Why were the Yugoslav Partisans so Effective? (Short Animated Documentary)

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  • čas přidán 12. 06. 2024
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    Why were the Yugoslav Partisans so good? They had something to fight for, weren't exclusively Serbian, hid in the mountains and had an ideology.

Komentáře • 5K

  • @guillaumegiroux9425
    @guillaumegiroux9425 Před 4 lety +16746

    Is hard to invade Yugoslavia because with all the forests and mountains, you don't know where yugo.

  • @Orthane
    @Orthane Před 4 lety +6444

    Tito: Unity is cool
    Literally 2 seconds after Tito's death: *Let's all kill each other over ethnic hatred*

    • @thefishoftruth235
      @thefishoftruth235 Před 4 lety +405

      *10 yrs after his death

    • @concept5631
      @concept5631 Před 4 lety +250

      @@thefishoftruth235 That makes it better.

    • @Luka__1
      @Luka__1 Před 4 lety +153

      shut the fuck up, please, just shut the fuck up

    • @damnman677
      @damnman677 Před 4 lety +222

      @Ksio fuck tito? he sent people who were nazis in ww2 to the bare island and other nazis. just like it should be done.

    • @RafitoOoO
      @RafitoOoO Před 4 lety +266

      Turns out everybody hated each other and only didn't do a thing when he was alive because they feared and respected him A LOT.

  • @idontknowwhatmypfpis1918
    @idontknowwhatmypfpis1918 Před 3 lety +3285

    Imagine being such a bad resistance that the side you’re fighting aids you to help fight another resistance

    • @aleksmalalan5478
      @aleksmalalan5478 Před 2 lety +49

      😂😂

    • @mevsworld3074
      @mevsworld3074 Před 2 lety +13

      LOL

    • @johnythecookedsteak4819
      @johnythecookedsteak4819 Před 2 lety +213

      Well, yes but mainly because chetniks couldn’t recive equipment and ammunition from communists because partisans did and they were not in the greatest relaitons with the allies (despite the yugoslav goverment being pro allied) so the didn’t recieve equipment from them either, because of this they were “collaborating” with the axis to keep their units supplied and well equiped and simply waited for allies to invade balkan.
      They would use that as a perfect time to revolt and aid allies in driving axis out of the balkans.
      Also Chetniks weren’t a single resistance group.
      They were different groups that were remanants of the Yugoslav army and some chetnik groups collaborated with the Axis, others were fighting against the axis, but the most famous and largest chetnik movement was one led bi Draža Mihajlović (as his name is spelled that way in my country) that was the only chetnik movement that was collaborating to keep itself alive while in the same time waiting for perfect opportuniti to revolt.
      I am croatian so I know something about this since it is related to our history in the 20th century.

    • @thearbiter3351
      @thearbiter3351 Před 2 lety +70

      @@johnythecookedsteak4819 finally a non serb who knows the truth about it, pozdrav

    • @johnythecookedsteak4819
      @johnythecookedsteak4819 Před 2 lety +46

      @@thearbiter3351 Pozdrav iz Zagreba

  • @zarkozi
    @zarkozi Před 3 lety +5677

    We kept the Germans out so successfuly so that 80 years later we would beg to move to Germany for labor lol.

    • @nemanjaras
      @nemanjaras Před 3 lety +457

      80 years later? Tito begged West German government to accept workers from Yugoslavia already in the 1960s. 20 years after the war.

    • @felsachat7931
      @felsachat7931 Před 3 lety +402

      @@nemanjaras Begging is the wrong word, it was a economic pact. Yugoslavs had work and Germany had workers in sectors where workers were missing

    • @vvkth2500
      @vvkth2500 Před 3 lety +291

      @@felsachat7931 And mind you, many were high quality engineers and technicians. Yugoslav engineers practically built Egypt, Libya, Iraq..

    • @bojanstare8667
      @bojanstare8667 Před 3 lety +66

      @@nemanjaras Yes, because Germany haveb`t payed for all damages in Yugoslavi during WW2.

    • @mctavishsoap3815
      @mctavishsoap3815 Před 3 lety +135

      I don't see why you call 'begging for labor'. They have economic pact, on a fair negotiation, within the jurisdiction of int'l law. The labors are paid and protected by the economic deal. They work in sectors where they got comparative advantage (cheaper wage) and got paid - simply supply and demand. They're not forced labor. The economic deals are the results of having sovereignty, results of successfully pushing the Germans out.
      I swear I don't know why people are this stupid to recognize the difference. I feel so bad when people use this narration to talk about Eastern European workers. They work hard and legitimately and still being called 'begging for jobs' by some lazy ass Westerners.

  • @cespu_iv4519
    @cespu_iv4519 Před 4 lety +6881

    My granpa fought in WW2. He drove a train trought Yugoslavian territory to reach Albania and supply the italian troops in Greece. Every time he travelled a group of partisans would attack, and the guy who shot the machine gun would always die. Always, no execption. My granpa told me: "every time, I had to chose who died". They were so good they almost killed him when a bullet almost took him in the head, but killed his friend. He asked to be transeferd in Tunisia because he prefered to fight the Allies rather than the yugoslavian partisans

  • @DrewPicklesTheDark
    @DrewPicklesTheDark Před 3 lety +4326

    The virgin French resistance vs. the Chad Yugoslav resistance.

    • @testytesteberger6397
      @testytesteberger6397 Před 3 lety +152

      and yet, the French get all the glory...

    • @jake42731
      @jake42731 Před 3 lety +395

      @@testytesteberger6397 lol what glory, no one praises french resistance, they are made fun of for losing in 40 days and rightfully so

    • @glebb..3416
      @glebb..3416 Před 3 lety +139

      Also dont forget the soviet partizans who did much more than the French resistance.

    • @testytesteberger6397
      @testytesteberger6397 Před 3 lety +309

      @@glebb..3416 everyone did more than the French

    • @stevebeave9252
      @stevebeave9252 Před 3 lety +18

      @@jake42731 your à clown

  • @mathewc6707
    @mathewc6707 Před 3 lety +2534

    I’ve always wanted to know more about Yugoslavian Partisans because from what my grandma has told me my great grandpa was one.

    • @devinreis5811
      @devinreis5811 Před 3 lety +87

      That's bad-ass.

    • @kreso149
      @kreso149 Před 3 lety +25

      Fuck yugoslavia

    • @Tino1555
      @Tino1555 Před 3 lety +66

      @@kreso149 why?

    • @andrija2555
      @andrija2555 Před 3 lety +142

      @@Tino1555 partisans did massive number of revenge and hate fueled warcrimes based on all number of reasons. From raping women and little girls and roasting priest alive, to executing captured prisoners and killing entire families because their sons and fathers were drafted into army. They would steal supplies that people kept and if they tried to stop them, killed them in cold blood. They were brutal the same way as their enemies. But post war was bad aswell. Oppresion of national views during Tito to make "yugoslavians". If you shown any national views or criticise the goverment, communist party had a large number of snitches that reported you If you were lucky you would only lose your job, if not... It was a communist oppresive regime, not one system that oppreses the people it claims to want to protect and make prosperous lasts forever.

    • @OhioHater
      @OhioHater Před 3 lety +22

      @@andrija2555 holy shet,thats dark

  • @LEFT4BASS
    @LEFT4BASS Před 11 měsíci +43

    Another reason the Yugoslav resistance was so strong was because the Germans were so heavy-handed that they basically forced people into the resistance. Yugoslav resistance formed quickly, and Germany reacted by decreeing that 100 Yugoslav civilians would be killed for every German soldier killed. This backfired when the resistance used it to their advantage by wiping out German garrisons and recruiting the entire village since everyone knew that the Germans would murder them all anyway.
    It takes a brave person to fight when it puts them in danger, but even a coward will fight when it’s the only way to survive.

  • @Edmonton-of2ec
    @Edmonton-of2ec Před 4 lety +1217

    I actually did some digging and it turns out Draža Mihailović’s grandson Vojislav is actually the leader of a Serbian monarchist party, so I guess the family tradition continues

    • @CounterTheAnimatorocn1
      @CounterTheAnimatorocn1 Před 3 lety +208

      Tito's grandson is the head of the Communist Party in Serbia.

    • @misiknuo
      @misiknuo Před 3 lety +16

      He is stupid like his grandfather,never passed 10 % of votes...now he is in another party and they are sitting at 3.5 %

    • @misiknuo
      @misiknuo Před 3 lety +117

      @@CounterTheAnimatorocn1 Communist Party in Serbia is not even party anymore ,they are more like club now...

    • @vvkth2500
      @vvkth2500 Před 3 lety +38

      @@misiknuo like Elderly Society Club more like.

    • @nenadrajic9740
      @nenadrajic9740 Před 3 lety +35

      @@vvkth2500 I mean we god SPS and pokret socijalista tho, but the only socialism left there is in the names lmao

  • @insulam821
    @insulam821 Před 4 lety +1415

    2:44 that joke in the bottom right corner.... I’m still laughing

    • @kylemohs8728
      @kylemohs8728 Před 4 lety +42

      I completely overlooked that. XD

    • @warbeatler618
      @warbeatler618 Před 4 lety +12

      I don't get it. Can you explain?

    • @kylemohs8728
      @kylemohs8728 Před 4 lety +138

      @@warbeatler618 It would be unrealistic to ask him to show a quarter of a million people in this four minute cartoon.
      He shows four, and puts a disclaimer at the bottom of the screen saying the rest aren't shown which would be pretty obvious.

