The most popular Croat-Argentinian guy

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  1. Pavelić arrived in Buenos Aires on 6 November 1948 on the Italian merchant ship Sestriere,[citation needed] where he initially lived with the former Ustaša and writer Vinko Nikolić.[144] In Buenos Aires Pavelić was joined by his son Velimir and daughter Mirjana. Soon afterwards, his wife Maria and older daughter Višnja also arrived.[citation needed]

    Pavelić took up employment as a security advisor to Argentinian president Juan Perón.[145] Pavelić’s arrival documents show the assumed name of Pablo Aranjos,[citation needed] which he continued to use. In 1950 Pavelić was given amnesty and allowed to stay in Argentina along with 34,000 other Croats, including former Nazi collaborators and those who had fled from the Allied advance.[145] Following this, Pavelić reverted to his earlier pseudonym Antonio Serdar and continued to live in Buenos Aires.[citation needed]

    According to Robert B. McCormick, the Vatican saw Pavelić as a man who had made mistakes but had fought for the just cause.[146]

    As for most other political immigrants in Argentina, life was hard and he had to work (as a bricklayer).[citation needed] His best contact with the Peróns was another former Ustaša Branko Benzon, who enjoyed good relations with Evita Perón, wife of the president. Benzon had briefly been the Croatian ambassador to Germany during World War II and had known Hitler personally,[144][147] which benefited Croatian-German relations. Thanks to Benzon’s friendship with Evita Perón, Pavelić became the owner of an influential building company. Not long after arriving he joined the Ustaše-related “Croatian Home Guard” (Croatian: Hrvatski domobran) organization.

    At the end of the 1940s, many former Ustaše split from Pavelić because they believed that Croats, now under new circumstances, needed new political direction. Many who split from Pavelić continued to call themselves Ustaše and sought the revival of the Independent State of Croatia. The most well known of these separatists was the former Ustaše officer and head of the NDH concentration and extermination camp network, Vjekoslav Luburić, who lived in Spain.[citation needed] In Argentina, Pavelić used the “Croatian Home Guard” to gather Croatian political emigrants.[140] Pavelić tried to expand the activities of this organization, and in 1950 founded the Croatian Statehood Party, which ceased to exist that year.

    On 10 April 1951, on the 10th anniversary of the Independent State of Croatia, Pavelić announced the Croatia State Government. This new government considered itself to be a government in exile. Other Ustaše emigrants continued to arrive in Argentina, and they united under Pavelić’s leadership, increasing their political activities. Pavelić himself remained politically active, publishing various statements, articles, and speeches in which he claimed that the Yugoslav Communist regime promoted Serbian hegemony.[148]

    In 1954, Pavelić met with Milan Stojadinović, a former Royal Yugoslav Prime Minister, who also lived in Buenos Aires. The subject of their meeting was trying to find a solution for the historic conciliation between the Serbs and Croats. The meeting stirred controversy, but had no practical significance.[149] On 8 June 1956, Pavelić and other Ustaše immigrants founded the Croatian Liberation Movement (Croatian: Hrvatski oslobodilački pokret or HOP), which aimed to re-establish Nazism and the NDH.[150] The HOP saw itself as “a determined adversary of communism, atheism and Yugoslavism in any possible form”

  2. Pavelić arrived in Buenos Aires on 6 November 1948 on the Italian merchant ship Sestriere,[citation needed] where he initially lived with the former Ustaša and writer Vinko Nikolić.[144] In Buenos Aires Pavelić was joined by his son Velimir and daughter Mirjana. Soon afterwards, his wife Maria and older daughter Višnja also arrived.[citation needed]

    Pavelić took up employment as a security advisor to Argentinian president Juan Perón.[145] Pavelić’s arrival documents show the assumed name of Pablo Aranjos,[citation needed] which he continued to use. In 1950 Pavelić was given amnesty and allowed to stay in Argentina along with 34,000 other Croats, including former Nazi collaborators and those who had fled from the Allied advance.[145] Following this, Pavelić reverted to his earlier pseudonym Antonio Serdar and continued to live in Buenos Aires.[citation needed]

    According to Robert B. McCormick, the Vatican saw Pavelić as a man who had made mistakes but had fought for the just cause.[146]

    As for most other political immigrants in Argentina, life was hard and he had to work (as a bricklayer).[citation needed] His best contact with the Peróns was another former Ustaša Branko Benzon, who enjoyed good relations with Evita Perón, wife of the president. Benzon had briefly been the Croatian ambassador to Germany during World War II and had known Hitler personally,[144][147] which benefited Croatian-German relations. Thanks to Benzon’s friendship with Evita Perón, Pavelić became the owner of an influential building company. Not long after arriving he joined the Ustaše-related “Croatian Home Guard” (Croatian: Hrvatski domobran) organization.

    At the end of the 1940s, many former Ustaše split from Pavelić because they believed that Croats, now under new circumstances, needed new political direction. Many who split from Pavelić continued to call themselves Ustaše and sought the revival of the Independent State of Croatia. The most well known of these separatists was the former Ustaše officer and head of the NDH concentration and extermination camp network, Vjekoslav Luburić, who lived in Spain.[citation needed] In Argentina, Pavelić used the “Croatian Home Guard” to gather Croatian political emigrants.[140] Pavelić tried to expand the activities of this organization, and in 1950 founded the Croatian Statehood Party, which ceased to exist that year.

    On 10 April 1951, on the 10th anniversary of the Independent State of Croatia, Pavelić announced the Croatia State Government. This new government considered itself to be a government in exile. Other Ustaše emigrants continued to arrive in Argentina, and they united under Pavelić’s leadership, increasing their political activities. Pavelić himself remained politically active, publishing various statements, articles, and speeches in which he claimed that the Yugoslav Communist regime promoted Serbian hegemony.[148]

    In 1954, Pavelić met with Milan Stojadinović, a former Royal Yugoslav Prime Minister, who also lived in Buenos Aires. The subject of their meeting was trying to find a solution for the historic conciliation between the Serbs and Croats. The meeting stirred controversy, but had no practical significance.[149] On 8 June 1956, Pavelić and other Ustaše immigrants founded the Croatian Liberation Movement (Croatian: Hrvatski oslobodilački pokret or HOP), which aimed to re-establish Nazism and the NDH.[150] The HOP saw itself as “a determined adversary of communism, atheism and Yugoslavism in any possible form”

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