Mustafa Golubić | |
---|---|
Born |
Stolac, Bosnia Eyalet, Ottoman Empire |
24 October 1889
Died | 11 June 1941 Belgrade, Kingdom of Yugoslavia |
(aged 51)
Mustafa Golubić (Serbian Cyrillic: Мустафа Голубић; 24 October 1889–11 June 1941), nicknamed Mujko, was a Serbian member of the secret societies Young Bosnia and the Black Hand, as well as a secret agent for the Communist governments of Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union.
Golubić was born into a middle-class Bosnian Muslim family in Stolac. Sources vary as to his date of birth; either 24 October 1889 or July 1891. His father Muhamed died while Golubić was still a child, while his mother Nura lived to be 102, dying in 1953. His family moved to the Kingdom of Serbia in his early years.
In the First Balkan War, he joined the Chetnik detachment of Vojislav Tankosić. He distinguished himself at Merdare, and during the war wrote articles for the magazines of Ilustrovana ratna kronika and Balkanski rat u slici i reči. He had the rank of narednik, and was awarded the Obilić medal for bravery by King Aleksandar Karađorđević.
He was killed during World War II in a Belgrade park.