Libmonster ID: RS-592
Author(s) of the publication: A. V. KIRILLOV

On the eve and during the Second World War, when Hitler's Germany, having seized the countries of Central and South-Eastern Europe, wanted to enslave or physically destroy their population, the idea of unity of Slavic peoples was revived on a new basis and became widespread, resulting in the Slavic solidarity movement. Historical traditions, the common fate of the peoples of this region as victims of fascist aggression, their struggle for national independence, against a common enemy - these are the factors that served as the basis of the movement. At the head of the Slavic solidarity movement of those years was the All-Slavic Committee in Moscow , an international democratic public organization based on the platform of anti-fascist unity. 1
The history of the committee dates back to the All-Slavic rally held in Moscow on August 10-11, 1941. As Z. recalled: Firlinger, who was at that time Czechoslovakia's ambassador to the USSR, initiated the meeting from a group of Slavic public figures living in the USSR. This initiative was supported by the Soviet government and broad circles of the international anti-fascist public. The meeting was opened by the writer A. N. Tolstoy. He stressed the need to unite the Slavic peoples to fight Hitlerism, saying that freedom is not brought on a golden platter, it is taken with weapons in hand. Then representatives of Russian, Ukrainian, Belarusian, Polish, Serbian, Croatian, Slovenian, Montenegrin, Czech, Slovak, Bulgarian and other peoples, as well as German anti-fascists, made speeches. All of them warmly supported the idea of the unity of the Slavs. The participants adopted an appeal calling on the Slavic peoples to unite in order to defeat fascism as soon as possible. The Slavic Solidarity movement was declared open to all patriotic individuals, regardless of their social background, philosophical and political views, or religious beliefs .2
At the All-Slavic rally, the issue of creating a permanent body of this movement, the All - Slavic Committee, was also raised. Its organizational formalization took place in October 1941 at the constituent assembly of representatives of the public of the Slavic peoples. 3 A. S. Gundorov4 , a member of the party since 1915, an active participant in the Great October Socialist Revolution and the Civil War, head of the Military Engineering Academy, Lieutenant General, was elected chairman of the committee. Vice-chairmen were: outstanding Czech scientist, Professor of Charles University (in the People's Czechoslovakia-President of the Czech Academy of Sciences and Arts, Minister of Social Security and Education) Zdenek Needlyu; famous writer (later Chairman of the Union of Polish Patriots in the USSR), Vice-Chairman of the Polish National Liberation Committee Wanda Vasilevskaya; Serbian Professor Bozhidar Maslarich; Bulgarian public figure Alexander Stoyanov; Soviet Ukrainian playwright Alexander Korneychuk. The committee includes representatives of Russian, Belarusian, Slovak, Montenegrin and other Slavic peoples.

Most of the committee members left for the front or were evacuated from Moscow shortly after the rally. Regular activities of the committee began as early as the end of March 1942 in connection with the preparation of the Second World War-

1 M. V. Kuyan. Діяльність Всеслов'янського Комітету по згуртуванню антифашистських сил (1941 -1945 рр.). "Украінський історичний журнал", 1970, N 7; Л. Б. Валев, В. В. Марьина, Г. М. Славин. The All-Slavic Committee and the Liberation Movement of Foreign Slavic Peoples during the Second World War. "History, culture, ethnography and folklore of the Slavic peoples", Moscow, 1973.

2 "Pravda", 12. VIII. 1941.

3 TsGAOR USSR, f. 6646, op. 1, d. I, l. 1.

4 For more information, see: A. S. Gundorov. Mobilized by the Revolution, Moscow, 1968.

page 208

A. S. Gundorov was also on various sectors of the front-he led one of the Moscow defense sectors, commanded sapper units, and headed the engineering service of the Moscow Air Defense Front 6 . Only in the autumn of 1942 did he re-join the work of the All-Slavic Committee. Prior to that, the committee was actually headed by Z. Needly7 . In April 1942, a regulation was approved that defined the essence and main tasks of the All-Slavic Committee and its organizational structure.

