the
Presidency of the Croatian Government of 24 May, 1946. HDA, VK, kut. 6, doc. 557.
75
HDA, Rittig, kut. 4, 2/3, file II.
219
Communists and to their efforts to build a new, transformed society according to their
precepts. Rittig also opposed the law on marriage, warning that it would offend the
religious feelings of the people, and suggesting that while the wishes of those who
desired a civil marriage should be respected, "marital matters fall within the religious
The question of the pensions of retired priests was a persistent concern of the
Church throughout 1945 and 1946, with numerous petitions being delivered to the
Religious Commission. The roots of the problem lay in the long delay in regulating the
question of pensions in general, the regional variations in the way in which the clergy
had been treated before the war and confusion over which government body was
responsible for the issue. Priests in some areas did receive payments part of the time,
while others received nothing, causing hardship for many. The Religious Commission
Croatian and Federal, on the matter. Although it appears that confusion was the main
cause of the problem, an exasperated Ivan Tremski of the Commission wrote to the
Federal Ministry of Finance on 21 June 1946 that "finally it is also of urgent importance
from the political point of view to resolve this question satisfactorily, as the wretchedness
The ability of many Church institutions to carry out their work was hindered by the
takeover of numerous of their buildings in the period shortly before and after the end of
the war. Thus the Provincial of the Dalmatian Franciscans complained in September
1945 that their house in Split had been partly occupied by the authorities since January
of that year, making the normal life of the house impossible, and damaging the
76 Speech by Rittig regarding the Law on Marriage. HDA, VK, kut. 1, doc. 67.
buildings. 78 The diocesan seminary in Split was used as a military hospital after the war,
as was part of the Zagreb Archdiocese's High School, while the Archdiocese's boarding
school in Slavonska Pozega and the Franciscan seminary and High School in Varazdin
were taken over by the Army. 79 The authorities emphasized that these takeovers of
Church property were to fulfil a temporary need and, for example, promised that the
alternative was found.80 But the issue was still present in 1946, many buildings being
taken over permanently. In March 1946, Rittig warned that nothing aggravated feelings
There were other measures too which hampered the Church's ability to function as it
was used to. In February 1946, Salis asked the Religious Commission to intervene
regarding the prohibition by the authorities of the collection of food for the seminaries. In
April 1946, the superior of the Franciscan house in Zagreb appealed that they be
exempted from the order of 5 February 1946 forbidding the collection of alms, as that
was their only means of living, the way they had always lived and the way laid down in
their rules. In July 1945, a parish priest in Zagreb wrote to the Religious Commission that
sacraments. 82 In July 1945, Stepinac ordered that all religious associations (including
Catholic Action), except for the charitable organization Caritas, be closed. This followed
a request from the authorities for membership lists for all religious organizations. Rather
79 Petitions regarding these at HDA, VK, kut. 3, doc. 760; kut. 4, doc. 851; kut. 3, docs. 791 and 792.
80 Letter from the Presidency of the Croatian Government to the Religious Commission. HDA, VK, kut. 5, doc.
401.
81 Letter recommending that the Jesuit philosophical institute not be remove from its building. HDA, VK, kut.
5, doc. 480.
82Letters to the Religious Commission at HDA, VK, kut. 5, doc. 278; kut. 6, doc. 740; kut. 3, doc. 501.
83Alexander, Church and State, p. 63. Letter from Stepinac to the Ministry of the Interior of 26 July, 1945,
informing them of the measure, HDA, VK, kut. 3, doc. 330.
221
In a letter of 26 October 1946, the provincial of the Franciscan Province of the Holy
Redeemer, in the Dalmatian hinterland and the coastal area around Makarska, poured
out the range of misfortunes which had been visited upon the province since the
Communist takeover. Numerous of their houses had been partly occupied by the local
governments, their educational establishments had been lost, travel to their parishes in
neighbouring dioceses had been blocked and the collection of alms, on which they
depended, had been forbidden. Thus the constitutional guarantee of religious freedom
had little meaning for them, as they were being denied all possibility of exercising it. 84
In all these complaints the Church leaders rarely received redress from the
authorities. Bakaric later confirmed that Stepinac had been wasting his time in writing his
series of protest letters during the summer months of 1945: "Those protest letters were
for the most part stupid and they almost never related to matters which we would have
been able to correct (except for the occasion when they attacked him with eggs)."85 The
Communists did not accept the validity of most of the complaints of the Church leaders.
In a brief reply to Stepinac's lengthy exposition of the grievances of the Church of 21 July
1945 (much of which was devoted to the arrests and executions of priests and others),
was badly informed or they simply held different points of view.86 In general, and on all of
the key issues, the views of the two sides were widely at variance.
Though Bakaric could acknowledge that there had been some excesses and
mistakes, in general the view was that innocent priests and Catholics were not attacked,
but collaborators and participants in war crimes. As to criticisms that freedom of religion
and religious education were being denied, it was claimed that measures adopted by the
new regime did not traverse the line which had already been established in modern civil
84
HDA, VK, kut. 7, doc. 1495.
85Per letter from Bakaric to Dedijer, cited by Dedijer, Novi prilozi za biografiju Josipa Broza Tita, p. 564. The
reference to the eggs relates to an assault at Zapresic in November 1945, discussed below.
societies, that Church and State should be separated, and religion should be a private
matter. As to Church property, the churches themselves were not touched, and some
land was left to the Church. Other Church buildings and establishments had been
requisitioned for military and other purposes, with the intention that they would be
returned. If there were excesses, with good will these could have been sorted out. The
root of the problem, as the Communists saw it, lay in the unwillingness of Stepinac to
compromise and his lack of belief in the possibility of reaching an accord with the new
authorities.87
It has been suggested that the Communists' conciliatory attitude towards the Church
immediately after the war, stemming from a desire to settle relations with the Church as
quickly as possible, actually prompted the Church leaders to press the new regime
regarding those matters in which the Church was interested. According to this view,
Stepinac's stance at his meeting with Tito on 4 July 1945 amounted to a rejection of the
olive branch which Tito had offered to the delegation of the senior clergy two days
resolution of all important matters regarding relations between Church and State to the
Holy See. This led Tito to the conclusion that agreement with the Catholic Church on
terms that he could regard as acceptable was not possible. This view was confirmed by
the apparently uncompromising stance which Stepinac adopted in his protest letters,
which allegedly presented maximal demands that exceeded the needs of the Church.88
attack, which was seriously damaging its interests and its ability to operate. Further, it
appeared that all of his suggestions and proposals in the months following the
Communist takeover had been ignored. In September 1945, the Conference of Bishops
of Yugoslavia met in plenary session. This was the occasion which Stepinac chose to
raise the stakes, and to issue his most severe and public protest yet. As the conference
got underway on 17 September 1945, Masucci noted that: "given the fact that the
to strengthen their atheistic transformation, the bishops have decided that it is necessary
The authorities were keenly interested as to what conclusions the conference might
reach, and were clearly nervous. On 19 September, Masucci noted that Rittig was very
worried that the stand that the bishops were adopting would damage relations between
the Church and the State. He presented Masucci with his suggestions as to what line the
bishops should adopt (Masucci noted that no notable Church figure would receive Rittig),
who passed them on to Stepinac. 90 Also, while the conference was in progress the
authorities let Stepinac know that the Church's confiscated printing facilities would be
returned. Stepinac saw in this an attempt to persuade the bishops to soften their
approach, but he was not deflected, reportedly commenting to the bishops "gentlemen,
The conference addressed a letter to Tito and a circular to the clergy. Most
provocative, however, was a pastoral letter, to be read in all churches. While starting and
finishing on a conciliatory note, stressing that the Church did not seek to interfere in the
political life of the country and that it only sought a lasting solution to the question of its
relations with the State, the substance of the letter was a forthright exposition of the full
range of the Church's grievances against the State. It referred to 243 priests dead; 169
imprisoned; and 89 missing. It insisted that the bishops did not intend to shield guilty
priests, and acknowledged that there were some who, through their extreme nationalism,
had gravely sinned, and deserved to answer before the temporal courts. But their
'Masucci, p. 222.
91 Reported in the diary of Josip Vranekovic, the parish priest in Krasic, in whose house Stepinac was
confined from his release from prison in 1951 until his death in 1960. Cited in Benigar, pp. 499-500.
224
number was small, and the accusations against the greater part of the clergy
represented a campaign of lies to besmirch the Church in the eyes of the people.
Further, the Church was being prevented from fulfilling its mission by the loss of its
press, property and institutions, and of its means of educating the youth. The letter
condemned the "materialistic spirit" being propagated, and all ideologies and social
systems based not on the principles of Christian revelation, but on "the hollow
foundations of a materialistic, godless philosophy." The letter finished with a list of the
Church's demands, starting with the words "therefore we seek, and we shall never,
The letter thus represented an open challenge, setting terms which were clearly
unacceptable to the Government. Many have criticized Stepinac for adopting such an
openly confrontational stance, seeing it as unwise given that the balance of power was
so clearly in favour of the authorities, and that they were obviously determined to
implement their programme in spite of any opposition from the Church. It is probable that
not all of the bishops would have adopted such a course, and indeed the Communists
sought to show that some of them were against it. In his response to the letter, at a
In thus seeking to point to divisions among the senior clergy regarding the pastoral
letter, the Communists drew particular attention to a bishop outside of Croatia, the
pressure by the Montenegrin authorities (far greater than was experienced by any bishop
in Croatia) to disassociate himself from the letter, which he had signed, and the press
throughout Yugoslavia reported that he had condemned it and refused to have it read in
the churches of his diocese. This alleged statement by Dobrecic was greatly
93Report on the press conference at FM, Paris, Vol. 34, docs. 33-34.
225
exaggerated, and the British Consul-General in Zagreb reported that Dobrecic denied
The Communists also made efforts to prevent the reading of the letter in churches in
Croatia. In a report received by the Croatian Central Committee on 20 October 1945, the
Regional Committee of the KPH in Dalmatia reported that it had still not been read in
town People's Council, had gone to the bishop and asked him not to read it. They
reported that he had said that he would not, and that he would know how to justify
himself to his superiors.95 In another despatch, sent at the same time, they reported that
the letter had been read in very few places in the Zadar area. They cited a case where
believers (allegedly) walked out of the Church while the letter was read, and the priest
attacked them as enemies of the Church and of the faith. The real origin of this protest
protests" of the people should be organized against the letter. The Dalmatian Committee
also reported that there had been a meeting of priests to discuss the matter, and that
there had been talk of the Church staying out of politics, and of a boycott. 96
It is impossible to know how wide the circulation of the letter was. Many priests were
clearly very nervous about reading it. Stepinac acknowledged to the British vice-consul in
Zagreb that he feared that by reading the letter priests rendered themselves liable to
arrest. 97 Gaillard noted Yugoslav press reports that some priests in Varazdin and Banja
Luka refused to read it, and that in many churches the hands of the priest trembled as he
94Serbo and Jasmina Rastoder, Dr. Nikola Dobrecic, Arcibiskup barski i primas srpski, 1872-1955 (zivot i
djelo) (Budva, 1991), pp. 127-128; press reports and Dobrecic's denial of them in reports from British
Embassy in Belgrade of 29 October and 14 December, 1945, PRO, FO371/48912, R12462/1059/92 and
FO371/59429, R68/68/92.
95HIP, telegrammes, inv. br. 2214, knj. 2, despatch no. 1351, from Regional Committee of KPH for Dalmatia
to CK KPH, received 20 October, 1945.
96HIP, telegrammes, inv. br. 2214, knj. 2, despatch no. 1352, from Regional Committee of KPH for Dalmatia
to CKKPH, received 20 October, 1945; despatch no. 1459 of 20 October, 1945, from CK KPH to Regional
Committee of the KPH for Dalmatia.
97Letter of 10 October, 1945 from FWD Deakin in Belgrade. PRO, FO371/48912, R18199.
226
read it. 98 Both the fear of the clergy and the importance attached to the letter by the
authorities demonstrate that the bishops' conference and the letter it issued represented
a decisive turning-point.
To the Communists it seemed much more than a list of complaints and criticisms
aimed at settling relations between Church and State. Its tone and content appeared to
represent an ultimatum and a call to resistance to their authority." While there were still
contacts between the authorities and the Catholic hierarchy after this, serious attempts at
conciliation were practically abandoned, and the situation was one of more or less open
confrontation. Indeed, the Communists later cited the September pastoral letter as the
Stepinac was fully aware of what a serious challenge he had thrown down to the
regime. But he did not regret it, saying later that "if we had been silent, they would have
struck at us still more heavily. They would have forgiven me everything, if only it had not
been for that, for them, unhappy letter. They would even have forgiven me that if I had
later recanted it. But free me, oh God, from such reasoning." 101 From his point of view it
must have seemed that his worst fears about Communist rule were coming true. His
objections that the authorities had not honoured Tito's pledge to settle matters
concerning the Church through consultation were justified. In a later letter to Tito,
100'Hrncevic, pp. 207-208; at his trial Stepinac's secretary, Ivan Salic was told by the prosecutor, Jakov
Blazevic, that it was the letter which had brought him to the dock. Sudjenje LJsaku, Stepincu, Salicu i druzini,
p. 80.
He denied that the poor state of relations between the Church and the State had
anything to do with the Church's attitude towards the new Yugoslavia. It rather
concerned the attitude of the Communists towards religion in general, and towards the
Catholic Church. The Church was being restricted to its strictly religious functions, the
clergy constantly attacked, slandered and judged from a political standpoint, with the
intention of separating it from its people. What, he concluded, then remained to the
Church?102
In Stepinac's analysis can be seen the fundamental problem, that the Church and
the authorities based their approaches upon completely different assumptions about
what matters legitimately concerned the Church. Stepinac could not accept the Church's
being excluded from the social life of the country and restricted to purely spiritual, ritual
functions. His conclusion suggests he had decided that there was little left to lose.
For Rittig it was a bitter disappointment. He had watched his hopes for good
relations between the Church and the State ebb away in the six months since the end of
the war. Most of the promises which he had made on behalf of the new authorities
regarding the position of the Church had quickly been broken. And yet at the end of the
war he had had high hopes that he and the Religious Affairs Commission which he
headed could play a positive role in settling relations between the two sides. His position
was delicate from the start. Having identified completely with the Partisan struggle during
the war he was regarded with suspicion by many among the clergy. Pallua asserted that
Stepinac had approved his and Rittig's participation in the Religious Commission, but he
acknowledged that the Commission was hampered in its work by the fact that the senior
As we have seen, Rittig did frequently use his position to try to defend the interests
102 Copy of letter from Stepinac to Tito, dated 24 November, 1945. AJ, fond 144, SKVP, fasc. 1/4.
103 Regarding Stepinac's agreement to Pallua and Rittig's work, Pallua, tape 2, p. 30; tape 3, pp. 3 and 26;
hierarchy's avoidance of Rittig, Pallua, tape 2, p. 38.
228
priests against whom the authorities were proceeding. The senior clergy were quick to
turn to the Religious Commission when seeking intervention in their cause, while
petitioners of all kinds found that among the authorities only Rittig and the Commission
were accessible. 104 Mostly the interventions of Rittig and other Commission members
failed, but occasionally Rittig achieved a positive result. In October 1945, he appealed to
the Ministry of Education that the high school of the Zagreb Archdiocese be exempted
from the law abolishing private schools, as its main purpose was to provide a secondary
education for future Catholic priests. Shortly afterwards the Ministry announced that it
had accepted this recommendation (the rector of the school nevertheless complained
that its work was still hindered by the fact that part of the school was being used as a
But the fact that the Commission had to cope with so many petitioners and intervene
so frequently with the authorities was merely symptomatic of the poor state into which
relations between the Church and the State had sunk. Rittig had hoped for much more
than this, and had ambitions that the Commission would play a much more exalted role,
as a mediator between the two sides in reaching an overall settlement. Immediately after
the war, taking his cue from all the promises which the Partisan bodies had made during
the war, he assured Church figures that they would enjoy full freedom. Rather his fear
was that Stepinac would oppose the new regime. 106 Rittig participated at the meeting
between Tito and the delegation of the senior clergy on 2 June 1945, and it clearly filled
him with hope, seeing in it as he did an offer of cooperation from Tito, a chance to let
bygones be bygones, and an opportunity for the Church leaders to grasp, for the
105Letter from Rittig to the Ministry of 3 Oct, 1945 and response of 15 Oct, 1945; letter from the rector of the
school to the Commission of 25 Oct, 1945. HDA, VK, kut. 4, docs. 834 and 851.
It quickly became apparent that his hopes were not being fulfilled. Towards the end
of July, Masucci complained to him about all the problems being experienced, with
priests being arrested and shot and Catholics living in fear, particularly drawing attention
to an attack on Stepinac, Salis and Marcone on Belgrade radio on 21 July. Rittig said
that he would bring the matter up with the authorities, but accused the Church leaders of
responsibility for the increase in tensions for having rejected the chance to reach an
agreement with the Government. On 20 August, Masucci again complained to Rittig, who
Government was Tito) of 25 August 1945, Rittig elaborated the sorry state of relations
between the Church and the State. This letter showed that he recognized that the fault
was not all on one side, and that he was aware that the actions of the authorities were
pushing the Church hierarchy into a confrontational posture. His line was to remind the
Government of the earlier promises regarding freedom of conscience and religion, and to
praise Tito extravagantly for having demonstrated such magnanimity in his meetings with
the senior clergy at the beginning of June. He then expressed his disappointment that
things had not happened in practice as Tito had foreseen, pointing to elements on both
sides which had not followed Tito's example, but were rather re-opening old wounds.
