Bleiburg 1945 - U sjecanje - Đuka Čaić KRIŽNI PUT - Video
PUBLISHED:  May 13, 2007
DESCRIPTION:
Bleiburg 1945.-2013. - u sjecanje - Đuka Čaić KRIŽNI PUT
http://www.croradio.net/bleiburg.htm
JOŠ NAS IMA, JOŠ HRVATA..
Bleiburg 1945.-2013. - u sjecanje
TEBI nepoznati hrvatski sine,
Što ležiš negdje izpod briega,
Tebi na ulazu u Arkade,
Veliki spomenik podic treba!

Ne znam da li si pao kao borac
Izpod zastave hrvatske svete,
Ili su Te ubili u Koloni smrti
Ili si sa grudi majke odtrgnut kao diete.

Taj spomenik neka bude naše jedinstvo,
Ljubav medu nama i sloga hrvatska.
To ce biti naše remek - djelo,
Iz kojeg ce niknut N. D. Hrvatska!

I zato stari i novi borci,
Kunu se Tebi, neznani hrvatski sine,
Da ce se do zadnje kapi krvi
Borit za slobodu Domovine!

Cuj: vec kroz hrvatske gore
Njihove pjesme cuje se jeka.
Svice naša Zora! Pucaju okovi!
Ubojice Tvoje i hrvatskog puka
Zaslužna kazna ceka.

Tek onda ce moc naraštaji,
Hrvatska uzdanica, naš ponos i dika,
Proci u mimohod izpred Tvoga lika!

MYTH: "THERE WAS NO RETRIBUTION AGAINST THE CROATIANS AFTER WORLD WAR II"

Myth: Because Tito was a Croatian, no retribution was taken against Croatian officials, soldiers or civilians after World War II by the victorious Partisans.

Reality: Thousands of Croatians were slaughtered immediately after the War, tens of thousands more were sent to prisons, government officials were executed and those who escaped were tracked down and murdered in foreign lands well into the 1960s.

That there was no retribution against the Croatians after World War II is not so much a myth as an outright attempt to falsify history. As is the case with several other myths, the Serbian apologists Nora Beloff and David Martin gave new currency to this story in the world press during the Croatian war for independence.

Bleiburg

The post-war massacres of Croatians are almost unknown outside the Croatian community. To Croatians, the single word "Bleiburg" summarizes the pain endured by an entire nation. The Bleiburg-Maribor massacres have been documented in such works as Operation Slaughterhouse by John Prcela and Stanko Guldescu, In Tito's Death Marches and Extermination Camps by Joseph Hecimovic, Operation Keelhaul by Julius Epstein, Bleiburg by Vinko Nikolic, and perhaps best known, The Minister and the Massacres by Count Nikolai Tolstoy. That these massacres occurred is irrefutable. Only the number of deaths and the depth of American and British duplicity are in question. The story of Bleiburg began in early 1945 as it became clear that Germany would lose the War. As the German Army retreated toward the Austrian border, the Red Army advanced and the Partisans began their consolidation of power, anarchy prevailed in what was Yugoslavia. A dozen or more nationalist movements and ethnic militias attempted to salvage various parts of Yugoslavia. Most nationalists, Croatian, Slovenian and Serbian alike, were anti-Communist and all had visions of the Western Allies welcoming them into the coming battle against Communism. Croatians especially cherished the totally unsupported notion that Anglo-American intervention would save an independent Croatian state. As in every other part of eastern Europe, armies, governments and civilian populations began moving toward the Western lines. Some were pushed before the retreating Germans, others followed in their wake. Many traveled in small bands, armed or unarmed, while others were well organized into mass movements of people and equipment. Along the trek north they fought the Partisans and each other. Many surrendered, others fought to the death.
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