Slavko Goldstein | |
---|---|
Born |
Sarajevo, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina) |
22 August 1928
Nationality | Croatian |
Occupation | Writer |
Political party | Croatian Social Liberal Party |
Spouse(s) | Vera Goldstein (deceased); 2 children |
Relatives | Danko (brother), Ivo Goldstein (son) Pavle Goldstein (son) |
Slavko Goldstein (born 22 August 1928) is a Croatian Jewish writer, publisher, and politician.
Slavko Goldstein was born in Sarajevo. His family was originally from Tuzla. He spent his childhood in Karlovac, where his father Ivo was notable bookseller.
At the beginning of the Second World War, his father, Ivo, was murdered by the Ustaše at the Jadovno concentration camp. Slavko, his mother Lea, and his brother Daniel ("Danko") escaped and joined the Partisans with whom they stayed until the end of the war. Slavko was an active member of the combat units. Lea Goldstein was a nurse, and Danko was a courier. When the war ended, Slavko was a 17 years old Lieutenant.
After the World War II, Goldstein participated in the war for Israel independence as a member of Israel Defense Forces. He lived a few years in a kibbutz. In the mid 1950s he returned to Yugoslavia. He studied literature and philosophy at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences in Zagreb, but he never graduated.
Goldstein worked as a journalist, editor and writer in many Croatian newspapers. He wrote screenplays for several Yugoslav World War II films such as Signal Over the City (Signali nad gradom, 1960) and Operation Stadium (Akcija stadion; 1977, co-written with Dušan Vukotić). He edited more than 150 books, and as a publisher, he worked on about 400 titles.
From 2001 to 2005 he was the president of the Council of the Jasenovac Memorial Center. He was a founder of the Croatian Social Liberal Party (HSLS) and was the party's first president, from 1989-90. He and his son Ivo, a notable Croatian historian, were involved in the efforts to reconstruct the Zagreb Synagogue.