Gornji Jelovac is a populated place in the city of Prijedor, Republika Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina. According to the 1991 census there were 547 inhabitants.

Just before the Second World War - in 1940, the village had 1,158 inhabitants.[1] Gornji Jelovac (lies on the road from Prijedor to Dubica) is one of the many Potkozarje villages that was almost completely destroyed during the Second World War when Ustashe (Croats and Muslims) slaughtered and killed 626 Serb civilians, including 267 children under the age of 15. It is another in a series of evidences of the genocide committed by the independent state of Croatia against the Serb population.[2]

Geography

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It is located in the very heart of Kozara, below the peak of Komanda (elevation 497 m - the eastern edge of the village). From the west, the border is the ridge Planinica, and from the south Bukova Kosa (elevation 287 m). In the north, Jelovac is open to Knežopolje, i.e.- Donji Jelovac and further to Knežica. In the north-east, at 301 m, there is the famous hill Patrija, the thirteen centuries old Serbian Knežopolje Guard.[3][4] There is the Road of Partisan Liberation - from the river Mlječanica to the elementary school "Petar Kočić". The average altitude of the village is 240 m.

About 60% is arable land and about 40% is forest. The rivers Mlječanica, and streams Rijeka (Jelovačka = Poharine), Jelovača, Poljanski potok, Studena and Petrovića [5] potok (flows from Prodans, through Aleksićs and Vilas - to Cerova kosa, i.e. Usjek) all flow through the village. There are 27 wells of drinking water.[6]

History

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Pre-Roman and Roman Times

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The history of the broader area dates back to ancient times. The first traces of life in this area are evident in prehistory - which is considered to be around 4000 B.C. In pre-Roman times and in Roman times, the Meze tribe lived in this area, which disappeared from the world stage in the 5th century, together with the Roman Empire. There is significant evidence of a Roman presence in the region over several centuries. The Serbs have been inhabiting this village since the 7th century. In that thirteen-century period, peoples' sufferings were very frequent.[7]

The Middle Ages

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Slavs have inhabited this village since the 7th century. It is not known when the name Gornji Jelovac was first mentioned. In our area, the rulers were from the Kotromanić family. There were 11 Stefan rulers (word Stefan = the one who was crowned), starting from Stefan Prijezda I Kotromanić (who ruled from 1290) all the way to Stefan Vukčić Kosača (who ruled until 1466), which is the period of 176 years. For a short period, this area, known in history as Donji Kraji, was under the rule of Tvrtko I (Stefan Tvrtko I Kotromanić - ban from 1367 to 1377, king from 1377 to 1391).[8]

Turkish Administration

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Gornji Jelovac fell under the Turkish rule after the end of Kotromanić's rule, and Banja Luka was the seat of the Sandžaks between 1554 and 1580. Turkish rule lasted from 1466 to 1878. The Christian Orthodox churches and monasteries around Banja Luka were built mainly in the 19th century, while the monasteries of Moštanica, Gomionica and Liplje were built many centuries earlier. During Turkish rule, the area was not modernized.[9]

Austro-Hungarian Administration

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From 1878 to 1918, the area fell under the rule of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy. The Austro-Hungarian occupation in 1878 led to economic progress. Mills, sawmills and infrastructure have been developed. In 1898 Christ Ascension Christian Orthodox church was built in Donji Jelovac. The period of 40 years of Austro-Hungarian rule is called the golden age in economic terms.[10] In the First World War, more than 200 civilians were killed, while many local men (never found exact number) fought in the Serbian Army[11] and 36 volunteers fought on the Thessaloniki Front in 1918; two were killed.[12][13]

Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes - Yugoslavia

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From 1 December 1918 the area became an integral part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. A decade after the First World War, the village was part of the Vrbas Banovina - the province of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. The primary school was opened in Jelovac Donji in 1923. From the economy perspective the 23-year period of the Kingdom's rule is considered as the Bronze Age.[14]

