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词条 Dominik Mandić
释义

  1. Life

  2. Works

  3. See also

  4. References

  5. External links

{{One source|date=August 2016}}

Dominik Mandić (2 December 1889 – 23 August 1973) was a Herzegovina-born Yugoslav Franciscan priest and an influential supporter of the Nazi-affiliated Croatian Ustaše.

Life

Mandić was born in Lise, Herzegovina (present-day Široki Brijeg). He completed his primary education in Široki Brijeg, where he attended the famous Franciscan high school, but graduated from the last two years in Mostar. He studied theology at Fribourg and obtained his PhD in church history. When he returned to Mostar, he became a teacher of religion in the Mostar state high school. The Franciscan Province of Herzegovina elected him as their head.{{cn|date=August 2018}}

In 1939, Mandić was appointed a member of the central administration of the Franciscan Order in Rome as the representative of all the Franciscan provinces in Slavic countries, and Chief Economist of the Order. He was in Rome when war broke out in the Balkans in April 1941. As Chief Economist and General Definitor of the Franciscan Order, he provided financial support to the Ustaše, as Mark Aarons and John Loftus reference in Unholy Trinity: The Vatican, The Nazis, and The Swiss Banks.[1]

Mandić controlled San Girolamo ratline's finances. He arranged the laundering of Ustasha money likely via the Franciscans' Vatican Bank accounts to which he had access and placed the Franciscan printing presses at the disposal of the Ustasha to print false identity information for war criminals to escape from justice after the Holocaust using ratline escapes. Other priests involved in the San Girolamo ratline included: Krunoslav Draganović, Dragutin Kamber, Vilim Cecelja (based in Austria) and Karlo Petranović (based in Genoa).[1]

Works

  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20060525220243/http://www.magma.ca/~rendic/introductioncroats%26serbs.htm Hrvati i Srbi, dva stara različita naroda (Croats and Serbs, Two Ancient and Different Peoples)]
  • Bogumilska crkva bosanskih krstjana (The Bogumil Church of Bosnian Christians)
  • Crvena Hrvatska (Red Croatia)
  • Državna i vjerska pripadnost sredovječne Bosne i Hercegovine (State and Religion in Medieval Bosnia and Herzegovina)
  • Etnička povijest Bosne i Hercegovine (Ethnic History of Bosnia and Herzegovina)

See also

  • Operation Bloodstone
  • Aunt Anna's, a safe house in Merano, Italy

References

1. ^Mark Aarons & John Loftus, Unholy Trinity: The Vatican, The Nazis, and The Swiss Banks, St. Martin's Griffin (revised edition, 15 June 1998), page 118; {{ISBN|978-0312181994}}

External links

  • The Collected Works of Dominik Mandić, fram.ba (PDF)
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15 : 1889 births|1973 deaths|Ustaše|Holocaust perpetrators in Yugoslavia|People from Široki Brijeg|Christian fascists|Croatian fascists|Croatian military chaplains|Croatian people of World War II|Croats of Bosnia and Herzegovina|Bosnia and Herzegovina Roman Catholic priests|Bosnia and Herzegovina Franciscans|Bosnia and Herzegovina writers|Place of death missing|20th-century Roman Catholic priests

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