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Topic: Stevan Moljevic


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  Helsinki Charter
Moljevic published this writing in mid-1941 when Yugoslavia was already occupied and her army capitulated, while Hitler’s invasion was in full swing.
Throughout the war Stevan Moljevic remained a main promoter and official interpreter of the Chetnik movement’s warring and national goals, and its vision of a post-war state.
Moljevic was appointed the president of the Executive Board of the Central National Committee and senior political adviser to Draza Mihailovic.
www.helsinki.org.yu /charter_text.php?lang=en&idteksta=1495   (1738 words)

  
 TWATCH-L archives -- March 1998 (#375)
Two months later, Moljevic became a member of the executive council of the Chetnik National Committee and was a key adviser to Gereral Draza Mihailovic.
Throughout WWII and the civil war within Yugoslavia, the Chetniks functioned as the instruments of a policy of genocide, which was accepted broadly by the intellectual and political leadership in Serbia and which extended beyond Serbia's borders.
Moljevic was also elected to it, but he was no longer kingpin." This material is offered not to inflame anyone, but to add to the background understanding.
listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu /cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind9803&L=twatch-l&P=R47640   (1370 words)

  
 East European Constitutional Review
Moljevic's goal was a "compact Serbia, which should include the entire ethnic territory on which Serbs (Serbian people) live." Moljevic's Greater Serbian idea was illustrated with a map in which Serbian ethnic territory extends as far west as Gospic and Pakrac in Croatia.
Moljevic's map became very popular at the beginning of the 1990s as Serbian nationalists dreamed of preserving Greater Serbia under the false name of Yugoslavia.
They would thereby take under their control even those areas that are by no means exclusively populated by Serbs, or where Serbs are not even a majority.
www.law.nyu.edu /eecr/vol10num2_3/features/canak.html   (5248 words)

  
 Stevan Moljevic: Facts and details from Encyclopedia Topic   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Stevan Moljevic: Facts and details from Encyclopedia Topic
Stevan Moljević (1888-1946) was Serb[Follow this hyperlink for a summary of this subject] lawyer lawyer quick summary:
A lawyer or attorney at law is a person licensed by the state to advise clients in legal matters and represent them in courts of law (and in other...
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/S/St/Stevan_Moljevic.htm   (466 words)

  
 Milosevic Transcript 2004-12-16
The English version makes clear thus: That at the end of the war, Moljevic was proposing an extraordinary expansion, wasn't he, of Serb territory, starting at the south, taking in Scuttarisodar [phoen], taking parts of Bulgaria, taking parts of Romania, Hungary, and leaving Croatia with a very small split territory.
And second, Moljevic's map, and I don't know whether the Prosecutor has followed -- followed what I said, my conversation with President Milosevic yesterday and the day before when we discussed the Moljevic map in the examination-in-chief.
Moljevic map, and anybody thinking in these terms in the 1990s, as you already explained, would be thinking in Greater Serbian terms.
www.slobodan-milosevic.org /documents/trial/2004-12-16.html   (18734 words)

  
 Chetniks - Wikipedia Light!   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
In this manner, they marked their sorrow for the occupied fatherland which was ravaged by war.
One obscure Chetnik ideologue, Stevan Moljević, went so far as to compose a memorandum called "Homogenous Serbia" that outlined a plan to solve Serbian problems by expanding the Serbian territory to all the lands where ethnic Serbs live, and subsequently remove its heterogeneous ethnic composition, revising the idea of Greater Serbia.
This goal was to be achieved with ethnic cleansing of the territories that Greater Serbia was to assume.
godseye.com /wiki/index.php?title=Chetnik   (2810 words)

  
 Milosevic Transcript 2004-12-15   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Moljevic envisaged a Greater Serbia, even bigger than the one that was offered by the London treaty.
And Moljevic envisaged that this should be a homogenous Serbia from a national point of view along the following lines: The non-Serb population will be allowed to leave on their own or will be exchanged for those Serbs which remain outside this Greater Serbia.
However, that was not accepted either by the Serb people or, rather, the National Liberation Movement, and all these plans, Moljevic's and of the Sveti Sava Congress, all went down the drain in 1945 when the Chetnik movement was defeated once it openly collaborated with the German occupier.
www.slobodan-milosevic.org /documents/trial/2004-12-15.html   (18872 words)

  
 Books: Greater Serbia - Homogeneous Serbia
Stevan Moljevic (b.1888) was a lawyer in Banja Luka before the war.
In 1941 he fled to Montenegro after the Independent State of Croatia was declared.
The ideas Moljevic expressed in this memorandum reflect the views of most cetnik programs of the time, as well as those of the present.
www.hic.hr /books/greatserbia/moljevic.htm   (1313 words)

  
 Masonluk.Net
Bu soykırım programı, Çetniklerin önde gelen ideologlarından Stevan Moljevic tarafından özellikle vurgulanmaktaydı.
Moljevic, 'Homojen Sırbistan' adlı makalesinde, ve -kendisiyle aynı görüşü paylaşan- bir diğer Çetnik ideologu olan Dragica Vasic'e Şubat 1942 yılında yazdığı mektubunda, ülkenin tüm 'Sırp olmayan elementlerden temizlenmesi' gerektiğini söylüyordu.
Bu masonlar arasında özellikle Çetnik ideologu Dragica Vasic ve Stevan Moljevic'in adı geçmektedir...
www.masonluk.net /kabala_masonluk_11_2.html   (947 words)

  
 The Greater Serbian Ideology
There was no need to worry about public opinion abroad: "if Germany can expel tens of thousands of Jews, while Russia transfers millions from one end of the continent to another, the expulsion of a few hundred thousand Albanians will not cause a world war" (Cubrilovic in Grmek 1993:114).
Writing in June 1941 in German-occupied Belgrade, Stevan Moljevic argued that "the Serbs' first and fundamental duty" was the setting up of a Serbian state "uniting all Serbs and all lands where Serbs live" (Mojevic in Grmek 1993:128 & 131).
This Greater and ethnically "homogeneous" Serbia was to include all lands where any Serbs lived, together with whatever additional territories they might want for economic, strategic, or other reasons.
www.hr /darko/etf/prim1.html   (872 words)

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