The Question of Armed Resistance in 1941 Cover Image

Vprašanja oboroženega odpora 1941
The Question of Armed Resistance in 1941

Author(s): Damijan Guštin
Subject(s): Civil Society, Military history, Political history, Government/Political systems, WW II and following years (1940 - 1949), History of Communism, Sociology of Politics
Published by: Inštitut za novejšo zgodovino
Keywords: Second World War; resistance movement; National Liberation Army and PR of Slovenia; partisans;

Summary/Abstract: In Slovenia, armed resistance against the occupying forces began as early as July 1941. The resistance, which was among the first in Europe, was inspired and organised by the Slovene wing of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia. Although originally intended to serve its own political interests and support the defense of the Soviet Union, the Slovene Liberation Front defined this armed resistance as a means of national liberation and unification of the Slovene ethnic lands which were part of the Italian and German states. First formed in July 1941, the resistance units totalled thirty-one partisan squads, each counting from ten to fifty men. Although insufficiently armed and mainly recoursing to guerrilla tactics they also carried out larger operations, like the one in Posavje in October 1941, to prevent the deportation of Slovenes. The organisers of the resistance movement endeavoured to mobilise as many people as possible to ensure a massive popular uprising. They succeeded in this to a large extent in December 1941 when the first massive mobilisation was carried out in Upper Carniola.

  • Issue Year: 41/2001
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 123-142
  • Page Count: 20
  • Language: Slovenian
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