Mile Budak (30 August 1889 – 7 June 1945) was a
Croatian politician and writer best known as one of the chief ideologists of the Croatian fascist
Ustaša movement, which ruled the
Independent State of Croatia during
World War II in Yugoslavia from 1941–45 and waged a genocidal campaign of extermination against its
Roma
Roma or ROMA may refer to:
Places Australia
* Roma, Queensland, a town
** Roma Airport
** Roma Courthouse
** Electoral district of Roma, defunct
** Town of Roma, defunct town, now part of the Maranoa Regional Council
*Roma Street, Brisbane, a ...
and
Jewish population, and of extermination, expulsion and religious conversion against its
Serb population.
Youth and early political activities
Mile Budak was born in
Sveti Rok, in
Lika
Lika () is a traditional region of Croatia proper, roughly bound by the Velebit mountain from the southwest and the Plješevica mountain from the northeast. On the north-west end Lika is bounded by Ogulin-Plaški basin, and on the south-east by ...
, which was then a part of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire
Austria-Hungary, often referred to as the Austro-Hungarian Empire,, the Dual Monarchy, or Austria, was a constitutional monarchy and great power in Central Europe between 1867 and 1918. It was formed with the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of ...
.
[Profile](_blank)
, jasenovac-info.com; accessed 8 August 2014. He attended school in
Sarajevo and studied law at the
University of Zagreb.
[Contemporary Croatian literature by Ante Kadić, published by Mouton, 1960 (page 50)]
In 1912, he was arrested by Austro-Hungarian authorities over his alleged role in the attempted assassination of
Slavko Cuvaj, the
ban of Croatia.
Kingdom of Yugoslavia
Budak and
Vladko Maček
Vladimir Maček (20 June 1879 – 15 May 1964) was a politician in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. As a leader of the Croatian Peasant Party (HSS) following the 1928 assassination of Stjepan Radić, Maček had been a leading Croatian political fig ...
served as lawyers representing
Marko Hranilović and Matija Soldin at trial amid the
January 6th Dictatorship. On 7 June 1932, he survived an assassination attempt by operatives close to the
Kingdom of Yugoslavia. Afterwards, he migrated to Italy to join the
Ustaše and become the commander of an Ustaše training camp.
Budak was known for his literary work, especially novels and plays in which he had glorified Croatian peasantry. His works included the 1938 ''Ognjište'' (''The Hearth''), the 1933 ''Opanci dida Vidurine'' (''Grandpa Vidurina's Shoes''), and the 1939 ''Rascvjetana trešnja'' (''The Blossoming Cherry Tree''). About Budak's writing, contemporary E.E. Noth wrote: ''"Here we find the stubborn, spiritual-realistic conception of man and his relation to the soil on which he lives and which Mile Budak symbolizes as 'the hearth'"''.
In 1938, he returned to Zagreb where he began publishing the weekly newspaper ''Hrvatski narod''. The newspaper was vocal in its criticism of the
Croatian Peasant Party (HSS) and opposed the
Cvetković–Maček Agreement, by which the autonomous
Banovina of Croatia
The Banovina of Croatia or Banate of Croatia ( sh-Latn-Cyrl, separator=" / ", Banovina Hrvatska, Бановина Хрватска) was an autonomous province ( banovina) of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia between 1939 and 1941. It was formed by a merg ...
was created. In 1940, the authorities of the Banovina of Croatia banned the newspaper and had Budak arrested, along with 50 other Ustaše members. They were first interned in a prison in
Lepoglava, and were later transferred to Kruščica near
Travnik. On 31 March 1941, in a joint letter to Hitler, Pavelić and Budak asked him "to help Croatian people establish an independent Croatian state that would encompass the old Croatian regions, among them Bosnia and Herzegovina".
World War II
When the Independent State of Croatia was proclaimed, Budak became the state's chief propagandist and Minister of Education and Faith. As such, he publicly stated that forcible expulsion and religious conversion of the ethnic Serb minority was the official national policy. Budak signed the Ustashe regime's racial laws against Serbs, Jews, and Roma. Croatian novelist
Miroslav Krleža described Budak as "a minister of culture with a machine gun".