    • @warbeatler618
      @warbeatler618 Před 4 lety +37

      ​@@kylemohs8728 Ok, I thought there would some hidden meaning behind this like 250k being just propaganda and not actual army number or that some of them were just soviet troops in partisant uniforms etc.
      Guess I was overthinking it too much to realize it was just a simple joke :D

    • @tiagomd3811
      @tiagomd3811 Před 4 lety +26

      @@warbeatler618
      You fall too easy for capitalist propaganda

  • @filipvelkov6829
    @filipvelkov6829 Před 3 lety +322

    My great-grandfather got killed by the Bulgarians during WW2.
    Theres a small monument to him with his name on it in the mountains near where I’m from.
    Although its unkept and in remote location, its still something that amazes me.

    • @paintyxd
      @paintyxd Před 3 lety +25

      Even if it's in a place barely no one sees it, your great grandfather must have been a great man to get a statue to his name.

    • @filipvelkov6829
      @filipvelkov6829 Před 3 lety +21

      @@paintyxd Thanks, Im sure he was. My mom recently showed me a picture that a relative shared on Facebook (old people and their Facebook 😂😂) of the monument and a black and white picture of his face.

    • @Donald_Trump_2024
      @Donald_Trump_2024 Před 3 lety +1

      @@filipvelkov6829 Can you tell me more about it? I am really ectremely interested.

    • @b0xeRa
      @b0xeRa Před 3 lety +2

      А защо не се питаш, пра-дедо ти, колко ли българи е убил, криейки се в тревата? Партизаните са убийци и престъпници!

    • @stefandusan9629
      @stefandusan9629 Před 2 lety +1

      @@b0xeRa side switching italian

  • @dd82modeler15
    @dd82modeler15 Před 3 lety +62

    My Grandpa was with the partisans. He had been awarded (Spomenicar). He didn't talk much about that time. He fought in Drvar in 1944 and in Srem in 1945. He only came home 3 years after the end of the war, they thought he was dead. The few stories from that time showed that there was no mercy towards the enemy.

    • @StandoffHusky
      @StandoffHusky Před rokem

      Been so good because been in bosnian mountains with half of them "partizans" been bosnians who Thought about freedom

  • @MultiFulhamFan
    @MultiFulhamFan Před 4 lety +3287

    I really like this channel for focusing on less known topics. Thanks for the content man!

    • @stevanmrkusicmrkusic6320
      @stevanmrkusicmrkusic6320 Před 4 lety +14

      Hows this less known..

    • @mikebather6688
      @mikebather6688 Před 4 lety +18

      Stevan Mrkusic Mrkusic Why are you mad Balkan

    • @parakeetiscool7647
      @parakeetiscool7647 Před 4 lety +34

      Stevan Mrkusic Mrkusic a lot of people don’t even know where the balkans are

    • @inaaronshead7331
      @inaaronshead7331 Před 4 lety +18

      @@stevanmrkusicmrkusic6320 Because many countries dont get taught much about the World Wars outside of its own, Americas and Englands involvement.. aswell as Germany and japan of course. I didn't even learn about Italy's involvement until I left school in Australia.. and our Anzacs were given a shit deployment and still pushed on.

    • @danwarsop7477
      @danwarsop7477 Před 3 lety +1

      Simp

  • @mladencic
    @mladencic Před 4 lety +2461

    My grandfather was in the Yugoslav partisans and got a medal for bravery. He mostly fought in occupied southern Serbia against Axis powers (Bulgarians, Albanians, Italians and Germans). Was wounded by a German grenade in the head and was out of combat for months but lived to tell the tale. He died in 1997, I miss him and his WWII stories.

    • @devinreis5811
      @devinreis5811 Před 3 lety +150

      That's bad ass. Your grandfather was a badass.

    • @mladencic
      @mladencic Před 3 lety +32

      @@devinreis5811 thnx man 🙂

    • @DacLMK
      @DacLMK Před 3 lety +85

      My great grandfather also fought in WWII, but first he was forced to serve the Bulgarian army, and then switched to the Partizans. I sadly never got to hear his stories because he passed away when I was 4 years old (in 2003). Pozdrav iz Makedonija.

    • @jorgeh.r9879
      @jorgeh.r9879 Před 3 lety +8

      That's pretty cool. My grandad was also a veteran, but not from WW2.

    • @nenadrajic9740
      @nenadrajic9740 Před 3 lety +23

      My great grandpa was a Partisan too in eastern Serbia, gonio nemce do austrije, but he died early from cancer, he was like 57 years old

  • @petarjovanovic1481
    @petarjovanovic1481 Před 2 lety +20

    Ustashe didn't just conduct ethic cleansing, also a bit of genocide and Holocaust here and there.

    • @Losangelesharvey
      @Losangelesharvey Před měsícem

      Milosevic?

    • @petarjovanovic1481
      @petarjovanovic1481 Před měsícem

      @@Losangelesharvey What about him?

    • @mottom2657
      @mottom2657 Před měsícem

      @@Losangelesharvey Milošević was a criminal, of course. But Ustaše crimes were horrible and inhuman.

  • @edim108
    @edim108 Před 3 lety +216

    One important factor was that Tito was an ethnic Croat, not a Serb.
    This meant that people who didn't like Serb dominance were much more supportive of Partisans.

    • @ivann2172
      @ivann2172 Před 2 lety +37

      It means that the people who wanted their country free, fought for Partisans, like 80% of Partisans were Serbs.And wdym Serb dominance, you tell me that Serbia, who created Yugoslavia instead of greater Serbia shouldn't have dominance over the country that they've created.

    • @saellenx3528
      @saellenx3528 Před 2 lety +21

      dont listen to these 2 clowns. People that fought in partisan movement indetified as Yugoslavs, not Croats or Serbs. Their goal was Yugoslavian state under communist rule . They didint give 3 f*cks about Croatia or Serbia. Today left wing Serbs and Croats are trying to present them as theirs. In truth Croats back then where Nazi allies called Ustashe that had death camps. Serbs were "antifascist" that were actualy fascist that were doing ethnic cleansings of everything not Serbian. Its left wing propaganda trying to whitewash their crimes from that period. Btw partisans were no better cuz after war they went on rampage fueled by vengance.

    • @thearbiter3351
      @thearbiter3351 Před 2 lety +17

      @@saellenx3528 clowns? They speak more facts than you do

    • @averinus7706
      @averinus7706 Před 2 lety +32

      To be honest, Tito identified as a Yugoslav, rather than a Croat

    • @saellenx3528
      @saellenx3528 Před 2 lety

      @@thearbiter3351 they speak nonsense.

  • @lukagjosevski4478
    @lukagjosevski4478 Před 4 lety +858

    French resistance: happens
    Yugoslavia: hold my rakija...

    • @orevukajlovic8662
      @orevukajlovic8662 Před 4 lety +3

      Hahagahahahahaha, that is soo True.

    • @alengrm7488
      @alengrm7488 Před 4 lety +5

      Slovenians don't drink Rakia.......wine and beer is like rakia here lol

    • @estrimrolls3880
      @estrimrolls3880 Před 3 lety +22

      @@alengrm7488 rakia, šnopc ...isti kurac

    • @alengrm7488
      @alengrm7488 Před 3 lety +3

      @@estrimrolls3880 Ik but wine and beer are still way more common

    • @filip5452
      @filip5452 Před 3 lety +4

      @Nalchi pa i hrvati piju rakiju sa ne

  • @Kardia_of_Rhodes
    @Kardia_of_Rhodes Před 4 lety +773

    Yugoslavia:
    When you gain independence from a collapsing multinational empire, only to have to deal with the exact same problems that your former overlord did, later down the line.

    • @biliminsrlar5752
      @biliminsrlar5752 Před 4 lety +57

      You either die with Empire or long live to see yourself became that empire but even worse.

    • @frenkli9815
      @frenkli9815 Před 4 lety +36

      Except people didn’t kill each other under the Austro Hungarian empire but they did under Yugoslav rule.

    • @dongilleo9743
      @dongilleo9743 Před 3 lety +38

      Yugoslavia wasn't the only failed "Frankenstein monster" of a nation pieced together from random parts by the victors after WW1. Czechoslovakia was ruled over by Czechs, even though they were actually less than 50% of the population, which included Slovaks, Germans, Poles, Hungarians, and Ukrainians. Likewise, the newly formed Poland had large minorities of Germans, Ukrainians, Russians, and Lithuanians. None of these nations had secure borders that were respected and agreed to by their neighbors, and all included large segments of the population that hated being part of the country and wanted out.
      Ironically, when Germany took the ethnic German Sudentenland from Czechoslovakia in 1938, Poland availed itself of the opportunity to snatch an ethnic Polish area for itself, seemingly unaware that they would soon be next on Germany's list of victims.

    • @thebravegallade731
      @thebravegallade731 Před 3 lety +11

      @@dongilleo9743 proper 'german' borders would be 1936 borders+ alsace (but not lorrane) +polish corridor+austria + sudetenland lol.

    • @duplicafly98
      @duplicafly98 Před 3 lety +8

      ​@@thebravegallade731
      -Alsace is French tho granted with a strong germanic culture, but that would be calling Irish people English people because... they speak English (yeah not happening).
      -The polish corridor as for Silesia is basically only polish by now, and old Prussia is only Russian at this point so also highly unrealistic.
      -German from Sudetenland were also expelled so also unrealistic.
      -Austria has been forbidden from joining Germany since WW1 and they have been doing fine as of now so they don't need Germany's money nor renounce their independence which is all upside and now downside as of now again. Plus even if they are Germanic people they have noticeable differences with the North Germanic world (History aside). In the end that would be asking the question "why does Canada doesn't join the US?"