Rittig specifically criticized the mass arrests and concentration camps, the
executions, the lack of freedom and equality before the law, and appealed that a spirit of
reconciliation should reign, and that all contrary trends should be silenced in the media.
He referred to the stream of petitions and circulars emanating from Stepinac as evidence
of the deep pessimism in which the episcopate and clergy were sunk, and pointed out
that some of Stepinac's complaints were justified. He warned that a resolution of the
conflict with the Church was urgent, as otherwise he was fearful regarding the impending
September bishops' conference. He warned that the Church leaders could not solve the
107 Meetings with Rittig on 23 July and 20 August, 1945. Masucci, pp. 216 and 219.
230
problems on their own. There was a need to rebuild confidence and to put aside mutual
recriminations. He finished this letter clearly taking the side of the bishops, asserting that
In their spirits they are confused and mistrustful, because in the new state system there
exists a certain strand which, contrary to explicit laws concerning the freedom of
conscience and of religion, by its conduct hinders the free religious, moral, educational and
social activity of the Church, and which by the latest proposed law on agrarian reform,
which has been introduced without the prior agreement of the Church, even threatens the
material survival of the Church, its institutions and clergy.
He concluded with an appeal that the high state authorities root out elements which
tended towards the sabotaging of relations with the Church, so that only Tito's line would
reign. 108
This letter demonstrates that Rittig sincerely sought to defend the interests of the
Church under the new regime, and his exasperation with the authorities for failing to live
up to their promises. It also suggests a certain naive belief that Tito was equally sincere,
and that Tito had the same things in mind as he did when he spoke of the freedom of
religion. In sharing the approach of the bishops to the question of the Church's role in
society, Rittig was clearly first of all a man of the Church. But given his belief that Tito
had genuinely offered the bishops a historic opportunity for a settlement, which they had
rejected, he could not but see the final responsibility for the poor state of relations as
being with the hierarchy, and with Stepinac personally, for allegedly failing to respond to
His identification with the regime was undimmed, and, his criticisms not
withstanding, in his sermon at a Midnight Mass in St. Mark's Church to see in the new
described the year just finished as the greatest in a thousand years of the History of the
South Slavs. A new world was being built on the foundations of social justice, liberty and
109This was the interpretation he offered to Auxiliary Bishop Lach of Zagreb. Minutes of discussion between
Rittig and Lach on 21 November, 1946. HDA, VK, kut. 1, doc. 327.
231
equality. He called for the "People's Authorities" to be judged kindly, and for patience. 110
His attitude towards the Church leaders at times seemed to be one of contempt. In a
speech to the Federal Constituent Assembly on 24 January 1946, he bemoaned the fact
that many of the Croatian clergy had not been with the National Liberation Struggle
during the war, but appealed that the churches not be blamed "for having as their
leaders, at the most crucial moment, men unworthy of them." 111 In reply to a letter from
Stepinac in November 1945, asking him to forward a petition to Tito, Rittig rebuked him
for adopting a form and manner which only made the difficult relations with the State
In the same letter to Stepinac, Rittig also expressed his hope that the expected
Church and State. 113 This was a hope which was much repeated among the staff of the
Religious Commission. In a letter of 29 October 1945, probably from Pallua to Fr. Bozo
Milanovic, an Istrian priest who enjoyed good relations with the authorities and with the
Religious Commission, much hope was expressed that the work of the Commission
would enjoy success, especially as the Holy See was to establish contact with the
Yugoslav Government. With the Holy See involved in their efforts to settle Church-State
relations, they need not fear any condemnation of the Commission by the Church. 114
As the months passed in 1946, Rittig seems to have lost all patience with the line
being pursued by Stepinac. In this he was in tune with Tito in seeing the removal of
arrival of the Holy See's representative in the country, Rittig wrote to Tito on the subject
112Stepinacto Rittig, 23 Nov, 1945, and reply of 26 Nov, 1945, HDA, VK, kut. 4, doc. 1022.
113 Payart reported on 30 October, 1945 that the Yugoslav Government had accepted the Holy See's
proposal to send a delegate. FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 62-64.
114 Letter of 29 October 1945 addressed to "Reverend Father", in the name of Rittig, and referring to the
writer's and Rittig's recent visit to Istria. HDA, Rittig, kut. 4, 2/3, file I.
232
of Church-State relations. The letter reveals that Rittig had been in frequent contact with
Tito, and that Tito had declared that the question of the Archbishop of Zagreb was
crucial, and would have to be urgently resolved. Rittig expressed understanding of his
point of view, and suggested that the papal legate should be told that Stepinac should be
removed as soon as possible from Zagreb, and that the Holy See should appoint others
to take over the administration of the Archdiocese. He suggested that the duties should
pass to a trio of canons, uncompromised by the Ustashas, proposing Dockal, Rozic and
Baksic. It should be impressed upon the Holy See that the appointment should not be
made without prior consultation of the state authority. Further, the sees of bishops who
had fled at the end of the war, Saric of Sarajevo, Garic of Banja Luka and Rozman of
Ljubljana, should be declared vacant, so that they could be filled according to criteria
which would ensure that no bishop or priest "soiled by Ustashism" could carry out public
Church services.
This letter, which is crucial in revealing the thinking of Rittig and the authorities
regarding the resolution of the conflict between the Church and the State, also shows
how Rittig's position, as a priest who had taken the side of the Partisans, had led to the
conflict with the Church hierarchy being for him, in part, personal. The Partisan priests
were, he asserted, to a greater or lesser degree, out of favour with the hierarchy. This
was "a matter of the internal discipline of our Church, but also of our personal honour".
He appealed for Tito's understanding and help, that in the discussions with the papal
representative he bear in mind the wishes of the Partisan priests, "and not allow their
elimination in this great work". He suggested that he, as representative of the Partisan
clergy, let the Holy See know how the Catholic episcopate had in large part gravely failed
in its pastoral duty during the National Liberation Struggle, and had, in its behaviour
towards the People's Authorities since the war, caused great harm to the people and to
Rittig's alienation from the Church hierarchy went still further, and in a speech
reported in the press on 1 July 1946, he blamed the hierarchy for failing to respond to
Tito's offer the previous summer, and thus causing much unpleasantness. He also
attacked the fanaticism of some younger priests, who after the liberation continued to
maintain contacts with emigre Ustashas and to harm the interests of the Church and the
people. But he still looked hopefully to the Holy See, and to a state law to regulate
Church-State relations, which he believed could resolve matters, given goodwill on both
sides. 116 Later the same month, Payart reported that "Mgr. Rittig, whose ambition the
regime uses, no longer enjoys any credit in Catholic circles". Payart added that Rittig's
speech would have resulted in his suspension if Stepinac had not feared the persecution
In the summer of 1946, the Religious Commission was much preoccupied with
preparing a Law on Religious Communities, by which Rittig set such store in his speech,
researching the literature on the subject and examining the arrangements in place in
other countries, such as the Soviet Union and France. 118 In trying to play a leading role in
framing such a law, Rittig hoped to be able finally to take for the Commission the
cherished role of settling relations between Church and State. He certainly had the good
of the Church in mind. Believing that Stepinac's approach was fatally flawed, he was
doing his best to win as good a solution as possible for the Church.
But he had still not grasped that from the point of the authorities his role and that of
the Commission was not to take any active part in making policy or framing laws. The
role of the Commission included advising the authorities on matters concerning religion
and mediation with the Church hierarchy. But the Communists had no intention of letting
that interfere with the implementation of their programme. They wanted to keep the
117Report from Payart of 31 July, 1946. FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 190-192.
118For example the report on the work of the Commission in August 1946 and plan for September put the
work on the proposed law in first place. HDA, VK, kut. 7, doc. 1428.
234
Church quiet, but they would not make concessions to it on fundamental issues. To
many it was clear that Rittig had simply been manipulated by the Communist leaders in
memorandum of the French Foreign Ministry in early 1947 suggested that the Yugoslav
authorities aimed "to use profitably the weakness of character and somewhat wavering
When Rittig tried to contribute to the framing of the constitution in January 1946, so
as to make it more favourable to the Church, he was ignored. He tried to soften the
division of Church and State (which is discussed below), to enshrine the right to religious
the report on the proceedings merely noted that he had opposed the relevant sections,
had abstained in the votes on them (which were otherwise unanimously passed) and that
Rittig's position was invidious. Clearly his task was frequently demoralizing. For
example, in June 1946 the lawyer Zlatko Kuntaric sent Pallua a request for Rittig to
intervene in the case of Canon Nikola Boric, who had been given a prison sentence for
sheltering a young man who had attacked an army officer. He also sent him a copy of a
personal appeal from Boric to the Presidency of the Federal Government. Boric was
closely acquainted with Rittig, and it was he who had been Rittig's contact in Zagreb
during the war. Yet Rittig felt unable to help him, writing a minute on the document that
"at this time, 20/7, with relations so strained, there is no point in signing a petition for an
He keenly felt the difficulty of his position. In a speech in January 1947, regarding
Croatia's draft constitution, he declared that "my position as a priest, Comrades, in the
120Speech by Rittig on the draft constitution, HDA, Rittig, kut. 9, 2/10; report in Politika 29 Jan, 1946.
121 Letter form Kuntaric of 17 June, 1946, enclosing copies of the verdict in the case and Boric's appeal. HDA,
VK, kut 1, doc. 268.
235
National Liberation Struggle, was hard, and today it is not easy". 122 He and other
into the regime's plans. In October 1946, just at the time when Stepinac's trial was
reaching its climax, the Commission's office boy received a visitor, who found only his
wife at home, but asked where Rittig and Pallua lived, and warned that Rittig should take
care for the next couple of days, or something would happen to him. At that time Rittig
But he believed that his course was right and necessary. In a draft letter, written in
February 1947 (apparently to a senior Czech clergyman) he explained his view that
Stepinac had failed to take advantage of Tito's offer to settle matters by agreement, and
his belief that the authorities were sincere in declaring their commitment to religious
freedom and good relations with the Church. Regarding Stepinac, he dismissed the
notion that he was guilty for the crimes of the Ustashas, but at stake was not just
Stepinac and relations between the Catholic Church and the State, but relations between
the Croatian Catholic people, and all Catholic Slavs, with the eastern, Orthodox Slavs. 124
For Rittig with his passionate Panslavism, his sense of a mission and a historical
opportunity in forging the unity of the Yugoslavs in particular, this was crucial.
Given his lack of standing among the clergy, Rittig was unable to play the role for
which he had hoped. The hierarchy would not avail themselves of his services as a
mediator in any of the bigger questions regarding the Church's relations with the State
and its place in society, only using him for interventions regarding the local problems
being experienced by individual people and Church institutions. The authorities had
hoped to use Rittig as an intermediary in their efforts to settle relations with the Church,
123Memorandum by Pallua of 11 October, 1946 regarding the warning, HDA, VK, kut. 1, doc. 243; postcards
at HDA, VK, kut 1, docs. 244 and 245.
124
HDA, Rittig, kut. 12, 4/3.
236
but ultimately discarded him, concluding that the poor regard that the hierarchy had for
hierarchy and clergy were increasingly heard. For example, at a press conference in
palace and remnants of the Ustashas still at large in Yugoslavia, stating that this was a
continuation of the wartime bond between the Catholic hierarchy, the Ustashas and the
occupiers. 126 During Stepinac's trial, one of the main purposes of the prosecution was to
present Stepinac and other members of the clergy as collaborators with the Ustasha
regime and as sharing responsibility for their crimes. 127 Clearly this was intended to
Stepinac's defenders vigorously refute such charges, but the crucial point here is not
whether Stepinac's wartime behaviour was all that it might have been, but what attitude
the post-war Communist authorities took towards it. Most of them did believe that his
response to the Ustashas was inadequate and that he was guilty of collaboration. Djilas
asserted that there was enough incriminating material "even according to criteria milder
than those of Communists and revolutionaries." However, the fact that it took the
authorities a year and a half to move against him, and that in the meantime attempts
were made to seek an accommodation with him, clearly suggests that this was not a
principal reason for his trial, and that it was other considerations which determined the
authorities' increasingly hostile attitude to the Church; that the issue of wartime
collaboration was simply added to the list of charges against him in order to make it more
125Nada Kisi6-Kolanovic, "Vrijeme politicke represije: Veliki sudski procesi"' u Hrvatskoj, 1945-1948. (in
Casop/s za suvremenu povijest, no. 1, 1993, Zagreb), p. 5.
127
Sudjenje Lisaku, Stepincu, Salicu i druzini
237
convincing. 128 Whatever the Communist leaders thought of Stepinac, they had
nevertheless hoped to do a deal with him, which would have fitted into the new
Communist order a Church which was restricted, humbled and controlled, and which was
potentially a useful tool of state policy. It was Stepinac's failure to play the role assigned
to him in the new order which explained the regime's hardening towards him. Worse still,
One thing is certain, that the problem of Stepinac arose at a time when it had become
clear that the Catholic Church could become a more significant rallying-point for anti-
Communist mal-contents. The subsequent identification of Stepinac as a collaborator
served both his political elimination and the elimination of Croatian anti-regime factions. 129
At his meeting with the senior Croatian clergy on 2 June 1945, Tito expressed his
wish that the Catholic Church in Croatia should be more "national" and independent of
Rome. There has been considerable controversy as to what Tito meant by this, and it
has frequently been suggested that this question was at the heart of the dispute between
the Communists and the Catholic Church in the immediate post-war period. This is what
For my part I would say that our Church should be more national, more adapted to the
nation. Perhaps it is a little strange to you now that I stress nationality so strongly. Too
much blood has flowed, I have seen too much suffering on the part of the people, and I
want the Catholic clergy in Croatia to be more deeply nationally connected with the people
than it is now. I must openly say that I do not claim the right to denounce Rome, your
supreme Roman institution, and I will not do that. But I must say that I regard critically the
fact that it has always inclined more towards Italy than towards our people. I would like to
see the Catholic Church in Croatia, now, when we have all the conditions for that, have
more independence. That is what I would like, that is the fundamental question, the
question which we would like to solve, and all other questions are secondary, and can be
easily resolved. 130
Many have interpreted this speech as a request that the Church's ties with Rome be
severed, and have suggested that Tito may have been hinting at a deal whereby the
130
Benigar, p. 463. Bakaric confirmed that Benigar's account of Tito's speech was accurate in a letter to
Dedijer of 11 February, 1980, Dedijer, Novi prilozi za biografiju Josipa Broza Tita, p. 563.
238
Church would escape repression if it accepted the offer. 131 Branko Petranovic insists that
it was never intended that the Catholic clergy should repudiate their obligation to the
Holy See in religious matters, but that it reflected "the experience that the Vatican is
always inclined towards Italy rather than towards Yugoslavia." 132 This was of great
relevance at the time, given the bitter controversy with Italy over Istria and Trieste, which
profoundly affected relations between the Yugoslav authorities and the Catholic Church
in the post-war period. Petranovic complained that the clergy failed to make a distinction
between their obligation to the Holy See in spiritual matters and their obligation to the
state in temporal matters, attempting to introduce the Holy See as a factor in the internal
affairs of the country, thus lessening the supremacy of the state and giving the Catholic
hierarchy a status external to the state. 133 Zdenko Cepic noted, regarding the Church's
social issue, and tried to transfer it into the realm of inter-state relations between
Yugoslavia and the Holy See. 134 Ramet considers that Tito probably did intend a break
with Rome, given the consistency with which Communists in other East European
impossible. Clearly the link between the Church and Croatian nationalism was something
which worried him. In his meetings with the clergy he focused on the national question.
His fear was that as an independent force, subject to an unfriendly leadership outside of
the country, and as a potential rallying point for Croatian nationalists, the Church could
represent a threat to the regime's consolidation of its power. 136 Some of those in the
133//d. p. 279.
higher echelons of power in Croatia at the time have suggested that he might indeed
have been thinking of a break with Rome. Bakaric said that Tito's main concern in
settling the relations between the Church and the State was that the Church in
even if only in as much as it would receive its own primate (this is what he stressed in
conversation with us)". 137
"that trial of Stepinac was forced upon us. If Stepinac had been a little more elastic, there
would have been no need for a trial. And he imposed it, because he was a politically
limited person." The interviewer then suggested that Tito had sought of Stepinac that he
separate the Catholic Church in Croatia from Rome, to which Blazevic replied in the
affirmative. 138 This led to a polemic during the following month in the Catholic and
secular press in Croatia. Blazevic, reacting angrily to suggestions in the magazine Danas
that he had been contributing to the trend of calling into question Tito's legacy, insisted
that Tito had only wanted Stepinac to distance the Church in Croatia from the Holy See's
policy. 139
Ivan Mestrovic claimed that it was Stepinac's refusal to break with Rome which the
Communist leaders held most against him. He reported a conversation with Djilas in New
York, when he asked about the Stepinac case, to which Djilas allegedly replied that "we
would not have had anything against his Croatian nationalism, but we could not endure
his fidelity to the Roman Pope". Mestrovic quoted another senior Yugoslav Communist
was a man of clean character who stood by his principles, but that there was just one
137
Per letter from Bakaric to Dedijer, cited by Dedijer, Novi prilozi za biografiju Josipa Broza Tita, p. 563.
138 lnterview in Polet, 15 February, 1985, quoted in Branimir Stanojevic, Alojzije Stepinac, zlocinac Hi svetac
(second edition, Belgrade, 1986), pp. 66-67.
'Articles in Danas, nos. 158 and 159, 26 Feb and 5 Mar, 1985, and Polet, 1 Mar, 1985.