Budak pursued in his positions virulent anti-Serb agitation. Thus, he remarked on 6 June 1941 in
Križevci:
According to an alleged statement, reportedly said by Budak, the Ustaše plan was to "kill one part of the Serbs, evacuate another and lead over one part to Catholicism and thus transform them into Croats." The origins of this statement are unclear. According to
Veljko Bulajić, the statement originates from a speech in
Gospić on 22 July 1941. Other authors claim that it came in a radio broadcast, while some attribute it to
Dido Kvaternik. In a report to the
Yugoslav government-in-exile, the statement was attributed to
Andrija Artuković. There are various versions of the quote that differ in wording. The historian Tomislav Dulić said that he "tried to find a primary source that could confirm the existence and exact wording of this statement", but was "not been able to ascertain whether such a statement actually exists".
He later became Croatian envoy to
Nazi Germany (November 1941 – April 1943) and foreign minister (May 1943 – November 1943). Following the
Independent State of Croatia evacuation to Austria, Budak was captured by British military authorities and handed over to
Tito's
Partisans on 18 May 1945. He was court-martialled (before the military court of the 2nd Yugoslav army) in Zagreb on 6 June 1945 and was sentenced to death by hanging the same day. His execution the following day took place exactly 13 years after the assassination attempt on his life. During the trial, Budak was described to behave "cowardly, constantly weeping, and claiming he was not guilty of anything".
Legacy
After the war, his books were banned by
Yugoslav Communist
Communism (from Latin la, communis, lit=common, universal, label=none) is a far-left sociopolitical, philosophical, and economic ideology and current within the socialist movement whose goal is the establishment of a communist society, a s ...
authorities. Thus, many Croatian nationalists viewed Budak as a great figure of
Croatian literature, equal, if not superior to the leftist
Miroslav Krleža.
Following Croatian independence in the early 1990s, the
Croatian Democratic Union
The Croatian Democratic Union ( hr, Hrvatska demokratska zajednica, lit=Croatian Democratic Community, HDZ) is the major conservative, centre-right political party in Croatia. It is one of the two major contemporary political parties in Croa ...
aimed to reinterpret the Ustasha as a Croatian patriotic force.
In early 1993, the collected works of Mile Budak were republished, and Croatian writer Giancarlo Kravar at the time wrote: "... Ustashism, in its history, was undoubtly also a positive political movement for the state-building affirmation of Croatianism, the expression of the centuries-long aspiration of the Croatian people".
Elsewhere and more recently, Budak was described as "a mediocre Croatian author", "a mediocre writer at best", "a writer of middling originality and imagination" or a writer which literary work is "average and without lasting value".
As of August 2004, there were seventeen cities in Croatia which had streets named after Budak. Alekse Šantića street in
Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina was named after Budak between 1995 and 2022. The
Archdiocese of Zagreb
The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Zagreb ( hr, Zagrebačka nadbiskupija, la, Archidioecesis Zagrebiensis) is the central archdiocese of the Catholic Church in Croatia, centered in the capital city Zagreb. It is the metropolitan see of Croatia, an ...
declared at one point that it had no objection to the erection of a monument dedicated to the dead
Ustaša leader. In 2013, the Ministry of public administration announced plans to rename all those streets as they were unconstitutional.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Budak, Mile
1889 births
1945 deaths
People from Lovinac
Croatian people convicted of war crimes
People from the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia
Croatian fascists
Croatian irredentism
Austro-Hungarian prisoners of war in World War I
Croatian Austro-Hungarians
Party of Rights politicians
Ustaše
Croatian collaborators with Nazi Germany
Croatian collaborators with Fascist Italy
Croatian Roman Catholics
Roman Catholic writers
Croatian novelists
Croatian male writers
Male novelists
Croatian people of World War I
Croatian people of World War II
Executed Yugoslav collaborators with Nazi Germany
Executed politicians
Executed writers
Executed Croatian people
Government ministers of the Independent State of Croatia
People executed by Yugoslavia by hanging
Members of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts
Genocide of Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia perpetrators
Romani genocide perpetrators
Holocaust perpetrators in Yugoslavia
20th-century novelists
Croatian nationalists
20th-century male writers
Anti-Serbian sentiment
Persecution of Eastern Orthodox Christians