  • @vincedibona4687
    @vincedibona4687 Před rokem +16

    Also, please recognize the commitment to getting the weaponry correct for each army and time period. It’s actually impressive.

  • @rexcorvorum4262
    @rexcorvorum4262 Před 2 lety +10

    The Partisans basically pulled a Band-Aid, making your name into the name of your categorisation

  • @mrhippo6040
    @mrhippo6040 Před 4 lety +1927

    Last time i was this early Trieste was still populated by Slovenes.

  • @HWDragonborn
    @HWDragonborn Před 3 lety +647

    When the mountains start speaking Serbo-Croatian

    • @amargabela7018
      @amargabela7018 Před 3 lety +77

      When the language is called Serbo-Croatian: *cryes in bosnian*

    • @ivankostovski9999
      @ivankostovski9999 Před 3 lety +33

      Don’t do the Macedonians and Slovenes like that bro 😭 we were there too

    • @zoot7981
      @zoot7981 Před 3 lety +12

      @Michael M man my girlfriend speaks “Yugoslavian”

    • @dogeofgreatness2222
      @dogeofgreatness2222 Před 3 lety +16

      More like when the mountains start speaking South Slavic.

    • @jacobpeters5458
      @jacobpeters5458 Před 2 lety +2

      when the snow starts speaking Finnish

  • @shitsalad429
    @shitsalad429 Před 3 lety +37

    “They were also based” -History Matters, 2021

  • @gypsyslayer4224
    @gypsyslayer4224 Před 2 lety +11

    My Great Grandad fought for the Chetniks. They Partisans did some awful things to them. My grandads family were all murdered and he has a particular story when he was on a train fleeing the country to Trieste and the train stopped just before Italy and they said that they weren't going to be killed anymore so everyone got off the train except my grandad. they opened fire on all of the people and soldiers whilst my grandad was hiding under the seat.

    • @bosnianvibe
      @bosnianvibe Před rokem +3

      A war wages a heavy toll and it sucks I'm sorry

    • @atomov
      @atomov Před měsícem

      If your great grandad didn't join the partisans in 1944, when King Peter II ordered them to, and when Tito offered them amnesty it can only mean he had some war crimes under his belt and was fleeing with Germans and other collaborators. There was zero tolerance towards those who sided with Nazis after so many people were killed and starved for years

  • @freekmiddelburg5604
    @freekmiddelburg5604 Před 4 lety +272

    2:43 "other 250,000 not shown" lol

    • @bebeboooo
      @bebeboooo Před 4 lety +5

      cuz they are hiding in mounts

  • @dalmatiaball7687
    @dalmatiaball7687 Před 4 lety +2063

    Tito: Hey Hitler wanna hear a joke?
    Hitler: Yes, sure.
    Tito: Adriatic sea.
    Hitler: I don't get it.
    Tito: That's right you will never get it.

    • @t.bfisher5855
      @t.bfisher5855 Před 4 lety +43

      This has to the best one I've seen today thanks man

    • @josh_bro0212
      @josh_bro0212 Před 4 lety +8

      @@t.bfisher5855 Yeah same

    • @bassmentier
      @bassmentier Před 4 lety +22

      Mussolini got it🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @nikola_tomic
      @nikola_tomic Před 4 lety +44

      @@bassmentier and lost it in a blink of an eye;)

    • @tigervv6437
      @tigervv6437 Před 4 lety +5

      @@nikola_tomic To the Germans at first

  • @xuehuapiaopiao9440
    @xuehuapiaopiao9440 Před rokem +4

    I like the part at 0:20 when the editor says: "Mostly, the Red Army helped." in the top left corner

  • @copah4537
    @copah4537 Před rokem +12

    My grandpa was in the front and occupied Trieste but had to leave because the British warned them to leave the city. He was from Kosovo, an ethnic Albanian and fought side by side with all ethnic groups of Yugoslavia.

    • @MrStefkic
      @MrStefkic Před rokem

      And he agrees that kosovo is serbian

  • @Edmonton-of2ec
    @Edmonton-of2ec Před 4 lety +811

    In a twist irony, the Independent State of Croatia was also technically a monarchy with an Italian prince, Prince Aimone, being declared the King in 1941.

    • @mvg92
      @mvg92 Před 4 lety +16

      He was decrowned i 1943...

    • @Edmonton-of2ec
      @Edmonton-of2ec Před 4 lety +2

      m vg *in

    • @mvg92
      @mvg92 Před 4 lety +5

      @@Edmonton-of2ec in*(my bed)

    • @andro7862
      @andro7862 Před 4 lety +22

      The pinnacle of lunacy

    • @Edmonton-of2ec
      @Edmonton-of2ec Před 4 lety +2

      Andro A I think they did it to try and legitimize their regime by related it to the Croatian Kingdoms of old....

  • @itaybron
    @itaybron Před 4 lety +619

    Good thing all that ethnic tension is a all in the past now. hahaha gulp.

    • @brandonhuynh4528
      @brandonhuynh4528 Před 4 lety +7

      The_Nuke Yugoslav War of the 1990’s? What’s that?

    • @aroundhere1200
      @aroundhere1200 Před 4 lety +45

      @@brandonhuynh4528 r/woooosshhh

    • @donquesewilliamswilliams3497
      @donquesewilliamswilliams3497 Před 4 lety +32

      @@brandonhuynh4528 It's just like Tiananmen Square on June 4th 1989, a time where nothing happened was completely normal nothing bad happened at all haha it is fake western propaganda yugoslavia still exists ahaha

    •  Před 4 lety +6

      @@donquesewilliamswilliams3497 Dude, Yugoslavia during WWII was nothing picturesque like on this video, but it got better after 1955, let say liberal cummunist uprising in 1974 was not deathly anymore. I m sLOVEnian so i have no idea but it seems USA was testing how muslims can be radicalised nowdays so they was 'observers' in Bosnia for more then 4 years before they finally made peace deal.

    • @sernoddicusthegallant6986
      @sernoddicusthegallant6986 Před 4 lety +5

      *Serbia strong playing in distance*

  • @georgeborcean8564
    @georgeborcean8564 Před rokem +11

    Rakija (plum brandy) helped a lot as it did vodka for russians . In hard times as in good times give you the courage and social bond to achieve your goals and resilience . It was true than and it is now ! Not to mention that was used for wounds to heal and an anesthetic to tolerate pain.

    • @samogasa7554
      @samogasa7554 Před rokem

      German also have schnaps(rakija) and lot drugs pervitin(amfetamin)

    • @georgeborcean8564
      @georgeborcean8564 Před rokem

      It is true for every person in a hard situation... I know sharing a glass of alcohol and light each other a cigarret forms a bond and will of surviving... i've been there.. i know.... Look at Karadic visiting trups sharing rakija.

  • @Grego2070
    @Grego2070 Před 2 lety +4

    I didn’t hear kell moneymaker
    “WHERE ARE THEY”

  • @1FoxxFace1
    @1FoxxFace1 Před 4 lety +230

    Yugoslavia ahead.⛔
    No tresspassing! 🚷
    Slavs and mountains danger! ⚠️

    • @veljkoangelovski5713
      @veljkoangelovski5713 Před 3 lety +4

      OH no the worst combination of slavs communism and mountains

    • @mycrobyte6063
      @mycrobyte6063 Před 3 lety

      BALKANS ARE NOT SLAVS!!! Maybe by culture but even there they aren't close, when it comes to people they don't look slav and even the language does not sound slav when spoken.

    • @kristiano100
      @kristiano100 Před 3 lety +9

      @@mycrobyte6063 Ok boomer

    • @someguy2744
      @someguy2744 Před 3 lety +3

      @@mycrobyte6063
      Ž.

    • @nenadrajic9740
      @nenadrajic9740 Před 3 lety +2

      @@mycrobyte6063 im pretty sure our languages sound slavic, it's just mixed with turkish, german, latin n shit

  • @midimusicforever
    @midimusicforever Před 3 lety +484

    Tito and his Broz.

  • @peterdieringer1861
    @peterdieringer1861 Před 3 lety +12

    'The Forgotten 500' is an excellent book on the two groups, the Partisans and the Cheniks.

    • @michellesheppard9253
      @michellesheppard9253 Před 3 lety +1

      I've read about half of the book. Apparently the guy who wrote it was extremely partial to Michaelovich and completely overlooks the fact the Chetniks and the Partisans committed the same war crimes. He also stated that he was very loyal to his people, which as you might know, he sided with the Italians against his people.

  • @nausikaja
    @nausikaja Před 3 lety +39

    Actually, the Chetniks were also collaborating with fascists, and they territorial aspirations plan called Big Serbia ( which included grand part of Croatia). So partisans were actually fighting against Italy, Germany , Ustashas and Chetniks.

    • @spatrk6634
      @spatrk6634 Před 3 lety +3

      @Red Obama in the base they collaborated because they've seen nazis and their extreme nationalism as opportunity to make their own countries greater than they are.
      croats wanted independent croatia thats includes parts of today's bosnia and herzegovina.
      while serbs wanted great serbia to tokyo across milwaukee.
      anyway both sides collaborated with nazis
      nazis just wanted yugoslavia out of the picture so they collaborated with both sides so that we kill each other.
      they suceeded.

