Bela Crkva incident

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The former tavern in Bela Crkva in front of which the Partisans killed two gendarmes. Busts of Miša Pantić, Žikica Jovanović Španac and Čeda Milosavljević can be seen in the foreground.

The Bela Crkva incident was an event that took place on 7 July 1941 in the village of Bela Crkva near Krupanj, when a group of Yugoslav Partisans led by Žikica Jovanović Španac killed two gendarmes who were enforcing a ban on political rallies after the German occupation of Serbia. The event was later taken as the beginning of the uprising in Serbia led by the Communist Party of Yugoslavia against the Axis occupiers and their collaborators.

After quickly being overrun by Germany and its allies in the April 1941 invasion of Yugoslavia, the country was dismembered. Serbia proper was organized in the occupation zone called the Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia. The Germans also set up Milan Aćimović's puppet Commissar Government and kept the pre-war gendarmerie in order to maintain order. The Germans also banned all political activities in their occupation zone.

Outlawed in the interwar period, the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (CPY) began its preparations for an uprising as soon as the Royal Yugoslav Army capitulated. The German invasion of the Soviet Union sped up the CPY's activities. Germans and their collaborators also began arresting men who were suspected of being communists. The Politburo of the CPY Central Committee decided at its meeting held in Belgrade on 4 July 1941 (attended by Josip Broz Tito, Aleksandar Ranković, Milovan Đilas, Ivan Milutinović, Ivo Lola Ribar, Svetozar Vukmanović, and Sreten Žujović) that the time had come for armed resistance.[1] The next day, the occupation authorities began killing hostages, as the gendarmes shot 13 hostages (ten communists and three Jews).[2]

Western Serbia and Šumadija were the regions where the first partisan detachments were formed. Among them was the Valjevo detachment with the Rađevina company. The political commissar was journalist and teacher Žikica Jovanović Španac, a veteran of the Spanish Civil War. Among others in the Rađevina company were physician Miša Pantić [sr] and teacher Čeda Milosavljević [sr].

The incident

Aftermath

References

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