Jusuf Mehonjić
{{Short description|Albanian revolutionary (1883–1926)}}
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Jusuf Mehonjić ({{langx|sq|Jusuf Mehonja}} or Isuf Mehani) (1883-1926) was an Albanian leader of the Kachak Movement and a member of the Committee of Kosovo from Šahovići.{{cite book|last1=Komnenić-Džaković|first1=Jelisavka|last2=Đurović|first2=Žarko|title=U spomen Vukomanu Džakoviću|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PnvlAAAAMAAJ|year=1994|publisher=Stručna knjiga|page=21|isbn=9788641901306 }}
He fought in the Ottoman Army until 1912.{{cite book |last1=Verli |first1=Marenglen |title=Nga Kosova për Kosovën: profile biografike personalitetesh dhe luftëtarësh të shquar : studime, skica, publicistikë, dokumente, ilustrime |date=2006 |publisher=Botimpex |isbn=9994380117 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=b6ktAQAAIAAJ}} During occupation of Serbia in World War One Mehonjić committed a few crimes, so he became an outlaw in 1918. In 1922 Yugoslav authorities sent Chetniks under command of Kosta Pećanac to hunt down Mehonjić after failed assassination attempt of prominent member of People's Radical Party. Chetniks killed 28 Muslim villagers in Starčevići near Tutin. Later they were defeated by Mehonjić's men near Sjenica, which gave him heroic status among the populace.{{cite thesis |last=Živković |first=Milutin |date=2017 |title=Санџак 1941-1943 |trans-title=Sanžak 1941-1943 |url= |type=doctorial |chapter= |publisher=University of Belgrade |docket= |oclc=1242119546 |access-date= |page=17-18}} In the period of 1924-1928, he was as an anti-Yugoslav rebel leader of the Kachak movements chetas (armed bands) (çetë) in the lower Sandžak area, including Novi Pazar, Rožaje, Sjenica, Kolašin and Bihor. Other leaders included Husein Boshko, Feriz Sallku and Rek Bisheva.{{cite book |last1=Verli |first1=Marenglen |title=Shqipëria dhe Kosova: historia e një aspirate (studiume historike, kumtesa, dokumente dhe ilustrime) |date=2007 |publisher=Botimpex |isbn=978-9994380145 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=q1ctAQAAIAAJ}}{{cite book |last1=Neziri |first1=Zymer Ujkan |title=Lahutarët e Sanxhakut të Pazarit të R |date=2020 |publisher=Instituti Albanologjik, Prishtinë |page=69}} His units mostly attacked Serbs, both soldiers and gendarmes, as well as civilians, traders and peasants.
In 1924, Mehonjić/Mehonja was framed for organizing the murder of Boško Bošković, the chief of Kolašin county, despite him being in Albania at the time. This was used as a pretext for the 1924 Šahovići massacre, in which around 600-900 local Muslims were massacred by Montenegrin peasants.{{cite book|last=Vulliamy|first=Ed|title=Seasons in Hell: Understanding Bosnia's War|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BI9pAAAAMAAJ|year=1994|publisher=Simon & Schuster, Limited|isbn=978-0-671-71345-4|page=35|quote=A wave of violence was unleashed against Muslims in the early 1920s. Three thousand extrajudicial murders were chronicled in 1924 in eastern Herzegovina alone, 600 of them during the massacre of two villages, Sahovici and Pavino Polje.}} Afterwards, it emerged that the murderers of Bošković were clan members from Rovca, a rival tribe to his own.{{cite book |last1=Morrison |first1=Kenneth |title=Nationalism, Identity and Statehood in Post-Yugoslav Montenegro |date=2018 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |isbn=978-1474235198 |page=56 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9Js8DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA56 |ref=Morrison}}
He was a member of the Committee for the National Defence of Kosovo, and according to Professor Matija Murko of Prague, Mehonjic was also a writer of poetry, writing and singing about the battles and skirmishes he had fought. These songs were confiscated by Yugoslav authorities.{{cite book |last1=Neziri |first1=Zymer Ujkan |title=Lahutarët e Sanxhakut të Pazarit të R |date=2020 |publisher=Instituti Albanologjik, Prishtinë |page=158}} Mehonja died in 1926. He is buried in Albania next to his wife Naze. According to one source he was betrayed and killed by his concealer and that Yugoslav Intelligence Service was involved in his death.
References
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{{Sandžak Albanians}}
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Category:Albanian nationalists
Category:Albanians in Montenegro
Category:People from Bijelo Polje
Category:Ottoman military personnel of the Balkan Wars
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