    • @ddddddddd378
      @ddddddddd378 Před 2 lety +5

      @@spatrk6634 Chetniks first of werent a united group. Ustase wanted Greater Croatia that featured the entirety of modern day Bosnia and Herzegovina and parts of todays Serbia and Montenegro. They based their claim off of medival Kingdom of Croatia that had those borders for extremely short period of time. The most extreme Chetnik group was the one of Dimitrije Ljotic who wanted to do to Croats what Croats did to Serbs and he was just as bad as the Ustase. What Mihajlovic's Chetniks wanted(most of the Chetniks) was to recreate Serbia and to unite all the Serbs as self determination was quite popular at the time. You also make an absolute laughable statement that Croats were guided by self determination as Croats made up less than half of "Greater" Croatia while Serbs were actually the majority in their own "Greater" country(during WW2 that is). What would be equivalent to WW2 Ustase would be Serbs claiming Tzar Dusans Empire. Those people do exist, but noone takes them seriously. What the idea of last centuries Chetniks would be equivalent is the idea of Croatia getting west Herzegovina today. You struggle to understand WW2 Chetniks, who mostly werent fascists(barring Ljotic and his followers) and 90s "Chetniks"(who were lead by idiots like Karadzic and Milosevic who were horrible).

    • @dinix2956
      @dinix2956 Před rokem +4

      That is 0% truth. Not all chetniks were involved in Axis-Ustashe movement.
      Some chetniks fought until they ran out of supplies and died protecting their own.
      Partisans were made out of "Opeartion Barbadossa" and Soviets were supplying Tito for being communist.
      So that is not true and Mihailovic chetniks were not traitors and kept killing Axis and Ustase.
      But without supplies Chetniks could not stand against Partisans Ustase and Axis killing them.
      Research more.

  • @kai8460
    @kai8460 Před 4 lety +1441

    The Chad Yugoslav rebellion vs the Virgin French resistance

    • @alexanderchristopher6237
      @alexanderchristopher6237 Před 4 lety +60

      What the French Resistance can't do in firepower, they can supplement in intelligence gathering and sabotage.
      Without the French Resistance doing intel gathering within France aided by British and US intelligence as well as sabotage works on their national infrastructures, D-Day would have not worked.

    • @teamdoge8917
      @teamdoge8917 Před 4 lety +53

      First of all that's just disrepectful towards the french resistants who gave their live and actually the french resistance was very effective.

    • @zallandor
      @zallandor Před 4 lety +167

      @@teamdoge8917 forgetting about Yugo, Polish and Russian partisans every time is more disrespectful...

    • @teamdoge8917
      @teamdoge8917 Před 4 lety +36

      I didn't forget about them. It's just that the point here was making fun of the french resistance which is disrepectful. I respect others partisans groups as much as the french ones.

    • @kai8460
      @kai8460 Před 4 lety +30

      @@teamdoge8917 It's a meme. Chill.

  • @HistoryExplained
    @HistoryExplained Před 4 lety +551

    Thank you for all the informative and fantastic content!

    • @al-uc7cb
      @al-uc7cb Před 4 lety +14

      good job passively advertising your channel by commenting like this on every history channel

    • @allanjbucknol4414
      @allanjbucknol4414 Před 4 lety

      Wow I look at your channel and I hope it grows

    • @fission3292
      @fission3292 Před 4 lety +1

      How else do you get your channel out there?

    • @muchentuchen6592
      @muchentuchen6592 Před 4 lety +2

      My great grandfather was a yugoslavian partisan. He was a brave warrior and fought against the nazis and their bosniak puppets. He took part in liberating belgrade but during the victory celebration he was runned over by a soviet T 34 tank and died.

    • @allanjbucknol4414
      @allanjbucknol4414 Před 4 lety

      @@muchentuchen6592 oh... I am sorry to hear your lost

  • @IsThisHandleTaken
    @IsThisHandleTaken Před 3 lety +3

    God damn these are some punchy compact history lessons! Well done!

  • @peteserbedzija7931
    @peteserbedzija7931 Před 3 lety +5

    Well done...as an ex Yugo, I give your video and narrative thumbs up. 👍

  • @iwandoherty3419
    @iwandoherty3419 Před 4 lety +734

    Can you do a video on Tito's Yugoslavia and the nation's Cold War History and how it differed from Soviet style socialism?

    • @kompav5621
      @kompav5621 Před 4 lety +51

      For anyone who's interested, and willing to pay, there's a book by Geoffrey Swain titled "Tito: A Biography" which deals with just that. Good book, lots of detail on political processes.

    • @berserk6855
      @berserk6855 Před 4 lety +3

      Yes please do it

    • @superluukiee
      @superluukiee Před 4 lety +21

      Also including the support for the Greek Communists who were attacked by the British forces during ww2

    • @ministryofanti-feminism1493
      @ministryofanti-feminism1493 Před 4 lety +3

      Don't forget to mentioned the hundreds of thousands of German Wehrmacht POW's mass murdered by Tito's men in Yugoslavia after the war's end.

    • @ministryofanti-feminism1493
      @ministryofanti-feminism1493 Před 4 lety +1

      @@El_Jefe_Maestro That is incorrect. They were brutal only to partisans.

  • @yugoslavia_operator128
    @yugoslavia_operator128 Před 4 lety +1757

    Germans: Let's invade Yugoslavia!
    YUGOSlavic mountains: Neće ići bagro Švabska.
    Edit: Holy Tito look at all these likes ;-;

    • @vaxbratee9526
      @vaxbratee9526 Před 4 lety +15

      Hahaha

    • @Loterrach
      @Loterrach Před 4 lety +84

      Germans: Können wir Jugoslawien erobern?
      Yugoslavia: Ah da ali ne

    • @slavicpotato_
      @slavicpotato_ Před 4 lety +7

      Jes jes

    • @markomarkovic5729
      @markomarkovic5729 Před 4 lety +39

      Kad su shvatili da vojnim putem neće moći, porobili su nas ekonomski.

    • @Loterrach
      @Loterrach Před 4 lety +8

      @@markomarkovic5729 Да, нажалост

  • @evanthesquirrel
    @evanthesquirrel Před rokem +2

    I just love the fact that Yugoslavia has a pair of truck nuts dangling off the south end.

  • @tomdavies9144
    @tomdavies9144 Před 3 lety

    Great channel, never change!

  • @sneeekeee
    @sneeekeee Před 3 lety +170

    Thank you. My grandfather was shot two different times as a messenger for the Partisans... I wish he was still alive so I could ask him more questions, now that more history has revealed itself!

    • @kristiano100
      @kristiano100 Před 3 lety +4

      Looks like someone didnt know the saying, “Dont shoot the messenger,”, all that aside, sorry for your grandfather, he was a brave man taking such a risky job during a devastating war. Respect ✊

    • @NoobGyver
      @NoobGyver Před 2 lety +1

      my grandpa used to live in the time of ww2 as a kid and told me lots of things mostly about taking apart bombs

    • @nickb3164
      @nickb3164 Před 2 lety +3

      your grandfather was a hero

    • @StandoffHusky
      @StandoffHusky Před rokem

      Been so good because been in bosnian mountains with half of them "partizans" been bosnians who Thought about freedom

  • @Kolar522
    @Kolar522 Před 4 lety +14

    my grandad was a partisan. he told a story once where he met an enemy soldier in the woods. they aimed their rifles at each other and stared for a good while, neither taking the shot. eventually they lowered their weapons and walked away.

  • @borisdavidov6600
    @borisdavidov6600 Před 2 lety +6

    My grand grandfather got 5 medals including top medals you could get in Yugoslavia in the WW2. He was leading brigade about 15k people that got encircled by advancing German forces and managed to bring them all out by his wits without anyone dying.

    • @stevekillgore9272
      @stevekillgore9272 Před 2 lety +2

      No one, not a one, of fifteen thousand, died ?

    • @borisdavidov6600
      @borisdavidov6600 Před 2 lety

      @@stevekillgore9272 No one, that is why we have a statue of him in our hometown! He actually played a trick onto the Germans and they bought it. Since he went with a white flag and told them that they have been sent to negotiate German surrender since it was early 45.

  • @smokkaraucher3490
    @smokkaraucher3490 Před 3 lety +13

    1:12 anti German?? Never! Anti Nazi on the other hand - still!

  • @peteranderson037
    @peteranderson037 Před 4 lety +381

    Invading a mountainous and ethnically complex country is always difficult to pull off. Ask anyone who has attempted to invade Afghanistan.

    • @general4526
      @general4526 Před 4 lety +7

      Peter Anderson you can ask Russia

    • @KKKKKKK777js
      @KKKKKKK777js Před 4 lety +113

      Invading is the easy part, Yugosalvia fell in 14 days. Occupaying or controling it is virtualy impossible though.

    • @Prebondus
      @Prebondus Před 4 lety +5

      @@KKKKKKK777js Tell that to the Turks.

    • @maxmagnus777
      @maxmagnus777 Před 4 lety +23

      @@Prebondus Turks had a province called Bosnia. Bosnia failed to pay taxes for the huge part of it's existence to Turkish Sultan. 3 times armies had been sent to quench rebellion in Bosnia. The rebellions were made by Turkish officials and with Turkish troops against the Sultan. It was so costly to the Sultans that they just kept ignoring the Bosnia as wild west.

