Mišo_Broz

Mišo Broz

Mišo Broz

Croatian diplomat


Aleksandar "Mišo" Broz (Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: Александар "Мишо" Броз; born 21[citation needed] May 1941) is a Croatian retired diplomat. He is the youngest son of Yugoslav president and Marshal Josip Broz (1892–1980) and Herta Haas (1914–2010).

Quick Facts Aleksandar Mišo Broz, Ambassador of Croatia to Indonesia ...

Biography

He was born on 21[citation needed] May 1941[1][2] in Zagreb.[3][4] He was given the name Aleksandar at birth, but during the war he was given the name Mišo, which he continued to use later.

Josip Broz, then Chairman of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, met Herta Haas in 1937. The relationship lasted until 1941.[5] Just before his birth, Nazi Germany invaded his home country Yugoslavia. His father, Josip Broz Tito, the secretary general of the then illegal Communist Party of Yugoslavia (KPJ), had to move to Belgrade a few days before his birth (21 May). Although the rules of the illegal revolutionary life at the time dictated that an illegitimate mother hand over her newborn child to a different family for care, so as not to expose herself and the child to the risk of arrest, his mother Herta Haas refused and at first took care of her son alone . Her mother Priska and Tito's friend Vladimir Velebit helped her take care of the child.

When Herta Haas was threatened with arrest, in November 1941, she gave her son Aleksandar, who was already six months old at the time, into the care of a family. He then became one of the youngest fugitives and took the illegal name Mišo. His mother was later arrested, and in 1943 she was exchanged for captured German officers and moved to the liberated territory. Until the end of the war, Mišo did not know his real parents - he saw his father for the first time in April 1945, and his mother in May of the same year.

After the liberation of Yugoslavia, Mišo lived in Belgrade, in the immediate vicinity of his father, the Prime Minister of Yugoslavia. Mišo, and later his older brother's children from his first marriage – Josip Joška and Zlatica, were taken care of by cousin Marija, daughter of Tito's eldest brother Martin Broz. He finished elementary school and high school in Belgrade, and then moved to Zagreb, where he graduated from the University of Zagreb.[6]

After graduating from University, he worked in the economy. First, he worked at the "Prvomajska" machine tool factory, where he was the head of the export department and director of foreign trade. Later, he worked for the oil company INA, where he was the director of the import-export sector, and for the Government of the Socialist Republic of Croatia, where he was on the Committee for Foreign Relations. From 1983 to 1993, he held the highest positions in INA.

After the independence of the Republic of Croatia, in 1991, at the suggestion of then president Franjo Tuđman, he moved to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, where he was first an advisor to the minister, and then plenipotentiary minister at the Croatian embassy in Russia and Egypt. His last duty was as ambassador to Indonesia, from 2004 to 2009.[7]

He is married to Mira Broz, born Kosinc, and has two children - daughter Aleksandra Saša (b. 1969) and son Andrej (b. 1973), as well as three grandchildren - Sara, Luka, and Zita. He lives in Zagreb.

Broz has registered several trademarks related to his father.[8]


References

  1. "'Kakav čovjek...moj tata', objavila je Titova unuka Saša Broz s rođendanske proslave svog oca Miše". Slobodna Dalmacija. 22 May 2021. Retrieved 26 January 2023.
  2. "TITO'S SON MISO BROZ INTERVIEWED". East Europe Report, Political, Sociological and Military Affairs (1708). 17 August 1979. [Editorial Report] Titograd POBJEDA of 25 May 1979 on page 7 carries an interview with Tito's son Miso Broz by POBJEDA editor Slobodan Vukovic. The interview was held in the Zagreb apartment of Miso Broz, where he lives with his wife, Mira, who is a dentist, and two children. In the interview Miso Broz talks about his life, his hobbies and his work as a director of Inakomere work organization of INA enterprise which specializes in foreign trade. He also make brief [favorable] comments about his father. The article also includes pictures of Miso Broz as a child (born in 1941 in Zagreb), as an adult with his father and at home with his wife and child.
  3. "Intervju s Mišom Brozom". Pobjeda (in Serbo-Croatian). No. 4833. Titograd. 25 May 1979. p. 7. (subscription required)
  4. Dedijer, Vladimir (1 January 1981). Novi prilozi za biografiju Josipa Broza Tita. Liburnija, Rijeka. OCLC 8316924. Retrieved 5 September 2022 via Worldcat.
  5. "Mišo Broz prestaje biti veleposlanik u Indoneziji". Archived from the original on 7 September 2009. Retrieved 14 July 2009.
  6. Kovačević, Rada. "Nasledio pudlice sad traži kuću". Revija 92. No. 590. Arena 92. Archived from the original on 17 January 2014. Retrieved 26 January 2023.
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