World War II

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Serbs, Jews and Roma people were outlawed in the independent state of Croatia (ndH). Croatia was dedicated to the extermination of Serbs with its all resources, it did not guarantee them: job, movement, supplies, personal and civil rights, education, religious rights, property, ... or even their own lives. No one was found guilty of the murder of Serbs in the ndH, and nobody was charged or convicted for such murders. During WW II Ustasha Nazis (Croats and Muslims) slaughtered and otherwise killed 626 Serb civilians, including 267 children under the age of 15 (Marina Ljubičić Bogunović, "Ustaški pokolj nad Srbima u selima Veliko i Malo Palančište i Gornji Jelovac kod Prijedora 1942. godine", page 68). In this place, Croatian Ustashas killed 50 mothers with their children, including Radojka Mudrinić and her nine children; Milka Petrić with her eight children and Milica Knežević with her seven children. [15] In the same period, 59 soldiers - members of the NOP (National Liberation Movement) were killed.[16]

Gornji Jelovac is the only place where four mass graves[17] from the WW II exist: Macurska krčevina (312 killed), Lakino kućište - Lazići (30 killed), Hajdučki izvor - Cvijetin tuk (27 killed) and Kneževića luka (13 killed). In the hamlet of Macure, a memorial ossuary was built in 1972, with the names of 221 murdered persons written on it. In the hamlet of Lazići (near Lakino kućište) there is a monument erected in 1985. In 1973, a monument with the names of the 109 killed was erected along the Dubica road in Kolarova Luka (author Vojislav Dragosavac). On the Patrija Hill, there is a monument to the Breakthrough of the Nazi-Ustasha ring on the 3/4 July 1942 - built in 1967, and renovated in 2009 (author Dragan Radaković). In 1959, a monument to fallen fighters of the National Liberation Movement (with 38 names) was erected along the Dubica road near Došen. In the same year, a memorial plaque was erected to the murdered residents of Jelovac Gornji - it is located on the building of the former regional elementary school. On the bridge near Bokani, over the Mlječanica river, a memorial plaque was placed in 1981 - marking the place where the Kozara fighters crossed from Kozara towards Patrija in July 1942. In this village, 34 households were completely extinguished - not a single family member managed to escape the slaughter and the Jasenovac factory of death - where "Ustashas used 57 methods of humiliation, murder and torture to death.[18]. NDH villains killed civilians - unarmed people with axes, sledgehammers and knives, on doorsteps, in orchards, groves[19], wherever they reached someone. Mr Spasoja Aleksić, at the age of 82 (in 2010), concluded that the perpetrators of the massacre in Jelovac and the entire Potkozarje were NDH Ustashas. There were 68 % Croats from Herzegovina (Široki Brijeg = Lištica, Livno and Duvno), 10 % Croats from Croatia, and 22 % Muslims from BiH.

DF / FPR / SFR Yugoslavia

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According to economic parameters, the period from 1945 to 1991 is considered as the Silver Age.[20] On 26. and 27. October 1969 two devastating earthquakes (6.0 and 6.4 on the Richter scale) damaged many buildings in Banja Luka and its surroundings, including Gornji Jelovac. It was a time when large numbers of residents moved (mostly permanently) to rather remote places in Germany, Austria, France, and Australia.[21]

Republika Srpska in the 1990-1995 Civil War

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Most of the young men - 118 of them - joined the Republika Srpska Army. This bloody and brutal war took 20 lives. Throughout the newly created entity, on 9 January 1992 (St. Stefan), Gornji Jelovac found itself in a whirlwind of change, which the people find quite difficult to accept.[22] A monument dedicated to the fallen soldiers of the Republika Srpska Army was erected near the elementary school in 2001.