    • @scudb5509
      @scudb5509 Před 4 lety +1

      The Eccentric Budget Gamer That was after they lost an entire army along with a sultan. And later on got their asses handed to them.

  • @Joker-yw9hl
    @Joker-yw9hl Před 4 lety +188

    Thank you for this video. I'm British but my Grandfather is a Bosnian Serb who fought in this war as a teenager. He has so many stories about it, as you can imagine. Great to see a video about it

    • @nikolastojiljkovic8668
      @nikolastojiljkovic8668 Před 4 lety +7

      Is your father Niko Bellic? 😁

    • @SpyMusic-ti8ke
      @SpyMusic-ti8ke Před 4 lety +5

      Nikola Stojiljkovic Commit Slobodan Praljak please.

    • @horuserb483
      @horuserb483 Před 4 lety +2

      U ar idiot man!U British...ahhhahha fck u and your british in passport!

    • @helloworld7796
      @helloworld7796 Před 4 lety +12

      And how did you become "British"? By getting passport? So If I get a passport of China, I am now Chinese? Really cool.

    • @MrDeicide1
      @MrDeicide1 Před 4 lety

      Fascist litter

  • @Prometheus7272
    @Prometheus7272 Před 3 lety +145

    "Why were the Yugoslav Partisans so Effective?" I feel like most of this video did not answer that question

    • @tsnm7711
      @tsnm7711 Před 3 lety +37

      Because they used guerrilla tactics in environment where you have a lot of hiding places and would make hit and run style of warfare, while hiding in mountain regions. They would use propaganda machine to it's fullest and had their spyes in every city and village that would correspond whit their headquarters, so in regard to that even it there were any anti communist base among the civilian populus they could soner or later capture them and execute them. When it comes to captives from German army based in territory of former Independent State of Croatia or Croatian armed forces fighting for independence of their country any of the following surrendering to partisan guerrillas would get executed also. So in that regard like Stalin said " No person, No problem" they exterminated everything and there was no more opposition. Best regards. If you need reference to any real documented events from that era feel free to ask.

    • @adissabovic
      @adissabovic Před 3 lety +17

      It's simple - we had no choice...:)

    • @mbabuskov
      @mbabuskov Před 3 lety +4

      Mountains.

    • @kkkkkkkkkkkkkkjable
      @kkkkkkkkkkkkkkjable Před 3 lety +10

      Partisans were a non factor before 1942, and even sympatized with new ustashe regime for a while. After the breakup of Ribbentrop-Molotov pact their attitude changes and they ran to woods.
      Their 'success' was conditioned by the fact that Italians were not cooperative with Ustashe due to Italian pretensions on Croatian territory. After predictable Italian capitulation partisans benefited from their logistics and armed themselves, plus the tyde of the war started to change, and Germans soon went into a full retreat mode, while at the same time allies started to support partisans as legitimate resistance movement.
      Their track record was pretty pathetic however, they had huge lossess, and often were heavily defeated even when they had nummerical superiority

    • @tsnm7711
      @tsnm7711 Před 3 lety +2

      @@kkkkkkkkkkkkkkjable That is only partially throu, because to properly understand the support they had at a beginning and later in war we have to understand the point of view of civilians. Looking from the point of view of local people present in Dalmatia they enjoyed their support at the beginning because of numerous executions and opression done by the italian troops in cordination whit chetniks in many cases, and German persecutions of local people ather the retreat of the Italian troops. Afther those events local civilians had mixed feelings considering Independent State of Croatia which in their eyes did not protect them from the persecutions from Germans operating in the region and Italian military present In the region before their retreat however afther the realisation that partisans will stop at nothing when it comes to winning including executions of large number of civilians that were not affiliated whit joining any side it was mostly a disarray of persecutions that caused a lot of smaller group of fighters called "green scene" ( mostly compromise d of civilians not bounding to any regime but simply trying to survive the war alongside many deserters) to start fighting and ultimately lossing. While if we take other parts like northern Croatia the Independent State Croatia had huge support based on the fact that people living in those regions had only fear of partisan guerrillas causing terrorist attacks in their city's which later on in war occurred alongside mass genocide of Croatian people and military personnel. Situation in modern day Bosnia and Hertsegovina past Independent State of Croatia was again different. Croatian Muslims and Christians living made a fierce resistance to partisans and in many situations fight to the death. It is important to note that afther the ultimate defeat of Croat forces in Bosnia for the first time in long history of brotherly relations between Muslims and Christians living there strong differences based on partisan propaganda had been established alongside burning of holy Mosques and Churches. To summerize it a bit what I wrote here is the sortest version missing a lot of crutial things yust so general public can try to understand mentality behind the conflict.

  • @sunrisings292
    @sunrisings292 Před 3 lety +4

    You need good research and a lot of brains to do accurate and fun videos like this. And talent, too. Good job, "History Matters".

  • @erikgruber9736
    @erikgruber9736 Před 3 lety +84

    Someone: Yugoslavia
    All the rest: Ah shit, here we go again...

  • @juancarlostopic6297
    @juancarlostopic6297 Před 4 lety +880

    Doing a video on the Balkans is like running through a minefield. U my friend are a very carefull runner. Good job- Serbian approved👍🇷🇸

    • @pajkecar
      @pajkecar Před 4 lety +1

      You are so tasty :)

    • @fulcrum2951
      @fulcrum2951 Před 4 lety +27

      Metaphorically or literally?

    • @johnarbuckle2619
      @johnarbuckle2619 Před 4 lety +3

      @@fulcrum2951 Ok mate, i see you everywhere you have to tell me who you are.

    • @fulcrum2951
      @fulcrum2951 Před 4 lety +2

      @@johnarbuckle2619 I'm just a mysterious MTF agent

    • @sadkaori5678
      @sadkaori5678 Před 4 lety +22

      When you make a video about the balkans ther are 2 Option
      you'll die or the normal people like it and the right wing will kill you

  • @bankerduck4925
    @bankerduck4925 Před 2 lety +1

    I really do enjoy talking about surprisingly effective paramilitary resistance movements!

  • @multimandan
    @multimandan Před 2 lety +2

    My dad's best childhood friend was the son of a former Austrian soldier (Mr. Platzer) who lost fingers due to a grenade explosion during the Nazi occupation of Yugoslavia. After the war, he ended up in Brazil (São Paulo) where he married and had a family and died sometime in the late 1970s.

  • @eyesocketplug6989
    @eyesocketplug6989 Před 4 lety +534

    This amnesty programme that Tito issued is what also led Yugoslavia ultimately to its doom, while it did have short term benefits during the war, later on it was a cause of major trouble and source for the rise of nationalist movements. Most of these amnestees weren't the actual cummunists and still secretly held their own - chetnik and ustasha allegiances and when Tito was dead and out of the picture, there was noone strong enough to contain them while simultaniously they held positions of power within army and government.

    • @user-uj6ml9qe8o
      @user-uj6ml9qe8o Před 4 lety

      .y coment got deleted lmao

    • @user-uj6ml9qe8o
      @user-uj6ml9qe8o Před 4 lety +8

      Nigaz geting ofended for sppiting facts yhat ustashas were evil anti serbs and chetniks antinazis

    • @Intreductor
      @Intreductor Před 4 lety +5

      @@user-uj6ml9qe8o they were all evil xD

    • @CikaDraza
      @CikaDraza Před 4 lety +62

      You cant compare the ideology of the Cetniks and that of the Ustase. Ustase were brutal and held many concentration camps including those for Children. The Cetniks were for the Kingdom of Jugoslavia, for Freedom of Religion and Freedom in General. They were the legitimate army of Jugoslavia before the Terroism of the Communists came around. Ustase were Fasist Neo Nazis who slaughtered entire populations of other nationalities based on Nationality and Religious beliefs. They were Monsters.The Cetniks also had bad people in their rank, but their core ideology was not about destroying all other nationalities. In contrast it was about keeping them together.

    • @jshadowhunter
      @jshadowhunter Před 4 lety +20

      Yugoslavia was the biggest mistake in the history of Europe.
      Why anyone believed such a state could possibly function is beyond me.

  • @donroka1
    @donroka1 Před 4 lety +36

    Me as a Bosnian Muslim, am so proud that my Grandfather was Partisan, that he fought for our Yugoslavia heavily, and he was soldier of our glory Marshal TITO ! Nek ti je vjecni Rahmet moj deduka, da ti dragi Allah Dzennet podari Amin !

    • @SlavaBogu11
      @SlavaBogu11 Před rokem

      U cetnicima je isto bilo muslimana. Cetnici Draze Mihailovica nisu bili nikakvi izdajnici vec su se borili do zadnjeg.

    • @dukagjini6610
      @dukagjini6610 Před rokem

      Theres no Bosnian Muslim you either Albanian or servian choose your lane and stop lying to your self

  • @solomoncase6968
    @solomoncase6968 Před 2 lety

    Just want to say since I discovered your videos I can’t not watch and learn. You’re doing a great job

  • @nik65stgt60
    @nik65stgt60 Před rokem

    Very interesting! Thanks!

  • @JBTito-pt1ub
    @JBTito-pt1ub Před 4 lety +126

    Answer is simple, comrades. We had a guy named Walther who had a magical ability to have infinite bullets in any weapon he holds. We also had Prle, Tihi and Marija - with similar abilities as well.

