On this date in 1943, young Yugoslav partisan Lepa Svetozara Radic went to a German gallows.
A Bosnian Serb — her village today lies in Bosnia and Herzegovina’s Republika Srpska, steps inside the river that forms its border with Croatia — Lepa Radic was just 15 when Europe’s Axis powers invaded Yugoslavia in April 1941. Her family’s established left-wing affiliations brought them swift arrest by the fascist Ustashe, but Lepa and her sister escaped in December and joined Tito‘s Communist partisans.
In early 1943, Nazi Germany mounted a huge offensive against the partisans. On a strategic plane, the offensive failed: the partisans were able to preserve their command structure and fall back, also decisively defeating in the field their nationalist/monarchist rivals, the Chetniks, which set them up to dominate postwar Yugoslavia.
But for those upon whom the blow fell, it was a winter of terrible suffering. The Germans claimed 11,915 partisans killed, 2,506 captured … and 616 executed.
So it was with Lepa Radic. This Serbian Zoya Kosmodemyanskaya was captured during the engagement trying to defend a clutch of civilians and wounded. They publicly noosed her at Bosanska Krupa after she scorned the opportunity to preserve her life by informing on fellow guerrillas with the badass retort, “my comrades will give their names when they avenge my death.” (Various translations of this parting dagger are on offer online.)
After the war, Yugoslavia honored her posthumously with the Order of the People’s Hero.
On this day..
- 1723: Charles Weaver, John Levee, Richard Oakey and Matthew Flood
- 1804: Ann Hurle, forger
- 1943: The five martyrs of the lycee Buffon
- 1721: William Spigget, after peine forte et dure
- 1527: Georg Wagner
- 1844: Hester Foster and William Young Graham
- 1804: Little Harpe and Peter Alston, Mississippi pirates
- 1942: Icchok Malmed
- 1924: The first electrocutions in Texas
- 1910: George Reynolds and John Williams
- 1924: Gee Jon, debuting the gas chamber
- 1587: Mary, Queen of Scots