Krsta Cicvarić
Krsta Cicvarić was a Serbian political activist and journalist. During the first decade of the 20th century, he espoused anarcho-syndicalist ideas. However, later in his life, Cicvarić was the editor of several openly antisemitic tabloid journals, and a Nazi collaborator.
He was executed on 31 October 1944 by the Yugoslav Partisans after the Belgrade Offensive.
Biography
Early life and education
Krsta Cicvarić was born on 14 September 1879 in the village of Nikojevići near Užice, the son of Zaharije and Jovanka. He attended primary school in Mačkat and his earliest known writing includes an article from this period.He attended the Užice Gymnasium for four years but left in 1896 following a conflict with his physics teacher and prominent Radical, Nastas Petrović. He then moved to Belgrade, where he completed the final two years of gymnasium. Afterward, he enrolled as a part-time student of philosophy, first in Vienna and later at the Velika škola in Belgrade.
In 1898, Cicvarić described himself as a Marxist in several letters to his cousin, Dimitrije Tucović. In these letters, he sided with Georgi Plekhanov in the debate over Eduard Bernstein's revisionism. According to Rafajlo Ješić, Cicvarić likely came into contact with anarchist ideas between 1898 and 1901, and he notes contemporaneous reports of increased anarchist influence among miners in the Podrinje region.
Ješić writes that by 1902 Cicvarić was already a committed anarchist and that he broke with Marxists who had previously been his associates. Tucović claimed that Cicvarić had repeatedly attempted to join the Serbian Social Democratic Party, but that his attempts were rejected because of his anarchist views. Tucović also wrote that Cicvarić was stopped from attending the party's Second Congress and that he was expelled from the party's Fifth Congress in 1907 on the initiative of the party president Dragiša Lapčević, with the approval of the congress.
Anarchist political activism
Cicvarić was arrested and imprisoned several times for his writings. In 1905 Vasilije Knežević, a member of Cicvarić's group the Equality Workers' Club founded the anarchist newspaper Bread and Freedom. Soon after, Knežević started to pay heavy fines for the paper and was imprisoned due to his inability to cover his debts. In this period Cicvarić took over the paper. The paper had only three issues, and Knežević moved to Valjevo after serving his sentence, disillusioned with the anarchists Cicvarić and Petar Munjić. Cicvarić and Munjić later founded the anarchist paper Worker's Struggle in 1907. The paper was closed down after the events related to the strike led by sugar workers in Čukarica in February 1907. Cicvarić was imprisoned in Požarevac because of his writing and was later released during the Annexation Crisis in 1908.In 1911 Cicvarić met Nedeljko Čabrinović who was working on the printing press owned by Živojin Dačić, where Civarić's paper the New Age was being printed. Cicvarić gave Čabrinović many books including all of his own works. Čabrinović later smuggled the books to Sarajevo where some were burned by his mother, while some were kept safe and were given to his friends as gifts. From 1911 to 1915, Cicvarić published the daily The Guard, the "free-minded organ of public thought".
Cicvarić was drafted during the Balkan Wars. He is mentioned by Leon Trotsky in his war correspondence The Balkan Wars: 1912–13 as a "free anarchist" and publisher of The Guard, and as an outspoken critic of the Serbian Social Democratic Party. He writes "Since, in this little country, everyone knows everyone else and does not hesitate to poke his nose into the private lives of his political adversaries, the polemic against the leaders of Social Democracy is carried on in a form that would not bear translation into any European language". He was drafted again in World War I, and surrendered, becoming a prisoner of war of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in Neusiedl am See.
Tabloid journalism and Nazi collaboration
After World War I, he started writing for Belgrade Daily, owned by Dušan Paranos and whose editor-in-chief was Mehmed Žunić. At first, he wrote introductory articles and was the chief polemicist. On 7 August 1922 he was signed as editor and director of the paper. From September 1922 on, the paper bore the title Krsta Cicvarić's Belgrade Daily. His main target were the Radicals, as well as Nikola Pašić and Stojan Protić as heads of the party. Pašić was a "thug", "scumbag", "villain" and, ultimately, "the most corrupt person in the entire history of Serbia", and when his son Radomir was beaten, Belgrade Daily wrote that "this act of the youth of the nation in Novi Sad is understandable and must be fully approved". His journalistic writing style in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia was inflammatory, and his scandalous articles were criticized by many, so much that he was even compared with the influential American newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst.In 1929 Cicvarić started working in Balkan, owned by Svetolik Savić. Besides journalism, he sold herbs used for treating cancer, tuberculosis, epilepsy, and anthrax. Since Pašić had already died, Cicvarić's main target was president of the Croatian Peasant Party, Vlatko Maček who he calls a "Jewish bastard", and a "long-nose". In his text "To Serbs of the Faith of Moses" from 29 April 1936 Cicvarić writes that "the Jews have ruined our Slavic motherland, Russia, and have spread their evil across the world" and states support for Adolf Hitler.
He spent the final years of his life living in Belgrade, almost completely blind. From May 1940 to March 1941, Savić and Cicvarić published the New Balkan, an antisemitic paper sympathetic to Hitler. In 1944 he writes