    • @vanjat2850
      @vanjat2850 Před 4 lety +8

      That's as far as some propaganda can get, shitty movies that made my childhood

    • @Alekx445
      @Alekx445 Před 4 lety +5

      @@vanjat2850 well at least they were good

    • @vanjat2850
      @vanjat2850 Před 4 lety

      @@Alekx445 some of them

    • @Alekx445
      @Alekx445 Před 4 lety +4

      Da ima nekih dobrih ali zato ima sranja poput Mirko i Slavko ali zato ima dobrih poput Bitka na Neretvi

    • @vanjat2850
      @vanjat2850 Před 4 lety

      @@Alekx445 nebi neretvu nazvao dobrom, most valja npr

  • @_neuromanser_
    @_neuromanser_ Před 4 lety +152

    Also lesser known fact - at the end of the WW2, Yugoslavian resistance counted over 900.000 soldiers, including women and children. Everyone fought against Nazis and their collaborators.
    My grandparents were leaders of rebellion at the start of the war in Vojvodina (north Serbia), they got a tons of medals for their war effort, and even more interesting was that my grandmother was of a higher military rank than my grandfather. She was captured and tortured by Nazis, but she never broke and in doing so, she saved countless lives. She paid for that courage and heroism with her health, same as grandfather. They remained heroes to me.
    After the war, communist party didn't want to recognize huge effort of our women soldiers, even though they stood side by side to men. This was unfortunate, but the truth is still being passed by their relatives.

    • @_neuromanser_
      @_neuromanser_ Před 4 lety +24

      Croatia is only EU country where Nazism is still incorporated in government structure and is popular among its people, as we can see here. If you can brag about killing 900.000 innocent civilians, including women, children and elderly population, of whom all were Serbs, Jews and Gypsies, then you are a truly a sick man. Psychopath.

    • @plutoniusis
      @plutoniusis Před 4 lety +8

      @@_neuromanser_ , don't ever label entire nation to mistakes done buy circumstances of the War , you are from Vojvodina as you stated , do you know that many actually part of Deutsche volks subject of nationality were Yugoslav National Heroes during WWII , not all of them followed the orders that could harm fellow innocent human beings , but stand against and paid with their life's it self . I visited Partisan monument side in Bosnia this summer with individual stones and engraved plates , all nationalities are there but was in hearth breaking condition , absolutely nobody take care of the side , it is totally abended , I put some marble plates back to place , for Serbian , Croats , Bosnian Muslim , Deutsche , Slovaks , who give their lives for something higher we can just imagen would exist !
      In your first comment I give you like regardless your second comment , because I do believe you are good human fellow , that would stand for a good and fairness regardless , out there are only bad and good human beings in entire World !

    • @_neuromanser_
      @_neuromanser_ Před 4 lety +18

      plutoniusis did you notice what did that Nazi Ustasa from Croatia wrote just after my first comment? I have put him on block and have reported him to Google because I don want to read his poison here. No idea if Google removed his comment by now and if they did, my answer must seem out of the place. He was proud of his grandfather who tortured Serbs in Jasenovac concentration camp an he bragged how that thing humiliated prisoners. Over 900.000 people were killed there, of all ages and nationalities, but mostly Serbs, Jews and Gypsies. They weren’t gassed or shot, they were all butchered in a most brutal way with knives specially made for humans. There were rivers of blood there and even recorded photographs of those inhumans celebrating their atrocities, all covered in blood.
      My answer was to him specifically and I am disgusted that his country is still allowing that kind of rhetoric and those Nazi groups. That kind of nazi rhetoric is only increasing now before their elections, because populist right wingers can get votes only that way, and hate attacks on Serbs are being reported throughout the country. Now I am puzzled how is this being allowed in a present day EU country?
      He is not a single case of an Internet troll, they all belong to same political party which is ruling in Croatia today. This is a problem that must be brought in front of all nations who fought against Nazis in WW2.

    • @_neuromanser_
      @_neuromanser_ Před 4 lety +10

      @@goodplayer6957 HDZ party. All undercover fascists.

    • @goodplayer6957
      @goodplayer6957 Před 4 lety +2

      @@_neuromanser_ no, they are commies, stop talking shit trying to fuel the cro-srb war you piece of shit

  • @petartodosijevic9691
    @petartodosijevic9691 Před 3 lety +9

    Good video, one point is missed though, the main reason Cetniks didn't show much resistance wasn't due to their waiting for the allies to show up (as Draza Mihajlovic said, the English were keen on fighting to the last drop of blood, Serbian blood), they were pressured by Germans killing civilians, the mass slaughter of kids and people in Kragujevac at 21st of October was due to a German convoy being attacked by Communists(partisans) in a nearby village, the rule was that per one wounded 50 civilians were executed and for one killed a 100. So since Germans enforced this the Cetniks stood quiet in order to preserve the people while Partisans fought on.

    • @cinoeye
      @cinoeye Před 3 lety

      100% true!

    • @eduard.bosnjak
      @eduard.bosnjak Před 3 lety +1

      No. Chetniks who wanted to fight and liberate their country defected to partisans as soon as they understood that Draža Mihajlović and other chetnik warlords are a bunch of collaborating cowards who were robbing and killing civilians same as ustahes. They even fought side by side with the ustashes against the only true resistance - People's liberation struggle. The only difference between chetniks and ustashes was that the ustashes were better organized and systematic.

    • @petartodosijevic9691
      @petartodosijevic9691 Před 3 lety +1

      @@eduard.bosnjak they fought with the ustashes? Are you joking or what

    • @cinoeye
      @cinoeye Před 3 lety

      @@eduard.bosnjak I will make assumption that you are Bosnian muslim, so no surprise you are having this point of view. But let me remind you about few things-muslims lived in Kingdom ruled by Serbs and there where no prison camps, killings...after formation of NDH and atrocities committed by the Ustaše and Muslims, some Serb forces where killing some innocent Muslims/Croatias...as a retaliation...now you are making guérilla Yugoslav Army in Homeland (aka Četniks) to be the same as nazi allied NDH state with laws, structure, gourmet...
      Another important point- you are right-there where a lot of local commanders who collaborated with Italians(Djurišić, Djujić), Germans(Kosta Pećanac and his Četnik Unit), Ustaše(Radić) for a different reasons-to fight communist, prevent German retaliation, revenge against Ustaše... here I do not count Ljotić and SDK or Nedić’s Zandamerija who where openly fighting JKVO(Mihailovic)...Feel free to do research that most of those had problem with Mihailovic because of Colaboration.-capturing and killing of Pećanac and fight with Djurišić)...in Serbia, there where virtually no Partisans untill 1944 and Communist would have never won if Soviets didn’t show up...

    • @cinoeye
      @cinoeye Před 3 lety

      @@petartodosijevic9691 Jeste Rade Radić

  • @yodatrombonist121
    @yodatrombonist121 Před 10 měsíci

    There’s more to it but for a 4-minute video you did a great job. Yugoslav history has always been quite fascinating to me

  • @DamnThisNick
    @DamnThisNick Před 3 lety +149

    amazing video, especially since it's a rather overlooked aspect of WW2. but as effective as the partisans were, the population paid the highest price: retaliation of German amd Ustaša forces was brutal. my grandmother (Croatian herself) always shook with fear, when the Ustaša would come looking in the barn for partisans (which in fact were there the night before)

    • @SrbKuc
      @SrbKuc Před 2 lety +1

      Retaliation on who? Why is it it so hard to say the name of the people they retaliated against?

    • @theboxygenie
      @theboxygenie Před 2 lety +10

      @@SrbKuc The population?

    • @SrbKuc
      @SrbKuc Před 2 lety

      @@theboxygenie the German and Ustasa forces retaliated against the innocent Serb population. The children and elderely they captuted and sent to concentration camps werent Partisan soldiers, they were Serbs.
      These people werent only 'the population', they didnt round up Germans and Croat families (populations) and send them to death camps. Nor did they round up cattle. They rounded up Serbs, Jews and Gypsies. Give them a name.
      THE SERB, JEWISH AND GYPSY POPULATION

    • @StandoffHusky
      @StandoffHusky Před rokem

      Been so good because been in bosnian mountains with half of them "partizans" been bosnians who Thought about freedom

    • @sloaiza81
      @sloaiza81 Před rokem +3

      ​@@SrbKuc civilians. Not too hard to figure out

  • @sonuvabitch
    @sonuvabitch Před 4 lety +76

    "other 250,000 not shown"
    Never would've happened back in the 10-minute history days...

  • @Architect172
    @Architect172 Před 3 lety +3

    Unreal tournament announcer: " Unstoppable ! "

  • @1LivelyRogue
    @1LivelyRogue Před 11 měsíci

    I love this channel.

  • @thomasturner6980
    @thomasturner6980 Před 4 lety +150

    Time to draw a map of Yugoslavia
    *Points at spaghetti*

  • @Languslangus
    @Languslangus Před 4 lety +186

    Reaserch the Slovenian branch of Partisans. They were independantly organized and formed a national goverment and so on before the end of the war and only truly formaly joined Titos partisans administratevaly by the end of the war

    • @warlord970
      @warlord970 Před 4 lety +6

      Se strinjam :)

    • @timmocnik3458
      @timmocnik3458 Před 4 lety +10

      WE FUCKING DID YEAH

    • @mrhippo6040
      @mrhippo6040 Před 4 lety +16

      Also Slovene resistance had the most developed Hospital system of any resistance in Europe.

    • @boozecruiser
      @boozecruiser Před 4 lety +1

      @@timmocnik3458 you, yourself?

