The Independent State of Croatia (Nezavisna Država Hrvatska, NDH) was the Croatian state existing during World War II. It was established in April 1941, after the Kingdom of Yugoslavia was split up by Nazi Germany and fascist Italy. Geographically it encompassed most of modern-day Croatia as well as Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The NDH was ruled by Ante Pavelić and his Ustaša coming from the extremist wing of Croatian Party of Rights (HSP), which was founded by Ante Starčević in 1848. The NDH had a program, formulated by Mile Budak, to purge Croatia of Serbs, by killing one third, expelling the other third and assimilating the remaining third. The first part of this Croatian national programme was achieved during WWII by a planned genocide in Jasenovac and other places all over NDH
Croatia was allied with Italy and Germany. The guerilla group called the Partisans, led by Josip Broz Tito and other members of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia, as well as rival guerilla group called Chetniks, opposed the Ustasha. The Partisans, Chetniks and the Ustasha effectvely fought a 3 sided civil war in the NDH. Communist Tito took control of increasingly large patches of Croatian territory by 1943, and in May 1945 Yugoslav army finally defeated the Axis forces. But during the 4 years of war (1941-1945) Tito didn't attack Jasenovac.
The establishment of NDH was proclaimed on April 10, 1941 by Slavko Kvaternik, deputy leader of the Ustaše. The leader of the state was Ante Pavelić. On paper, it was a kingdom under one Tomislav II of the House of Savoy (The Duke of Spalato), but he had only a figurehead and had no real power.
The name of the new state was an obvious attempt at capitalizing on the Croat people's desire for independence, which had been unfulfilled since 1102. Vladko Maček the head of the Croatian Peasant Party, the strongest elected party in Croatia at the time, refused an offer from Germans to head the government but called on people to obey and cooperate with the new government the same day Kvaternik made the proclamation. Ante Pavelić arrived on April 20th to become the poglavnik (Leader, correlated with führer). The Roman Catholic Church's official stance was also openly positive in this period.
According to Vladko Maček, the establishment of the state was greeted with approval by the middle classes and the intelligentsia who had become disillusioned with Yugoslavia, but the peasantry had met it with suspicion. The concession of an autonomous Croat province, the Banovina of Croatia, had been too recent (1939) to offset the friction that had marked the last two decades under the militarist regime of the Yugoslav king.
The state included most of today's Croatia, but with Istria, Kvarner and northern Dalmatia given to Italy by Pavelić according to the Roman contracts, and with Međimurje and southern Baranja annexed by Hungary. On the other hand, it spread to all of today's Bosnia and Herzegovina. It roughly included the areas of former Austro-Hungarian Empire where Croatian and Serbian were spoken (Austria Hungary 1911.jpg).
The State would eventually build up its own army, divided into two main groups:
Much of the population of the Independent State of Croatia was not Croat. It had significant populations of Serbs (about 19% of the population of Croatia at the time, over 30% of the population of NDH), Muslims (the largest population group of Bosnia at the time, and over 10% of the population of NDH), Germans, Hungarians and others. The Catholics (mainly Croats, Germans and Magyars) constituted just over 50% of the 6.3 million population. However, today's Bosniaks, at the time, were not allowed to acknowledge Bosniak nationality but were politically directed to be called "Croatians of Islamic faith". Dr. Mile Budak, politician and minister of the NDH - immediately took the opportunity to proclaim the Muslims as "Brothers". Many Croatians agree with the idea that the majority of modern Bosniaks are actually Croats who were converted to Islam during the invasion of Turks in the 15th Century. Many Bosniaks consider this idea offensive and a product of Croatian nationalism.
Many Bosniaks accepted the NDH (in some cases were forced to accept it) and immediately became involved. The most notorious of Islamic Ustase divisions was the SS Handžari. In respect to the soldiers of Muslim faith, a mosque was built in Zagreb - Croatia's capital city - known as "Poglavnikova Dzamija" or Poglavnik's Mosque.
The Ustase almost immediately enacted racial laws that reflected the acceptance of the ideology of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, with an emphasis placed on Croatian national issues.
The first "Legal order for the defence of the people and the state" dated April 17, 1941 ordered the death penalty for "infringement of the honour and vital interests of the Croatian people and the survival of the Independent State of Croatia". It was soon followed by the "Legal order of races" and the "Legal order of the protection of Aryan blood and the honour of the Croatian people" dated April 30, 1941, as well as the "Order of the creation and definition of the racial-political committee" dated June 4, 1941. The enforcement of these legal acts was done not only through normal courts but also new out-of-order courts as well as mobile courts-martial with extended jurisdictions.
The normal jails could no longer sustain the rate of new inmates and the Ustaša government started preparing the grounds what would become the Jasenovac concentration camp by July 1941. The regime would eventually form concentration camps in eleven different locations.
The Ustaše started conducting a deliberate campaign of mass murder, deportation and forced religious conversion in an attempt to remove the undesirables: Serbs, Jews, Gypsies, dissenting Croats and others. The atrocities against non-Croats started on April 27, 1941 when a newly formed unit of Ustaša army massacred the largely Serbian thorp of Gudovac near Bjelovar.
