Josip Križaj (aviator)

Josip Križaj
Nickname

"Pepi"

Nom de Guerre: José Antonio Galiasso
Born March 13, 1911(1911-03-13)
Kopriva on Karst, Austro-Hungary now Slovenia
Died August 10, 1948(1948-08-010)
Snežnik plateau, Yugoslavia now Slovenia
Allegiance  Kingdom of Italy
 Second Spanish Republic
 Kingdom of Yugoslavia
 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Service/branch Air forces
Years of service 1930–1948
Unit

Squadron España

11th Fighter Squadron NOVJ
Battles/wars

Spanish Civil War

World War II

Awards Order for courageusness

Josip Križaj (13 March 1911 – 8 October 1948), also known in the Italianized form as Giuseppe Krizai, nicknamed "Pepi", was a Slovene military pilot and a veteran of the Spanish Civil War.

Križaj was born in Kopriva on the Karst plateau, then part of the Austro-Hungarian county of Gorizia and Gradisca. After World War I, the region became part of the Kingdom of Italy and Križaj became an Italian citizen. Already at a young age he showed a passion for flight, which led him to pursue a pilot course in the Royal officer school in Capua near Naples, Italy.

Due to his Slovene ethnic origins, he was not allowed into the regular Italian Royal Air Force, but he was nevertheless granted a place in reserve composition. Because of the physical hardships endured during the training and his pro-Slovenian and pro-Yugoslav national political stance, he flew with Fiat AS.1 airplane on 25 June 1932 from Gorizia to Ljubljana, crossing the border of Yugoslavia, which led to much media interest. In 1934, he became a Yugoslav citizen. Following the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, he joined the Yugoslav volunteers who went fighting on the side of the Spanish Republic. He was a member of the Squadron España, shot down once and captured during the war. After his return to Yugoslavia, he moved to Serbia, where he lived during World War II.

After the war, he became a SFR Yugoslav Air Force military pilot. His life ended on 8 October 1948, when his plane Yakovlev Yak-3 crashed into the Snežnik Mountain in south-western Slovenia, because of of poor visibility in dense fog.

Today, the Ajdovščina Flying Club is named after Josip Križaj, and there is a monument to him located on Portorož Airport.

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