Tamara Griesser Pečar

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Tamara Griesser Pečar (b. March 18, 1947) is a Slovene historian.

She was born in Ljubljana, then part of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. She frequented the grammar school in Ljubljana, Koper and Portorož and later in New York City and in Vienna. After graduating from the American International School of Vienna, she studied history at the American University of Paris and later history and English language at the University of Vienna, where she obtained her PhD in 1973 with a disertation on the positions of the Slovenian autonomous government towards Carinthia and Carinthian Slovenes between 1918 and 1920.

She has written on the dissolution of Austria-Hungary, on the position of the Roman Catholic Church in Communist Slovenia and on the period of World War Two in Slovenia. In 2003, she publsihed a book in German language entitled "The Divided Nation. Slovenia 1941-1945: Occupation, Collaboration, Civil War and Revolution" (German: Das Zerrissene Volk: Slowenien 1941-1945, Okkupation, Kollaboration, Bürgkrieg, Revolution). The Slovene translation was published in 2006 by the publishing house Mladinska knjiga, becoming a bestseller. The book raised a lot of controversy and has been accused of historical revisionism, because of the re-interpretation of the role of the Communist Party in and the Yugoslav People's Liberation War in Slovenia.

In 2004, she was awarded with the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice order by pope John Paul II.

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