-----Original Message-----
From: Sandy Marquette [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2001 9:59 AM




          *** REMEMBERING A FALLEN HERO THIS JULY 17TH DAY ***



     July 17th is an important day for those who knew who he was and
what he 
did.  His name may or may not be familiar to you, but he may have been
as 
important a figure in history as those whose names are imprinted in the 
national consciousness.  He was Yugoslavia's General Draza Mihailovich,
a 
Serb, who lost his life on July 17, 1946.  He was a real hero.  A true
hero. 
  As a child growing up in Barrington, Illinois, very far away from
where he 
made his mark, I came to know who he was in a very personal way.

     Draza Mihailovich was born in the Spring of 1893 in the small town
of 
Ivanitza, Serbia in Yugoslavia.  He would become a military man,
schooled in 
the Military Academy and groomed to be an officer.  He would find his 
destiny to be a participant in war after war, beginning with the First
and 
Second Balkan Wars, then WWI, then WWII, where he would fulfill his
fate.

     He was a believer in the ideals of freedom and democracy.  He was
not a 
political man.  He knew and understood his people and was loyal to both
them 
and to the democratic Allies in whom he believed.  When the Nazis
attacked 
and occupied Yugoslavia in April of 1941 and the government and army 
surrendered, making Yugoslavia yet another of Hitler's successful
conquests 
in Europe, Draza Mihailovich opted not to surrender, but to fight.  With
him 
he took only 80 men into the mountains of Ravna Gora, Serbia and began a

resistance that would be the first of its kind in all the war.  He and
his 
Serbian Chetniks were the first to raise a successful resistance to the
Nazi 
forces in occupied Europe, and this resistance would have far-reaching 
implications for the outcome of the entire war.  The Allies, bigger and 
stronger than he and his guerilla fighters and the peasants who
nourished 
them, would come to owe much of the success of the Allied campaign
against 
Hitler to these simple people.

     Mihailovich made his position clear to the Germans:  "I demand," he

told them, when the Germans attempted an armistice, "that the German
troops 
evacuate my country and then the peace will be restored.  As long as a 
single enemy soldier remains on our soil, we shall continue to
fight...Our 
fighting spirit is based on the traditions of a love for liberty and our

unflinching faith in the victory of our Allies."

     The enemy did not evacuate.  Mihailovich was good to his word.
Severe 
and cruel Nazi reprisals began against the innocent Serbian civilian 
population in order to stop the resistance.  Because he was a
compassionate 
man who loved his people, Mihailovich was compelled to alter his means
of 
fighting the enemy in order to spare the lives of the innocents.  He and
his 
fighters would prove very adept at the sabotage campaigns that were 
crippling to the Nazi war machine.  Ultimately, Hitler would be forced
to 
keep several of his divisions in Yugoslavia just to fight the guerrilla 
resistance that had by now grown in number and foiled his plans for an
easy 
conquest of Serbia.  The ultimate consequence of this would prove fatal
for 
the German Army.

     Because Hitler was forced to keep several of his divisions in
Serbia, 
his plan for the invasion of Moscow was delayed by three months in 1941.

The delay proved to be critical, because by the time the German forces
would 
finally approach Moscow, the brutal Russian winter had set in, and that
was 
a force the Nazis could not overcome.  Had the German forces not been 
delayed by the Serbian resistance in Yugoslavia, Moscow may well have
fallen 
and the course of history would have been much different.

     As pivotal as this was, in the eyes of those whose lives General 
Mihailovich and his Chetniks affected directly, a feat was later 
accomplished that was even more important.

     During the course of the Allied bombing campaigns of the Ploesti
oil 
fields in Romania, Hitler's only supply of oil in the Summer of 1944, 
hundreds of Allied airmen were shot down by the Germans.  Over 700 of
these 
airmen, 500 of them Americans, would end up on Serbian territory.  There

they would be nursed back to health by the Serbs loyal to Mihailovich,
who 
at great risk to themselves, would shelter, feed, and protect these men
who 
were foreigners on their soil. Ultimately, these airmen, to the very
last 
one, would be returned to their homes and their families as a result of 
evacuations that would become the greatest rescue of American lives from

behind enemy lines in the history of warfare.  It was a grand rescue
under 
extreme duress for they were surrounded by the occupying Nazi forces.
500 
American young men would return home to become fathers and husbands and 
later grandfathers who would tell their children and grandchildren the
story 
of how their lives had been saved so many thousands of miles away by a
man 
named Draza Mihailovich.

     General Mihailovich would turn out to be a tragic hero.  Due to 
political game-playing, a severe lack of foresight, and devastating 
betrayal, Mihailovich would be abandoned by the Allies. The Communist
enemy, 
whom he had fought against as hard as he had fought against the Nazis,
would 
prevail.  In one of the worst cases of judicial travesty and the
miscarriage 
of justice, Mihailovich, after being captured by the Yugoslav
communists, 
was tried by a kangaroo court in Belgrade on fabricated charges,
sentenced 
to death, and executed on July 17, 1946.  He was 53 years old.  There
would 
be no marker, no headstone, no grave in all of Serbia.

     Two years after his death, U.S. President Harry Truman, under the 
advisement of General Dwight D. Eisenhower, posthumously awarded General

Mihailovich the Legion of Merit, the highest combat award our nation can

bestow upon a foreign national:

         "LEGION OF MERIT -- CHIEF COMMANDER"

"General Dragoljub Mihailovich distinguished himself in an outstanding 
manner as Commander-in-Chief of the Yugoslavian Army Forces and later as

Minister of War by organizing and leading important resistance forces 
against the enemy which occupied Yugoslavia, from December 1941 to
December 
1944.  Through the undaunted efforts of his troops, many United States 
airmen were rescued and returned safely to friendly control.  General 
Mihailovich and his forces, although lacking adequate supplies, and
fighting 
under extreme hardships, contributed materially to the Allied cause, and

were instrumental in obtaining a final Allied victory."

March 29, 1948.  Harry S. Truman


     I learned about this man, Mihailovich, growing up in my home in
Chicago.  I became familiar with his kind, warm face and with the truly
glorious things he did under impossible conditions through my father,
whose mission it seems, has been to keep the General's legacy alive.  A
few years ago, I learned that one of the American airmen whose life had
been saved, had lived quite near us in Fox Point in the 1970's.  Mr.
Robert W. Eckman, from Chicago, had been one of the original 20 airmen
who had gone to Washington in '46 in an attempt to win a fair trial for
Draza Mihailovich before the sentencing came down.  I'm thinking about
that now, and how small the world is, you know.  Here is one of Draza's
freedom fighters living almost side by side with an American whose life
was saved some 30 years before, and the two would never meet.

     My Dad continues to keep the General's memory alive.  I believe 1st

Lieutenant Eckman has since passed away.  And me, I do what I can to
promote 
the legacy of a hero I believe in.  Mihailovich did huge things much of
the 
world doesn't even know about.  He was a good man.  A virtuous military
man 
and a patriot who was willing to sacrifice himself for his people and
the 
ideals he believed in.  A decent human being.  One of the few truly good

guys in the badness that is war.  I'll be thinking of him this day, July

17th, and hoping that he knows that we who know of him have not
forgotten.


                                         Sandy Marquette

                     **********************



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