Ivan Vranetić

Ivan Vranetić

Vranetić at around age 19-20
Born c. 1926
Vrbas, Kingdom of Yugoslavia, (now Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Died 3 February 2010
Israel
Nationality Yugoslav, Israeli[1]
Religion Roman Catholic
Spouse(s) Erna (née Montilio) Vranetić

Ivan "Ivica" Vranetić (Hebrew: איוואן ורנטיץ'; c. 1926 – 3 February 2010) was a Yugoslav partisan of ethnic Croatian descent, whose aid to Jewish people during World War II resulted in his inclusion among the "Righteous Among the Nations" by Yad Vashem in 1970.[2] For more than two decades, he was Chairman of the Righteous Among the Nations organization.

Biography

Vranetić was born around 1926 in Vrbas, Donji Vakuf, Yugoslavia (present-day Bosnia & Herzegovina) and raised in Topusko (present-day Republic of Croatia).[1][3] He grew up in a liberal, middle-class, Catholic household. Although his parents were not particularly religious, Vranetić said he was raised to love and respect others. Vranetić began helping Jewish refugees at the age of 17 even though his village largely supported the Nazi-sympathizing Ustaše. His first attempt to help a Jewish doctor resulted in a beating from a Croatian soldier that resulted in Vranetić losing hearing in his left ear. He went on to help many others find secure hiding places and to supply their needs.[1]

Among the refugees he assisted was Erna Montilio, whose husband had at the infamous Jasenovac concentration camp, but her mother and sister managed to escape. In 1948 Erna and her daughter moved to Israel, where she married and had two more children. But the marriage did not last.[3] After the war, Vranetić continued to communicate with her and other refugees he had helped, eventually moving to Israel in 1963 and marrying Montilio.[1] He was granted honorary Israeli citizenship by the government of Israel. In 1970, he received his "Righteous Among the Nations" award from Yad Vashem for his work,[4] becoming chairman of the Organization of Righteous Among the Nations in Israel in 1986, a position he held for more than twenty years.[3]

Widowed in the late 1990s, Vranetić was honored during a memorial ceremony at the Yad Vashem Hall of Remembrance in 2009 when he and six Jewish Holocaust survivors met Pope Benedict XVI.

Death

Vranetić died in Israel on 3 February 2010. He was believed to be 84 years old (not 82, as some sources reported).[3][5][6]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Sudilovsky, Judith (11 May 2009). "Catholic... who rescued Jews from Nazis excited to meet pope". Catholic News Service. Retrieved 2010-03-14.
  2. Associated Press (3 February 2010). "Yugoslav Partisan Who Saved Jews in Holocaust Dies". ABC News. Accessed 16 November 2010.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Yad Vashem (4 February 2010). "In Tribute to Ivan Vranetic, Righteous Among the Nations". yad-vashem.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2010-03-14.
  4. "Briefly: Ivan Vranetic". The Independent. 5 February 2010. Retrieved 2010-03-14.
  5. New York Newsday obituary for Vranetić (registration required)
  6. Boston Globe report on Vranetić's death, 7 February 2010; accessed 8 September 2016.
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