Milan Bulajić

Milan Bulajić (Serbian Cyrillic: Милан Булајић; 6 September 1928 – 29 November 2009) was a Serbian historian, expert in Holocaust studies, and Yugoslavian diplomat. He was one of the founders of the Museum of Genocide Victims and Fund for Genocide Research (Fond za istraživanje genocida) in Belgrade, and The International Commission for the Truth on Jasenovac.

Bulajić was born in Vilusi near Nikšić (now in Montenegro), the son of an educated worker and grandson of a barjaktar (flag-bearer) in the Montenegrin Army and later government deputy. He joined the Yugoslav Partisans at the start of World War II. He finished the Law Faculty in Belgrade in 1951 and received a master's degree at the journalist-diplomat school in 1952, as the best in class. He received the doctoral degree in 1953. In the period of 1949–1987 he worked as an envoy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He was pensioned in 1987.

The sociologist Jovan Byford emphasized that Milan Bulajić belonged to a group of authors whose works support the Serbian side against the Croatian side in a "war of words" which became propaganda war after the involvement of various state Ministries. A group of authors depicted genocidal nature of Croatian nationalism, as well as the role of the Catholic church in the genocide committed in WWII, while denying the existence of any form of anti-Semitism in Serbia.[1]

Works

References

  1. Byford, Jovan (2011). Staro sajmište: mesto sećanja, zaborava i sporenja. Beogradski centar za ljudska prava. p. 147, ISBN 978-86-7202-131-8.
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