139
240
thing that they had against him:- "His Croatian nationalism would not have bothered us,
and if only he had proclaimed a Croatian Church we would have raised him to the
heavens". Djilas later denied to Ivan Muzic that he had said what Mestrovic had
attributed to him concerning Stepinac, and so Mestrovic's testimony must be treated with
caution. Djilas himself wrote that, according to his judgement, Stepinac "was always, and
remained a faithful pastor of the Vatican", though Muzic chooses to accept Mestrovic's
word. 140 These various contradictory statements from leading Communists suggest that
Tito may have been vague as to his exact intention, but the idea that he did intend a
Stepinac also feared that this may have been Tito's intention. In his sermon for the
feast of Saints Peter and Paul on 29 June 1945, he laid great stress on the need to
remain faithful to the Pope, the successor of St. Peter. 141 In a letter to Bakaric at the
that there was no intention on the part of the government of interfering in the dogma and
internal affairs of the Church or of alienating the clergy and faithful from Rome. 142 Yet in
a circular of 27 August 1945, the Catholic bishops showed that their fears were far from
It seems that Stepinac's fear that the Communists were aiming at a break with Rome
remained with him, as from his house arrest in Krasic he wrote to a priest regarding the
140lvan Mestrovic, "Stepinac - duhovni heroj: nekoliko refleksija o Stepincu, povodom desetogodisnjice
njegove osude", (in Nova Revija, Buenos Aires, 1956), reproduced in Vinko Nikolic, Stepinac muje ime:
zbornik uspomena, svjedocanstava i dokumenata (Zagreb, 1991), pp. 446-447. Djilas's denial and note that
the other senior Communist source was Popovic, Muzic, pp. 90-91; Djilas's opinion of Stepinac, Milovan
Djilas, Vlast, p. 32.
142Letter of 2 August, 1945, cited in Alexander, The Triple Myth, pp. 124-125.
later attempts of the authorities to form priests' associations, with the aim of dividing the
lower clergy from their bishops. He warned that this was part of a move towards a break
But the available evidence does not point conclusively to an active intent on the part
of the Communists to engineer the formation of a national Church and its break with
Rome. It is clear that Tito hoped that by loosening the ties between the local hierarchy
and Rome he could bring the Church under the closer control of the State. Certainly he
found it extremely galling that his attempts to reach an agreement with the local Church
on his terms were thwarted by the insistence of Stepinac that he must deal with the Holy
See. The evidence that the Holy See had actively opposed the spread of Communism in
eastern Europe, had lobbied hard against his regime among the western Allies and
openly supported Italy in the dispute over the Julian regime (which questions will be
discussed below) all inclined him to hostility towards Rome and to look negatively upon
In his speech to the senior representatives of the clergy on 2 June 1945, he explicitly
ruled out any notion of denouncing Rome as the supreme centre of the Catholic Church.
His emphasis was on political matters, specifically regarding the Holy See's inclination
towards Italy over Yugoslavia. Indeed, this was the thrust of the whole policy of the
Communists towards the Catholic Church in the immediate post-war period. They
showed little interest in the strictly religious functions of the Church, its dogma, the
performance of Church rites etc. Their interest in the Church was as a potential political
opponent. At issue was its loyalty to the regime. Thus Tito's assertion that he did not
seek the separation of the Church from Rome nor to question the competence of the
Following Stepinac's conviction in October 1946, Bakaric asserted that all they
wanted was that the Church satisfy the religious needs of the people and adhere to the
144,
Muzic, p. 93.
242
people's political and national tendencies and desires, and no others. 145 That meant, of
course, that the Church should not question the line of the Communists in matters of
politics and national interest. Rittig, in his important letter to Tito in February 1946, took
the same view. The "nationalization" of the Catholic Church meant that Croatian
Catholics would have their own hierarchical organization, analogous to that of the
Serbian Orthodox Church, with the Archbishop of Zagreb (who should not be Stepinac)
as primate. But that would not, he insisted, mean a break with Rome, but merely that the
Croatian primate would enjoy the powers of other primates, such as the one in
Hungary. 146 As noted earlier, Rittig had been in frequent contact with Tito regarding
Church related issues, and his views reflected Tito's thinking. Rittig was muddled in his
countries, and displayed his usual naivety in imagining that such a solution was realistic.
No doubt Tito was more astute. But the letter does suggest that Tito was indeed not
Tito's vagueness concerning what exactly was meant by a "more national Church"
may have been deliberate. Hostile to the Vatican, desirous of bringing the Church under
the closer control of the State, determined to press ahead with a revolutionary policy
which he knew the Church would regard as seriously prejudicial to its interests and
aware that the Church was fundamentally opposed to his regime, he may have been
simply floating the idea of a national Church to see what the response of the bishops
would be. The Church, unsurprisingly, was not prepared to comply with a strategy aimed
at bringing it under the control of the Communist State, Stepinac insisting that according
to Canon law only the Holy See was empowered to settle the question of the Church's
In fact, by introducing the idea of a more independent Church, Tito merely sowed
confusion and increased mistrust among the Church leaders. The often expressed idea
that Tito offered Stepinac a deal, whereby the Church could escape persecution if he
agreed to distance himself from Rome, is misleading. Tito was determined to implement
his revolutionary strategy whatever the Church did. He wanted to obtain the bishops'
loyalty and to neutralize their opposition, but he had little to offer them. Proposing a more
"national" Church was thus an opportunist's ploy, and there was never any possibility of
As discussed earlier, the key element in the Communists' vision of the settling of
relations between Church and State was separation. However, in the circular issued to
the clergy by the Bishops' conference of September 1945, the separation of Church and
State was explicitly rejected. Believers are children of God and members of the State, so
there are issues, such as the upbringing of children and marriage, in which both Church
and State are interested. It repeated that the best way to regulate relations between
Church and state was by a concordat with Rome. 148 The Church's opposition to the
separation" of Church and State in France in 1906, followed by the persecution of the
Church, Stepinac asserted that if that was what was intended for Yugoslavia, it would
legitimately concerned the Church. Communists aimed to restrict the churches to their
strictly religious functions and rituals, and to exclude them from society. 150 The Church,
on the other hand, conceived its role in much broader terms. In a petition to the
150Simon, p. 198.
244
authorities in January 1946 regarding the new constitution, Aksamovic explained the
Church's position. 151 Guarantees of the freedom to perform its strictly religious work and
rites were insufficient, as this recognized only one small sphere of its activity. The
Church must be able freely to promote all of its aims, including religious education in
schools at all levels, the right to found its own, confessional schools, and to maintain its
illusory. He warned that under the constitution being drafted the Church, its clergy,
institutions and property lacked a secure legal status, enabling them to be attacked
At a practical level, the attempt to exclude the Church from the social sphere was
August 1945, under which all associations and societies were supposed to register. The
law did not encompass religious communities as such, whose freedom to operate was to
be guaranteed by the constitution, but disagreement arose over church institutions which
the authorities did not regard as being by their nature religious, but which the Church
Particularly instructive in this regard was the case of Caritas, a Catholic charitable
organization. The Croatian Interior Ministry invited Caritas to register under the law, and
to alter its statutes to bring them into line with it. This Caritas refused to do, insisting that
as a Church organization, whose work was an integral part of the Catholic life, it should
not be covered by a regulation designed for secular societies. The Ministry responded by
banning the work of Caritas altogether, asserting that the activities of the Church in the
social, educational and cultural spheres could not be regarded differently from the work
of secular bodies in the same fields. Such functions were, in modern societies, mainly
carried out by secular organizations, and Church organizations involved in them must be
151
Petranovic, "Aktivnost rimokatolickog klera", pp. 307-309.
245
subject to the same regulations. Caritas's assertion that "good works" were an essential
and inalienable task of the Catholic Church was thus irrelevant to the case. 152
The effect of this law was felt by other institutions too. Thus, for example, the local
authorities in Osijek banned the continued work of the Society of the Sisters of Mary of
the Miraculous Medal, a nursing order. This was because it had failed to register under
the law on associations, which it was obliged to do, as its work fell outside of Church
functions, and it was therefore not a religious society as such. Here too the Religious
letter to the Interior Ministry, that the Society did not register under the law on
associations because it was waiting for the law on religious communities to be passed.
The law on associations should not apply to religious establishments, which were
allowed by the constitution to carry out their work freely. If the decision in Osijek were
accepted, then all monasteries, parishes, dioceses etc. could be considered illegal. 153
Thus Tremski expressed the same fear as Aksamovic regarding the lack of legal
the Commission regarding the demand of the local authorities that all religious
their officers. Srebrnic rejected this as unwarranted interference in Church affairs. Rittig
suggested that a distinction should be made between societies of Catholic Action which
were social in nature, which should come under the law on associations, and purely
religious societies, which should come under the forthcoming law on religious
communities. But, as terrorist elements were hiding behind religious organizations, they
should come under the law on associations until the law on religious communities was
152Letter from the Interior Ministry of 2 March, 1946, announcing the banning of Caritas; protest letters from
Caritas to the Religious Commission of 1 April, 1946, and to the Croatian government of 5 April, 1946. HDA,
VK, kut. 6, docs. 563 and 620.
153Letter from the Internal Affairs section of the locality of Osijek to the Society; complaint from the Society to
the Religious Commission; letter from Tremski to the Interior Ministry of 5 July, 1946. HDA, VK, kut. 7, doc.
1075.
246
passed, and in the meantime their statutes should be respected. 154 Here again, Rittig
was trying to defend the Church within the confines allowed by the Communists. To most
Stella Alexander has described the discourse between the bishops and the
authorities after the war as a "dialogue of the deaf."155 The idea of separation of Church
from State may, according to Dragoljub Zivojinovic, have been modern and legitimate,
but that legitimacy was undermined by the underlying aim of the Yugoslav Communists
in implementing it, which was to reduce an organization which could have constituted a
Clearly there was not even the minimum consensus necessary for the two sides to
particularly irritating that they could not reach an agreement with the local Church
because of the repeated insistence of the bishops that such an agreement regarding
relations between Church and State could only be reached with the Holy See. This made
the task of reaching an accommodation and pacifying the Church on their terms much
harder for the Communists. It appeared to them that the pernicious influence of the
Vatican was sabotaging their efforts to order Church-State relations as they would wish.
Certainly the Holy See's attitude towards the new regime in Yugoslavia was hostile.
The British minister to the Holy See, Sir Godolphin d'Arcy Osbome, wrote that "with no
country were Vatican relations so bitter as with Yugoslavia". 157 Even before the end of
the war the Holy See was receiving reports from Yugoslavia, and used them as the basis
of appeals to the western Allies to intervene. 158 Attempts to rouse the western powers to
154Srebrnictothe Commission, 6 Dec, 1945, enclosing letter from his local authorities of 30 Nov, 45; letter
from Rittig to the Interior Ministry of 5 Jan, 1946. HDA, VK, kut. 5, doc. 164.
156Zivojinovic, p. 148.
action in Yugoslavia continued after the war, with appeals regarding the position of the
Church in Yugoslavia generally, and the controversy over the Julian region in
particular. 159 But the Communists' resentment that the influence of Rome was thwarting
their efforts to come to terms with the local hierarchy was not entirely justified. The Holy
See's petitions to the western Allies were in large part based on reports from the clergy
inside the country. Indeed, one report just before the end of the war asserted that the
Holy See had proposed to appoint a chaplain to the Partisans, and to establish relations
with them, but that they had been dissuaded by objections from Croatia and Slovenia. 160
Following their takeover, the Communists found particular cause for complaint in the
conduct of the representative of the Holy See in Yugoslavia. They had little to complain,
however, about Abbot Marcone, who had been the Holy See's representative with the
with that of Stepinac, finding that the former "behaved correctly", was critical of Stepinac
and had a pleasant conversation with Tito. Bakaric's good opinion did not extend,
however, to Marcone's secretary, Masucci, who he described as an intriguer and a liar. 161
Such impressions were confirmed by British diplomats in Belgrade and Zagreb, who
reported that Marcone's efforts on behalf of Ustasha victims were well-known, that he
had expressed dismay at the anti-Communist pastoral letter of 24 March 1945 and that
he was critical of the wartime stance of many of the Croat clergy. Meanwhile, in
September the British vice-consul in Zagreb reported that Masucci had asked whether it
was true that the British were helping dissident Croats in the woods, that he was clearly
looking for support against the regime and was "an unreliable intriguer". 162
159
Yib/d. pp. 120-127.
160Minute by RGD Laffan of the British Foreign Office, on report dated 26 February, 1945, citing Mgr. Tardini
of the Vatican Secretariat of State. PRO, FO371/48910, R2992.
162 Reports from British Embassy in Belgrade in July 1945. PRO FO371/48911, R9875 and R10313;
F0371/48912, R12502, and one in September 1945, FO371/48912, R15604.
248
Shortly after the end of the war, Marcone left Yugoslavia (Masucci stayed longer).
Following the agreement that the Holy See would appoint a delegate to Yugoslavia,
Rittig hoped that Marcone would be returned "with full powers" to negotiate on behalf of
the Holy See. Rivoire noted that such a notion was "strange to anyone who knows the
habits of the Vatican, presaging serious misunderstandings". 163 In fact, the post went to
Mgr. Joseph Hurley, an American bishop and experienced Vatican diplomat. 164
It would seem that Hurley's mission had a dual purpose. One was certainly to
defend the Catholic Church in Yugoslavia. The other had a broader significance within
the whole framework of the Vatican's response to the Communist takeovers in Eastern
Europe. Franklin Gowen, the secretary of the American mission to the Holy See, saw it
as a feeler towards that part of Europe which had fallen under the sway of the Soviet
Union. Hurley acknowledged to him that the mission was not just of a religious nature,
but that he would follow the political situation and relations between Tito and Stalin, and
enable the Holy See to prepare for a possible future improvement in relations with the
Soviet Union. American military intelligence reckoned that the Holy See was interested in
Soviet affairs, seeing Soviet domination in Catholic countries, even on the borders of
Italy, as a threat. It saw the Catholic Church as under attack, the last opponent of
Communism and defender of Christian culture in areas under Soviet control. It was
engaged in a struggle, and needed intelligence from that part of Europe. Thus part of
Hurley's brief was to monitor the situation in the region, and to help the Vatican formulate
its approach to the Soviet Union and other countries under its control. 165 Payart
discreet line of rapprochement on the part of Moscow, assuming that it was with
Moscow's approval, and was not in fact an assertion of independence from Moscow by
163 Letterof28 December, 1945. FM, Paris, vol. 34, doc. 113.
164Zivojinovic, p. 153.
the Yugoslav leadership, given that Moscow's campaign against the Vatican
continued. 166
There was little chance of Hurley's mission achieving success. While Payart found
Hurley "accessible to modem ideas" and capable of "reconciling dogmatic rigidity with
practical liberalism", he noted that, following his first meeting with Tito, Hurley was
sceptical as to the chances of compromise with a Marxist government (though Hurley too
noted Tito's affability). According to Rivoire, Hurley saw Communism as the root of evil,
the enemy. 167 Hurley told the British ambassador, Stevenson, that the Vatican was in no
hurry to come to terms with the Yugoslav regime. Giving the lie to Communist claims that
the hierarchy's main grievance was the loss of the Church's property, and that it was
merely protecting its own interests, Hurley asserted that the regime would be mistaken in
thinking that the Holy Father would be content with a "sop" such as the restitution of
some property or state payment of the clergy. The Church would get by financially (as
the Communists suspected it could): "The essentials of any arrangement with the regime
were freedom of religious life, including the right of the Church to educate her children
and of every Catholic to practice his religion in all spheres, without fear or hindrance."168
In his scepticism as to the possibilities for reaching an agreement with the Yugoslav
regime, Hurley was in line with the thinking at the Holy See. Mgr. Montini of the
Secretariat of State (the future Pope Paul VI) told Gowen that he had little confidence in
the mission's chances. A month after Hurley had arrived in Yugoslavia, Pope Pius XII
told an American diplomat that there was a "real reign of terror" in Yugoslavia, and
suggested that "perhaps a little demonstration of strength" was needed. The American
envoy to the Holy See, Myron Taylor, found that the Pope was not ready for cooperation
166 Report dated 30 October, 1945. FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 62-64.
167Telegrammes from Payart of 6 February and 9 February, 1946, and letter from Rivoire, 8 April, 1946. FM,
Paris, vol. 34, docs. 147, 152 and 160.
with the Yugoslav government, seeing the Church as being engaged in a struggle
The Yugoslav authorities were also doubtful as to whether anything positive would
come out of the Hurley mission. Tito told FWD Deakin (the first British liaison officer with
the Partisans' Supreme Command during the war, who was briefly posted to the
embassy in Belgrade after the war) that the Yugoslav charge d'affaires at the Holy See
(who had been part of the Royal Yugoslav legation there) had been told to prepare the
way for direct talks, but there had been no result. He expected little of an American
bishop, unversed in the conditions in Yugoslavia (i.e. who would not share his view of the
compromised role of much of the clergy during the war). 170 In their meetings, Tito
focused on his dissatisfaction with Stepinac, who he asked to be removed, while Hurley
listed the range of the Church's grievances. 171 With no common ground between them,
both inflexible on crucial issues, there was little chance of any understanding being
reached.
Indeed, the Communist leaders soon came to view Hurley's presence as actually
making things worse, believing that he was instrumental in hardening the attitude of the
hierarchy, in maintaining the discipline of the clergy and preventing attempts to draw
away any who might have been more open to compromise on the tough line initiated by
Stepinac. Certainly Hurley approved Stepinac's stance, and encouraged its continuation.
