Home Guard unit, Tunjo Salatović and Anto Ikić in the photo. Source: Vitomir Zečević, Zovik na križnom putu, Zovik, 2002.
Donji Zovik
Donji Zovik is a small Croatian village belonging to Zovik parish, former Brčko municipality, now Brčko district. Donji Zovik is said to be 100% inhabited by Croats. When the war started in the territory of the parish, young men from Donji Zovik and all able-bodied volunteered to join the Croatian army. They were mostly unmarried young men, but there were also those who started a family. The Partisan Communist government always labeled Donji Zovik an “Ustasha place.”
When the war was over, Donji Zovik had 50 houses – and lost a total of 56 people. Of the 56 killed, eight of them were killed in a fight with Partisans and Chetniks or were mercilessly killed by Partisans, while 48 were killed at Bleiburg and the Way of the Cross, when the war was over.
When the war was over, the Partisans committed violence against the disarmed people. Without any trial, they committed terrible massacres and crimes in Donji Zovik.
In 1946, Tunjo Mićić and Stjepan Dubravkić were killed by Partisans in broad daylight in front of their house in Donji Zovik. Tunjo Mićić neither served in the army nor participated in the war. Tunjo was married, had one child, and was unfit for military service because he had a damaged leg. On the day of his death, he was only 20 years old and an only son. Zekerija Mulahalilović (a Partisan) from Ograđenovac bragged that he had fired 14 more bullets into the dead Tunja, and when Tunjo’s mother fell on top of her only son and cried, the partisans beat her with rifle stocks and boots.
Zekerija said: “Tunjo got what he deserved.”
From Tunjo’s house, they went to Stjepan Dubravkić and killed him in front of his house. Two men in the prime of their youth in the summer of 1946, one year after the end of the war, lost their lives in such a terrible way, without any trial. This tells us how little the lives of our people were worth. Then they also shot at Peja Mijatović, who survived severe wounds. Anto Celić was killed in Soljani.
Niko Dubravkić was killed by Partisans in Gornji Rahić. Luka Grgić was killed in a fierce battle near Ugljevik. Marko Kraljević, a member of Croatian units, was killed on the battlefield near Tuzla in a battle with Partisans. Pejo Vidović was killed near Zagreb when their positions were attacked by Partisans. Filip Sarčević was killed in Đakovo by Partisans. Niko Sarčević was accidentally killed in Donji Zovik.
The post-war situation was very difficult for the inhabitants of this place. The government tried to solicit them to enter into a “commune” and wanted to subjugate all the locals under a “cooperative”. They did not give in to it, but because of that they were harassed by the Communist government.
Eight men killed during the war:
| Last name | Father’s name | Name | Where he was murdered |
| Celić | Ivo | Anto | Soljani, Slavonija |
| Dubravkić | Franjo | Niko | Between Rahić and Palanka |
| Dubravkić | Niko | Tunjo | Near Ɖakovo |
| Grgić | Joko | Luka | In Ugljevik |
| Mijatović | Antun | Mato | Near Slavonski Brod |
| Šarčević | Ivan | Filip | Čačinci near Ɖakovo |
| Šarčević | Tunjo | Niko | Donji Zovik |
| Vidović | Ivo | Pejo | Near Zagreb |
How many sons have fathers lost
Dubravkić, Niko 3 sons Tunjo, Mijo i Stjepan
Kraljević, Ivo 3 sons Niko, Marko i Milan
Mijatović, Pejo 3 sons Niko, Antun i Tadija
Pejić, Blaž 3 sons Mijo, Grga i Stjepan
Ageljić, Grga 2 sons Pejo i Martin
Celić, Marko 2 sons Grga i Toma
Dubravkić, Ivan 2 sons Pejo i Jozo
Mijatović, Ivo 2 sons Grga i Stjepan
Mićić, Franjo 2 sons Marko i Grga
Šarčević, Filip 2 sons Petar i Šimo
Šarčević, Franjo 2 sons Petar i Mato
Šarčević, Tunjo 2 sons Božo i Niko
