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by Janko Ehrlich - Zdvorak, 21 September 2001
by Janko Ehrlich - Zdvorak, 21 September 2001
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On the meeting of Highest Command of the People's Liberation Movement of Liberation of Yugoslavia (NOPOJ) and volunteer units in Stolice (Serbia) on September 26, 1941 (confirmed by the decree of Highest Command of the NOPOJ of October 1, 1941) was decided that: "All headquarters and commandants of Partisan units on their area must immediately find responding national flags. In the middle of the flag and stretched over whole width must be a five-pointed red star.".
According to this, members of the Croatian antifascist movement (Partisans) were using as their flags Croatian red-white-blue tricolour with a red star in the middle, touching edges of upper and lower stripe.
First Partisan flag in Lika
by Janko Ehrlich - Zdvorak, 21 September 2001
However, the first Partisan flag showed-up in Croatia was one in Lika (Lika is a part of Croatia situated between Dalmatia and the rest of Croatia (main city is Gospiæ (Gospic). There is population mixed (Croats and Serbian minority).
but it was made half of Croatian and half of Serbian colours, without any star.
Later, in 1943 at the third congress of United Antifascist Council of People's Liberation of Croatia (ZAVNOH, kind of
parliament) was adopted and confirmed that Croatian flag is tricolour with the red star. Of course, at that time there were not any specific regulations related with dimensions. It is to assume that old Bannate or Independent State of Croatia civil flag were used with applied red star. Anyway, many examples were made in other ratios.
Janko Ehrlich - Zdvorak, 21 September 2001
Reagring this stright-forward wouldn't it meant that the star is reaching the top and bottom edges of the flag? Certainly this was not the meaning.
Regarding the Lika flag, even if I havent done much research - this was a one-time "incident" (though important, since it was the first flag). Otherwise the traditonal tricolour flags defaced with red stars were used - and usually both Croatian and Serb tricolour were hoisted side by side. (I don't have any firm sources to back up this, but at least I remember that a number of propaganda posters made by Partisans in Croatia during and imidiately after the War showed both flags.)
In some of the encyclopedias of JLZ (lexicographic institute in Zagreb) once I have seen a flag that was suposedly the first partisan naval ensign - that consisted of the Yugoslav tricolour with star and canchor in its midde and with fly end having three flags ove above the other, Slovenian, Croatian and Serbian (Montenegrin). I think that it might have been in "Pomorski leksikon" or in "Vojna enciklopedija", though not in that issue of the last that I have checked. Since I saw it, quicly in some used-books fair, I am trying to locate it again, but in vain .
The practice of reusing other flags with application of the red star was quite common, apparently. (I guess that Ustasha badge would be removed first, for sure, though there was certainly a good number of captured flags in rural areas where there was never the badge appliqued anyway.
As an example it may be taken a flag of Croatian Pessants' Party (HSS) from Goricica aroudn Sisak, shown on pages 140-141 of the cataloge of the flag exhibition in the Croatian History Museum [bor96], the inventroy number HPM/PMH 11866: Croatian tricolour sized 117x375 cm, richly embroideried with Peasants' Party emblems and agricultural motives, and maybe one of the nicest flags in their collection. In the middle of the flag it is visible stain that is left from, probably sewed, red fivepointed star that was presumably added during the WWII, and presumably it was latter removed, or it was lost, before the item came to Museum. Sisak area was very active in Anti-Fascist strougle.
IMHO, this stains make this museum item even more interesting and providing much bigger story then an already nice flag would do in itself. I would very much like to lear more about the story of this flag.
I am sure that there are other flag in Croatian History Museum that have similar features, and certainly there should be more such examples in local museums, too.
Zeljko Heimer, 28 September 2001