Nenad Petrović (writer)

Nenad Petrović (Serbian Cyrillic: Ненад Петровић) (born 1925) is Serbian writer, and one of numbered displaced persons after World War II and revolution in Yugoslavia.

Life

Petrovic was born in 1925 in Zagreb and graduated from high school in Belgrade in 1944, when he joined the nationalist resistance movement, (Chetniks), under Axis occupation.

After withdrawing through Sandzak and Bosnia in 1944 and 1945, he became an interpreter for the Yugoslav units serving the British Army in Italy and Germany. In 1947, he came to Great Britain as a Displaced Person and first worked as a farm hand and later as an employee in an industrial concern. He studied Political Economy in London.

Petrovic is active in the association Oslobodjenje (Liberation) and a member of the editorial board of the publication, Nasa Rec (Our Word) from 1958 and of the editorial board of the publishing house Nase Delo (Our Deed).

From 1963, he is secretary of the exile Committee of the Liberal International. He was a member of Democratic Alternative, founded by Desimir Tošić.[1][2] He is also secretary of the Association of Serbian Writers and Artists in Exile.

Petrovic is active in the work of the Serbian Orthodox Church. Under the editorship of Professor Radoje Knezevic he was, from 1964 to 1974, permanent correspondent of Glas kanadskih Srba (Voice of the Canadian Serbs).

Petrovic has published in English in the Review of the Study Centre for Yugoslav Affairs, articles Yugoslav Communist Party Congresses since. the War and The Fall of Alexander Rankovic and in the Serbian language, among others, articles on Dimitrije Mitrinovic (1967), The Centenary of Lenin's Birth, Vladimir Gadinovic, Risto Radulovic, Peter Struve.

He has published the following books: The Two Faces of Jugoslav Communism (1963) and The Daughter of Marx (1973), a critical survey of the beginnings of Socialism in England. He has contributed to the two volumes, Democratic Jugoslavia, articles entitled: "For a new social and political morality" (1967) and "The awakening of nationalism under Communist regimes" (1972); in both editions of the selected works of the Association of Serbian Writers and Artists in Exile on: "Our literature in exile" (1973) and "The latest monograph on Hilandar" (1980). In the record of Twenty years of work and political attitudes of the Association Oslobodjenje Petrovic contributed an article entitled: "In Emigration — yet independent of it."

In Belgrade he has published: Iz života londoskih političkih emigracija (From the life of the London Political emigrants) (1998) and Ogled o smislu i zabludama (Essay on Sense and Aberrations, 2001).

Nenad Petrovic resides in London.[3]

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