From the very beginning, the committee attached great importance to establishing contacts with the national liberation movement in Slavic countries, with foreign progressive Slavic organizations and the press. Establishing direct contacts with the people's liberation movement in the Slavic countries that were under the Fascist yoke was fraught with enormous difficulties. Therefore, the committee had connections mainly with progressive organizations of Slavic emigration in the United States, Canada, Latin America, and Australia. Requests, letters, and telegrams were sent to them. The difficulty of this work was that, for example, the official bodies of the Polish and Yugoslav emigrant governments had a negative attitude towards such contacts; there was tacit but very tangible opposition to the committee's actions from the United States, England, and Argentina; a number of Slavic nationalist organizations in exile openly spoke out under the flag of the struggle of ideologies against the unity of Slavic peoples. Thus, the national Committee of the American Slavic Congress for a long time did not express a desire to establish ties with the All-Slavic Committee. However, the growth of the latter's international prestige forced the Slavic Congress to change its position. In April 1943, he sent a telegram to Moscow saying, among other things:"We are proud of the remarkable work that your committee has done in bringing unity and cooperation among the Slavs of Europe." 8 Telegrams expressing solidarity and support for the All-Slavic Committee and recognition of its services in the struggle for the anti-fascist unity of Slavic peoples were also received from the Canadian All-Slavic Association, the All-Slavic Conference in London, the United Slavic Committee of Australia, the Coordinating Slavic Committee of Uruguay and many other organizations .9
The activities of the All-Slavic Committee were also aimed at strengthening ties with the people's liberation and partisan movement in the Slavic countries occupied by Hitler's Germany, at establishing contacts with Slavic committees, state and public organizations and figures of those countries from whose territory the aggressor was expelled with the help of the Red Army .10 The Committee established contacts with the liberated areas of Yugoslavia, with the Union of Polish Patriots in the USSR and the Polish Committee for National Liberation, the Slovak National Council 11 . He organized receptions for government delegations from Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Poland, as well as individual state and public figures, including K. Gottwald, I. Broz Tito, B. Berut, E. Benes and others .12 The All-Slavic Committee has particularly close ties with the Slavic committees of Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, and Poland formed in 1944-1945, which joined the platform of the All - Slavic Committee .13 Typical in this respect is a letter sent on September 26, 1944 to the All-Slavic Committee by the Slavic Committee of Bulgaria. It read: "The first meeting of our Slavic Committee decided to ask the All-Slavic Committee in Moscow to accept our committee as a member and formalize us as a section of your committee... The program of the Moscow All-Slavic Committee will be our main program " 14 . By the end of 1945, the committee had established and maintained regular contacts with 130 foreign Slavic organizations and organizations. -

6 TsGAOR USSR, f. 6646, op. 1, d. 1, l. 18; f. 8581, op. 1, d. 97, l. 92.

6 "Krasnaya Zvezda", 7. XII. 1973.

7 A. S. Gundorov. A tireless public figure. "Zdenek Needli-an outstanding public figure and scientist", Moscow, 1964, p. 146.

8 TsGAOR USSR, f. 6646, op. 1, d. 98, l. 34.

9 Ibid., d. 4, l. 15; d. 7, l. 33; d. 17, l. 32; d. 21, l. 63; d. 51, l. 27; op. 2, d. 18, ll. 84, 130, 137.

10 Ibid., op. 1, 72, l. 1.

11 Ibid., 73, l. 5; 90, ll. 2, 4, 6, 7, 13, 197; d. 83, l. 24; d. 88, l. 22; d. 23, l. 8.

12 Ibid., d. 98, ll. 10-11.

13 Ibid., 74, l. 8; 69, l. 104.

14 Ibid., 69, l. 104.

page 209

still with 230 15 . He became a recognized leader of the Slavic solidarity movement.

The activities of the All-Slavic Committee were supported by the communist parties of the Slavic countries, who considered the idea of unity of their peoples as a political platform for uniting various patriotic strata of the population in the struggle against fascism16, and the Slavic solidarity movement - as a specific form of the united anti-Fascist Popular Front, as an integral part of the Resistance movement. Along with non-partisan public figures, prominent representatives of the Communist parties of Slavic countries (G. Dimitrov, K. Gottwald, V. Kolarov, I. Broz Tito, G. Gusak and others)took part in the committee's events17 . Ya., a member of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the CHR, actively worked in the committee. Shverma. Joined the All-Slavic Committee in October 1943, he spoke at many of its plenums, prepared articles for the press and radio, appeals to the Slavic peoples. His articles "The Struggle of the Slavs against the German Invaders" and "The Idea of Slavic Solidarity in Czech Politics"were of great importance for revealing the essence of the Slavic solidarity movement .18 A significant contribution to the work of the All-Slavic Committee was made by the well-known Bulgarian social activist Stella Blagoeva (daughter of the founder of the BKP Dimitar Blagoev)19 . All this increased the authority of the committee, strengthened the political orientation of its activities, and contributed to the broad involvement of the popular masses of Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Poland, and Bulgaria in the struggle for national and social liberation.

