SDP: On this day in 1943, the painful injustice inflicted on Montenegro in 1918 was corrected.

"The pages of our glorious history were written in golden letters with the uprising against the fascist occupation in Yugoslavia, and November 29, 1943 represents the date when, in the heat of the fight for freedom, the construction of a modern Yugoslav state, based on the principles of equality and the equality of its peoples, began."

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Photo: SDP
Photo: SDP
Disclaimer: The translations are mostly done through AI translator and might not be 100% accurate.

Led by the arc of the anti-fascist struggle for freedom, the delegates at the Second Session of the Anti-Fascist Council for the People's Liberation of Yugoslavia (AVNOJ) decided that Yugoslavia should be organized as a state community of equal peoples, thereby correcting the painful injustice inflicted on Montenegro in 1918 when its statehood was forcibly abolished. the church and the banished Montenegrin sovereign.

This was announced by the Social Democratic Party of Montenegro (SDP) on the occasion of November 29, the former Republic Day.

"With the uprising against the fascist occupation in Yugoslavia, the pages of our glorious history were written in golden letters, and November 29, 1943 represents the date when, in the heat of the fight for freedom, the construction of a modern Yugoslav state based on the principles of equality and the equality of its peoples began," adds the SDP in announcement.

With the constitution of Yugoslavia as an equal community, as they state, the path to the reconstruction and development of all its republics destroyed in the Second World War began, and it is safe to say that in numerous segments socialist Yugoslavia represented the greatest achievements of our peoples in their history.

They add that while preserving anti-fascism and the National Liberation Struggle (NOB) as our brightest value, they have an obligation to constantly remember the Montenegrin delegates who at this session contributed to the constitution of Yugoslavia as a state where everyone will be equal, free and accepted by others.

"And they are: Arso Jovanović, pop Blažo Marković, Gojko Garčević, Ivan Milutinović, Joksim Radović, Marko Vujačić, Mihailo Vicković, Obrad Cicmil, Pero Krstajić, Petar Leković and Radonja Golubović. We remember and keep the sacrifice that our heroes made for the freedom of Montenegro and Yugoslavia. Death to fascism, freedom to the people," the announcement concludes.

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