Life in the Dayton Republika Srpska

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A significant number of residents have moved to work in Slovenia, Germany, Austria and the USA in the last two decades. There is no population growth, so the demographic picture is constantly worsening.[23]


Economy

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The inhabitants are engaged in agriculture, animal husbandry, poultry, fruit growing, hunting, fishing, viticulture, beekeeping and hand crafts (carpenters, wheelwrights, tub-makers, blacksmiths, bricklayers, roofers, potters, electricians, welders, fitters, car mechanics, car electricians, hairdressers, dressmakers, weavers, embroiderers). Our ancestors used objects/tools/devices such as: chains, iron pan for baking, iron pad header, iron ash spatula, kneading-through, bucket, vodijer (small bowl for grass scythe grinding stone), distaff, spindle, spindle with ring, winch, flying shuttle, winch, trlica (threshing device which removes the rest of the crushed hemp or linen plant), wooden machine for wet hemp rolling, loom, wooden tub for laundry board, carpenter's ax, wooden plow ...[24] Since its introduction into wider use: tractors (1964), chainsaws (1964), cereal grain threshing machines (1948), radios (1963), televisions (1968) - with completed electrification, washing machine 1970), cereal grain harvesters, corn harvesters, home telephones (2000), mobile telephones (2002), the Internet, the life of inhabitants became much easier. Sawmills - mobile circular saws (aran diesel engine) owned by Marko Kovač Stojanović, Sreto Ćurin, Dragan Kunić, Rajko Mudrinić and Predrag Ratković, and sawmills - bansek owned by Zdravko Prodan have accelerated the construction of buildings and other facilities at family homesteads. The only currently in use is at Ratković (in 2021). A significant momentum was given by the mobile machine - a screw press for the production of raw bricks (owned by Zdravko Prodan), which after drying was baked in a brick furnace for 72 hours. In the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, the village had two shops - owned by Nidžo Aleksić and Rade Đaković. During the FPRY / SFRY, there was one shop, and at the end of the 20th century, another one was opened by Ms Bosa Macura. Since 2015 Jelovac has not any shops. Around two decades at the end of 20th century there were several producers who delivered milk to Banja Luka Dairy. The collecting stations functioned at the homestead of Marko Pilipović, Zdravko Prodan and Željko Vukić. Today, the main milk producer is Rade Šormaz. For a long time Ribnjak - restaurant Zavišić on the Jelovačka River has been in function, and more recently Ribnjak - restaurant Radukić on the Mlječanica River, while Restaurant - cafe Bukova Kosa was closed. Car Seller Asha Auto can offer very good used vehicles.[25]

Road Network

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The main road Prijedor - Kozarska Dubica was paved in 1963. About 600 m of the local road to Ćiverice was paved in the summer of 2020. By the decision of the Republika Srpska Government dated 28.05.2020. the local road Međuvođe - Mlječanica, Mlječanica - Gornji Jelovac marked 1508 became a regional road of the second order. A section of this regional road, lenght about 1,800 m, starting from the elementary school towards Patrija (up to the turn to Cvijići) was paved on 31 August 2021.[26] The company "Prijedorputevi" completed the asphalting of the new section of the Partisan Breakthrough Road on St. of Joachim and Anna (22 September 2022). The total length of the asphalt road was 3,200 meters. The 2,100-meter-long connection with the asphalt road near Trubarci was made a day after St. Apostle Luke (1 November 2023). Now the regional road of the second order (number 1508) is in function from Međuvođe via Mlječanica (Trubarci), Patrija to Gornji Jelovac.

Culture, Arts and Sport

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"Petar Kočić" Elementary School might have celebrated a century of its existence in 2023. It started working as a joint four-grade school in 1923 in Donji Jelovac (opened in 1913[27] ). The first student from Gornji Jelovac was Rade (father Stevo) Bokan.[28] The school ceased its work 99 years later in the summer of 2022 due to lack of students. Quite a number of children played football, athletics, basketball, handball, table tennis, and chess. Jelovac has a football court, where "Happy Village" ("Selo veselo") competition was held in 2019. The athletic competition "Small Marathon Patrija" was held almost every year in June / July from 1976 to 2015 - totally 17 times, with a break during the Civil War until 2014. Opera singing is performed by Mladen Prodan Junior. Milorad Mićo Knežević, Sanja Knežević Zorić and Dule Ćiverica are active performers of ethnic songs. Anja Prodan performs songs of popular and folk music. Painting is done by Milorad Vila, Sanja Prodan, Nevenka Aleksić Aljetić and Ljiljana Prodan. Poetry is written by Milan Stojanović, Milena Reljić, Nevena Pilipović, Rajko Mudrinić, Duško Pilipović and Savan Zorić. Milan Stojanović and Dr. Dušan Dule Aleksić deal with factual writing. Sculpture is done by Milorad Vila and Duško Tubin. In the Local Cultural Centre (Dom kulture), films were screened for about thirty years, very nice performances were held, as well as dance evenings. The dance evenings were also held near the Monument on Patrija Hill, where the Partisan Breakthrough Road stretches, as well at Arman in Aleksići. Two gatherings of generations were held in 2013 and 2015 at Patrija Hill. National (peoples') gatherings have been held since 1967 by the Breakthrough Monument on Patrija Hill. Similar gatherings were also held near the former school - on the site where the football court is currently. There is a monument to the fallen National Liberation Movement fighters. Parastos for 312 Serbian martyrs has been held on the St. Sisoja Day by the monument in Macure hamlet since 2002[29]. The decision to mark the "Remembrance Day of Murdered Children in the Independent State of Croatia" from 2021[30] as an event of the national importance was adopted by the Republika Srpska Government.

