Married couple national heroes
Filip Kjajić was born on May 2, 1913 in the village of Tremušnjak, near Petrija. As a cadet of the Serbian Business Association.
The businessman went to Vel in 1925. Kikindu to learn carpentry. In the fall of 1931, he got a job in Belgrade. There he began his revolutionary activity in the United Workers' Union of Yugoslavia (URSSJ). In 1936, he became a member of the Communist Parties of Yugoslavia (CPY), and in 1937 he was elected a member of the CPY District Committee for Belgrade. He was Western as the organizer of several workers' strikes, and he was especially engaged in working in the unions of leather and processing workers. At the annual assembly of the trade union organizations of tanners in Belgrade, on February 20, 1938, he was elected a member of the board.
He was one of the organizers of mass excursions of youth and older workers in Topčider and Košutnjak, which is why in 1938 he was imprisoned every year for two months. The Belgrade city administration explained his arrest as a precaution, in order to prevent extraordinary demonstrations during Maček's visit to Belgrade. In the second half of 1938, Kjajić was expelled to his hometown. Because of that, he had to go illegal, and the Provincial Committee of the CPY for Serbia sent him to Nis. There he got a job in the factories that he met his future wife Đurđelina Đuka Dinić, a national hero. He remained in Nis until the break-in of the Nis party organization in 1940. Then he and his wife moved to Valjevo. There they continued their party activity together. In September 1940, he was elected secretary of the District Committee of the CPY for Valjevo, and on October 12, he organized a meeting in Valjevo, which had 3,000 workers.
After the April war and the occupation of Yugoslavia, as a member of the Military Committee at the Provincial Committee of the CPY for Serbia, and then the political and political commissar of the NOP General Staff, he robbed Serbia, and was one of the organizers of the People's Liberation Struggle. He took part in the first insurgent actions: in the attack on Seljski rudnik, Lajkovac, Svilajnac, etc. During the First Unreported Offensive, the Supreme Commander of NOV and POJ Josip Broz Tito was personally entrusted with the task of organizing the defense in the Valjevo sector. In performing his duty, Fić was hard at work in those battles. He participated in military-political conferences in Duleni and Stolice, he was the first political commissar of the First Proletarian Strike Brigade, from November 1942, and the political commissar of the First Proletarian Division. One with its proletarian units went through the fiercest battles in Bosnia, Montenegro and Dalmatia.
He died on July 5, 1943, during the attack of NOVJ units on Zvornik.
By a decree of the Presidency of the Anti-Fascist Council of the People's Liberation of Yugoslavia (AVNOJ), on September 25, 1944, during the first battles of the People's Liberation Army, he was proclaimed a national hero.
Đurđelina Đuka Dinić was born on November 9, 1914 in the village of Donji Konjuvac, near Leskovac.
Jen Father Nikolaj Dinić, socialist oriented, was a parliamentary candidate in 1912 and 1914, and is on the list as a communist candidate in 1920. He was a student of the People's Liberation Struggle and the first president of the District Board for the Leskovac district.
A year after finishing home school in 1933, she left Leskovac for Nis, where she worked as a weaver and got a job in a leather factory in Nis, where she met Filip Knjajić when she married in 1938. His death began in that city. revolutionary work. She was appointed a member of the Communist Parties of Yugoslavia in 1938. At the end of 1940, after the break-in of party organizations, she left Nis and moved to Valjevo alone with her husband. She worked there illegally and remained there until the occupation of Yugoslavia. When the uprising began, according to the Partners' directive, he moved to Belgrade, where he was the leader of sabotage and other actions.
She was a member of the Local Committee of the CPY for Belgrade and remained in that position until the Special Police arrested her on September 23, 1942 in Dedinje. She was taken to the Baćići camp, where she was terribly tortured, but despite that she did not reveal any information, not even a public name. She was shot in Jajinci, on May 25, 1943, under the illegal name of Radmila Obradović.
The decision of the presidency of the Anti-Fascist Council of the People's Liberation of Yugoslavia (AVNOJ), and at the suggestion of the Supreme Command of the Yugoslav Army, Marshal Josip Broz Tito, was declared a national hero on June 6, 1945.
I only heard about him. I know he was a national hero. I haven't heard of his wife. Thanks for the new knowledge