The Daksa massacre, also called the Daksa executions, refers to the war crime summary execution of 53 men, accused of collaboration, by Yugoslav Partisans on 24âÂÂ25 October 1944 during World War II on the Croatian island of Daksa, near Dubrovnik.
After the Partisans entered Dubrovnik on 18 October 1944, they arrested more than 300 citizens. 53 were executed on Daksa without trial. Exhumation and DNA analysis have confirmed the identities of 18 of these, while 35 remain unknown. The Partisans later published and distributed flyers through Dubrovnik with the words: "In the name of peoples of Yugoslavia" and "Judicial Council of the Court Martial of the Command of South Dalmatian region". The flyers contained the names of 35 people killed on that date.
On 19 June 2010, the remains of the executed men were re-interred. The victims included a Catholic priest, Father Petar Perica (who composed the song "Djevo Kraljice Hrvata"), and Niko Koprivica, Dubrovnik's mayor. No one was ever tried for the executions.
The list of people killed on Daksa
- Tomislav BaÃÂa
- Petar Barbir, typographer
- Slavko Barbir, student
- Boris BerkoviÃÂ, journalist (Zagreb, 1920 - Daksa, 1944)
- Marijan BlaÃ
¾iÃÂ, prof. (St. Matthew, Kastav, March 25, 1897 - Daksa, October 25, 1944)
- Ante BreÃ
¡koviÃÂ, merchant (NereÃ
¾iÃ
¡ÃÂa on BraÃÂ, January 1, 1912 - Daksa, October 25, 1944)
- Baldo Crnjak, craftsman (Trnova 1901 - Daksa 1944)
- don Mato Dobud (Luka Ã
 ipanska, 19 September 1882 - Daksa, 25 October 1944)
- Milan Goszl, merchant (Ruma, 1884 - Daksa, 1944)
- don Mato KalafatoviÃÂ-MiliÃÂ (Janjina, July 23, 1911 - Daksa, October 25, 1944)
- dr. Niko Koprivica, mayor of Dubrovnik, lawyer and champion of the Croatian Peasant Party
- don ÃÂuro KreÃÂak (Dubrovnik, April 23, 1883 - Daksa, October 25, 1944)
- Ivo KneÃ
¾eviÃÂ, farmer (Dubrovnik 1910 - Daksa, 1944)
- Ivan KubeÃ
¡ (Kubesch), clerk (KorÃÂula, 1913 - Daksa, 1944)
- Jure (ÃÂuro) MatiÃÂ, postman (ToÃÂionik, 1895 - Daksa, 1944)
- Ã
½eljko MiliÃÂ, captain of a long voyage
- Makso MiloÃ
¡eviÃÂ, prof., Director of the Dubrovnik Gymnasium, (Dobrota in the Bay of Kotor 1887 - Daksa 1944)
- Antun Mostarcic, prof. (Imotski, 1903 - Daksa, 1944)
- Ivan NikiÃÂ, clerk (Dubrovnik, 1923 - Daksa, 1944)
- Niko NuniÃÂ, B.Sc. Lawyer, Secretary of the Municipality of Dubrovnik (Dubrovnik, 1903 - Daksa, 1944)
- Nikola ObradoviÃÂ, farmer (Danube, 1903 - Daksa, 1944)
- Ivo Peko, director of the Dubrovnik Roundabout and journalist (Dubrovnik 1903-Daksa 1944)
- Petar Perica (KotiÃ
¡ina above Makarska, June 27, 1881 - Daksa, October 25, 1944)
- Dr. Baldo PokoviÃÂ, lawyer (Dubrovnik, 1897- Daksa, 1944)
- Mato RaÃÂeviÃÂ, school janitor (Vitaljina, 1905 - Daksa, 1944)
- Vido Regjo (Grbavac, 1906 - Daksa 1944)
- Don Josip Schmidt (Vukovar, March 1, 1914 - Daksa, October 25, 1944)
- Nedjeljko Dinko Ã
 ariÃÂ, tax officer (Trstenik, 1905 - Daksa, 1944)
- Ante Tasovac, police scout (Vela Luka, 1907 - Daksa, 1944)
- Toma Tomasic, prof. (BaÃ
¡ka Draga, 17 August 1881 - Daksa, 25 October 1944)
- Martin TomiÃÂ (DraÃÂevo, 1907 - Daksa, 1944)
- Josip Tuta, student (Dubrovnik, 1924 - Daksa, 1944)
- Frano VojvodiÃÂ, president of the mixed Croatian choir GunduliÃÂ in Dubrovnik, (Brgat, 1897 - Daksa, 1944)
- Marijan VokiÃÂ, driver (SoviÃÂi, Drinovci, 1915 - Daksa, 1944)
- Frano Ã
½iÃ
¡ka, retired officer (1897 - 1944)
- Dr. Ivo KarloviÃÂ, Mayor of Dubrovnik (1893 - 1944)
References