Grandson reveals late ‘regret’ of Yugoslavia’s Tito
BELGRADE: Before his death 40 years ago, Josip Broz Tito, the charismatic and controversial leader of former Yugoslavia, privately shared a “regret”, his grandson recalls. Speaking to AFP by phone, 72-year-old Joska, who proudly shares the name Josip Broz, summons the words of an illustrious grandfather who took him in as a child.
In the twilight of his life, Tito confided it was a “mistake” to allow the 1974 constitution that loosened Yugoslavia´s federal system, opening up fissures that later exploded into war. While the man who embodied Yugoslavia did not live to witness its brutal shattering a decade after his death, he saw the seeds of discord had been planted, according to his grandson. “From one state, we created eight small ones... we crumbled everything, that´s my biggest mistake”, Joska remembers Tito saying — an admission the powerful leader would not have made in public.
With or without the 1974 constitution, many consider Tito´s passing six years later to be the true death knell for the country he founded from the ashes of World War II. Home to a patchwork of Serbs, Croats, Slovenes, Albanians and other communities, the nation was held together by their lifelong president´s magnetic personality — and tools of suppression. While Tito is praised for turning Yugoslavia into one of the most prosperous communist countries, critics highlight his jailing of political dissidents and his repression of the historical grievances between communities that surged back with a vengeance in the 1990s.
As one of six grandchildren, Joska saw a different side of a man often viewed as larger-than-life. Tito became a “father” to Joska and his sister Zlatica after their parents divorced when he was four, he told AFP. The children lived in Tito´s home in Dedinje, a leafy and affluent Belgrade neighbourhood, until they were teenagers.
Fish and chicken
According to Joska, in spite of being a statesman known for his extravagant parties and a bon vivant lifestyle, Tito also “liked simple things”. “He was relaxed with his family, he particularly liked fish and chicken, two dishes he could not enjoy at official meals” because “they are eaten with the fingers”, Joska told AFP. He “taught us that we had to live from our work without exploiting our family name,” recalled the grandson, who was a policeman, a restauranteur and now a member of the small neo-communist party he created. It was as a police officer that Joska helped manage the logistics of Tito´s enormous funeral, which brought together a who´s-who of global leaders, a legacy of a shrewd diplomacy that criss-crossed Cold War divides.
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