One of the most important and most effective forms of activity of the All-Slavic Committee was the holding of All-Slavic meetings. The Second All-Slavic Meeting, held in Moscow on April 4 and 5, 1942, called on the Slavic peoples to actively fight fascism, outlined specific forms of it, and set clear tasks for individual Slavic peoples and categories of the population. An even more important role was played by the Third All-Slavic Rally on May 9, 1943. It was attended by over 2 thousand people. Speakers at the rally spoke about the difficult situation of the Slavic peoples under the Fascist yoke, the growth of the partisan movement behind enemy lines, and the need to further expand the scale of armed resistance to the Nazi invaders. "The Czech people have always held Slavic solidarity in high esteem... We vow not to stop fighting until Hitlerism is wiped off the face of the earth, until the sun of freedom shines on our homeland," said the commander of the 1st Czechoslovak separate infantry battalion in the USSR, L. Svoboda 20 . The participants of the rally appealed to the peoples of the Slavic countries to disrupt Hitler's "total mobilization" measures, to launch a nationwide struggle against fascism in all Slavic countries on the basis of strengthening national and inter-Slavic unity .21 All-Slavic rallies caused a huge political resonance all over the world. Thus, the Third All-Slavic rally received more than 250 greetings from public organizations of the USSR, the Central Committee of the CPYU, the Executive Committee of the Anti-Fascist Veche of the People's Liberation of Yugoslavia, the commander of the NOAI I. Broz Tito, the Central Committee of the Polish Workers ' Party, the General Staff of Polish Partisan Detachments, the State Council of Czechoslovakia, Ukrainian, Belarusian and Polish partisan detachments, progressive organizations of Slavic emigration in the USA, Canada, Latin America, Australia, and New Zealand. "We are confident that... The activities of the All-Slavic Rally will give our peoples new strength in these most difficult days of life-and-death struggle, " the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine telegraphed 22 . The Central Committee of the Polish Workers ' Party in its greeting noted that Polish patriots see in the military friendship with the Slavic peoples, first of all with the peoples of the USSR, the only guarantee of an early victory over fascism and the conquest of a free and independent Poland .23. Materials of the Shiro rally-

15 Ibid., 74, l. 3.

16 A. I. Nedorezov. Socio-political significance of the solidarity of the Slavic peoples during the Second World War. ."History, culture, ethnography and folklore of Slavic peoples", p. 39.

17 TsGAOR USSR, f. 6646, op. 1, d. 1, ll. 11, 44, 54; d. 22, l. 1; d. 23, l. 1; d. 24, l. 13; d. 33, ll. 30, 31, 45, etc.

18 "Communist International", 1942, No. 5; "Slavs", 1944, No. 5.

19 R. T. Ablova. Cooperation between the Soviet and Bulgarian peoples in the struggle against fascism. 1941-1945, Moscow, 1973, p. 127.

20 TsGAOR USSR, f. 6646, op. 1, d. 19, l. 17.

21 "Slavs", 1943, N 5, p. 6.

22 TsGAOR USSR, f. 6646, op. 2, d. 12, l. 18.

23 Ibid., op. 1, d. 50, ll. 38-39.

page 210

They were covered in newspapers of the USSR, as well as in partisan combat leaflets, the underground press of Slavic countries, in the press of England, the USA, Canada, Latin America, Australia, Turkey, and Sweden. They were broadcast by the radio stations of the Communist parties of the Slavic countries, all European sections of the BBC 24 .

