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Bandito
9th September 2009, 16:05
CV of Yugoslavia's greatest revolutionary.

Vlado Dapcevic
1917-2001

Vlado Dapcevic was born in 1917 in Montenegro. He was accepted into the Communist Party of Yugoslavia in 1933. Because of distributing propaganda material, joining demonstrations and taking part in clashes with the police, he was arrested several times. Together with a large group of volunteers, he tried to get into Spain to take a part in defending the Spanish Republic, but he was arrested and convicted.
He continued his political work at the University of Belgrade, where he was seriously injured during a clash with fascist youth(he got shot in the face).
In 1941 Vlado Dapcevic took part in the people’s uprising in Montenegro against the fascist occupiers. He took part in all the great battles of the Partisan Army for the liberation of Yugoslavia. During these battles he was wounded several times and was twice expelled from the Communist Party of Yugoslavia because of criticism of certain decisions of the Party. By the end of the war he had become a lieutenant colonel.
After the war he worked at the Higher Party School, and then he was appointed Chief of Administration of the Yugoslav People’s Army (JNA) for agitation and propaganda.
In 1948, after the Resolution of the Communist Information Bureau opposing Tito’s revisionism, Vlado Dapcevic tried to escape the country, but he was caught and sentenced to 20 years in prison.
From 1948 until 1956 he experienced the worst torture at Goli Otok and other concentration camps of Tito’s Yugoslavia.
In 1958, because of the possibility of a new arrest, he fled the country to Albania, and then to the Soviet Union. Because of opposition to the policy of Khrushchev and the CPSU, it was made impossible for him to work politically. He tried to organize a trip of political emigrants to Cuba, and then to Vietnam, but that was made impossible for him by the authorities. Under threat of arrest, in 1967 he was forced to flee the Soviet Union and to go to Western Europe. In Western Europe, until settling in Belgium, he was arrested a few times. He worked hard in Belgium, doing physical work for a slave wage in order to survive, but he continued his revolutionary work as well.
In Western Europe he was engaged in the work of the Marxist-Leninist parties.
In 1975, Yugoslav police kidnapped Vlado Dapcevic.
In Yugoslavia he was sentenced to death, but the sentence was commuted to 20 years in prison.
In 1989 after release from prison he was expelled from the country.
In 1990 he was permitted to return to Yugoslavia.
From 1992 he was President of Partija Rada(Party of Labour:http://www.partijarada.org./)
During that period, Vlado Dapcevic directed all his activities to the fight against war, and for peace among the peoples of Yugoslavia, while the struggle against Great-Serb nationalism and Milosevic’s regime was the main aim of his political activity.
He was an example of how one consistent revolutionary can defend the basic principles of proletarian internationalism. In his brave struggle for the rights of the exploited and oppressed, Vlado Dapcevic with his life and work wrote some of the best pages of the revolutionary anti-imperialist movement of the world.
In Brussels on the 12th of July 2001, in the 84th year of his life died a Revolutionary, Vladimir - Vlado Dapcevic.

ToxicSoil
12th September 2009, 00:59
Rest his rebellious soul.

Искра
12th September 2009, 11:06
He was in "Trotsky's fan club", right?

Bandito
12th September 2009, 13:25
Quite the opposite.

Wakizashi the Bolshevik
17th September 2009, 18:30
May he rest in peace.

Wakizashi the Bolshevik
17th September 2009, 18:31
He was in "Trotsky's fan club", right?
If he opposes Tito and Kruschev?
Don't think so.

Bandito
20th September 2009, 10:48
There is now a wikipedia page on this great man:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vlado_Dap%C4%8Devi%C4%87

The Author
20th September 2009, 17:14
After his release and due to the possibility for re-arrest, with a group of comrades, he escaped to Albania in 1958. After couple of months the Albanian government deported them to the USSR.I don't know if this is true or not, but if it is, I'm extremely disappointed with the Albanian government in taking such action with Dapcevic and his associates and making a serious mistake in the process. After all, in the long term both were against the revisionist tide which was taking over the Soviet government and party, so none of the Yugoslavs should have been deported.

rebelmouse
20th September 2009, 18:04
big rebel with strong personality. rare example of human kind.

Bandito
20th September 2009, 18:27
No, there actually was no problem with Albanian Govenment at the time. The problem lies in a different matter.
Yugoslav communists, exiled in Albania at the time, wanted to be transfered to Soviet Union. Vlado was among them, but he didn't want to go to USSR, what he wanted was to stay in Albania for a little while and then illegally cross the border back to Yugoslavia and form a guerilla unit who will fight Tito's revisionism.
Yet the other Yugoslavians pressured the Government to ensure their transfer to Soviet Union, without his personal approval, and the Albanian government simply agreed to this.
Dapcevic had verbal conflicts about this with the rest of the Yugoslavians, but there was nothing he could do.
In USSR he faced something he expected, but was hoping that he is wrong, and wanted to go to Cuba. He spoke with Che Guevara about it in Moscow. Che agreed on that.
"I have to fight imperialism. That is my goal as a revolutionary and a permanent cause. I don't care if it's here or there, on this side of the globe or the other. We are professional revolutionaries and that is our duty." - said Dapcevic and faced a denial of his demand to go to Cuba.
Same thing happened later with his will to go to Vietnam.

About his times in emmigration, he often quoted Vera Zasulich: "Nothing destroys a revolutionary on the inside like that. Not gallows, not hunger, not prisons and dungeons...nothing kills a revolutionary like emmigration does."
http://www.partijarada.org/images/vlado.jpg