Tomić, Franjo 2 sons Grga i Niko
Ageljić, Ivo 1 son Joko
Ageljić, Joko 1 son Jerko
Ageljić, Jokica 1 son Mato
Ageljić, Jerko 1 son Niko
Ageljić, Marko 1 son Filip „Gavro“
Blažević, Niko 1 son Mato „Baća“
Brčinović, Tunjo 1 son Petar
Celić, Ivo 1 son Anto
Dubravkić, Franjo 1 son Niko
Grgić, Joko 1 son Luka
Ilijanić, Mato 1 son Jozo
Markanović, Antun 1 son Franjo
Matijašević, Andrija 1 son Marko
Mijatović, Antun 1 son Mato
Mićić, Tunjo 1 son Filip
Mićić, Niko 1 son Mato (Mađan)
Mićić, Pejun 1 son Niko
Mićić, Jozo (Jozep) 1 son Tunjo
Mićić, Mato 1 son Niko
Pejić, Pejo 1 son Stjepan
Šarčević, Ivan 1 son Filip
Šarćević, Ivo 1 son Mato
Šarčević, Tadija 1 son Jozo
Tomić, Marko 1 son Petar
Tomić, Mijo 1 son Mato
Vidović, Ivo 1 son Pejo
On Bleiburg and the Way of the Cross, the Partisans with the red five-pointed stars, and with the approval of the executioner Josip Broz Tito, killed 56 disarmed people from Donji Zovik, without any trial:
- Ageljić (Marko) Filip, 1921, +1945, Bleiburg
- Ageljić (Ivo) Joko, 1925, +1945, Bleiburg
- Ageljić (Grga) Pejo, 1921, +1945, Bleiburg
- Ageljić (Grga) Martin, 1924, +1945, Bleiburg
- Ageljić (Jerko) Niko, 1910, +1945, Bleiburg
- Ageljić (Joko) Jerko, 1921, +1945, Bleiburg
- Ageljić (Jokica) Mato, 1921, +1945, Bleiburg
- Brčinović (Tunjo) Petar, 1921, +1945, Bleiburg
- Blažević (Niko) Mato “Baća”, Bleiburg
- Celić (Ivo) Anto, 1925, +1945, Soljani
- Celić (Marko) Grga, 1917, +1945, Bleiburg
- Celić (Marko) Toma, 1925, +1945, Bleiburg
- Dubravkić (Ivan) Pejo, 1904, +1945, Bleiburg
- Dubravkić (Ivan) Jozo, 1908, +1945, Bleiburg
- Dubravkić (Niko) Tunjo, 1910, +1945, Bleiburg
- Dubravkić (Niko) Mijo, 1915, +1945, Bleiburg
- Dubravkić (Niko) Stjepan, 1918, +1946, D. Zovik
- Dubravkić (Franjo) Niko, 1912, +1945, G. Rahić
- Grgić – Lukić (Joko) Luka, 1905, +1943, Ugljevik
- Ilijanić (Mato) Jozo, 1921, +1945, Bleiburg
- Kraljević (Ivo) Marko, 1922, +1944, Tuzla
- Kraljević (Ivo) Niko, 1924, +1945, Bleiburg
- Kraljević (Ivo) Milan, murdered near Tuzla
- Matijašević (Andrija) Marko, Bleiburg
- Mićić (Jozo) Tunjo, 1925, +1946, D. Zovik
- Mićić (Franjo) Marko, 1922, +1945, Bleiburg
- Mićić (Franjo) Grga, 1924, +1945, Bleiburg
- Mićić (Mato) Niko, 1921, +1945, Bleiburg
- Mićić (Mato) Martin, 1924, +1945, Bleiburg
- Mićić (Pejo) Niko, 1922, +1945, Bleiburg
- Mićić (Niko) Filip, 1918, +1945, Bleiburg
- Mijatović (Ivo) Grga, 1907, +1945, Bleiburg
- Mijatović (Ivo) Stjepan, 1919, +1945, Bleiburg
- Mijatović (Pejo) Niko, 1922, +1945, Bleiburg
- Mijatović (Pejo) Tadija, 1925, +1945, Bleiburg
- Mijatović (Antun) Mato 1920, +1945, Bleiburg
- Mijatović (Pejo) Antun, Bleiburg
- Markanović (Antun) Franjo, 1915, +1945, Bleiburg
- Pejić (Blaž) Mijo, 1922, +1945, Bleiburg
- Pejić (Blaž) Grga, 1924, +1945, Bleiburg
- Pejić (Blaž) Stjepan, 1926, +1945, Bleiburg
- Pejić (Pejo) Stjepan, 1922, +1945, Bleiburg
- Šarčević (Tunjo) Božo, 1905, +1945, Bleiburg
- Šarčević (Tunjo) Niko, 1911, +1941, D. Zovik
- Šarčević (Ivan) Filip, 1915, +1943, Đakovo
- Šarčević (Tadija) Jozo, 1914, +1945, Bleiburg
- Šarčević (Filip) Petar, 1911, +1945, Bleiburg
- Šarčević (Filip) Šimo, 1915, +1945, Bleiburg
- Šarčević (Ivo) Mato, 1925, +1945, Bleiburg
- Šarčević (Franjo) Petar, 1920, +1945, Bleiburg
- Šarčević (Franjo) Mato, 1923, +1945, Bleiburg
- Tomić (Mijo) Mato, 1918, +1945, Bleiburg
- Tomić (Franjo) Niko, 1924, +1945, Bleiburg
- Tomić (Marko) Petar, 1925, +1945, Bleiburg
- Tomić (Franjo) Grga, Bleiburg
- Vidović (Ivo) Pejo, 1916, +1945, Zagreb
Sources:
Zbornik radova i popis žrtava za vrijeme i poslije II. svjetskog rata na području Brčkog, Stradanje Hrvata brčanskoga kraja u II. svjetskom ratu, Zagreb, 2002.
Vitomir Zečević, Zovik na križnom putu, Zovik, 2002.
Ivo Šarčević.
Editorial/crimesofcommunism.net