The All-Slavic Committee carried out propaganda work to promote the heroic struggle of the peoples of the USSR, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Poland against fascism, the community of Slavic peoples, and to expose the misanthropic and anti-Slavic ideology and practice of German fascism. The forms of this work were very diverse. Much attention was paid to transmitting materials and articles prepared by committee members and sections to foreign Slavic newspapers and radio stations. The demand for them was huge. The committee received numerous letters and telegrams requesting that such materials be sent more and more frequently .25 For example, a letter from Naprijed, the organ of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Croatia, dated April 13, 1945, said: "A month ago we received from you the first articles for our newspaper. Both articles were published... You ask us how our readers received your articles about Soviet cities. We think that you do not need to be convinced how fervently and ardently our people love their Russian brothers and all the other peoples of the great Soviet fatherland. We are happy and interested in all the news about your life. " 26 And there are many such examples. Articles prepared by the committee were published in Czechoslovak, Bulgarian, Polish, Yugoslav, American, Canadian, Argentine, and Australian newspapers and magazines .27 Thus, in 1945, 74 newspapers of Slavic countries and 55 newspapers and magazines published by emigrant Slavic organizations received materials from the Committee of 28 . A total of 2,050 articles and materials were sent abroad in 1942-1946 .29 A wide variety of radio propaganda was carried out on a large scale. During the period of the committee's activity, 6087 speeches were broadcast .30
The All-Slavic Committee paid much attention to publishing activities: printing leaflets, pamphlets, documents of All-Slavic meetings, etc. Since June 1942, with a circulation of 4 thousand copies. The Slavs magazine began to appear. It was received in 17 countries 31 . Among the authors of the journal are prominent state and public figures of the USSR (M. I. Kalinin, A. F. Gorkin, M. S. Grechukha, P. K. Ponomarenko) and fraternal Slavic countries (V. Kolarov, S. Blagoeva, I. Broz Tito, J. Shverma, E. Benes, K. Georgiev, D. Vlakhov, S. Yendrikhovsky, Z. Modzelevsky), military leaders (A. I. Eremenko, P. S. Rybalko, L. Svoboda, Z. Berling), scientists (A. Bogomolets, T. Pavlov, E. Medynsky, V. Pertsev, N. Korobkov, Yu. Leonov), writers (Vs. Ivanov, I. Ehrenburg, A. Korneychuk), most members of the All-Slavic Committee. In a short period of time, the magazine has gained great popularity. The committee received numerous requests from foreign Slavic magazines and newspapers to expel " Slavs "in exchange for their publications. 32
The All-Slavic Committee carried out a great deal of work in the formations formed on the territory of the USSR: the Polish divisions named after T. Kosciuszko, G. Dombrowski, R. Traugutt, the 1st and 2nd brigades of the Czechoslovak Corps, the Yugoslav separate Brigade. Its delegations regularly went to the army, attended the celebrations of taking the oath of office by soldiers of these formations and handing over banners to them, parades, rallies in connection with sending to the front, etc. Members of the committee V. Vlakhovich, B. Maslarich, A. Zavadsky, V. Vasilevskaya and others conducted constant propaganda work among the personnel of military units. 33 To strengthen the combat solidarity of soldiers and officers of the Red Army, Slavic military units in the USSR and partisans, the rally of Slavic soldiers on February 23-24, 1944 was of great importance. The Committee also organized various cultural events dedicated to significant dates in the history of the Slavic peoples. At solemn meetings, evenings, and meetings, he popularized the idea of democracy.-

24 Ibid., ll. 37, 44; d. 4, ll. 23-24; f. 8581, op. 1, d. 101, ll. 35-37.

25 Ibid., f. 6646, op. 1, d. 15, ll. 6, 7, 9, 23, 33, 36. 38, 47, 63, 72, 80, 90, 115, 153, 165, 182; 45, l. 84; 47, ll. 4, 6, 9, 15, 26, 64; d. 48, ll. 4, 12, 16, 35; d. 69, l. 32; d. 72, ll. 12, 15, etc.

26 Ibid., d. 90, l. 117.

27 Ibid., d. 72. ll. 12-14; d. 73, ll. 61-62; d. 98, l. 123.

28 Ibid., 72, l. 11.

29 Ibid., d. 98, l. 92.

30 Ibid., l. 97.

31 Ibid., d. 4, l. 51.

32 Ibid., f. 8581, op. 1, d. 101, ll. 28-30.

33 Ibid., f. 6646, op. 1, d. 74, l. 2.

page 211

historical and revolutionary traditions of these peoples, their contribution to the development of world culture 34 .

In early March 1945, the Slavonic Cathedral in Sofia was held to celebrate the 67th anniversary of the liberation of Bulgaria from the Ottoman yoke. The Council was convened on the initiative of the Bulgarian Slavic Committee. A delegation of the All-Slavic Committee headed by A. S. Gundorov and members of the Slavic National Committees arrived in Sofia. On the opening day of the cathedral, a demonstration of workers took place, welcoming foreign guests and expressing their commitment to the idea of Slavic solidarity. The Council adopted a proclamation in which it emphasized the solidity and inviolability of the unity and friendship of the Slavic peoples. Representatives of the Slavic peoples present at the council vowed to continue to strengthen this friendship as a guarantee of their strength and invincibility, a guarantee of freedom and independence, and to continue the fight against fascism until its complete destruction .35 The Council was of great importance for consolidating the unity of the Slavic peoples, mobilizing them to defeat fascism and implement democratic transformations, and raising the international prestige of Bulgaria.