Zavičajno društvo [[1]]Patrija Jelovac Prijedor[31] is the only association in the village with the status of a legal entity. The Homeland Society works to connect people born in Jelovac and those who are in any way connected to Jelovac in order to preserve all the positive values ​​of our region from being forgotten, to nurture the culture of memory, to network with people around the world, and to support social activities of general benefit for the residents of Jelovac . The construction of the multi-purpose facility (Patrija Living Memories Home) has been ongoing since 2020, with its opening scheduled for 2025. The society organized an artistic evening and a literary evening in 2023. The promotion of the book KRVOPAD by Saša Dimitrijević was organized by the Homeland Society in Prijedor, Banja Luka, Mrakovica, Knežica, Kozarska Dubica, Klekovci and Gradiška in March 2024. The exceptionally well-attended Kotlićijada organized by the Hunting Section from Jelovac were held in 2023 and 2024 at Patrija. Traditionally, on the eve of St. Peter's Day (July 11), lilas made of dry cherry bark are lit on the Patrija plateau.

In 1912, Jovan Dobrijević was proclaimed the most beautiful man in one state of the United States of America.[32]

The most significant cultural and religious event for the villagers for decades is the people's assembly at the nearby Moštanica Monastery (Kozarska Dubica), which is held every year on the Transfiguration of the Lord, August 19.[33]


Population

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Certain number of people arrived from Lika Region and Visoka Krajina in the end of XVIII and in the beginning of XIX century. The most numerous families today are Aleksićs, Prodans, Lukićs, Petrićs, Mudrinićs, Cvijićs, Zorićs and others.[34]