This became more important after Stepinac's arrest, when, the Communists believed,
Hurley actually took over the real leadership of the Yugoslav episcopate, so as to ensure
that it kept to the combative path of the Pope and of Stepinac. 172
Tito's angry response to the September pastoral letter illustrated the gulf that
separated them. He was not interested in addressing the grievances of the bishops, but
rather attacked them, concentrating on their wartime stance. He accused them of double
standards, in that they declared themselves ready to sacrifice themselves now, but had
not issued a pastoral letter against the killings of Serbs in the NDH, implying that they
had been silent then not from fear, but because they supported the Ustashas. When he
had promised not to interfere in the Church's internal affairs he had expected the bishops
to take a lead in expiating the shame which the Ustashas had brought upon Croatia. 173
Clearly he understood the question of an accommodation with the Church solely in terms
of the limited role which he was prepared to permit it. Any other rights to which the
Even before the Partisans entered Zagreb, their attitude towards the Catholic
hierarchy had been soured by the alleged involvement of the bishops in the various
schemes to preserve the NDH, as the Ustashas sought to retrieve their position with the
help of the hierarchy, as already described. It also appeared to the Communists that the
higher clergy continued in its attempts to undermine them after they had taken power,
making the Church a focus of opposition to the regime. Although western intervention to
prevent a Communist takeover did not materialize, Pallua recorded that many in Zagreb
were still expecting it for months after the war. According to him, Stepinac was among
them, counting the whole time on something illusory. 174 As noted earlier, Tito was much
preoccupied with this possibility at the time of his meetings with the delegation of the
clergy and with Stepinac at the beginning of June 1945, when the crisis over Trieste was
at its height and the possibility of a clash with the British seemed real. Blazevic later
asserted that all of the major trials in the immediate post-war period were aimed to stop
the Communists' enemies from, with the help of the west, defeating the revolution. 175
The Trieste issue hung in the background of Church - State relations in Yugoslavia
for more than a year after the war, and the Communists took the threat of outside
intervention very seriously, as well as any inclination on the part of their internal enemies
The clergy gained the impression of the temporariness of the new state from the tension
between the great powers, which was reflected also on this territory, particularly in the
strain in relations between the DFJ [Democratic Federal Yugoslavia] and the Anglo-Saxon
powers in connection with the withdrawal of the Yugoslav army from Trieste. 176
between the French Consul in Zagreb and the Dominican Provincial. The former warned
that the policy being pursued by the Church of confrontation with the regime was
mistaken, but the latter replied that the chaotic circumstances of the post-war period
made it the best time to strike a blow against the regime. 177
Such expectations that the regime could prove to be only temporary were
widespread among the clergy. In February 1946, the Croatian Interior Ministry warned
that some priests were spreading hostile propaganda and false news of imminent foreign
intervention. 178 A Religious Commission memorandum noted that the clergy was still
expecting a new war. 179 This impression was confirmed by a Croatian priest who was in
There was widespread optimism, he said, and a firm belief that the western powers would
soon launch a new war against Communism, and topple Tito's regime. The Ustashi high
178Letter of 5 February, 1946 to the Religious Commission, HDA, VK, kut. 5, doc. 265.
179 Undated. Related to preparations for a trip to Rome. HDA, Rittig, kut. 7, 2/6.
253
command thought that their exile would end almost as soon as it had begun, and with
western help they would return to create another "independent" Croatian state, 180
It seems that the exiled Ustasha leaders were encouraged in this belief by the attitude of
reported that their British and French counterparts were convinced that a war with the
Soviets was imminent, and were therefore giving succour to any anti-Communist East
Europeans, including Ustashas. 181 One report gives a vivid impression of the attitude of
In the eyes of the Vatican, Pavelic is a militant Catholic, a man who erred, but who erred
fighting for Catholicism. It is for this reason that [Pavelic] now enjoys Vatican protection...
The extradition of Pavelic would only weaken the forces fighting atheism and aid
Communism in its fight against the Church. 182
The Yugoslavs, who had good intelligence as to the movements of Ustasha leaders after
the war, saw the failure to extradite Pavelic (who spent some time in the British zone of
Austria before moving on to Rome) as evidence that he and his supporters were being
used by the British and the Vatican in an anti-Communist crusade. In this, the British
intelligence service was pursuing a line which was out of step with official Foreign Office
policy, which was to hand over all proven Ustashas to Yugoslavia. The Vatican was also
at the centre of a network which organized the escapes of numerous East European
Fascists, including Croats, in the immediate post-war period. A central figure in these
efforts was Fr. Krunoslav Draganovic, a Croat priest from Bosnia, who operated from the
The extent of the involvement of senior Vatican figures in the activities of Draganovic
is uncertain, though they must have been aware of them, and they at least tolerated
them benignly. Various Catholic and Ustasha sources in Rome, including Mgr. Milan
Simcic and Ivo Omrcanin, a former NDH official, asserted that Draganovic was close to
180'MarkAarons and John Loftus, Ratlines: How the Vatican's Nazi Networks Betrayed Western Intelligence
to the Soviets (Heinemann, 1991), p. 124. Interview with Mgr. Milan Simcic.
182*/d. p. 83. Quoting from the CIC (Counter Intelligence Corps) file on Pavelic.
Montini, and that Montini was aware of his network. Simcic dismissed the notion that
Montini had any contact with Pavelic, and it seems that he was not connected with the
arrangements for Pavelic1 s concealment and flight. 184 But the goings-on in the Vatican at
the time undoubtedly fuelled the suspicion of Communists towards the Catholic Church
within Yugoslavia.
Whatever his feelings about the involvement of the clergy in politics, Stepinac found
himself being cast in the role of focus of the opposition in Croatia after the war. The HSS
was not able to mount an effective opposition. Members who tried to act independently
cooperation with the Ustashas. Macek was continually attacked in the press, while the
Communist initiated Executive Committee of the HSS was upgraded and re-named the
Croat Republican Peasant Party (HRSS), and given more of an appearance of a genuine
party. The HSS leaders were fragmented, with some such as Subasic trying to work
within the Popular Front, and another group around Radio's widow, Marija Radic, trying
to campaign outside it. Subasic's failure to unite those opposed to the KPJ was part of
the problem. He refused to protect HSS leaders such as Magovac and Kosutic who had
tried to come to terms with the Communists but had fallen foul of them before the end of
the war. He soon went the same way. Subasic also failed to cooperate meaningfully with
the Serbian opposition around Milan Grol and the newspaper Demokratija, although they
had much in common and were experiencing many of the same problems.
But what ever the weaknesses in Subasic's approach, ultimately the Communists
were never going to allow him seriously to undermine their plans. He was prevented from
going to Paris for discussions with Macek, and a few days later, objecting that Tito had
failed to carry out the provisions of their agreement, he resigned and advised HSS
followers to reject the Popular Front list at the elections (which were announced on 6
184/6/d. pp. 85 and 113-118; Peter Hebblethwaite, Paul VI: the First Modern Pope (Harper Collins, 1993), pp.
209-210.
255
September 1945, and took place on 11 November). By the end of September, it was
clear that the HSS would not be able to oppose the Communists, and, in common with
the Belgrade opposition, its leaders called for a boycott of the election. 185
With other opponents thus emasculated it was really only the Catholic Church, the
one legal independent institution, which remained to provide a focus for opposition for
those who would obstruct the Communists' plans. Indeed, Stepinac's protests at this time
went further than strictly religious matters, as he objected to violations of freedoms and
injustices. 186 And it was through religious questions, such as votes to retain religious
opposition to the new regime, that people were best able to express their dissatisfaction
with Communist rule. Gaillard reported that "if in the strictly political domain no open
resistance manifested itself, religious questions revealed clearly the wishes of the
Stepinac thus: "Attachment to the Church, certainly, but especially hostility to the political
regime". 187
agreement with a Communist regime, and the Communists quickly confirmed his fears.
Thus, in his determination to defend the Church, it was very easy for him to slip into the
role of opposition figurehead. Pallua, of whom, unlike Rittig, there was never any doubt
that his loyalty was to the Church rather than to the regime which employed him, begged
Stepinac not to place himself in the first ranks of the opposition. 188 Pallua feared
Stepinac's hastiness, as in the case of the rector of a junior seminary, most of whose
187 Report by Gaillard of 18 August, 1945. FM, Paris, vol. 30, docs. 34-38.
space had been taken over, but who was reluctant to go to Stepinac, fearing his hasty
reaction. 189
But Stepinac believed that there were questions regarding which the Church had a
right to raise its voice, as he explained in a circular in September 1944: respect of the
person as a free and independent individual; freedom and respect for religion; freedom
and respect for every race and nation, including the inalienable right of national
minorities to live and prosper, and the right to private property, as the basis of the
freedom of the individual and the independence of the family. 190 There was, immediately
after the end of the war, a great deal of anxiety in Zagreb, with all the arrests,
disappearances etc. Stepinac undoubtedly saw it as the Church's right to speak out on
these matters, and on measures directed against the Church, such as restrictions on
religious education and land reform. But the collection, by the staff of the Archbishop's
education and land reform were seen by the Communists as attempts falsely to portray
the Church as being under attack, and thus to galvanize opposition to the regime. 191
In his sermons and circulars at this time, Stepinac frequently referred to the difficult
conditions, seeing them as punishment from God. In a circular in July 1945, he stressed
the need for people to pray and keep up their devotions in the new, difficult
circumstances. Priests should stay in contact with their flock, but should beware of any
risk of being denounced by malicious people. They should stick strictly to their pastoral
duties, and avoid any allusion to worldly matters in their sermons, preaching only the
teachings of Christianity and the word of the apostles. It would be better if they could
write out their sermons, and read them word for word, so that they could later produce
189 Memo from Pallua to Rittig, 5 November, 1945. HDA, Rittig, kut. 4, 2/3, file I.
the text if they were called to account. Any injustices or actions against Church property
Brother priests! Whatever befalls us, let us not lose heart, as if trials and afflictions come
our way, the Lord is near us. Thus in our daily prayers, especially in the holy Mass and in
the breviary, let us cry to the Lord, that these days be shortened and that the sun of God's
mercy shine upon us and upon our faithful."192
as extremely provocative. The prayer that these days be shortened was especially
menacing, appearing to confirm that Stepinac and many of the clergy hoped that
Communist rule would be short-lived. There were other such provocations. In September
1945, a Zagreb religious newspaper contained the following passage: "What the human
race has considered inviolable has been destroyed in our souls, and new facts have
arisen which are quite foreign and unknown to the human soul... Around us ruins, in us
emptiness. Revolution in the world, in our souls despair." 193 The article went on to
suggest that the only salvation lay in spiritual regeneration, but it was clear that the
The annual pilgrimage from Zagreb to the shrine at Marija Bistrica in July 1945 was
the occasion for a popular outpouring of devotion to the Church and to Stepinac, and of
opposition to Communist rule. Masucci wrote that it was a sight to bring tears to the
eyes.
The whole of Zagreb gathered in the shadow of the Catholic Church to bear witness before
everyone that they are faithful children of Catholic Croatia, of that people whom one holy
Pope proclaimed the "rampart of Christianity", and which even at the price of the spilling of
its blood wishes to remain so.
The appearance of Archbishop Stepinac was greeted with a thunderous "Long live the
Archbishop!" 194
The pilgrimage attracted tens of thousands of people, and in the course of the
sermon in which he repeated many of the themes of his sermons and circulars at that
193Dodr/pasf/r, 23 Sept, 1945, quoted by Deakin, 3 Oct, 1945, PRO, FO371/48912, R17283.
time, stressing the difficult conditions, which were a punishment from God for having
forgotten him and for being sunk in sin. 195 Stepinac was not a demagogue, but in the
pilgrims were from the families of those who had been killed or arrested, or had
disappeared. The authorities were not yet sure of their control of the situation, and this
Allegations of miracles, such as apparitions of the Virgin Mary calling for a halt to the
bloodshed, also irritated the authorities, who saw them as attempts to incite unrest
among the people. 197 In a speech in July 1946, Tito attacked the clergy for using
apparitions as a means of attacking the regime, asking "but where were these saints
when the children of our country perished by the thousands? Where were they when our
people needed saving?"198 Bakaric later attacked the unscrupulous use of propaganda
by the clergy, such as the vulgarization of the Fatima visions. He singled out Aksamovic
as the only bishop who had spoken out against the use of miracles to trouble the
people. 199
So the Communists accused Stepinac and other members of the clergy of using a
observers who were far from being sympathizers of the Communist regime perceived
Rivoire described him as the one "militant", whose defiance contrasted with the cautious
reserve of the opposition. After Stepinac's letter to Tito of 24 November 1945, Rivoire
198Reported by Payart, 31 July, 1946. FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 190-192.
remarked that "battle lines" had been drawn, and that if Tito's reaction was violent, he
would merely be playing the game of the "combative prelate" ("ce prelat bretteur"). 200
Of course, the greatest complaint of the authorities was over the September pastoral
Reaction". 201 Coming as it did at a sensitive time, shortly before the holding of elections
to the Constituent Assembly, and when political opposition figures were calling for a
boycott, it seemed to the Communists that the letter was part of a coordinated effort to
step up the pressure on them, as a deliberate attempt to discredit the regime and to
To the Communists it seemed that the hostile activities of the clergy within the
country went beyond the mere sowing of discontent and encouragement of opposition. In
the late summer of 1945, a number of exiled Ustashas infiltrated back into Yugoslavia,
linking with groups which had remained in the country (known as "Krizari" -
"Crusaders"). 203 One of the main accusations in the trial of Stepinac was that he
the Archiepiscopal Palace."204 In fact, the term Krizari was applied to a variety of types of
disturbances, some of them more organized than others. The Communists often used it,
seeking to link the Catholic Church with HSS figures such as Marija Radic and Kosutic's
wife, Mira Kosutic, in an organized movement to oust them from power. There were
groups which used the name, operating under the slogan "in the struggle for Christ
against the Communists" ("u borbi za Krista protiv komunista"). Most of them relied on
200 Reports from Rivoire of 17 Nov and 20 Dec, 1945. FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 75 and 97-98.
2%b/d. p. 299.
the help of the population, especially the families of killed Ustashas or domobrani, for
Small, isolated and uncoordinated, these groups never presented a real threat,
although the Communists made much of them. A report from the British consulate in
Zagreb in the summer of 1946 said that much was being made of the Krizari, but that
their activities were exaggerated. But it acknowledged that: "disturbances are taking
place in many villages as a result of the disappearance or arrest by night for unknown
reasons of peasants who are outspoken in their hostility to the regime. Reprisals are
taking place, and Communists have been murdered."206 Communist sources noted
killings of Party workers and burnings of the buildings of village Peoples' committees and
between the clergy, Ustashas and Krizari, and the formation of groups of believers to
Certainly some priests were in direct contact with Krizari groups. Thus Fr. Eduard
Zilic, a Bosnian Franciscan, reported that it had been established that Fr. Sclafhausen
had helped the Krizari. 208 A letter to Rittig in June 1946 described the situation in
Djakovo, including the "reactionary activity" of the monastery there and of certain priests
who had not accepted the new order. In such activities the relatives of killed and exiled
Ustashas played a prominent role.209 At his trial, Fr. Ivan Condric from Sarajevo admitted
that in August 1945 he set about organizing links between those who were opposing the
regime, including people in the woods. He saw the circumstances as right, given the
208Religious Affairs Commission memorandum of 25 January, 1946. HDA, VK, kut. 1, doc. 15.
209Letter from one Lukic of 24 June, 1946. HDA, VK, kut. 1, doc. 170.
261
widespread dissatisfaction, and based his work upon the expectation of armed British
intervention. 210
There were also direct links between the Krizari and individuals in the Archbishop's
palace. Stepinac's secretary, Salic, the catechists Josip Simecki and Josip Cmkovic and
Fr. Djuro Marie, who stayed in the Archbishop's palace for a time after the war, were in
contact with various Ustashas, and helped bring them into contact with each other and
with Krizari groups. They supplied false papers and organized the collection of materials
for those groups. In October 1945, a ceremony was held in a chapel in the palace to
bless a flag for a Krizari group.211 However, it has been speculated that this incident may
have originated as an OZNA ploy to ensnare the palace staff, and that it was OZNA that
actually ordered the flag. The flag was alleged to have been ordered for a Krizari group
led by Martin Mesarov, a former HSS official. However, Mesarov had already been
When the leading Ustasha, Erih Lisak, returned to Yugoslavia he went straight to the
palace, contacting Salic and Stepinac. Lisak acknowledged that he went to the palace in
search of information about the situation in the country, but denied that he talked to
Stepinac about the Ustasha - Krizari groups in the woods. He received information from
Salic and Masucci, including a summary of the September pastoral letter.213 What was
particularly incriminating from the point of view of the authorities was that Lisak's visit
coincided with the Bishops' conference in September 1945. It seemed that rather than a
coincidence, this was part of a premeditated plot to bring as much pressure as possible
upon the regime at a particularly sensitive time; that the pastoral letter was intended to
212Zdenko Radelic, "Komunisti, Krizari i Katolicka Crkva u Hrvatskoj, 1945. -1946. godine." (in Dijalog
povjesnicara - istoricara 2, Zagreb, 2000).
incite the populace to a rebellion which would coincide with the stepping up of Krizari
activities.214
Stepinac later disassociated himself from the events at the palace. He insisted that
he had not known who Lisak was until he actually met him, and that they had not
discussed anything to do with the Krizari. He had been unaware of the existence in the
palace of a depot for supplying the Krizari, or of a channel for Ustashas arriving in the
country. It was without his knowledge or approval. 215 It seems unlikely that Stepinac was
directly involved in the activities in the palace, although he was surely aware of them.
