Sisak People's Liberation Partisan Detachment | |
---|---|
Participant in the Yugoslav People's Liberation War | |
Monument to the Detachment in Brezovica forest |
|
Active | 1941-1945 |
Leaders | Vladimir Janjić-Capo |
Headquarters | Brezovica forest |
Part of | Yugoslav Partisans |
Opponents | Axis powers, Germany, Italy, NDH, Bulgaria, Chetniks |
The Sisak People's Liberation Partisan Detachment, also known as the 1st Sisak Partisan Detachment (Serbo-Croatian: Sisački narodnooslobodilački partizanski odred, 1. Sisački partizanski odred) was the first military unit formed by a resistance movement in World War II occupied Europe.[1] This first unit of the Yugoslav Partisans was established in occupied Yugoslavia, in the Brezovica forest near Sisak (today's Croatia) on June 22 1941, the day Germany invaded the Soviet Union. It had 79 members, mainly Croats with the exception of one notable Serb woman, Nada Dimić,[1] and was commanded by Vladimir Janjić-Capo.
This event launched the anti-fascist resistance in occupied Croatia and the rest of Yugoslavia. Today, June 22 is commemorated every year as a public holiday called the Anti-Fascist Struggle Day.
Janko Bobetko, who 50 years later became one of the most prominent Croatian generals in Croatian War of Independence, was one of the founding members of this unit.