maki
Membrum
Posts: 147
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Post by maki on Nov 12, 2008 7:28:19 GMT -5
Interested in knowing how many of your guys grandfathers faught for the Partizans in WW2? Lot of nationalism running in this forum so it'll be interesting to know who faught for who.
I know my grandfather from my dad's side was a Colonel in the JNA but his brothers were too young to fight. My grandfather from my mothers side was a POW.
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Post by bosanskinovi on Nov 12, 2008 7:34:54 GMT -5
My grandfathers were both too young to fight.
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Trazi Vise
Amicus
Today's "church" has NOTHING to do with religion.
Posts: 3,126
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Post by Trazi Vise on Nov 12, 2008 8:49:18 GMT -5
I don't think it matters because ww2 saw even brothers kill eachother. So which side do you take then? My grandparents were too young also.
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Post by Caslav Klonimirovic on Nov 12, 2008 9:00:02 GMT -5
One of mine from Montenegro was in the Serbian army. Not chetnicks, just Serbian army fighting against the Partizans. The other one from Bosna I don't think he fought much but he was a bit of a commo Partizan to the end.
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Post by tito on Nov 12, 2008 9:10:53 GMT -5
My grandfather was a partizan fanatic, especially after the cetniks killed his brother(who got 2 streets named after him in both Bosnia and Montenegro), he liberated Serbia but ended up in jail because he refused to tolerate the genocidal cetnik murders who joined the partizans at end of the war.
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Post by Caslav Klonimirovic on Nov 12, 2008 9:15:55 GMT -5
^^ That doesn't make sense or does not sound very plausible.
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Post by tito on Nov 12, 2008 9:30:13 GMT -5
He was organizing the survivors of the genocide in east Bosnia to witness against the cetnik criminals who had joined the partizans at the end of the war but the project got bit too successful so the cetniks above him arranged a similar process against him, apparently they didn’t like the fact that he was killing cetniks in and after WW2(at the time when Draza was still hiding from justice like Mladic today).
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Post by Caslav Klonimirovic on Nov 12, 2008 9:32:42 GMT -5
He was organizing the survivors of the genocide in east Bosnia to witness against the cetnik criminals who had joined the partizans at the end of the war but the project got bit too successful so the cetniks above him arranged a similar process against him, apparently they didn’t like the fact that was killing cetniks in WW2. wtf? This still doesn't make any sense.
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Trazi Vise
Amicus
Today's "church" has NOTHING to do with religion.
Posts: 3,126
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Post by Trazi Vise on Nov 12, 2008 10:22:15 GMT -5
So he was killing cetniks, but there were cetniks above him? wtf? Nice story anyway from what I could make out of it!
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Post by tito on Nov 12, 2008 11:23:00 GMT -5
So he was killing cetniks, but there were cetniks above him? wtf? Correct, those cetnik bastards where pushing echother up the hierarchy so at the end they controlled the JNA, instead of the heros who defetad them.
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Trazi Vise
Amicus
Today's "church" has NOTHING to do with religion.
Posts: 3,126
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Post by Trazi Vise on Nov 12, 2008 11:32:31 GMT -5
Well I guess you just proved to everyone here, they are the same djubre.
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Post by fazlinho on Nov 12, 2008 11:43:36 GMT -5
One grandpa was too young (mom's side) the other was in the Partisans, he remained in the army after ww2 and remained there as an officer, the JNA gave him the apartment where he spent his whole life in Sarajevo (one of the 2 commie flats on Marijin dvor, near holiday inn) Actually he was given the possibility to get an apartment in Belgrade, but he switched that one for a bigger in Sarajevo.
2 of his brothers died in ww2 as Partisans, and others were in as well. I come from a "true" partisan family.
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Post by sweetnugs on Nov 12, 2008 11:49:07 GMT -5
------^ My store is similar to that story as well.
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Post by Ja Ona i Pivo on Nov 12, 2008 11:55:10 GMT -5
One grandpa was too young (mom's side) the other was in the Partisans, he remained in the army after ww2 and remained there as an officer, the JNA gave him the apartment where he spent his whole life in Sarajevo (one of the 2 commie flats on Marijin dvor, near holiday inn) Actually he was given the possibility to get an apartment in Belgrade, but he switched that one for a bigger in Sarajevo. 2 of his brothers died in ww2 as Partisans, and others were in as well. I come from a "true" partisan family. Cool! What if he moved to belgrade Then u would call ur self Fazislav and not Falza just a thought
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Trazi Vise
Amicus
Today's "church" has NOTHING to do with religion.
Posts: 3,126
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Post by Trazi Vise on Nov 12, 2008 12:02:47 GMT -5
Since when did communists become such nationalists?
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Post by fazlinho on Nov 12, 2008 12:19:58 GMT -5
They always were, the majority at least.
I would still be the coolest on the forums, that's what matters B)
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Post by theblackswans on Nov 12, 2008 14:03:43 GMT -5
My best friend Edin his mothers brother was a Partizan and the last person killed in WW2 in Bosnia. He was shot by a sniper in Tuzla.
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Post by zgembo on Nov 12, 2008 14:03:47 GMT -5
One grandpa was a Partisan, the other was a POW (after being part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia Army).
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Post by bob1389 on Nov 12, 2008 17:42:20 GMT -5
Chetniks on my mums side, based around Drvar/Kljuc and faught against Ustase.
Partizani on my father side, based around Srbinje ("foca") faught against nazis, ustase and Chetniks.
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Post by bob1389 on Nov 12, 2008 17:43:47 GMT -5
I'm 110% Chetnik though.
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