Salic recalled that when he told Stepinac about the blessing of the flag he disapproved
on account of the danger.216 The important point is that the authorities were not
convinced. They found further cause for suspicion in the fact that an emissary of Milan
Grol visited the palace.217 This seemed to justify their fears of a wider coordinated plot to
undermine them, in which the opposition in Serbia and Croatia were linked, with the
Another piece of evidence used by the Communists against the clergy at the time
concerned the finding of a horde of Ustasha loot buried in the Franciscan house in
Zagreb. The contents included jewellery, gold teeth etc. pillaged from Ustasha victims
during the war. The Communists had suspected that there was something hidden there,
but the Franciscans had denied it until, in January 1946, it was dug up in the presence of
the provincial and other friars. To the Communists it seemed that this treasure was being
kept safe until the expected return of the Ustashas, and for the financing of Krizari
activities. Zagreb Franciscans were also accused of sheltering Ustasha priests trying to
214
Petranovic, "Aktivnost rimokatolickog klera", pp. 299-300.
escape the country, and of helping to supply and to provide connections between Krizari
groups. 218
The clergy were accused of generally affording moral support to the Krizari, and of
organizing and supplying them through monasteries and parish offices, with all contacts
being centred upon the Archbishop's palace. The authorities strove to demonstrate
Stepinac's overall responsibility for this, even if there was no evidence of any direct
involvement on his part. Thus, at Stepinac's trial, a statement made by Fr. Modesto
Martincic, provincial of the Franciscans in Zagreb, who was one of Stepinac's co-
defendants, was quoted, in which he claimed that the attitude and statements of
Stepinac was one of the main reasons why some priests incited and participated in
armed actions.219 At his trial in August 1946, Fr. Dragutin Gazivoda spoke in a similar
vein:-
The position of Stepinac towards the people's authorities was one of the basic reasons
why the lower clergy adopted such a position, because the communications and directives
which were coming from Stepinac himself were such that they were intended to drag the
whole clergy into an open struggle, a really hostile position towards the current authorities
and the programme of the present government. It is my personal opinion that if the
representative of the Church in Croatia had taken a more moderate position, a position of
cooperation, the lower clergy would have followed. 220
While this statement was clearly made by a man before a rigged trial, pressurized
and anxious to save himself, its content cannot be entirely dismissed. Stepinac, seeing
the Church under attack, did adopt a confrontational posture towards the regime. He
shared the hopes of many in Croatia at the time that a change in the international
situation could result in the fall of the regime in Yugoslavia. As we have seen, he did, for
various reasons, find himself at the forefront of the opponents of the regime in Croatia.
His hostile attitude towards the regime was clear to all, including members of the clergy
who were more actively involved in trying to bring about its downfall. Insecure as they
still felt at this stage, the Communists saw an international plot involving the "western
218//d. pp. 18-23; report on the finding of the treasure from Rivoire, 31/1/46. FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 141-
145.
imperialist powers", the Vatican, the emigre Ustashas, and the remnants of the "internal
forces of reaction", to undermine and overthrow the regime. 221 Although they
undoubtedly believed that Stepinac was guilty of the charges laid against him, the
accommodation were effectively abandoned. There was a brief lull following the letter,
with Bakaric still inclined towards caution, recognizing the influence of the Church among
most of the Croatian people, and wishing to avoid antagonizing them unduly with a full
offensive against the Church. Thus his first reaction to the letter, at a press conference
on 6 October 1945, was relatively restrained in tone. He denied that the Church was
persecuted, insisted that every effort was made to satisfy the religious needs of the
people, and claimed that the demands of the Church leaders were already being
addressed. He claimed that, the letter, with its pro-Ustasha spirit, notwithstanding, there
had been progress in settling Church-State relations. But Tito seems to have concluded
that a clash with Stepinac was unavoidable, hence the much sharper and more
menacing tone of his response of 25 October, as already noted. 222 According to Djilas,
following the pastoral letter Tito, both in public and in private, signalled a much tougher
Following Tito's lead, Bakaric took up the cudgels in his press conference of 15
December (mentioned earlier). There followed a shrill press campaign against the higher
clergy, and Stepinac in particular. Strongly featured in these were the clergy's alleged
222 lrvine, pp. 240-241; reports on Bakaric's press conference, FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 33-34 and 43; Tito's
response, Borba, 25 October, 1945.
references to the post-war goings-on in the Archbishop's palace. They included warnings
that Stepinac would have to answer for his crimes. The attacks also included gross
caricatures with, in the words of Rivoire, "no regard for taste". 224 Another central feature
of these attacks was repeated accusations that the bishops were trying to avoid the
agrarian reform, to preserve their privileged lives at the expense of the just aspirations of
the peasantry to acquire more land. For example, in one article Stepinac was accused of
showing more mercy towards Lisak than towards Croatian peasants who wanted Kaptol
(the Zagreb street where the Cathedral, the Archbishop's palace and various other
Church institutions are situated) land. Thus the Communists sought to undermine the
high regard in which the Church was held among the large majority of the Croatian
the number of parishes, each of which would be entitled to the legally permitted minimum
of land, has already been mentioned. Their opposition to this tactic turned violent. At the
beginning of November 1945, Stepinac received a warning from an OZNA officer that if
he went to the opening of a new parish at Zapresic, just outside Zagreb, he would be
planned. As he arrived, his car was attacked by a mob, and pelted with stones and eggs.
Reports as to what exactly happened were different on the two sides. Stepinac quickly
withdrew, but after he left there was a confrontation in which the parish priest was beaten
up and shots were fired, for which the priest was blamed, an accusation hotly denied by
Stepinac, who claimed that the gun was planted on him. Stepinac wrote a sharp
224Examples in Vjesnik, 19 Dec and 11 Nov, 1946; radio broadcast from Belgrade, 1 Jan, 1946, reported at
FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 118-122; report from Rivoire of 20 Dec, 1945, FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 97-98.
225Article in Vjesnik of 11 Jan, 1946; letter from Rivoire of 27 Jan, 1946, FM, Paris, vol. 34, doc. 140.
226Benigar, p. 505.
266
complaint to Bakaric concerning the incident, and in a circular to the clergy explained
At this time there were also orchestrated demonstrations in Zagreb, calling for the
arrest of Stepinac. Meanwhile posters appeared in the streets in the same vein. It was
widely expected that the arrest of Stepinac was imminent. 228 Tito, it appears, was still
hoping that there might be another way. Hurley arrived in January, and Tito pressed him
to have Stepinac withdrawn, warning that if he were not, then he would be arrested. 229
Hurley offered Stepinac the chance to leave, telling him that the Pope would receive him
"brotherly" if he decided to come to Rome, and would stand behind him if he decided to
In the spring of 1946, the press campaign abated. Payart reported that the Church
was still persecuted, though by more subtle means, through attacks on its source of
renewal, the seminaries. Deprived of their property, they were now forbidden to take
collections. The authorities also tried to encourage dissidents among the lower clergy,
though with little success. The campaign against Stepinac ceased in Belgrade, while in
Zagreb it was relegated to the inside pages of the newspapers. But the dossier had only
that the Communists were aware of the popularity of Stepinac, and of the attachment of
the peasants to their priests. While the separation of Church and State and the agrarian
reform certainly diminished the Church's temporal power in the long term, in the
meantime its prestige and influence had if anything been increased by the attacks of the
227Account of the incident at Alexander, The Triple Myth, p. 134; letter from Stepinac to Bakaric of 10
November, 1945 on the attack, Kisic-Kolanovic, "Pisma zagrebackoga nadbiskupa", pp. 171-174; Stepinac's
circular of 7 November, 1945, HDA, Politeo, doc. 481; government's account in Vjesnik, 1 November, 1945.
229As Tito told a delegation from the American churches on 3 August, 1947. JBT, I - 2 - a/72.
231 Telegramme from Payart of 13 April, 1946. FM, Paris, Vol. 34, docs. 162-163.
267
State against it. The Communist leaders still needed to take account of the power of the
Church. Whether they responded to the threat which they perceived from the Church
with brutality or with caution depended, the memorandum concluded, on the evolution of
This was a reference to the course of the negotiations in Paris over the disposition of
Trieste and the Julian region, as the Yugoslav regime felt under some constraint to show
moderation while it still hoped to gain something from the Allies. In July 1946, following
United States, Britain, France and the Soviet Union announced its decision regarding the
new Italo-Yugoslav border and the formation of the Free Territory of Trieste. The new
line was largely based on the French proposal, and was much more favourable to
Yugoslavia than the American or British suggestions, though less so than that of the
Soviet Union. In fact neither Italy nor Yugoslavia was satisfied. 233
The Yugoslav government regarded the outcome of the peace conference very
bitterly, and they did not conceal their frustration. It was precisely at this time that attacks
on Stepinac and the Church picked up again, with renewed vigour. Observers clearly
connected events in Paris with the new offensive against the Church, which culminated
in the arrest of Stepinac in September 1946. One senior party official admitted that the
arrest was in deliberate defiance of the West, stating that 'We must recognize that we
can expect nothing more from the Paris peace conference. So be it!... We shall look
after ourselves, we alone!" ("nous nous suffirons a nous-merries, rien qu'a nous-
memes").234
Another reason why attacks on the Church picked up at this point was an article in
234 Recorded by the French Consul in Zagreb, 28 Sept, 1946. FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 247-252.
268
comprehensive attack on the Yugoslav regime. The Yugoslav authorities reacted angrily,
and considered expelling Hurley, whom they blamed. 235 Disturbed by this prospect, Rittig
tried to defend the interests of the Church in his usual way, mixing attacks upon
elements within the Church with expressions of optimism that things were moving in a
positive direction. Thus the new offensive against the Church opened with a speech by
Rittig, in which he blamed the higher clergy for the poor state of Church - State relations,
for having allegedly failed to take up Tito on his offer of June 1945. He also attacked
fanatical younger priests who had maintained their links with emigre Ustashas and
Krizari, harming the interests of the Church and of the people. But he did not believe that
the Holy See supported such policies, putting his faith in the proposed law on religious
communities and the correct relations between the Holy See and Yugoslavia. 236
During a long tour of the country during July, Tito repeatedly returned to attacks
upon the Church, with a ferocity unknown until then. He warned of a "diabolical union" of
domestic and international reaction, which "a vast clero-fascist conspiracy supports and
animates throughout the World." Clearly the disappointments in Paris were much on
Tito's mind when he accused the "forces of reaction", centred on the HSS and the
Catholic Church, of using any means to gain power, including damaging the country's
vital interests with regard to Trieste and Istria. He warned that the authorities would not
show weakness, and that no ecclesiastical immunity would be able to protect those who
attacked the country's interests. Payart asked why Tito chose that time to begin a new
offensive? He speculated that, frustrated by the course of events in Paris and aware of
demonstrate that it would not be possible for their enemies to take advantage of their
difficulties and their loss of face over Trieste. Tito had stated that "it is under the cassock
that one can find the sources of the discontent that is disseminated artificially among the
235Zivojinovic, p. 160.
people", and with the apparent failure of his policy towards Trieste he no longer needed
to appear liberal in the eyes of the World. The time to cut down the Communists'
It is also notable that attacks on the Catholic Church as a centre of "reactionary" and
"hegemonistic" circles in the World were stepped up in the Soviet union at this time. 238
article in mid-September, following the start of the trial of Lisak, Salic etc. (Stepinac was
added to the list of defendants a few days later) saw Stepinac at the centre of a
calculated plan, organizing the Krizari in expectation of intervention over the Trieste
question, 239
At the same time as attacks on the clergy were stepped up in the press during 1946,
so there were frequent instances of physical attacks on them. Thus, in January 1946
Bonefacic complained about attacks upon priests in the Split diocese, which frequently
Provincial in Split informed the Religious Commission of the murder of a priest near
Drnis, in the Sibenik diocese, in which members of the town People's Committee were
implicated, and of an attack on another priest near Knin, in which local members of the
Communist youth organization (SKOJ) were involved. Salis reported an attack on the
priest's house in Stenjevac on 23 February, and appealed that measures be taken, "that
it will not appear that the priestly estate is without defence or personal freedom in this
state". 240
237Letter from Payart of 31 July, 1946, FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 190-192; report in Vjesnik, 17 July, 1946, on
speech by Tito in Cetinje.
238Tass report attacking the Papal representative in Poland and the Archbishop of Milan, in Vjesnik, 21 July,
1946.
239
Vjesnik, 16 September, 1946.
240Letter from Bonefacic to the Religious Commission of 30 January, 1946 and report to the Regional
People's Committee of 27 January, 1946, HDA, VK, kut. 5, doc. 200; letter from the Franciscan Provincial in
Split of 21 February, 1946, HDA, VK, kut. 5, doc. 338; letter from Salis to the Religious Commission of 1
March, 1946, HDA, VK, kut. 5, doc. 394.
270
In June 1946, the authorities in Split allowed the annual "Corpus Christi" procession
to go ahead. According to the French Consul in Split, Charles Boutant, it was a grand
occasion, presided over by Bonefacic with much pomp. Tito reacted furiously to it,
provocation. Boutant saw it as the reaction of the population against the religious policies
of the regime. He quoted a priest who observed ironically that "the Ustasha government
built churches, but they remained empty. As regards the faith, the present government is
perhaps the one that has done the most for the Church."241
When it came to an annual procession of a statue of the Lady of Bistrica through the
region of Zagorje (around Zagreb) the authorities showed less tolerance. The procession
was stopped by the police in Klanjec, and several people, including a priest, arrested,
then released on condition that they calm the people, as the procession was banned.
According to the Church's version of events, they stayed for two days in Klanjec, during
which time they were subjected to organized provocations. They then returned to
Zagreb, and placed the statue in the cathedral, where large numbers came to pay
homage to it. During the night of 28 August, it was stolen from the cathedral, and was
smashed, the pieces being found scattered around the surrounding streets. A large
crowd gathered before the cathedral, and there were instances of rebellious slogans
being shouted. The police accused Stepinac of being the instigator, and arrested the
The Communists responded with another attack upon the record of the clergy,
accusing certain priests of spreading the false impression that pilgrimages to Marija
Bistrica were forbidden. There had, however, been cases of processions being
transformed by certain priests into "clero-fascist demonstrations". The main thrust of the
article which contained this attack was that these anti-national clergy represented no
danger, and their efforts were pitiful, because the people saw through their activities. The
241 Letter from Boutant of 21 June, 1946, FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 178-179; report by Payart on speech by
Tito in July 1946, FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 190-192.
271
old times would never return. 242 Clearly the regime was straining to assert its confidence,
which in itself suggests continued nervousness at the open displays of defiance which
There were also further reports of violent attacks on members of the clergy during
the summer and autumn of 1946. For example, Salis informed the Religious Commission
that Fr. Franjo Ljubetic was attacked in late August, while Fr. Josip Ormuz was beaten
from his flat and killed. On 5 October, a catechist was murdered in the village of Savski
Dol at a time when it was surrounded by police, and on 15 November two priests
received a severe beating from uniformed policemen at Popovaca, near Bjelovar. 243
Bishop Pusic of Hvar was pelted with eggs on the island of Brae, by students who had
followed him there from Split. However, it was Boutant's impression that the clergy in
Dalmatia were trying to stay distant from events in Zagreb, avoiding confrontations. In
general he thought this had resulted in a less tense situation there, as evidenced by the
fact that processions in honour of the Virgin took place in Split in August and October.245
Indeed, it seems that the attacks on the clergy in Dalmatia were not sanctioned by
the senior Croatian authorities. In January 1946, Bakaric upbraided the Regional
Committee of the KPH for Dalmatia for attacking all of the bishops like they did Stepinac.
This general attack was weakening the campaign against the centre of clerical reaction
in Zagreb, he said. They should leave the bishops alone if they did nothing wrong. The
following month, Bakaric informed the Dalmatian Party that he had heard that two more
priests had been killed, and that members and leaders of the Party were involved. He
242Church's version of the events in a circular read in all churches on 1 September, 1946, FM, Paris, vol. 34,
docs. 199-200; official version in Vjesnik, 1 September, 1946.
243Two letters from Salis to the Religious Commission of 4 October, 1946, and two of 15 November, 1946.
HDA, VK, kut. 7, docs. 1437, 1438 and 1791.
244
Letters from Bonefacic of 30 July and 15 October 1946. HDA, VK, kut. 7, docs. 1487 and 1538.
245Report from Boutant of 23 October, 1946. FM, Paris, vol. 35, docs. 86-87.
272
n would be taken
issued a severe warning, asserting that if it happened again legal actio
people. 249 Certainly Bakaric must have been aware of the plans that were in motion to
bring Stepinac to trial, as his earlier cited letter to Kardelj on the subject shows. Were
there perhaps differences at the top of the Party on the approach to Stepinac? Whatever
Bakaric was thinking when he spoke to Milanovic, the evidence suggests that he
preferred to avoid a confrontation with the Church, but he always deferred to Tito's policy
line.
