Sneha Girap (Editor)

Moša Pijade

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Preceded by
  
Milovan Djilas

Role
  
Art critic

Nationality
  
Yugoslav

Succeeded by
  
Petar Stambolic


Spouse(s)
  
Lepa Pijade

Battles and wars
  
World War II

Name
  
Mosa Pijade

Mosa Pijade Anonymous No Longer Holocaust History Museum Yad Vashem

Born
  
4 January 1890 Belgrade, Kingdom of Serbia (
1890-01-04
)

Political party
  
League of Communists of Yugoslavia (SKJ)

Occupation
  
Painter, Art critic, Publicist, Revolutionary, Resistance commander, Statesman

Awards
  
Order of the People\'s Hero Order of the Hero of Socialist Labour Order of the brotherhood and unity Order of the partisan star Order of the National liberation Order for courageousness

Died
  
March 15, 1957, Paris, France

Party
  
League of Communists of Yugoslavia

Allegiance
  
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia

Service/branch
  
Yugoslav People\'s Army

Moša Pijade (Serbian Cyrillic: Мoшa Пиjaдe; 4 January 1890  15 March 1957), nicknamed Čiča Janko (Чича Јанко, lit. "Uncle Janko") was a prominent Serbian and Yugoslav communist, a close collaborator of Josip Broz Tito, former President of Yugoslavia, and full member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts.

Moša Pijade FileOsuenik Moa Pijadejpg Wikimedia Commons

Life and career

Moša Pijade FileMoa Pijade and Titojpg Wikimedia Commons

Pijade was of Sephardic Jewish parentage. In his youth, Pijade was a painter, art critic and publicist. He was also known for translating Das Kapital by Karl Marx into Serbo-Croatian.

Moša Pijade wwwmakabijadacomimagesMosaPijadeautoportretJPG

He is thought to have had a major influence on Marxist ideology as exposed during the old regime in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. In 1925, he was sentenced to 20 years in prison because of his 'revolutionary activities' after World War I. He was discharged after 14 years in 1939 and imprisoned again in 1941 in the camp Bileća.

Moša Pijade Stevan Kragujevic Mosa Pijade polazak za London i Pariz

Pijade was one of the leaders of the Uprising in Montenegro. His ruthless cruelty toward the people who refused to join his units was noted. He was subsequently recalled to the communist headquarters because of the issues connected to the uprising. Under the influence of Pijade and Milovan Đilas an extreme prosecution of "leftist errors" was pursued by the Partisans in Montenegro.

Moša Pijade FileTito i Moa Pijade u zatvorujpg Wikimedia Commons

He was known as the creator of the so-called 'Foča regulations' (1942), which prescribed the foundation and activity of people's liberation committees in the liberated territories during the war against the Nazis. In November 1943, before the second AVNOJ meeting in Jajce, he initiated the foundation of Tanjug, which later became the state news agency of SFR Yugoslavia, nowadays of Serbia.

Pijade held high political posts during and after World War II and was a member of the Central Committee and the Politburo of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia. He was one of the leaders of Tito's partisans and was subsequently proclaimed People's Hero of Yugoslavia. He was one of six Vice Presidents of the Presidium of the Yugoslavian Parliament (deputy head of state) 1945–53.

In 1948 Pijade convinced Tito to allow those Jews who remained in Yugoslavia to emigrate to Israel. Tito agreed on a one-time exception basis. As a result, 3,000 Jews were allowed to emigrate from Yugoslavia to Israel on the SS Kefalos in December 1948. Among those was Tommy Lapid who became Deputy Prime Minister of Israel and is the father of Yair Lapid.

After having led the law commission of the Parliament, Pijade was Vice-President (1953–54) and President of the Yugoslavian Parliament or Skupština (1954–55). In 1957, he died in Paris during the return from a visit to London, where he had talks as leader of a Yugoslav parliamentary delegation. Streets in many cities of the former Yugoslav countries were once named after him.

References

Moša Pijade Wikipedia