Pajica Omčikus

Pavle Omčikus (1912—1942), nicknamed Pajo or Pajica was one of the leaders of Serb rebels during the Srb Uprising in July 1941 in the Axis puppet state, the Independent State of Croatia. He later commanded the Chetnik Regiment "King Peter II" and collaborated with the Italian occupiers. He was killed in Partisan custody in March 1942.

Pavle Omčikus
Native name
Павле Омчикус
Nickname(s)Pajo or Pajica
Born1912
Srb, Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia
DiedMarch 1942
Krbavica, Independent State of Croatia (modern-day Croatia)
Allegiance Kingdom of Yugoslavia (1933–1934)
Chetniks (1941–1942)
Commands heldChetnik Regiment "King Peter II"
Battles/warsSrb uprising

Early life

Pavle Omčikus was born in 1912 in Srb in the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia. His father's name was Gajo and his mother was Marija. Omčikus' family was well-known in the region as Pavle's father and grandfather were presidents of a Serb municipality.[1] Omčikus completed elementary school in Srb and gymnasium in Gospić. He served in the Royal Yugoslav Army in Meljine in Kotor Bay during 1933—1934. He was a supporter of the social liberal Independent Democratic Party,[2] but later he joined the far-right Yugoslav Radical Union (Serbian: Југословенска Радикална Заједница).[3]

World War II

Uprising

At the beginning of the Srb uprising Omčikus, together with Pera Rajak, Miloš Torbica and other rebels, attacked Srb and destroyed the Ustaše garrison.[4] Omčikus used trucks to organize transport of rebels to fighting positions.[5]

In August 1941 the Chetnik Regiment "King Peter II" was established in Lika and Omčikus and was appointed as its commander[6]. He publicly disagreed with communist leaders in Lika accusing them of being responsible for the division among Serbs.[7]

Italian assistance

Italy used the uprising to try to expand the territory of NDH under Italian control deeper into western Bosnia.[8]Chetnik leaders Omčikus, Radjenović and Major Rašeta claimed that the Italians would save the Serbs from the Ustasha terror and that the Italians should be welcomed as liberators.[9] On 26 August, 1941 NDH and Italy agreed that the Second Italian Army would occupy and pacify rebels in the second and third zone.[10] Italy supported Serb rebels to create an opening, to establish Italian influence beyond the zones they occupied per formal agreements.[11]

Death

Some of the post-war communist sources emphasized that Omčikus surrendered to Partisans with intention to join them.[12] Voivode Momčilo Đujić who was commander of Yugoslav Chetnik forces in Lika, sent an ultimatum to communists to release Omčikus.[13]

Some communist sources underlined that Omčikus committed suicide in communist-held prison in Krbavica,[14] while the contemporary communist reports clarified that Omčikus and group of 30 Yugoslav Chetniks were captured and murdered by communists.[15]

Elaborate of Dinara Division

The leaders of the Serb rebels who belonged to Chetnik units of Dinara Division agreed on basic principles of their further struggle. This was presented in a document composed between the 8th and 12th of March 1942 and titled "Elaborat of Dinara Division" (Serbian: Елаборат Динарске дивизије).[16] The main objective of their struggle of establishing a Serb nation-state was stipulated in detail, and signed by Momčilo Đujić, Pavle Popović, Pavle Omčikus, Branko Bogunović and Mane Rokvić.[17] On the other hand, the Croatian Communist forces undertook all necessary measures to destroy any attempt to establish Serbian nation-state by the "murders of national leaders and Chetniks" and waging against them "a war until extreme limits of life".[18]

gollark: If you want to retain privacy, it is not very useful to just give up all privacy and become uninteresting.
gollark: Except they can then... see everything you're doing, which defeats the point.
gollark: I don't think that's actually true unless you can go to ridiculous lengths like "run entire universe simulation backwards", in any case.
gollark: I mean... maybe, but it's more about making it very difficult.
gollark: I mean, how do people manage to mess this stuff up? I hesitate to say that I could do better about presumably very complex things, but it seems like a lot of the time the phone network is terrible and even I could do better at designing it.

References

  1. (Jovanić 1988, p. 35):"To je Pajica Omčikus iz Srba, iz imućne porodice Omčikusa, čuvene još u austrougarskoj državi, kada su mu otac i djed bili predsjednici općine srbske."
  2. (Jovanić 1988, p. 35):"Za vrijeme stare Jugoslavije bio je pristalica samostalnih demokrata. "
  3. (Majstorović 1961, p. 115)
  4. (Плећаш 2004, p. 267):"У Лици је Пајица Омчикус , са Пером Рајаком , Милошем Торбицом и другим устаницима напао Срб и у њему су уништили усташку посаду . Истога дана лички устаници су пресекли жељезничку пругу Госпић-Книн и заузели Отрић"
  5. (Damjanović 1972, p. 133)
  6. (Majstorović 1961, p. 115):"»Puk kralja Petra« kojem je na čelu stajao Pajica Omčikus."
  7. (Đuretić 1997, p. 334):".. сукоба дошло је приликом оснивања и смотре пука “Краљ Петар II“, када су посланици ЈРЗ Рађеновић и Пајица Омчикус изразили пуно неслагање с комунистичким руководством Лике оптужујући га за разбијање српског народа."
  8. (Redžić 2005, p. 15)
  9. (Дедијер 1951, p. 223):"Четничке вође Рађеновић, мајор Рашета и Омчикус, почеле да говоре како Италијане треба дочекати као ослободиоце и да они спасавају народ од усташког зулума. "
  10. (Redžić 2005, p. 16)
  11. (Redžić 2005, p. 16)
  12. (Jovanović & Rešetić 1963, p. 387)
  13. (Damjanović 1972, p. 282):"...u Tiškovcu je četnički vojvoda pop Momčilo Đujić, komandant zamišljene dinarske četničke divizije, okupljao četnike, slao poruke i ultimatum partizanskim jedinicama da se pusti zarobljeni komandant »četničkog puka« Pajica Omčikus,..."
  14. Vojnoistorijski institut (Belgrade, Serbia) (1952). Zbornik Dokumenta. p. 29.
  15. Vojnoistorijski institut (Belgrade, Serbia) (1954). Zbornik Dokumenta. p. 75. Streljali smo oko 30 četničkih razbojnika među njima i P. Omčikusa.
  16. (Николић 2009, p. 84)
  17. (Николић 2009, p. 84):" „Елаборат" су потписали Момчило 'Бууий, Павле ПоповиН, Павле Омчикус, Бранко БогуновиН и Мане Роквип."
  18. (Николић 2009, p. 85)

Sources


Sources published in Yugoslavia during communist rule
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