Hrncevic judged that given Stepinac's persistent hostility to the regime, there was no
choice but to bring him before the court. The trial was carefully prepared. The Croatian
OZNA carried out the investigation into the activities of Lisak, Salic and the others, and it
was decided to include Stepinac in the trial. The indictment was principally the work of
Blazevic, and was, in the words of Hrncevic, in the spirit of the time, infused with
propaganda. Hrncevic, Blazevic and Dusko Brkic, the republican Minister of Justice,
visited Aleksandar Rankovic (a Serbian communist, who, with Djilas and Kardelj, made
up the inner circle of power around Tito) on 10 August 1946 to discuss the impending
trial. Tito was in the building at the time, but was preoccupied with the foreign reaction to
the recent shooting down of an American aeroplane over Yugoslavia, and did not speak
to them about the Stepinac case. The trial began on 9 September. There was a recess
when the arrest of Stepinac was announced, and the trial re-commenced on 23
Those within the Party leadership who had hoped that they could avoid having to
move against Stepinac by persuading Hurley to have him removed to Rome, had clearly
been disappointed. 251 Payart saw the arrest as the victory of a hardline faction within the
Party, which had disavowed Tito's early attempt at conciliation. It was, however, clear
that the initiative in adopting a harsher line towards the Church came from Tito. Payart
250
Hrncevic, pp. 193-196.
251 General Velebit acknowledged as much to the French ambassador, as the latter reported in his letter of 21
September, 1946. FM, Paris, Vol. 34, docs. 238-241.
274
was surprised that the authorities should have chosen such a moment, when the
deliberations in Paris were still going on, and the regime might have seen it as being in
its interest to gain the favour of the powers. When he made this point to Vladimir Velebit,
the latter replied with an exaggerated gesture "don't let's talk about that, if you don't
mind". Payart regarded Velebit, like Bakaric, as a moderate whose views were out of
Rivoire believed that the trial was a demonstration of the regime's control over the
situation. 253 Nada Kisic-Kolanovic agrees, seeing that the trial was intended to make an
impression on any hesitant elements in Croatia which were still entertaining hopes of a
change of regime with the help of foreign intervention. 254 It was also a blow against
from the Catholic hierarchy, and was thus intended to stabilize the situation in Croatia.255
Djilas later wrote that the trial was ill-conceived and badly timed. Although he
considered that the case against Stepinac was convincing, he thought it lacked credibility
to put so much emphasis on his wartime stance, given that he was arrested so long after
the war. For him the trial was a failure, in part due to Stepinac's dignified bearing during
its course. 256 Pallua too saw it as a major political error by the Party, believing that
Bakaric's caution had been wiser, and that Tito later came to the same conclusion. 257
As to the trial itself, apart from Lisak, whom German intelligence reports show to
have been a devoted Ustasha, close to Pavelic, the other defendants mainly served the
regime. Blazevic's main emphasis was to demonstrate a link between the Catholic clergy
252Letter from Payart of 21 September, 1946, FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 238-241.
253 Letter of 30 September, 1946. FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 253-265.
and the Ustashas. Lisak was steadfast, avoiding incriminating Stepinac in any way, but
the priests in the trial fulfilled their role in mounting the case against Stepinac very
effectively. Salic was apparently subjected to a long and hard interrogation, which broke
himself, passing the blame on to Stepinac and expressing repentance for his own
activities.258
became defensive and flustered.259 But the trial certainly did not achieve the
Communists' ends. Hurley saw it as a great triumph for the Church. He confided to
Payart that he had initially had worries as to the solidity of Stepinac's case, and as to his
resistance, but he believed that his doubts had proved groundless. He declared that
Stepinac had entered the court as head of the Church in Croatia, and emerged a
national hero, and in prison his authority would be greater than when he was at liberty.260
The Communist authorities hoped that, having removed Stepinac from the scene, they
could more easily manipulate the Church, and reach an agreement to their liking direct
with Church representatives in the country. They were disappointed, as Hurley now took
a leading role in Church affairs. They were still faced with having to deal with the Holy
See, which was what they had most objected to all along.261
Finally, Stepinac was made an example of because he had not been prepared to fit
into the very restricted space which the Communist authorities were prepared to grant to
the Church and, more than that, he was seen as the focus of opposition, both domestic
and international, in Croatia. In spite of the disapproval of his wartime attitude on the part
258Kisi6-Kolanovic, "Vrijeme politicke represije", pp. 11-12; hearing of the case against Salic, Sudjenje
Lisaku, Stepincu, Salicu i druzini, pp. 55-84; telegramme from Payart, 18 September, 1946. FM, Paris, vol.
34, docs. 233-234.
260Report from Payart of 17 October, 1946. FM, Paris, vol. 35, docs. 43-49.
of most of the Communist leaders, this was not the reason for his arrest. It has been
suggested that the need to balance the major Serbian show trial, that of Draza
Mihailovic, with a major Croatian trial may have entered into the equation. 262 If so, given
the unavailability of Pavelic, Stepinac was the obvious target for the authorities. One
He is now almost the only man of whom the authorities are afraid... He represents,
moreover, the one great opposing force to Communism, the Catholic Church, which has
always wielded great influence in Croatia, and which is now regarded as the only possible
source of organized opposition to the regime. 263
263Memorandum on Stepinac by the Foreign Office Research Department of 25 September, 1946. PRO,
FO371/59429, R14440.
Chapter Six
Following the end of the war the Catholic Church in Slovenia was able to pursue an
independent course in its relations with the new regime only to a limited degree. Firstly,
with Rozman's departure, Slovenia lost its most senior Church figure. Secondly, with
Yugoslavia restored, the Slovene dioceses were once again part of the Yugoslav
province, its bishops (or vicar-generals) part of the conference of bishops of Yugoslavia,
whose president was Stepinac in Zagreb. Stepinac was to be the dominant figure on the
Church's side in conducting relations with the new government and in responding to its
actions. Thus any inclination on the part of the Slovene hierarchy to pursue a different
course would carry only limited weight. Relations between the Church and the
Zagreb.
This chapter will show that the situation faced by the Church in Slovenia had
significant similarities to the situation in Croatia. The aim of the Communists to restrict
the Church's role in society was essentially the same. In dealing with the attacks of the
authorities, the senior Slovene clergy sought to defend the Church, following the line
emanating from Zagreb. However, adopted a lower key, less confrontational strategy.
This chapter will discuss the relative effectiveness of this strategy, in comparison with the
According to Lenic, Rozman had not intended to leave, but he wavered when, just
before the Partisans' arrival, he received an invitation in the name of the Slovene clergy
agreed that he should go. 1 His place was taken by the Vicar-General, Ignacij Nadrah,
who took responsibility for the Ljubljana diocese until his arrest on 13 June 1945. 2 The
new authorities were not favourably disposed towards Nadrah, whom they had identified
as an enemy during the war (for example, he was heavily criticized for his oration at the
According to the wish of Rozman, expressed shortly before his departure, the
succession was then to fall to the next most senior canon. But as other canons had
either left or stepped aside, the leadership fell to Anton Vovk. That the authorities were
better disposed towards him has been put down to his relationship to Franc Saleski
Finzgar, a priest and writer who was a friend of the OF. 4 Indeed, it has been suggested
that Vovk was himself regarded as being relatively pro-Partisan, so much so that
Catholic sources have felt it necessary explicitly to refute the notion. Lenic believed that
there were no grounds for the belief, and that no one in the diocese had the impression
that Vovk had any connection with the Partisans. Another priest who knew him, Anton
Trdan, described him as essentially non-political, although in his heart for the
choice of leader.
In a sense, the departure of Rozman, who had been such a bitter foe of the
be set on a new footing. Indeed, under Vovk the remaining senior Slovene clergy made a
considerable shift in their attitude towards the Communist regime. Their approach was
2Ludovik Ceglar, Nadskof Vovk in njegov cas, 1900-1963: 1. del (Klagenfurt, 1993) (hereafter Ceglar), pp.
115-120.
pragmatic, avoiding the confrontational stances of Rozman, and far more conciliatory
The Presidency of SNOS named the new Slovene government on 5 May 1945, and
on 9 May the Partisans entered Ljubljana. There then followed, as in other parts of
Yugoslavia, a period of ruthless cleansing, which lasted until local elections in July, as
the regime sought to consolidate its control. This was mainly carried out by OZNA and
the military courts. The Yugoslav Army played a crucial role in the takeover in Slovenia,
the scene of the last battles. It involved the destruction of Croatian Ustashas and
Domobrans and Serbian Chetniks as well as Slovene anti-Communist forces, which had
all congregated in Slovenia in the last phase of the war, and which all attempted to flee
regarded by the Communists as wholly compromised, much of the need for "cleansing"
was pre-empted by a mass exodus, quite apart from the numbers of priests who had
already been killed. In a memorandum prepared for the western Allies just before the
arrival of the Partisans in Ljubljana, Miha Krek estimated that 65 priests and nine
seminarians were killed in Slovenia during the period before the take-over, as part of a
deliberate plan to "liquidate" all those they considered potential obstacles to their
revolution. 7 Lenic reckoned that about 200 priests fled in the last days. Noting that the
propaganda of the collaborationist regime concerning the killings of priests was very
powerful, and caused much panic, he judged that many of them left completely
needlessly, but few ever returned. He was ready to leave himself, but was persuaded not
to by Vovk and Nadrah. Rozman reported to Rome that 251 priests fled.8 The
Communists reported that many priests, including those of the Maribor diocese, some of
7Report by Krek of 8 May, 1945. FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 1-12.
them priests who had earlier been expelled by the Germans, assisted the Zagreb and
Ljubljana Franciscans in sheltering fleeing Ustashas and helping them on their way to
the border.9 It may be that some among the Communists had in mind an even more
thorough cleansing of Slovenia of their real or potential opponents. In January 1944 a list
of twenty thousand people to be liquidated following the German defeat was uncovered
leaders was to accept the new reality and to make conciliatory gestures to the new
rulers. This line was in accord with the views of anti-Communist clericalist leaders
outside the country. An associate of Krek, Fr. Stanislav Zerjal, told Allied intelligence
officials in August 1944 that Krek advocated caution, that the SLS should preserve its
independence but avoid attacks on Tito or Yugoslavia. It should argue for internal peace
and renewal, and that the people should be allowed to decide their fate. It should thus
leave itself room for manoeuvre, as the current state of affairs would only be temporary.
Krek believed that with the help of Allied pressure, the SLS could still return to power. 11
The Ljubljana Ordinaria was ordered to ring the church bells when the Partisans
marched into Ljubljana. Lenic asked Nadrah what to do, and he replied that the war was
over, so let the bells be rung. Mikuz expressed a wish to celebrate a High Mass in the
cathedral for fallen Partisans. Nadrah was embarrassed due to Mikuz's suspension by
Rozman, and went to inform him that the suspension was lifted (interestingly, Mikuz
9HDA, Fond MUP, kut. 5/001.1, report entitled Katolicka crkva kao ideoloski i politick! protivnik FNR
Jugoslavije (The Catholic Church as an Ideological and Political Opponent of the Federal People's Republic
of Yugoslavia) (hereafter HDA, MUP), p. 311.
10Report by Krek of 8 May, 1945. FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 1-12; Zivojinovic, p. 98. Zivojinovic does not
dispute the authenticity of the list.
11 Zivojinovic, p. 138; the same information provided in a Foreign Office report on the SLS, PRO,
FO371/44387, R14863.
281
responded that Rozman had lifted the suspension long before). The requiem Mass was
a circular hailing the liberation and the unification of Slovene lands, calling for loyalty to
But in spite of these conciliatory gestures, the Slovene Church leaders found it
difficult to establish fruitful relations with the new authorities during the first weeks after
the end of the war. At a certain level there were contacts. Part of the bishop's residence
was taken over by the army, thorough searches of it were made, and much was
removed. But according to Lenic, the authorities made no effort to enter into relations
with the senior clergy, and Nadrah was unable to make contact with the Government. 14
There was a rapid change following the replacement of Nadrah by Vovk. Clearly, in
spite of Nadrah's attempts to strike a conciliatory posture, the Communists regarded him
as being too closely identified with Rozman, and so long as he remained at the helm he
was an obstacle to attempts to start afresh. Maks Miklavcic of the theological faculty, a
supporter of the OF during the war, made an initial approach to the authorities 15 The day
after Vovk took over in the diocese, a car was sent for him, which conveyed him to the
Interior Minister, Zoran Polic, and it was from this time that contacts began. 16
A major concern of Vovk's at the time was the position of priests who had been
banished from German-occupied areas during the war, and who were now returning. The
Interior Ministry had decided that they should not be allowed to return to their former
parishes until their wartime conduct in Croatia or Serbia had been investigated. Vovk
brought this matter up with Polic at their first meeting, complaining that priests who had
been victims of the occupation were now regarded with suspicion, as enemies of the
12"Pogovor s skofom dr. Stanislavom Lenicem", pp. 1937-1938; Alexander, Church and State, p. 85.
"Archive of the Ljubljana Archdiocese, Okroznice (circulars), 1945-1950. (hereafter Ljubljana Archdiocese).
14Ceglar, pp. 118-119; "Pogovor s skofom dr. Stanislavom Lenicem", pp. 1937-1938.
15Miklavcicto Stella Alexander in 1970. Alexander, Church and State, pp. 84-85.
16Ceglar, p. 123.
282
people. For his part, Polic asked that the high representatives of the Church should
make a declaration of loyalty to the regime. 17 Thus the Slovene authorities hoped that,
having in place at the head of the Slovene Church a figure whom they regarded relatively
favourably, they could obtain the loyalty of the remaining high clergy, neutralize them as
a potential focus of opposition to the regime and co-opt them in the task of pacifying and
gaining the acquiescence of the overwhelmingly Catholic Slovene population in the face
Vovk did not accede to the request at once, but called together the prominent clergy
of the diocese, the cathedral canons, the superiors of the religious orders and others for
fully acceded to the authorities' request for a declaration of loyalty, some among the
clergy were reportedly resentful. It has been suggested that the principle reason for the
arrest of Nadrah may have been his unwillingness to make such a declaration. 18 But
nevertheless, on 11 July 1945 Vovk led a delegation of the clergy to an audience with
Vovk read the prepared memorandum. It expressed the sincere readiness of the
clergy to support the People's Government in Ljubljana and the federal government in
Belgrade in their efforts to promote the welfare of the people, and loyally to fulfil their
national and civic duties, as their faith also demanded. It gave thanks for the liberation
and the formation of a Slovene state, and declared loyalty to the federal government, in
the belief that Slovene existence, independence and national economic and cultural
development were possible only with the "brother nations" of Yugoslavia. Referring to the
wartime hostility between the Partisans and most of the clergy in the Ljubljana diocese, it
said that it was all the more important for them to stress their loyalty, as wartime events
might cast doubt on their sincere patriotism and real will to support the peoples'
authorities. It condemned every neglect of patriotic duty and wilful treachery towards the
people as a grave sin before God, and expressed regret for the wrongs of some
However, in a passage which was less acceptable to the Communists, it put such
behaviour down to bad information, propaganda, pressure from the occupier and the fear
of atheism. It could not believe that good Catholics and priests had bad intentions, and it
offered to contribute to the healing of the wounds of the bitter past. The clergy would be
informed of the content of the memorandum, and care would be taken to see that they
acted accordingly, while the people would be informed of their duty, according to God, to
fulfil their duties to the state. Finally the memorandum appealed that the government
enable the free practice of all of the Church's activities, and that priests who had been
Kidric replied with an exposition of the tolerant attitude of the authorities towards
religion, stressing the participation of Catholics in the OF. There would be no cultural
struggle. But he rejected the suggestion that the treachery of much of the clergy could be
the clergy upon the liberation was the fault of treacherous priests. But despite Kidric's
rejection of those parts of the memorandum which sought to excuse the behaviour of the
clergy and which dealt with the hopes of the Church regarding its treatment, he
concluded with an expression of satisfaction with the content of its earlier sections. He
declared that if those principles were put into practice, then relations between Church
and state could be settled. However, he warned that as yet not all of the clergy were
Most of the issues with which the Church was concerned after the war were the
same as in Croatia. The memorandum of the senior clergy appealed for understanding
20Report on the meeting with the text of the memorandum and Kidric's reply in Slovenski porocevalec, 14
July, 1945.
284
regarding the treatment of the clergy, religious education, church property, the religious
press and church weddings. But in spite of Kidric's assurances that there would be no
struggle against the Church, it is clear that the new authorities deliberately set out to deal
it a heavy blow. The leading Slovene Marxist specialist on the Church, Zdenko Roter,
acknowledged as much in 1982, when he said that "after the war optimism reigned
There was a severe shortage of priests in Slovenia after the war, as a result of the
killings and the mass flight. In the immediate post-war period any priests who were
considered to have had connections with the BG or the Domobranstvo were arrested.
This continued for several months, and included numerous executions. For example, Fr.