    • @mrbisshie
      @mrbisshie Před 4 lety +2

      Was it even worth it for the Axis to conquer Yugoslavia? Could they have just tried to get them to stay neutral? I know it's pretty funny to say that after the Benelux, but it worked for Sweden. Keeping 100k troops just to try keep Yugoslavia under control sounds like such a waste for the Axis.

  • @irgendwer3610
    @irgendwer3610 Před rokem +3

    the Partisans worked so well mainly because james bissonette guided Tito

  • @Luboman411
    @Luboman411 Před 3 lety +4

    I was going to say--Yugoslavia has A LOT of mountainous terrain with thick forests that is very easy to hide into. Not so with a country like the Soviet Union, France or Poland, where the land is mostly very flat with few forests in which to hide.

  • @GENdandyboy
    @GENdandyboy Před 4 lety +45

    My great grandfather was a Serbian partisan because of a group of 5 chetniks that beat the shit out of him and almost killed him. He was a hardcore >serbian< to the end of his days ironically, he wanted to raise my grandfather as a priest during the 50's in a communist country which is hilarious to think about. All he wanted to do is find the 5 chetniks and kill them out of revenge because he figured if he is fighting as a partisan in eastern serbia where they almost beat him to death, and being the place where he lives he would eventually find them. He did. But not in the way he intended to. After the war in 1948 he decided to go to Pirot and become a member of the workers party (the only political party in Yugoslavia) so he could reap some benefits and gibs since he was a partisan scout and later artilleryman. After waiting to finish up paperwork he went to be heard by the local representatives of the party to evaluate him. Guess who was waiting behind those two doors? All 5 of the chetniks with short hair and no beards as representatives sitting and starring into his eyes, all alive, all with respectable positions in Yugoslavia and all of them shitting themselves collectively. He gave them all a look of disbelief and defeat, went back to his village and nearly never left it again. Imagine the level of torment and hate. He only came to my home city in the 90's and early 2000's for the funeral of my grandfather (his son) and the weddings of his grand children (my father and my uncle), the birth and baptisms of his great grand children (five of us all together) and that's that. He hated just about everything in life except his family which he loved. I think of him and the shit he went trough and compare my daily sufferings to his and feel at ease, how lucky i am and how good i got it. Deda Brance i miss you.

    • @powresitta
      @powresitta Před 2 lety +2

      this story omg ty for sharing this, cuz my grandfather went trough similar situation in his life and i miss him so much

    • @Markko1986
      @Markko1986 Před rokem

      So he was a soldier with soldier skills, but unable to enact his vengeance on those who wronged him, and instead never left his village? The problem we still have to this day.

    • @unethicalgoose
      @unethicalgoose Před rokem

      Many Partizani had done the same in Lika. Majority of them quickly fell for the partizans due to communist forces betraying cetnici. It was commonplace back then, and my own family had to join the cetnici as they were on a list of influential serbs to be killed by the communists when the war first started.

    • @extraterrestrial7424
      @extraterrestrial7424 Před 10 měsíci

      Evil cowardly malicious pussy sh*ts always cling to power and politics, while men of honor die in battle or are alive but ruled by these sh*ts.

  • @firefox3249
    @firefox3249 Před 4 lety +41

    Continue the bloody series already!I'll turn into a partisan myself!

  • @Passer__
    @Passer__ Před rokem +3

    Great video! Usually foreigners do a bad job talking about our history, but you did very well! Below is an elaboration about the Chetniks.
    The reason the Chetniks seemingly did very little was because of German retaliation. For every wounded German 50 Serbs would be killed and for every killed German 100 Serbs would be killed. The Chetniks, being a Serbian movement, didn’t want to indirectly kill thousands of their own people to mildly hinder the Germans. On the other hand, the Partisans didn’t care about that and sabotaged the occupiers anyway. Also only the Partisans received foreign aid.

  • @Nenad-ICXC-Shuput-GFAMMA
    @Nenad-ICXC-Shuput-GFAMMA Před 3 lety +1

    Excellent

  • @TankMarko
    @TankMarko Před 4 lety +73

    As someone who lives in ex-yugoslavia....i hear the word partisan on average like three times a day :)

  • @stulog
    @stulog Před 4 lety +27

    "* other 250,000 not shown"
    I just love all the little notes you throw into the graphics in your videos.

  • @neenm4299
    @neenm4299 Před 3 lety +11

    The sky: starts singinging fortunate son
    The sea: starts speaking Japanise
    The mud: starts speaking Russian
    The snow: starts speaking Finnish
    The trees: start speaking Vietnamise
    The mountains: start speaking Yugoslav

  • @conorspyridon7008
    @conorspyridon7008 Před 2 lety

    Yugo into depth quite well in this video !

  • @dragantesic1685
    @dragantesic1685 Před 4 lety +93

    I live in the town of Drvar, better known as Tito's Drvar before the breakup of Yugoslavia. City is known for the battle of Drvar in which the Partisans won. My great-grandfather participated in that battle. After World War II, Tito's Drvar hosted "Desant na Drvar" every year, showing how the Germans attacked the town in the battle of Drvar.
    Also there is Tito's Cave (Titova Pećina), in the cave there was a small house where Tito hide from the Germans, and today it is whole and can be visited.

    • @PanSerbism
      @PanSerbism Před 4 lety +8

      How is life in Drvar now? I hear only bad things sadly, but I hope the Serbs of Drvar, Grahovo, Petrovac and Glamoč will one day find a good future again. Pozdrav brate

    • @yarpen26
      @yarpen26 Před 4 lety +9

      Tito was a self-obsessed jerk who wasted millions of taxpayers' money on advancing his personality cult. Also, he was a ruthless Stalinist immediately after the war (and during it, of course) and only backed out after Stalin started perceiving him as threat, he then needed to cozy up to the Americans. Despite not having to follow the Kremlin's botched economic policies, unlike Poland, Czechoslovakia or Hungary, he still drove the country to the ground and had to save the public funds by allowing hundreds of thousands of people to emigrate to Austria and West Germany just so they could send back remittances. And he died having done nothing in the way of securing a smooth transfer of power.

    • @xgamerbih
      @xgamerbih Před 4 lety +14

      yarpen26 you have no idea, so be quiet kid

    • @justincase4892
      @justincase4892 Před 4 lety +12

      @@yarpen26
      You sound dumb

    • @shinglemcdingle4093
      @shinglemcdingle4093 Před 4 lety +1

      Bog blagoslovia tvog pradida, pravi borac za slobodu!

  • @inkblowout
    @inkblowout Před 4 lety +51

    Thanks for the video my brother, my great grandfather joined the Yugoslav Partisans during the German occupation. I'm unaware about his role in the partisans but in general history for the partisans and the yugoslavs were very grim due to Hitler's rule of 50/100 (50 Serbians killed for 1 German injured and 100 Serbians killed for 1 dead German.) But I'm glad for my Great grandfather and thousands of other men in Yugoslavia who stood up against Nazi rule.

    • @Jessie_James850
      @Jessie_James850 Před 4 lety +1

      Red Army "liberated" Yugoslavia",and of course raped a lot of children,girls and even elderly females. Tito was pussy who miledly objected when rape become epidemic,becouse he was Stalin little bitch.Partisans could not defeat Croatian forces on their own,not to mention Wehrmacht. They could only win against cowardley Chetnics and Italians in small battles.

    • @milostomic8539
      @milostomic8539 Před 4 lety +4

      My three great grandfathers fought in Chetniks since the beginning of uprising may-june 1941.They escaped being captured by Germans in april 1941 after Yugoslavia capitulated.
      One was killed fighting the Germans that same year.Two others survived the war and lived a long life.The fourth one was a Yugoslav Army officer and a POW in Germany for 4 years.
      After Germany lost the war he returned home with 350.000 Yugoslav (mostly Serbian) soldiers and officers.Died peacefully at the age of 97.

    • @inkblowout
      @inkblowout Před 4 lety +3

      @@Jessie_James850 Who raped children, girls and elderly females? As far as I know, pretty much everyone on both sides committed horrors that shouldn't be ignored. And as for Tito, he could have been Statin's "Bitch" at the time during WW2 but it's obvious he was just using him for his own benefits as he defected from Stalin post-war. And I won't lie, they weren't very strong in terms of battles. But the axis failed to achieve their goals after each offensive which overall made the partisans a pain in the ass for Germans in general.

    • @southamptonfan3460
      @southamptonfan3460 Před 2 lety +1

      @@inkblowout partisans we’re not a pain in the ass . But their allies were . Serbia was a country that got occupied many times and freed by Meer luck .

  • @groerhahn225
    @groerhahn225 Před 2 lety +8

    It's also worth mentioning how Tito later managed to keep Jugoslavia idependent and wealthy as a socialist nation while beeing surrounded by NATO and Warsaw pact membersin the middle of the cold war.
    Despise his ideals as much as you want, but Tito was probably one of the smartest people to ever run a country.

    • @Devedesetdva
      @Devedesetdva Před 2 lety +1

      If we ignore the fact that:
      1. It left Serbia, as a Yugoslav successor, in crippling debt
      2. He drew ethnic lines that caused one of the blodiest and most gruesome European wars in modern history
      3. He still was a dictator so no democracy or any freedom of expression, press etc.
      4. He reinvented the national ideas of regions that were ethnically ambiguous leading to more conflict
      5. He moved a shit ton of Albanians to Kosovo which lead to further ethnic tension in the region which caused another war filled to the brim with warcrimes
      5.5 He abused his wife and was a pedophile tho I wont count this one as a full point since it isn't related to leadership
      6. His party was so full of oligarchs and red princes that when he finally died (good riddance) the shitstorm of a "government" he left behind started plundering each and every corner of what was left of Yugoslavia. Those oligarchs are also largely responsible for the Yugoslav wars. Their successors rule Serbia to this day (and until recently Montenegro)
      Oh yeah, did I mention that he was fighting for the enemy during WW1 and quite has possibly participated in some of numerous war crimes in Voivodina (including gangrape, mass murder stc.)