The Jasenovac complex of five concentration camps would become the place of murder of several hundred thousand people (some estimate that this camp was the third largest camp of WWII); The overall Ustaša death count is estimated at around 400,000 people, but all written records were destroyed to cover it up.
A large number of people were displaced internally due to fighting as well as from external sources. The NDH also had to accepted more then 200,000 Slovenian refugees which were forcefully evicted from their homes as part of the German plan of annexing parts of the Slovenian teritories. As part of this deal the Ustaše were to deport 200,000 Serbs from Croatia military , however only 182,000 were deported due to the German high commander Bader stopping this mass transport of people because of the chetnick and partizan uprising in Serbia. Because of this 25,000 Slovenian refugees ended in Serbia.
The Ustaša government tried to convene the Croatian Parliament (as Hrvatski državni Sabor NDH) in 1942, with a manually selected list of deputies, but after three short sessions, this mock parliament ceased operation by the end of the same year.
The HSS was banned on June 11, 1941 in an attempt of the Ustaše to take their place as the primary representative of the Croatian peasantry. Vladko Maček was sent to Jasenovac concentration camp, but later released to serve a house arrest sentence due to his popularity among the people. Maček was later again called upon by the foreigners to take a stand and counteract the Pavelić government, but refused.
The Catholic Church participated in religious conversions at first, but eventually the main branches of the Church stopped doing so, as it became obvious that these conversions were merely a lesser form of punishment for the undesirable population. Nevertheless, a number of priests joined the Ustaša ranks. (See also: Involvement of Croatian Catholic clergy with the Ustaša regime.)
The anti-fascist movement emerged early in 1941, under the command of the Communist party, led by Josip Broz Tito, as in other parts of Yugoslavia. The Croatian Partisans (partizani) began what would come to be known as the War of Liberation in Yugoslavia on June 22, 1941, when their first armed unit was formed in Brezovica near Sisak. The Partisans first engaged in combat on June 27th in Srb in Lika.
Another faction among the rebels were the Chetniks (četnici), the Serbian royalists. The first Chetnik armed unit in Croatia was formed on June 28 (on the day of Vidovdan, a Serb Orthodox holiday).
With increasing atrocities by Ustaše, the Partisans gradually received support from an increasing amount of population. At first they were isolated guerilla units formed in the areas of the atrocities — this is why Partisans were often quoted as being a movement composed mostly of Serbs. Shortly after the Communists started their uprising, the Ustaše incarcerated much of the left-wing inteligentsia in Zagreb, and in an oft-quoted incident of July 9th, 1941, killed Božidar Adžija, Otokar Keršovani, Ognjen Prica and other Croatian communists.
By the end of 1942, the news about the Ustaša atrocities in Jasenovac and elsewhere had also spread among the Croatian population. Noted writers Vladimir Nazor and Ivan Goran Kovačić escaped from the Ustasha-held territory to join the Partisans, and were followed by many more.
The Serbian royalist guerilla the Chetniks who were ostensibly formed to protect the Serbs from the Ustaša, in turn committed atrocities against Croats in retaliation. Later in the war, both Ustaše and Četnici collaborated with the Axis powers and fought together against the Partisans.
The NDH army held its lines as it withdrew towards Zagreb with German and Cossak troops by early 1945, and even continued fighting for a week after the German surrender on May 9th, 1945. They were soon overpowered and the Independent State of Croatia (NDH) effectively ceased to exist in May 1945, near the end of the war. The advance of Tito's partisan forces, joined by the Soviet Red Army, caused mass retreat of the Ustaše towards Austria.
In May 1945, a large column composed of anti-communists, Ustaša followers, NDH Army troops and civilians retreated away from the Partisan forces, heading northwest towards Italy and Austria. Ante Pavelić detached from the group and fled to Austria, Italy and finally Argentina. The rest of the group, consisting of over 150,000 soldiers (including Cossak troops) and civilians negotiated passage with the British forces on the Austrian side of the Austrian-Slovenian border. Unfortunately the British Army then turned over the overwhelming majority to the Partisan forces. Most did not survive the return journey.
It should also be noted that atrocities were not only committed by the Ustase, but also by Tito's Partisans. The best known example is the Bleiburg massacre, which is the common name for the atrocities committed on the members of the Ustasa movement, NDH army and Croatian civilians who were turned over to the Partizans. During the Tito's Yugoslavia, many Croatian Nationalists were executed or imprisoned (the Lepoglava jail and Goli Otok were the most notorious). The expression of Croat nationalist ideas became illegal. The Catholic Church also became the object of persecutions.
Independent State of Croatia | Former countries in the Balkans | World War II client states | 1941 establishments
Nezavisna Država Hrvatska | Независима хърватска държава | Den Uafhængige Stat Kroatien | Unabhängiger Staat Kroatien | Estado Independiente de Croacia | État indépendant de Croatie | Nezavisna Država Hrvatska | Stato Indipendente di Croazia | Onafhankelijke Staat Kroatië | クロアチア独立国 | Niezależne Państwo Chorwackie | Neodvisna država Hrvaška | Независна Држава Хрватска | Itsenäinen Kroatian valtio
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"Independent State of Croatia".
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