Franc Cerkovnik and Fr. Peter Krizaj were put to death on 20 March 1946. Kidric's
assertion that priests who had fled could return was disingenuous. They had good
reason to be afraid. Fr. Alojzij Strupi was seized while fleeing in May 1945, and died in
custody. Fr. Franc Tom was shot in December 1945. Fr. Franc Krasna and Filip Tercelj
were shot on their way to Ljubljana in January 1946. A few did return, but they were not
always well received. One who wished to return was denied permission by the local
People's Committee of his parish. Another who did return was not allowed back to his
parish. Fr. Joze Zalokar returned, and was given a long prison sentence. Fr. Janko
Arnejc, who had earlier been an intermediary between Rozman and the Partisans, was
In the summer of 1945, permission was denied to about 100 priests to carry out their
priestly functions. As a result of all these factors, in 1946 the Ljubljana diocese had some
60 parishes without a priest. Many priests also suffered severe hardship, especially as a
result of the agrarian reform and heavy taxation. Thus Fr. Janez Hladnik declared that he
was going hungry, received no pay and could not afford to retire. Many parish houses
21 Ceglar, p. 136.
were occupied by the army, leaving the priest with one room, or having to find other
guarantees regarding the treatment of the clergy is that most members of the delegation
As in Croatia, limited religious education was permitted in schools in the initial post-
war period. During the first year after the war, it was taught in primary and secondary
schools, and prayers were permitted before and after lessons. Attendance was optional,
according to the will of the parents, a large majority of whom opted in favour. There were
pressures though. For example, the teaching of History in high schools was infused with
lessons about the harmful role of the clergy.24 Priests who were suspected of wartime
circular to coincide with the start of the new school year, reminding parents of their duty,
according to Church law, to ensure that their children receive a Christian education. 26
The authorities complained that in spite of the restrictions, the Church sought to maintain
its influence over the young through their parents, through church choirs, the Marian
Society and Catholic Action. Religious education was carried on outside of school. 27 At a
meeting of the Central Committee of the Slovene Communist Party on 8 June 1946,
considerable time was devoted to a discussion of the position of the Church. Ivan Macek,
a member of the KPS Politburo, warned that the ideological struggle against religious
prejudice would be long and hard, as the Slovenes were the most faithful of peoples. He
complained that religious education was subtly being brought into the churches, where it
was carried out by catechists and priests, without any control. Another KPS Politburo
2Aibid. p. 141.
26 Ljubljana Archdiocese.
member, Vida Tomsic, objected that the schools did not prepare pupils sufficiently
ideologically. Party people were too liberal towards religion, and not taking the struggle
sufficiently seriously. 28 This meeting took place when, taking the cue from the central
leadership, the Party was sharpening its stance towards the Church. Nevertheless, it
reflects the frustration of the Slovene Party leaders with the success of the Church in
circumventing the restrictions placed upon it to maintain its influence over the young.
August 1945, Vovk sent a letter of protest to the Slovene government regarding the
measure.29 As in Croatia, the Church lost a great deal of property, but this was not
without incurring the displeasure of the regime by its attempts to avoid it. In 1946,
Ljudska Pravica noted that agrarian reform had mostly been carried out, but that in some
places, such as the Crnomelj region, dispossessed clergy had influenced the population
against the reform. 30 In the Maribor diocese and in Prekmurje, the authorities perceived
that the focus of the Church's anti-regime activities was against the agrarian reform. The
Church authorities tried to avoid losing by selling off threatened land in time. Most active
The Communists moved quickly to suppress the Catholic press upon their takeover,
giving as a reason the shortage of paper. Later, a small church press was permitted,
once the Communists were more secure in their grip on power. Vovk noted in a circular
of 14 September 1945 that the authorities had authorised the publication of a religious
paper.32 In the meantime, members of the clergy had to rely on their ingenuity to
circumvent the ban on the religious press. One method was to use posters. Fr. Roman
28Arhiv CK ZKS, ACK KPS III. Politburo CK ZKS, 1945-1984, sk. 2, 1946 (hereafter CK ZKS), session of CK
KPS, 7-8 June, 1946.
30Ceglar, p. 140.
32 Ljubljana Archdiocese.
287
Tominec explained how he started the practice, when he used a poster to advertise a
Mass at 2am one Sunday morning, so as to enable children who had to set off on a
religious paper called Oznanilo, which was run by Vilko Fajdiga. It had two pages, and
carried church announcements and passages from scripture. When there was no paper,
Finzgar went to the Presidency of the government to ask that it be provided. No doubt
the good relations which he had enjoyed with the Communists were of benefit. In Maribor
things were easier, and an eight-page Catholic paper appeared. There were no religious
radio programmes, but from June 1946 a mostly Slovene-language Trieste channel
Slovenia, it found itself confronted with much the same difficulties as were being
experienced in Croatia. Thus it was that Vovk, Tomazic and Jeric were among the
Yugoslavia, the letter was recognized as a forthright challenge to the new regime, and its
reading was mostly greeted by "deathly silence" in the churches. Vovk, however,
maintained the more conciliatory approach which he had adopted, in comparison to the
line emanating from Zagreb. According to Lenic, when the Slovene government
demanded that he retract the letter, he declined, but he gave assurances that he would
make no further declarations on it.34 He would not publicly distance himself from the
confrontational stance of Stepinac; the substance of the letter and of Stepinac's protests
was, after all, as true for Slovenia as it was for Croatia. But it appears that his approach
was more cautious. The September letter was primarily a Zagreb affair, and Vovk tried to
The reaction of the Slovene authorities was also fairly muted. As in Croatia, there
was a slight delay before the authorities decided on their response. When it came in a
letter from Kidric to Slovenski porocevalec on 7 October, it was in the same vein as
Bakaric's cautious and defensive response in Croatia. Kidric rebutted the accusations
contained in the letter, asserting that there was freedom of worship, religious education
and the religious press. There was no persecution of the clergy, and only those guilty of
serious collaboration or atrocities were arrested. Those who were guilty of minor crimes
and petty collaboration had not been punished, as the Church authorities had promised
to take action themselves against such offenders. Yet no such action had been taken, he
complained. The Partisans had always, Kidric went on, sought to enlist the cooperation
of the clergy. In this spirit, temporarily requisitioned church buildings would be returned,
and the religious commission would be activated and given responsibility for all
Other responses came from leading Catholic members of the OF. Mikuz's response
was much sharper. He accused the bishops of having called upon the faithful to respect
and obey the armies of occupation during the war, while recognizing no obligation
towards their own country or its government. Given the wartime behaviour of the
bishops, they had lost all claim to the moral leadership of Slovenia's Catholics. They had
hoped, with the letter, to restore their influence, perhaps hoping to incite real
The letter was seen as being connected with a stepping up of political opposition at
the time, with Subasic's resignation from the government and calls for a boycott of the
while Vidmar attacked the opposition as underground plotters. Just before the elections
there were numerous calls for participation in them. One such was a call on behalf of
Slovene Catholics, whose signatories included Finzgar, Snoj, Mikuz, Brecelj, Fajfar,
The letter did result in a serious strain in relations, especially as Tito's response on
25 October was much fiercer than those of Kidric and Bakaric. Direct contact between
the bishops and the government ceased, although various prominent Catholics
continued to act as go-betweens.39 The attitude of the Communists towards the Church
was ambiguous. The desire to avoid a confrontation and to find ways of reaching an
Ultimately, no matter that the Slovene Church's approach was more conciliatory than
was the case in Croatia, the Communists' programme unavoidably meant a severe
Communist Attitudes
The Communists' suspicion of the clergy revealed itself in their reluctance to allow
the return of priests who had spent the war out of Slovenia, and of whom they had no
knowledge. They felt the need to watch the clergy closely. A member of the Religious
June 1945 that returning priests were treated with suspicion by some representatives of
the authorities in Styria, who were persisting in general condemnations of the clergy. 40
The ambivalence of the Communists, even towards Catholics with whom they had
apparently good relations, can be seen in their relationship with the Christian Socialists.
40Letter of 20 June, 1945, Arhiv Slovenije, Predsedstvo SNOS-a, sk. 9, doc. 81/1.
290
In a report in 1947, the French consul in Ljubljana noted evidence of Christian Socialist
input into the regime's policy towards the Church, especially in frequent claims that there
was no implacable opposition between Christian and Marxist ideologies. 41 On the other
hand, in its discussion of Church affairs at its meeting of 8 June 1946, the Central
Slovene Communist Lidija Sentjurc objected that they often made the same complaints
as the clergy and international reaction, for example, claiming that the Catholic press
was suppressed. She noted that Kocbek had the habit of visiting parishes and talking
with the priests, and was concerned that there were no guarantees as to what he would
discuss with them.42 The French consul concluded that the authorities had not given up
hope of reaching an accommodation with the Church on its terms. For example, he
noted Tito's gesture in offering to be godfather of the latest child of a very large Slovene
family, being represented at the christening by an army general. But there was
nevertheless much mutual bitterness, and relations were unstable, threatening a major
rupture.
The regime continued to see hostility on the part of the clergy. In general, the
Communists complained that the clergy continued to use its influence over the people in
opposition to the new order they were trying to build. Ivan Macek listed ways used by the
clergy to oppose the regime, cautiously exploiting the "indulgence" of the authorities and
avoiding open struggle. Deanery meetings for the spiritual renewal of the clergy were
parish missions in the autumn of 1945 had the same intention. Confirmation ceremonies,
and the parades which accompanied them, were used as demonstrations of opposition,
and attracted more people than pro-regime rallies. Priests sought to portray the Church
as being under persecution by the authorities.43 In reality, most of the clergy were simply
following the example of Vovk, in avoiding confrontation while cautiously defending the
among elements of the clergy. For example, it was alleged that individuals within the
Ljubljana Ordinaria were in contact with the Slovene 'Chetnik1 leader, Major Karlo Novak,
and that radio equipment had been found which had been used to maintain contacts
abroad. In the summer of 1946, a courier was captured who revealed that Jeric had
maintained contact with exiles in Salzburg, and that he and other Prekmurje priests had
distributed Chetnik propaganda and collected money for them. The Communists noted
that the Prekmurje clergy became increasingly combative during 1946, and that the
Maribor clergy went in the same direction, taking the lead in opposing the government,
although they had been the least compromised among the clergy during the war. One
Maribor priest was arrested in 1947 when it was discovered that he had since 1945 used
But, as in Croatia, in spite of their suspicion of the clergy, the Communists sought to
manipulate individual priests for their ends. Thus it was that Polic sought a declaration of
invited priests who had been in contact with the Popular Front to a meeting the following
day, to produce a pastoral letter, to be read on behalf of the Slovene episcopate for the
new year. The idea came to nothing due to the resistance of the Ljubljana and Maribor
as the French ambassador noted in a letter in July 1946, when he said that a small group
"ibid.
44 HDA, MUP, pp. 311-314 and pp. 323-325.
of Catholics favourable to the regime, led by Kocbek, who was then the vice-president of
the Slovene assembly, was excluded by the Party from real power. 46
In the Littoral and the Maribor diocese, where the clergy had been relatively well-
disposed towards the Partisans during the war, the priority of the authorities was to
isolate them from the influence of the Ljubljana diocese. 47 In addition, the secret police
reported that by the beginning of 1947 they had ten agents among the Slovene clergy.
They noted that these priests mainly saw their role as one of mediation and protection of
the Church's interests in cooperation with the secret police. They were apparently
considered to be of little use, as their pro-regime tendencies were known, and so, it was
reported, any "hostile activities" were hidden from them. Their usefulness was primarily
limited to the provision of information on directives from the higher to the lower clergy.48
considerable extent influenced by events in Zagreb, which was the focus of the post-war
confrontation between the Church and the new regime in Yugoslavia. Thus it was that
the September bishops' conference and the elections to the constituent assembly which
came shortly afterwards (in November) were seen as a watershed in the development of
relations. Although the Church in Slovenia pursued a much more cautious line than its
counterpart in Croatia, the authorities saw the clergy inciting the people against the
However, after the elections, following which it was quite clear that the regime had
tactic on the part of the clergy, whose activities they described as being more "thought-
46 Letterfrom Payartof 31 July, 1946, FM, Paris, vol. 34, docs. 190-192.
48
Bizilj, pp. 98-99.
293
out". Church figures did, in this tense time following the September pastoral letter, try to
alleviate the situation with expressions of a desire to cooperate with the authorities.
Tomazic issued a pastoral letter calling for loyalty to them. The complaints which were
contained in the pastoral letter, and which had been expressed by the Slovene Church
before then, concerning religious education, civil marriage, agrarian reform etc., tended
not to be made publicly from this time. The authorities noted that by the winter of 1945
Vovk was regarded by the clergy as a suitable leader for the Church in the
circumstances. He was an effective tactician who opposed the regime but pursued a
pragmatic policy towards it.50 Following Jeric's arrest, the Ljubljana Ordinaria forbade any
participation by the clergy in illegal activities.51 His cautious response to the conditions in
which the Church found itself was noted by the authorities. According to them, this policy
was worked out quite explicitly. Shortly after the elections there was a conference in
Ljubljana, which, according to the police, decided on a quiet approach, keeping the
authorities uninformed about the affairs of the Church, making as few public
particular, they would seek to maintain the influence of the Church over the young
through parents. The practice was to show readiness for loyal cooperation, while
privately seeking to retain whatever advantage they could for the Church.52
This pragmatic and cautious approach did not prevent Slovenia from being affected
by the Communists' sharp turn against the Church in the summer of 1946, which was
largely connected with the course of negotiations over Trieste and the Julian region.
During the discussions on the Church at the Slovene Central Committee meeting in
June, speakers reflected that the clergy had been taking advantage of the indulgence of
the authorities, and their activities were linked to the activities of reactionary clergy
throughout the World. They needed to go over to the offensive, while avoiding giving the
impression that there were any big problems over the question of religion. 53
A report from the British embassy in August 1946 noted that waves of arrests of
priests in Slovenia were taking place.54 Indeed, from this time through to the early 1950's
there was a series of arrests and show trials for spying and "anti-national" activities.
Many of the accusations were concerned with Blatnik, who had been an informer for the
Italians during the war, and who was in Rome after it.55 The secret police stepped up
their activities in seeking out compromising material on the clergy. One of the purposes
of this was to place pressure on the clergy, so as to divide them and intimidate the less
It was also at this time that the trial of Rozman took place. The preparation of the
case against Rozman had been going on for some months. The defendants also
included Krek (who like Rozman was tried "in absentia") Rupnik, Rosener and others. 57
The charges related to wartime activities, but it was probably no coincidence that the trial
took place just at the time, following the disappointments at the Paris peace conference,
when actions against the clergy generally were being stepped up, and shortly before the
According to the authorities, the trial roused enormous indignation among the clergy.
good-hearted man who had done nothing more than stand up to the scourge of
Communism. There were, however, no official protests from the Church, as the hierarchy
57A detailed description of the case against Rozman was provided above.
295
took a cautious attitude.58 No doubt aware that Rozman's wartime behaviour had indeed
brought. 59 At the time of the trial, Vovk was in contact with Stepinac. There was
speculation that the question of whether to replace Rozman was considered. 60 However,
in the context of the time, when the Church felt itself under attack on a broad front, and
engaged in a general and bitter struggle against "atheistic Communism", there was little
chance that it would offer such satisfaction to a Communist regime, which would have
implicitly recognized that Rozman had erred. In fact, the Church preferred to keep
relatively quiet about it, especially in comparison to its response to the Stepinac trial.
Unlike Stepinac's case, the Rozman trial had little long-term effect on the life of the
Church.61
Relations between the Communists and the Church in Slovenia were particularly
affected by the dispute over Trieste. Knowing that they would meet the western Allies in
the Julian region, the OF had carefully prepared the ground there before the end of the
war. They expected opposition to their takeover of the region from the Holy See, and had
already noted that the Slovene clergy, under Vatican influence, had turned against the
Partisans and towards the western Allies as the end of the war approached. 62
While for the Holy See the situation had no ambiguity, in that hostility to Communism
was complimented by support for Italy, the Slovene Church was clearly presented with a
dilemma, given that support for the Yugoslav side in the territorial dispute was only
natural. Vovk's position was consistent with his conciliatory line towards the authorities.
In a circular in August 1945, he called for prayers that the Paris peace conference would
bring the unification of all Slovenes in the national state. He referred again to the
The French Consul in Ljubljana noted in his report in 1947 that the Slovene
authorities, following the lead taken by Tito in Croatia, coupled attacks on the influence
of the Vatican with encouragement of the nationalization of the Church in Slovenia. Here
too, the regime resented the notion that the Church in Slovenia owed allegiance to an
external authority. He concluded, however, that the Church was not prepared to fit into
the regime's vision of a "national" Yugoslav Church, adding that Yugoslav patriotism was
The Holy See lobbied hard against the Yugoslav cause. Reports from the American
presidential envoy, Myron Taylor, show that the Pope was preoccupied with the region's
fate. For example, in September 1945 the Pope handed a memorandum to Taylor on
conditions in Croatia and Slovenia, detailing vigorous oppression of the Church. Another
report on the region followed at the end of December, and a note was handed to Taylor
in May 1946.65
As with Croatia, the authorities in Slovenia complained that the Slovene hierarchy
was led by the Vatican, through Hurley.66 Hurley reported that Rozman was highly
regarded in Rome, and that his see would be kept vacant if it was impossible for him to
return.67 In fact, Rome and Rozman himself continued to hope for some time after the
65Zivojinovic, p. 143.
67 Letter from the British ambassador in Belgrade of 11 March, 1946, reporting a conversation with Hurley.
PRO, FO371/59429, R4620.
297
war that Rozman would be able to return. 68 It was the same hope as influenced the
Croatian Church leadership, that the new regime might prove to be short-lived, and it
explains the uncompromising attitude of the Holy See towards Yugoslavia. Although
Vovk remained true to Rozman, his behaviour, marked as it was by pragmatism, was in
The Italian bishops in the Littoral region were also active in trying to thwart the
Yugoslav Communists' ambitions. Bishop Santin of Trieste was in contact with the Italian
anti-Fascist Committee of National Liberation (CLN), which had, since the withdrawal of
without success, to persuade the German garrison to surrender to the CLN, to forestall a
Yugoslav entry into the city. He was also among leading figures in the city to be
approached by anti-Communist Serbian forces which had gathered in the region at the
end of the war, and which tried to form a common anti-Communist front. The proposal
got nowhere, as the Serbs could not accept the demands of the Italians, including
However, following the entry of Yugoslav troops into the city, Santin initially tried to
be conciliatory. On 4 May 1945, he met the Yugoslav commanders in the city. At the
I am happy to declare that the attitude of the Yugoslav and local Trieste authorities has
always been correct and very attentive. For myself, I have absolutely not been troubled by
the People's authorities, nor subjected to their surveillance in my flat. The religious life in
Trieste continues to function without hindrance. 70
However, relations quickly deteriorated. Following the division of the region into Allied-
violations of political, civil and religious rights in the Yugoslav zone B. On 17 June, he
was forced to abandon a visit to Sezana, after his car was attacked by a stone-throwing
68Bizilj, p. 82.