References

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  1. ^ Dr Dušan Aleksić "Tragedy of the Serb Hearths 1941 - 1995 in Jelovac near Prijedor", "Grafomark" Laktaši, 2015, page 289
  2. ^ Marina Ljubičić Bogunović, "Ustaški pokolj nad Srbima u selima Veliko i Malo Palančište i Gornji Jelovac kod Prijedora 1942. godine", "Grafid" Banja Luka, 2021, page 68
  3. ^ Milan Stojanović "Oj, Jelovac - Monografija sela Gornji Jelovac", "Grafomark" Laktaši, 2011, pages 125.-142.
  4. ^ Borislav Kasagić, Patrija, "Gorazd" Gradiška, 1997.
  5. ^ proto Slavko Vujasinović "Hajduk Pecija", "Štamparija Braća Jakšić" Banja Luka, 1933. page. 7.,26.
  6. ^ Milan Stojanović "Oj, Jelovac - Monografija sela Gornji Jelovac", "Grafomark" Laktaši, 2011, pages pages 15.-21.
  7. ^ "Fotomonografija Prijedor", "Grafomark" Laktaši, 2012, pages 5.-13.
  8. ^ Milan Stojanović "Oj, Jelovac - Monografija sela Gornji Jelovac", "Grafomark" Laktaši, 2011, pages 5.-13.
  9. ^ Milan Stojanović "Oj, Jelovac - Monografija sela Gornji Jelovac", "Grafomark" Laktaši, 2011, pages 31.-50.
  10. ^ Dr Vjekoslav Domljan "Prorajtali stoljeće", https://6yka.com/kolumne/vjekoslav-domljan-prorajtali-stoljece, 14. juli 2017.
  11. ^ "Jugoslovenski dobrovoljački korpus", "Vojno delo" Beograd, 1954.
  12. ^ Prota Slavko Vujasinović "Knešpolje i vojvoda Petar Pecija Petrović (Hajduk Pecija) 1830.-1875.", Banja Luka, 1933.
  13. ^ Milan Stojanović "Oj, Jelovac - Monografija sela Gornji Jelovac", "Grafomark" Laktaši, 2011 pages 51.-57.
  14. ^ dr Vjekoslav Domljan "Prorajtali stoljeće", https://6yka.com/kolumne/vjekoslav-domljan-prorajtali-stoljece, 14. juli 2017.
  15. ^ Dragoje Lukić "Rat i djeca Kozare", Beograd, 1990.
  16. ^ Milan Stojanović "Oj, Jelovac - Monografija sela Gornji Jelovac", "Grafomark" Laktaši, 2011, pages 58.-66.
  17. ^ Marina Ljubičić Bogunović "Ustaški pokolj nad Srbima u selima Veliko i Malo Palančište i Gornji Jelovac kod Prijedora 1942. godine", Banja Luka, 2021
  18. ^ dr Gideon Greif "Jasenovac - Auschwitz of the Balkans", Kiryat Ono, Israel & Miami, FL, USA, 2008
  19. ^ Institut za istraživanje srpskih stradanja u XX veku, Institute for Research on Suffering of the Serbs in XX Century http://www.serb-victims.org
  20. ^ Dr Vjekoslav Domljan "Prorajtali stoljeće", https://6yka.com/kolumne/vjekoslav-domljan-prorajtali-stoljece, 14. juli 2017.
  21. ^ Milan Stojanović "Oj, Jelovac - Monografija sela Gornji Jelovac", "Grafomark" Laktaši, 2011, pages 109.-124.
  22. ^ Milan Stojanović "Oj, Jelovac - Monografija sela Gornji Jelovac", "Grafomark" Laktaši, 2011, page 161
  23. ^ Milan Stojanović "Oj, Jelovac - Monografija sela Gornji Jelovac", "Grafomark" Laktaši, 2011, pages 125.-142.
  24. ^ Dr Jovan B. Dušanić - Lipljanski "Srbi Bosne i Hercegovine u XX veku - borba za slobodu i ujedinjenje", Beograd, 2018, pages 553-.559.
  25. ^ Milan Stojanović "Oj, Jelovac - Monografija sela Gornji Jelovac", "Grafomark" Laktaši, 2011, pages 276.-292.
  26. ^ https://srpskainfo.com/nakon-dodikove-posjete-krenuli-radovi-asfaltiranje-puta-prema-zaseoku-macure-i-patriji-foto
  27. ^ Proto Slavko Vujasinović "Memoari", "Glas Srpske" Banja Luka, 1920, page 41.
  28. ^ Dragoslav Aleksić "Knežopolje i Knežopoljci - u sadašnjosti i prošlosti", "Dom maloletnika" Beograd, 1931.
  29. ^ Milan Stojanović "Oj, Jelovac - Monografija sela Gornji Jelovac", "Grafomark" Laktaši, 2011, pages 201.-261.
  30. ^ "https://www.vladars.net/sr-SP-Cyrl/Vlada/Ministarstva/mpb/media/vijesti/Pages/dansjecanja.aspx
  31. ^ http://patrija.info
  32. ^ Milan Stojanović "Oj, Jelovac - Monografija sela Gornji Jelovac", "Grafomark" Laktaši, 2011
  33. ^ proto Slavko Vujasinović "Moštanica Monastery", "Štamparija Braća Jakšić" Banja Luka, 1933, pages 19-27
  34. ^ Dr Dušan - Dule Aleksić "Tragedija srpskih ognjišta 1941. - 1995. godine u Jelovcu kod Prijedora", "Grafomark" Laktaši, 2015, pages 157.-238.