In the context of the political division of the various classes and social groups involved in the Resistance movement that took place at the end of World War II, the committee strongly supported the democratic wing of this movement and sided with the workers of Yugoslavia, Poland, Bulgaria and Czechoslovakia, who were not only for national liberation, but also for radical socio-political transformations. The sixth extended Plenum of the Committee, held on 16-17 October 1943, was of the utmost importance in this regard. The Plenum heard information from the Vice-Chairman of the committee B. Maslarich about the work of the Yugoslav patriots; called on the generals, officers and soldiers of the PLA, the Yugoslav partisans to further strengthen the struggle for freedom and happiness of their country; condemned the treacherous role of D. Mikhailovich, the official representative of the emigrant government, and his Chetniks, who often acted in concert with the invaders. 36 The Plenum reviewed and approved the activities of the Union of Polish Patriots in the USSR. Greetings were sent to the officers and soldiers of the 1st Polish Corps in the USSR and the Czechoslovak Brigade, and an appeal was made to the Bulgarian people, in which it was noted that for Bulgaria there is only one way to prevent a national catastrophe-a decisive break with Germany. The plenum marked the beginning of a new stage in the work of the committee, when the Slavic solidarity movement began to define more specifically its tasks in the cause of not only the defeat of fascism and the national revival of the Slavic peoples, but also their social liberation.

The All-Slavic Committee welcomed the formation and activities of the Anti-Fascist Veche of the People's Liberation of Yugoslavia, the People's Liberation Committee of Yugoslavia, the Polish National Council-the Home Rada of Narodova, the Polish National Liberation Committee, the Provisional Government of Poland - the "truly people's Government"37 . He approved the "Kosice Program" developed by the Czechoslovak Communists, which provided for the development of Czechoslovakia as a people's democratic state, 38 and received with deep satisfaction the news of the overthrow of the monarcho - fascist dictatorship in Bulgaria as a result of the victory of the national armed uprising on September 9, 1944. All this contributed to the formation of public opinion among wide circles of various countries of the world in support of the revolutionary and democratic transformations carried out by the peoples of the Slavic countries, exposing the traitorous role of the Yugoslav and Polish emigrant governments in London and the monarcho-fascist government of Bulgaria.

The All-Slavic Committee continued to function even after the end of World War II, as the Slavic solidarity movement remained a real political factor, an important pillar.-

34 Ibid., d. 98, ll. 10-12.

35 "Славянски събор в София 3 март 1945 година". Възпоменателен сборник. Sophia. 1945, ar. 73.

36 Archive of the Central Museum of the Revolution of the USSR, 37830/11, G-91, 7-11y.

37 TsGAOR USSR, f. 6646, op. 1, d. 34, ll. 37-38; d. 89, l. 3; f. 8581, op. 1, d. 101, l. 42; "Slavs", 1944, N 1, p. 46; N 5, p. 28.

38 TsGAOR USSR, f. 6646, op. 1, d. 98, l. 10.

page 212

world 39 . The main directions of its activity during this period were the further strengthening of the unity, friendship and alliance of the Slavic peoples, their mobilization for the moral and political defeat of reactionary agents in their countries and the consolidation of democratic gains, and the struggle for peace in Europe and throughout the world .40 The most important event of this period was the Slavic Congress, which took place on December 8-11, 1945 in Belgrade and defined the tasks of the Slavic movement at a new stage. Among its participants were G. Gusak, Z. Needlyi, S. Blagoeva, M. Shvermova, I. Ribar, F. I. Tolbukhin, S. A. Kovpak, A. S. Gundorov. The delegates highly appreciated the activities of the All-Slavic Committee in Moscow aimed at uniting the Slavic peoples and strengthening their friendship. At the suggestion of S. Blagoeva, a resolution was adopted approving its five-year activity .41 In connection with the fulfillment of its tasks and the formation of an All-Slavic Committee at the Slavic Congress (with a seat in Belgrade) The All-Slavic Committee in Moscow was transformed in March 1947 into the Slavic Committee of the USSR with two national branches - in Kiev and Minsk. The friendly relations of the Slavic peoples, which were strengthened during the joint struggle against fascism, were further developed in the post-war period, enriched with new social content and acquired a deeper meaning.

