This manuscript “La Jugoslavia comunista: fra il dissenso dell'intellighenzia eil diritto di Stato della Croazia” (Communist Yugoslavia: Between the Intellectual Dissent and Croatia’s Right to Statehood) was written in 1978 and published as a book in Venice in 1979. Čolak wanted to highlight two dangers for the Yugoslav regime: first, the Croatian national question and, second, the resistance of intellectuals to the communist dictatorship.
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The article “Mihajlo Mihajlov i smisao njegove političke borbe” (Mihajlo Mihajlov and the meaning of his struggle) about the renowned dissident Mihajlo Mihajlov, was written immediately after Čolak’s departure into exile in Italy in 1966. It offers a review of Mihajlov's struggle for the democratization and liberalization of Yugoslavia. It was most likely not published.
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This manuscript entitled Istina o Jugoslaviji. Proživio sam dvadeset godina u komunističkoj Jugoslaviji. I. redakcija (The truth about Yugoslavia. I survived twenty years in communist Yugoslavia) was written in Padua in 1970, but printed in 1977 as a book in Croatian under the title Iza bodljikave žice: sudbina Hrvatske u srbokomunističkoj Jugoslaviji (Behind Barbed Wire: the Fate of Croatia in Serb-Communist Yugoslavia). In it, Čolak described his life before going into exile. He explained his life trajectory from the communist prison until the attempt to establish the first free review in Yugoslavia.
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The article “Jugoslavia e l' Europa unita” (Yugoslavia and united Europe) was written in Italian in the wake of the tenth anniversary of the Treaty of Rome in 1957 and the Declaration on the Name and Status of the Croatian Literary Language in 1967. Čolak stressed his belief in a united Europe, which would be constituted from nations liberated from communism and which would be extricated from every form of imperialism. Unlike Yugoslavia as a whole, the Croatian and Slovenian people do not see in the united Europe in solely material terms, but also as a cultural interest, since they belonged to it in terms of their geography, history and outlook.
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The Husar Club was founded by the Club of Friends of Popular Music Rijeka in 1957. In the Husar, young people gathered to "dance to music from LP records." Beginning in 1962, the first rock bands in Rijeka performed in the club. The club operated until 1964 and is considered as the first disco club in Croatia and one of the first in Europe. The establishment of this club heralded the creation of the rock and disco culture movement as a counterculture in socialist Yugoslavia.
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