70Jean-Baptiste Duroselle, Le Conflit de Trieste, 1943-1954 (Brussels, 1966), p. 171, citing Borlba, 4/6/45.
298
1946, he declared that religious freedom did not exist in Zone B. His pro-Italian stance
brought protests from some among his Slovene clergy. His order, in the summer of 1946,
that Yugoslav flags be removed from two churches led to disorder. When the decision on
the creation of the Free Territory of Trieste was announced, he was in Rome, and he
handed a memorandum to Taylor, citing the lack of religious freedom in Yugoslav areas,
measure, pro-regime Slovene clergy held a conference of their own. Margotti also
directed his clergy not to cooperate with the Communist regime. 72 As with Vovk, there
was a certain ambiguity in the attitude of the lower clergy in the region. At the KPS
Central Committee meeting in June 1946, at which they discussed the position of the
clergy, senior Slovene Communist Miha Marinko noted that the clergy in the Littoral were
The authorities found that most of the Littoral clergy were for Yugoslavia, but against
Communism and atheism. In Zone B, the local authorities were instructed not to take
harsh measures against the clergy, so as not to create martyrs. In fact, the authorities
found little basis to attack the clergy. They objected to the policy on religious education
Slovenia. 74 However, following the announcement of the setting up of the Free Territory
of Trieste in July 1946, prayers were ordered for the inclusion of Trieste and the Julian
71 /b/d. pp. 214 and 539; Zivojinovic, pp. 118 and 125-127.
region in Yugoslavia. 75 It was just at this time that the Church came under increased
pressure, as the regime, reacting angrily to its failures in Paris, gave up all pretence of
moderation in its behaviour towards the Church. It would seem that many among the
The deterioration in relations between the Church and the Communist regime in
Slovenia and throughout Yugoslavia could be seen at its most stark in the arrest and trial
of Stepinac in Croatia, but it was also revealed in the wave of arrests and harassment of
priests in Slovenia which took place at the time. It was against this difficult background
that the question of the long-term succession to Rozman was addressed. By the summer
of 1946 it was clear that the regime had consolidated itself, and hope that Rozman would
be able to return in the near future had to be abandoned. At the beginning of August,
Rozman informed the Pope that he could not return to his diocese, and would not be
The need for an assistant bishop had already been recognized. The Secretariat of
State had asked Rozman to suggest three candidates in May. On 2 July, Rozman sent a
list of three cathedral canons, headed by Vovk. It is quite possible that Rozman had it in
mind that if he were to be able to return one day, Vovk was a man with whom he would
be able to work. There was considerable secrecy surrounding the appointment, and that
of Maksimiljan Drzecnik, who was named assistant bishop of Maribor at the same time.
The news came from the nunciature in Belgrade on 18 October. The authorities did not
initially accept the appointments, as they had been made without consulting them.
76Ceglar, p. 153.
300
However, Vovk and Drzecnik visited Boris Kraigher, the interior minister, on 23 October
The consecrations were fixed for 1 December for Vovk and 15 December for
Drzecnik. A circular was planned to coincide with the consecration of Vovk, but the
authorities banned its dissemination. By no means all of the clergy adhered to the ban,
but a few days before the ceremony a new one was submitted. Still the Ljubljana
authorities tried to block the proceedings, but the nunciature managed to arrange it from
Belgrade. The ceremony in Ljubljana did not pass off without incident, as a tear gas
including the pro-Partisan Finzgar among their number. At the end of the month, Petar
Kovacevic was installed as abbot in Celje. The authorities regarded him as a reactionary,
and he had avoided all contact with them. However, following his appointment, he
presented himself to the Chairman of the NO for Celje. The authorities saw this as part of
a coordinated line, as Vovk sought to get off to a good start with them. 79
Vovk had consistently sought to pursue a conciliatory line since the end of the war.
He had protested against measures which he saw as damaging to the interests of the
Church, much as Stepinac had done in Croatia, and he had quietly and unobtrusively
sought to defend the Church's position without antagonizing the regime. When it came to
the crunch, he avoided the type of confrontational posture which Stepinac finally adopted
when it seemed that no amount of reason would divert the Communists from their frontal
attack on the position of the Church in society. However, despite Vovk's quieter, more
conciliatory approach, it cannot be said that on any of the key issues, such as attacks on
the clergy, the confiscation of Church lands or the restriction of religious education, the
Church in Slovenia gained any appreciable advantages over its counterpart in Croatia.
302
Conclusions
By the end of 1946, the reversal of the Communists' wartime strategy of conciliation
and coalition building, appealing to and seeking to reassure the Catholic clergy and
faithful, was complete. This thesis has aimed to provide an analysis more systematic and
detailed than that available in any previous works of the shifting priorities and changes of
approach in the Communists' policy towards the Catholic Church from 1941 to 1946. It
has shown that throughout these apparent shifts, the Communist leaders did not alter
their fundamental goals, and maintained a constant purpose. It is hoped that the thesis
has enhanced our understanding of a relationship that has hitherto been covered
primary source material and upon recent relevant research carried out by historians in
former Yugoslavia, the thesis has tried to present a more balanced portrayal of a subject
which has often been fraught with emotion, prejudice and political controversy.
The thesis has stressed that during the period of the war and the Communists'
takeover and consolidation of their power, their policy towards the Catholic Church
sought to balance two principle objectives: the short-term goal of seizing power; and the
extensive efforts to appeal to and reassure Catholic clergy and the faithful that, following
a victory for the National Liberation Movement, freedom of religion would be guaranteed
and the Church would be able freely to go about its work. Thus for much of the war the
Communists avoided measures or pronouncements which might confirm fears that, once
in power, they would implement a social revolution which would fundamentally impinge
upon realms that the Church regarded as vital to its interests and its mission. Such
realms included education, marriage and the properties by which the Church maintained
itself. Thus the Communists sought to ease their passage to power by neutralizing a
The short-term strategy for achieving power necessarily meant that the Communists'
303
separation of Church and state, which were bound to be regarded by the Church as
inimical to its interests, was never abandoned. The thesis has charted the change in the
balance between these two aims during 1941-1946. For much of the war, the longer-
term plans of the Communists were indeed played down, as the emphasis was on
building alliances with any who were prepared to cooperate in what was portrayed as a
war of national liberation against the occupiers and their domestic collaborators.
The relatively little academic literature that has assessed the relationship between
the Catholic Church and the Communists has tended to focus on the confrontation
between two bitter rivals. A key contribution that this thesis has aimed to make is a
detailed presentation of the Communists' efforts to appeal to Catholic clergy during the
war. As with Rittig and other priests in Croatia, Bosnia and Slovenia who had contacts
with, or even cooperated with the Communists, and also with the Christian Socialists in
Slovenia, the thesis has illustrated the uses to which the Communists put their allies in
the liberation movement as they sought to spread their appeal beyond their own narrow
constituency.
This conciliatory approach was, however, never more than a strategy for gaining
power, and the Communists had never intended to compromise on their revolutionary
programme once in power. Just as the emphasis on liberation from the occupiers was
played up during the war, at the expense of the wider goal of social revolution, so
soften Catholic opposition to them and to try to win Catholics to their banner. Later in the
war, especially from the summer of 1944, the Communists' priorities changed, as, with
their position strengthening and with victory in sight, they sought to consolidate and
centralize their rule, to gain international recognition and to set their sights on the new
society which they intended to build after the war. Thus the balance between the short-
and long-term objectives shifted away from the compromises inherent in the coalition-
304
building strategy, and towards the ultimate purposes to which they intended to put their
power, once gained. In describing this shift, the thesis has pointed to the tensions that it
caused among the ranks of the Communist leaders in Croatia and Slovenia.
It might appear that the repression to which the Communists turned after the war
represented a complete negation of their earlier policy of including all within as wide a
front as possible. But despite tactical manoeuvrings during the war, they never gave up
their revolutionary principles. Gaining power came before everything, and they were
prepared to be flexible in dealing with others to that end. In key respects they were
During the war too, the Communists could be ruthless towards any who opposed
them, or who even came under suspicion of doing so. These included priests, large
numbers of who were attacked, arrested and murdered, the popular front policy
hostility towards the Church and the clergy, which arose both out of their ideological
beliefs, as Marxists, and their awareness that most of the clergy and Catholic faithful
were fundamentally opposed to them. This awareness was frequently confirmed by the
hostile activities of priests, especially in Slovenia, where members of the clergy were in
the forefront of the struggle against them. Communist suspicions were also often
confirmed in Croatia, where Stepinac, having put aside his scruples about the
involvement of the clergy in politics, when faced with the prospect of a Communist
takeover, took an active part in the attempts to forestall their seizure of power.
Yet despite attempts by members of the higher clergy to thwart their accession to
power, the Communists were ready to renew their efforts to reach an accommodation
after the war. However, any accommodation could only have been based on the
preparedness of the Church leaders compliantly to fit into the narrow space allotted to
them in the new Communist order. Essentially, this meant two key conditions, their
loyalty to the new regime would have to be assured; and they would have to accept that,
while the Church would be able to continue to administer the purely spiritual sides of its
life, its sacraments and rituals, it would be denied any role in the social life of the country.
This was at the root of the conflict that quickly developed between the Church and the
Communists after the war. The Communists expected that in time religion and the
churches would lose their relevance in the new order that the new regime set about
building. While they were prepared in the meantime to allow freedom of religion, their
understanding of what that meant was so narrow that there was really no basis for a
settlement that could have satisfied both sides. The Church was to become a dead thing,
ministering to the needs of an ageing pre-revolutionary population, while the youth, and
the future of society, would be won for the ideological goals of the Communists.
In a sense, it was the things that the Communists and the Church had in common
which made them irreconcilable. Both claimed a right to a close involvement in the life of
society. Just as the one sought to achieve its vision of society by inculcating its
ideological precepts into the masses, so the other sought to maintain its hold over its
flock. As the Communists sought to deprive the Church of its means of competing with
them, especially in the spheres of the education of the young and the Church's financial
ability to pursue its mission, there was no room for meaningful compromise. With the
power, and given Stepinac's unwillingness to accept the new regime's conditions for an
Probably some of the bishops would have been inclined to adopt a less
confrontational stance than that taken by Stepinac. But seeing the extent of the new
regime's attack of upon the interests of the Church and upon its role in society in the first
months after the war, Stepinac could see no basis for a compromise. Stepinac's critics
have suggested that the confrontational position he adopted from the issuance of the
September 1945 pastoral letter was foolish given that the balance of power so
306
international situation and to have under-estimated the strength of the regime. The
common belief in the inevitability of war between the Soviet Union and the western
Allies, which would result in the speedy collapse of the Communist regime, certainly
influenced his attitude. However, it is worth recalling that he only abandoned attempts at
conciliation when it had become apparent that the regime would not make any
meaningful compromises.
but ultimately he did not win any more concessions than did Stepinac. One notable
difference between the two approaches was that whereas Vovk broke with the tradition
of the Church in Slovenia, maintained by Rozman during the war, of taking an active role
in the political sphere, Stepinac, despite all his objections to political participation by
members of the clergy, turned the Church into the principal focus for all those in Croatia
who opposed the regime. The Church in Croatia became a symbol of the perceived
The bullying and persecution to which the Communists resorted in their dealings
with the Catholic Church in Croatia, Bosnia and Slovenia arose firstly out of fear and
insecurity in the face of an institution they knew they could not simply obliterate, and
whose support and devotion among the people would make it an enduring reminder of
the fragility of their own rule. In the longer term, the Communists needed to deal with a
Yugoslavia where Catholicism held the allegiance of only a very small section of the
population, in the predominantly Orthodox and Moslem regions where the Catholic
Church was of no more than peripheral interest to the local authorities, the Church had
little of the potentially subversive power which the Communists perceived in the western
particularly strong pressure to disassociate himself from the September 1945 pastoral
30"
letter. The suppression of religion in general was particularly severe in Montenegro (the
Serbian Orthodox Church was subjected to much harsher measures there than it was in
Serbia), and the strength of the pressure placed upon Dobrecic probably in part reflected
that. In contrast, the Catholic Church in Macedonia was treated with comparative
gentleness. The French consul in Skopje, Charles Boutant, who had earlier been in Split,
June 1947, he wrote that while the Orthodox Easter was not a holiday, and workers who
did not go to work found their names on lists, the Catholic Easter was celebrated and a
public procession authorised. He noted that at a confirmation service, the bishop gave a
sermon about the role of the Church among the youth, which contained ideas much like
those which had contributed to Stepinac's arrest. The authorities, he concluded, saw little
need not to be liberal towards such an insignificant minority, which presented no real
threat. 2 In Serbia too, Archbishop Ujcic, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Belgrade,
Stepinac in 1946, allegations of wartime collaboration and complicity in the crimes of the
occupiers and their domestic accomplices. However, while it was certainly the case that
Communists mostly did regard the wartime record of these and numerous other
clergymen as unsatisfactory, this thesis has demonstrated that this was not the reason
for the post-war deterioration in relations. That the Communists initially sought to reach
an accommodation with Stepinac is sufficient proof of this. Some members of the senior
clergy probably were considered as being too compromised by their wartime opposition
to the Partisans for any fruitful relationship with them to be possible. Rozman was almost
certainly among these, and some senior Communists seem to have been inclined
But the Communists nevertheless tried to reach a settlement with the hierarchy. The
Communist authorities' failure to achieve this was due to their underestimation of the
importance that the Church attached to the social aspects of its mission and to the
means through which it put them into practice. The Communists promised that, provided
that the clergy and Catholic faithful were loyal to the regime, freedom of religion would be
guaranteed, but they failed to appreciate that for the Church their understanding of
The Communists also defined political loyalty in a way that showed little
understanding of the relationship between the Church in Yugoslavia and the Holy See.
However, the stress that Tito placed on the need for the Church to be more "national" at
his meeting with the senior Zagreb clergy immediately after the war should not lead to a
conclusion that it is the refusal of the Church hierarchy to break with Rome that primarily
explains the souring of relations and led to the clampdown on the Church. Tito and the
Communist leadership were mainly interested in reaching a settlement that would ensure
the political loyalty of the Church hierarchy and remove the Church from the social
sphere. In his discussion with the senior clergy, and at his meeting with Stepinac, Tito's
stress was on political matters. At that time, his mind was particularly focused on the
Trieste crisis, and on the possibility of Allied intervention that might threaten his newly
established regime. As relations between the Church and state authorities deteriorated
during the summer of 1945, it was the question of the hierarchy's loyalty to the regime,
as well as the limitation of the Church's role in society, that was the key point at issue.
The Communists were, right from the time of Tito's meeting with the Zagreb clergy,
the Church's life. When Tito said that he would not question the links of the Church in
Yugoslavia to the Holy See in matters of faith and doctrine, he almost certainly meant it.
What he was interested in was to settle the question of the Church's place in the new
order so as to ensure that it would be able neither to subvert the regime nor to obstruct
the implementation of its revolution. The point of the Church being more "national" had
two main purposes, one international, and the other domestic. At the time when Tito
309
expressed this wish, he was concerned about the international situation, and about the
fact that the wider Catholic Church was both hostile towards Communism and inclined
from the position of considerable advantage that the regime enjoyed over the Church
after the war, in order to pressurize the Church leaders into accepting a position
acceptable from the Communists' point of view. This hope was thwarted by the repeated
insistence of Church leaders that any settlement of the Church's position in the state
could only be arrived at through negotiations between the state and the Holy See. That
standpoint seemed, from the Communists' perspective, both to throw doubt upon the
loyalty of the senior clergy, and to challenge the new regime's efforts to transform
society. Tito did not specify exactly what he meant by the Church being more national.
However, while it is possible that he and other Communist leaders would have regarded
a break with Rome on the part of the Catholic Church as desirable, there was never any
prospect of this. Such a full break was not seen by the Communists as a condition for a
satisfactory arrangement with the Church. However, the inclusion of the Holy See as a
unacceptable by the Communist authorities. They would deal with the local hierarchy
The regime's attitude towards the Catholic Church was complex. Its leaders realized
that it would remain a major force in society, and so tried to reach an accommodation
with it. The Church was unique in a Communist society. With the elimination of the
political opposition, no other group which did not support the legitimacy or the desirability
3 Bogdan Denitch, Religion and Social Change in Yugoslavia, in Bociurkiw and Strong, Religion and Atheism
in the USSR and Eastern Europe, p. 385; Stevan K. Pavlowitch, The Improbable Survivor: Yugoslavia and its
Problems, 1918-1988 (London, 1988), p. 102.
310
be restricted. Given the unwillingness of Church leaders to fit into the space granted
them, and what the regime considered to be their subversive activities, coercion was
finally needed to force them into line. However, while the Catholic Church was indeed
temporarily bowed by the measures taken against it, the Communists ultimately failed in
their attempts to find a place for it that they could regard as satisfactory. In prison,
Stepinac's prestige among the Catholic population was if anything enhanced. The
hierarchy stuck to its insistence that the regime deal with the Holy See in negotiating any
settlement and, in general, the Church remained defiant and an enduring reminder of the
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