Novo vreme

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Novo vreme

description Serbian daily newspaper
language Serbian
publishing company Srpsko izdavačko preduzeće AD
Headquarters Belgrade
First edition May 16, 1941
attitude 1944
Frequency of publication Every day
Editors-in-chief Miloš Mladenović
editor Stanislav Krakov
Portrait of Tito , published together with the profile of Draža Mihailović (Novo vreme, July 21, 1943).

Novo vreme (The New Era ) was the leading daily newspaper in Serbia during World War II with its headquarters in Belgrade . In addition to the newspaper Obnova (The Renewal), it was the newsletter of the Serbian collaboration government under General Milan Nedić . In cooperation with German agencies and local publishers, the paper took part in anti-Semitic and anti-communist propaganda .

history

The paper was founded in April 1941 as the first collaborating newspaper under German occupation and was created from the merger of the newspaper Vreme (Die Zeit) with the newspaper Politika (Die Politik). After the Balkan campaign of the German Wehrmacht and the occupation or destruction of the first Yugoslavia, the most important Yugoslav journalists willing to collaborate around Novo Vreme and the Croatian newspaper Hrvatski Narod gathered in Zagreb .

In August 1941, the newspaper published an appeal to the Serbian nation , an appeal by 546 prominent church, intellectual and political representatives of Serbia to convince the Serbian population of the senselessness and danger of resistance against the German occupation and to encourage them to collaborate.

responsible

Publisher Novo vreme was from 1941 to 1944, the former Chetnik -Offizier, journalist and writer Stanislav Krakov (1895-1968), an uncle maternal of the Prime Minister of the Serbian collaborationist government under Milan Nedić . The editor-in-chief was the lawyer Miloš Mladenović (1903–1984).

Editor-in-chief was Predrag Milojević from May 16, 1941 to August 3, 1941 (absent from July 25, 1941). Nikola Kapetanović , Živojin Vukadinović , Dušan Lopandić , Bora Kesić , Aleksandar Simić , Nikola Aleksić , Dragan Aleksić , Milan Radulović and Miloš Mladenović took turns in the editorial team . From August 3, 1941, the deputy editor-in-chief Miloš Mladenović and in the editorial team Radenko Tomić , Nikola Aleksić, Vojin Đorđević , Svetozar Grdijan . The newspaper was published by the publishing house Srpsko izdavačko preduzeće AD .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ John R. Lampe: Yugoslavia as History: Twice There Was a Country . Cambridge University Press, 2000, ISBN 978-0-521-77401-7 , pp. 205 .
  2. ^ Jozo Tomasevich: War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941-1945: Occupation and Collaboration . Stanford University Press, Stanford, Ca. 2001, ISBN 978-0-8047-3615-2 , pp. 226 , footnote 124 .
  3. Klaus Buchenau: Orthodoxy and Catholicism in Yugoslavia 1945–1991: A Serbian-Croatian Comparison (=  Volume 40 of the Balkanological Publications of the Eastern European Institute of the Free University of Berlin ). Otto Harrassowitz Verlag, 2004, ISBN 3-447-04847-6 , p. 78 .
  4. ^ Philip J. Cohen: Serbia's Secret War: Propaganda and the Deceit of History (=  Eastern European studies . No. 2 ). 4th edition. Texas A&M University Press, 1999, pp. 73 .
  5. Peter Longerich: Propagandisten im Krieg: The press department of the Foreign Office under Ribbentrop (=  studies on contemporary history . Volume 33 ). Munich 1987, p. 231 .
  6. ^ The Central European Observer . No. 19 . "Orbis" Publishing Company, 1942, pp. 306 .
  7. ^ American Jewish Committee. Research Institute on Peace and Post-War Problems (Ed.): The Jewish communities of Nazi-occupied Europe . H. Ready, 1982, ISBN 978-0-86527-337-5 , pp. 18 .
  8. Olivera Milosavljević: Potisnuta istina: Kolaboracija u Srbiji 1941-1944 [The suppressed truth: Collaboration in Serbia 1941-1944] . Ed .: Helsinški odbor za ljudska prava u Srbiji. Beograd 2006, ISBN 86-7208-129-3 , pp. 399 .