    • @groerhahn225
      @groerhahn225 Před 2 lety

      @@Devedesetdva I mean technically you're right. He's still just on an average when it comes to politicians in the Balkans, though.

    • @Devedesetdva
      @Devedesetdva Před 2 lety

      @@groerhahn225 Yeah, in the context of Balkan politics he's doing alright

  • @vulpes_channel
    @vulpes_channel Před 2 lety +1

    there's an film called Walter defends Sarajevo that was very popular in China . Almost all chinese in the older generation knew it

  • @Peoples_Republic_of_Devonshire

    Well that's partially right. For one thing the Chetniks weren't exactly a homogenous group under the command of Mihailovic, it was more of an umbrella term for a number of different factions of resistance movements, not all under Mihailovic's direction. The vast majority of the Chetniks were however controlled by him though.
    Also the UK provided massive amounts of support including the massive supplies of armament and equipment and liason officer, the RAF Balkan Air Force was formed to provide air cover and support troops on the ground, the insertion of the 2nd Special Service Brigade - Army Commandos and Royal Marines Commandos comprising 40 RM Cdo, 9 Cdo (I think), and 43 RM Cdo in which my grandfather served plus the mountain troops of the 2nd Battalion Highland Light Infantry.
    The 2nd Special Service Brigade was instrumental in preventing Tito falling into Axis hands when his own position became untenable and they started conducting multiple large scale assaults to keep the Germans on the back foot and allow Tito's retreating columns to keep ahead of the pursuing Axis forces.
    With such a complicated subject this may have been better as a 10 minute history to allow for greater detail. One of the officers of 43 Commando Royal Marines Michael McConville wrote a fantastic history of the campaign entitled "A small war in the Balkans" for those that want a more in depth history

    • @boozecruiser
      @boozecruiser Před 4 lety +3

      I think you'll find that several resistance movements throughout Europe wouldn't have fought anyone apart from themselves if not for british spy agencies directing them

    • @Peoples_Republic_of_Devonshire
      @Peoples_Republic_of_Devonshire Před 4 lety

      @@boozecruiser that's very true. Many resistance groups were founded by personal ambition more than anything else and defeating the Germans was merely a means to an end

    • @Peoples_Republic_of_Devonshire
      @Peoples_Republic_of_Devonshire Před 4 lety +4

      @@boozecruiser but the Chetniks were notable for terminology being an area of confusion. A chetnik was a Serbian nationalist guerilla, irrespective of his faction or political intentions. Mihailovic declared himself to be their leader but he was only the leader of those under his influence, and there were many that were not under his influence or control and some that actively opposed - such as the nature of guerilla warfare. This oddity of terminology created a great deal of confusion for the British, and leads to errors made by historians such as this

    • @tamovamo94
      @tamovamo94 Před 4 lety +8

      @@Peoples_Republic_of_Devonshire Also Draza and his chetniks saved around 300 allied pilots from certain death, they were good guys mostly but hated both nazis and communists.

    • @Peoples_Republic_of_Devonshire
      @Peoples_Republic_of_Devonshire Před 4 lety +6

      @@tamovamo94 they were yeah but the problem was that our objectives didn't line up.
      The Chetniks under Mihailovic's objective was the liberation of Yugoslavia, so they intended to rise up when the Allies were able to enter the country and launch a concerted and coordinated effort to push the Germans out.
      The Partisans' objective was the liberation of Yugoslavia, so they intended to resist the Axis invaders and try to push them out by force of arms.
      The Allied objective was to draw Axis troops away from the other theatres in Italy and North West Europe. Their intentions were to draw more and more German and Italian troops into Yugoslavia to allow their armies to move through their respective theatres with less opposition. So of the two movements the Partisans were the ones most closely aligned to the Allies' objectives which is why we chose to switch our support from Mihailovic to Tito, Draza may have been a good guy but he wasn't a winner unfortunately

  • @aleksandarvil5718
    @aleksandarvil5718 Před 4 lety +29

    Regards From (post-Yugoslavia) Serbia 🇷🇸🇷🇸🇷🇸 👍👍👍
    Many thanks to U, *@History Matters*

  • @swiety1981
    @swiety1981 Před 3 lety

    2:43 I love "*Other 250,000 not shown". in right bottom :) nice one!

  • @Strangefingshappen
    @Strangefingshappen Před 3 lety

    Love your videos. Do you do merch?

  • @donaldtR0ll3
    @donaldtR0ll3 Před 4 lety +54

    Read the title as "Why were the Yugoslav Partitions so Effective" and was ready for some heavy disagreement in the comments.

  • @lukezuzga6460
    @lukezuzga6460 Před 4 lety +32

    Great video, only wish it was longer! Heck, wish all your vids were longer.

    • @jackiereed1296
      @jackiereed1296 Před 4 lety

      He change his chanal up alot

    • @RyKaB17
      @RyKaB17 Před 4 lety

      I prefer the shorter videos. Much more straight forward, straight to the point stuff!

  • @greenbutter3190
    @greenbutter3190 Před 3 lety

    Stable video 👍

  • @Risto_Podvoznjak
    @Risto_Podvoznjak Před 3 lety +1

    Svaka čast! :-)

  • @explosivefiend9008
    @explosivefiend9008 Před 4 lety +7

    Thanks dude for doing this always like learning about Yugoslavia as it was my grandads homeland and fought in the partisans, thanks again !

  • @99Inflamunas
    @99Inflamunas Před 4 lety +3

    As always, great video here. No dazzle dazzle for in fact that quality is inherent to the subject. Well done sir.

  • @Isaacqhz
    @Isaacqhz Před 9 měsíci +2

    Imagine overthrowing your leader for allying with Germany, which lead to them getting invaded by Germany. Their leader was just compromising to prevent them from getting invaded, but they couldn’t see that.

  • @zlatanbogdanovic6874
    @zlatanbogdanovic6874 Před 2 lety +3

    1:48 I know like most of people can't pronounce Draža Mihajlović properly but man that was soo funny😆😆😆
    Mihajlo Bogdanović

  • @CB0408
    @CB0408 Před 4 lety +16

    You would think that such an epic experience would be enough to forge a strong, long-lasting Yugoslav national identity

    • @filipkajmakoski8464
      @filipkajmakoski8464 Před 4 lety

      well... you were wrong!

    • @CB0408
      @CB0408 Před 4 lety

      @@filipkajmakoski8464 lol

    • @maligjokica
      @maligjokica Před 4 lety +6

      They all hate each other,comen enemy bind them together.Communist tried to use communism as bond between us(the people of YU) and when it failed ALL failed.

    • @boozecruiser
      @boozecruiser Před 4 lety +1

      @@CB0408 the partisans came from fighting the spanish civil war. it's a miracle they didn't again turn to slaughtering eachother

    • @TheAJmoviemaker
      @TheAJmoviemaker Před 4 lety +7

      If there's one thing we're good at, it's defying expectations, XD

  • @leepek3575
    @leepek3575 Před 3 lety +10

    My grandfather was 17 and he escape from Poland and join Yugoslav Partisans. I must check more about it :D

    • @quasinormal
      @quasinormal Před 3 lety

      So he was a communist? Polish communist? Is this true story?

    • @leepek3575
      @leepek3575 Před 3 lety +4

      @@quasinormal xDDD Dont trigger me mate xDDD
      Yes, that's a true story, he escape Poland to NOT being slaved in Wermacht or sended to Camp.

    • @quasinormal
      @quasinormal Před 3 lety

      @@leepek3575 So he escaped Poland to help communists enslaving Slovenians, Croatians, Bosnians, Serbs and Macedonians at times when we were already under attack of nazis and fascists? And now YOU are telling me about being triggered? You in Poland got lost of communist oppresion 30 years ago, we still have it, mate! Thanks to all the forces that helped communist bandit army of partisans. I'm not blaming your poor grandpa if he had no other choice - but if that was his own decision, things get a little bit complicated here. I think I know something about Polish situation during the 2.nd was and I adore the bravery of your men to fight both nazis and commies, but if you knew more about Yugoslavian history, you would be much less proud of collaborating with this infamous revolutionary army.

    • @leepek3575
      @leepek3575 Před 3 lety +4

      @@quasinormal But as I heard Jugoslavian Partisant army fight against hitler?
      Btw. Is there any good museum about that soliders unit? I looking for any photos of my grandpa in army - maybe there is some info about him in old archive, do you have any idea?
      Well live is brutal, and wars are only for making ritch people more ritch , and poor are die for bank families

    • @felsachat7931
      @felsachat7931 Před 3 lety

      @Milos Bulajic my bro is all of Wikipedia in one head here

  • @AfterHoursNeon
    @AfterHoursNeon Před 2 lety +1

    My grandfather was part of the Yugoslav Partisans he died in 2002🙏🏻😞

  • @user-wx8si6bf2p
    @user-wx8si6bf2p Před 4 lety +10

    Good video man but i think it would he worth mentioning that Mihailovic had the support of the allies initially in ww2 and then they switched support to partizans.