39 G. Dimitrov. Selected Works, vol. II, Moscow, 1957, pp. 76-77, 320.

40 TsGAOR USSR, f. 6646, op. 1, d. 4, ll. 59-60.

41 Ibid., d. 93, l. 302.

page 213


© library.rs

Permanent link to this publication:

https://library.rs/m/articles/view/ALL-SLAVIC-COMMITTEE

Similar publications: LSerbia LWorld Y G


Publisher:

Andrija PutnikContacts and other materials (articles, photo, files etc)

Author's official page at Libmonster: https://library.rs/Putnik

Find other author's materials at: Libmonster (all the World)GoogleYandex

Permanent link for scientific papers (for citations):

A. V. KIRILLOV, ALL-SLAVIC COMMITTEE // Belgrade: Library of Serbia (LIBRARY.RS). Updated: 19.01.2025. URL: https://library.rs/m/articles/view/ALL-SLAVIC-COMMITTEE (date of access: 08.02.2025).

Found source (search robot):


Publication author(s) - A. V. KIRILLOV:

A. V. KIRILLOV → other publications, search: Libmonster SerbiaLibmonster WorldGoogleYandex

Comments:



Reviews of professional authors
Order by: 
Per page: 
 
  • There are no comments yet
Related topics
Publisher
Andrija Putnik
Белград, Serbia
44 views rating
19.01.2025 (20 days ago)
0 subscribers
Rating
0 votes
Related Articles
"A WORD ABOUT IGOR'S REGIMENT" IN THE "EXPERIENCE OF NARRATION ABOUT RUSSIA" BY I. P. ELAGIN
7 days ago · From Andrija Putnik
DRUZHINA AND THE GENESIS OF FEUDALISM IN RUSSIA
Catalog: История 
7 days ago · From Andrija Putnik
Many of you and your associates are operating in the hundreds of thousands, possibly millions y.e. This is about your transactions... Direct or Indirect or Potential. Not so long ago, many of you became players in "Cybereconomics". In a fundamentally new transformation of the digital world, about which many of us are still little known.. Purchase and exchange of fiat money, work on the transformation of fiat money into cryptocurrency. Buying a car, apartments, loans from financial institutions... Et cetera. There are lucky people who work in their own business or act as investors.
Catalog: Экономика 
LITTLE-KNOWN HERO OF BORODIN
Catalog: История 
10 days ago · From Andrija Putnik
THE IDEA OF SLAVIC UNITY IN THE SOCIAL THOUGHT OF PRE-REFORM RUSSIA
10 days ago · From Andrija Putnik
A. M. STANISLAVSKAYA. POLITICHESKAYA DEYATEL'NOST ' F. F. USHAKOV V GREKE [POLITICAL ACTIVITY OF F. F. USHAKOV IN GREECE]. 1798-1800
10 days ago · From Andrija Putnik
DEVELOPMENT OF ETHNIC IDENTITY OF SLAVIC PEOPLES IN THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES
10 days ago · From Andrija Putnik
NEW DOCUMENTS AND OLD FICTIONS ABOUT THE ROLE OF THE BALKANS IN THE EMERGENCE OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR
Catalog: История 
10 days ago · From Andrija Putnik
SOVIET-GERMAN FRONT AND MILITARY OPERATIONS IN THE WEST (DECEMBER 1944-JANUARY 1945)
10 days ago · From Andrija Putnik
"REMEMBERING YOUR FATHERLAND..."
10 days ago · From Andrija Putnik

New publications:

Popular with readers:

News from other countries:

LIBRARY.RS - Serbian Digital Library

Create your author's collection of articles, books, author's works, biographies, photographic documents, files. Save forever your author's legacy in digital form. Click here to register as an author.
Library Partners

ALL-SLAVIC COMMITTEE
 

Editorial Contacts
Chat for Authors: RS LIVE: We are in social networks:

About · News · For Advertisers

Serbian Digital Library ® All rights reserved.
2014-2025, LIBRARY.RS is a part of Libmonster, international library network (open map)
Keeping the heritage of Serbia


LIBMONSTER NETWORK ONE WORLD - ONE LIBRARY

US-Great Britain Sweden Serbia
Russia Belarus Ukraine Kazakhstan Moldova Tajikistan Estonia Russia-2 Belarus-2

Create and store your author's collection at Libmonster: articles, books, studies. Libmonster will spread your heritage all over the world (through a network of affiliates, partner libraries, search engines, social networks). You will be able to share a link to your profile with colleagues, students, readers and other interested parties, in order to acquaint them with your copyright heritage. Once you register, you have more than 100 tools at your disposal to build your own author collection. It's free: it was, it is, and it always will be.

Download app for Android