POPE Pius XII and the Challenge of Totalitarianism in Yugoslavia, 1941–1958

Publisher:
Institute for Balkan Studies SASA

ISBN: 978-86-7179-128-1

DOI: 10.46793/POLITY25.

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Introduction: The Silence of Pius XII

Vojislav G. Pavlović, Questionable Solicitude Pius XII and the Catholic Church in Croatia during the Second World War

10.46793/POLITY25.033P

33-74

Aleksandar Stojanović, The Independent State of Croatia and the Role of the Catholic Church in the Genocide

10.46793/POLITY25.075S

75-98

Milosav Z. Đoković, Bishop Ivan Bučko and the Independent State of Croatia: Visits of the Ukrainian Bishop to the Eparchy of Križevci in 1942

10.46793/POLITY25.099DJ

99-125

Dušan Fundić, The Relations between the Ustasha and the Roman Catholic Clergy in the Independent State of Croatia

10.46793/POLITY25.127F

127-153

Miloš Vojinović, The Independent State of Croatia and the Ustasha Violence at the Crossroad of Italian and Vatican Documents

10.46793/POLITY25.153V

155-183

Rastko Lompar, Nazi Germany, Christian Churches, and Genocide in Wartime Croatia

10.46793/POLITY25.187L

187-279

Miloš Ković, Metropolitan Josif and the Serbian Orthodox Church in Conflict with the New Yugoslav Authorities (1944–1946)

10.46793/POLITY25.281K

281-298

Igor Vukadinović, Motivations Behind the Yugoslav Communist Regime’s Prosecution of Archbishop Alojzije Stepinac of Zagreb in 1946

10.46793/POLITY25.299V

299-326

Dragan Bakić, The USA, Pope Pius XII, and Containment Policy in the Early Cold War: The Case of Yugoslavia

10.46793/POLITY25.327B

327-387

Boris Milosavljević, The Vatican, Emigrants from Yugoslavia after 1944, Escape Routes, “Ratline(s)”, and Intelligence Agencies

10.46793/POLITY25.389M

389-430

Bogdan Živković, “Everything for the Church and the Motherland”: The Yugoslav Regime’s Policy on the Catholic Church, 1947–1958

10.46793/POLITY25.431Z

431-493