Vida Tomšič | |
---|---|
Born |
Vida Bernot 26 June 1913 Ljubljana |
Died | 10 December 1998 Ljubljana, Slovenia |
Occupation | Politician Jurist Women's rights activist |
Vida Tomšič née Bernot (26 June 1913 – 10 December 1998) was a Slovenian communist before World War II, a partisan fighter during the War, and a prominent politician, women’s activist, and national hero in post-War Yugoslavia. She was born and died in Ljubljana, and held many government positions in Slovenia and Yugoslavia during her long career.
Vida Tomšič was born into the family of a schoolteacher living in Ljubljana during the waning years of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, one of five children. She studied law in Ljubljana and graduated in 1941. During her student days, she became involved in the leftist movement, and officially joined the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (CPY) in 1934. For her activities with the CPY, she was arrested in 1934 and spent eleven months in prison. She met her husband, Tone Tomšič, in 1937 who had also been arrested for communist activities. Vida Tomšič was eventually released from prison, and by 1940 she was admitted as a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia.
During the Italian occupation in 1941, Vida Tomšič used the name Mary Singer and gave birth to a son, but by December of that year both Tone and Vida Tomšič were arrested for their illegal political activities in support of the Communist Party. An Italian military tribunal sentenced Tone Tomšič to death, and Vida Tomšič to 25 years in jail. Separated from her son, Vida Tomšič was incarcerated in a string of Italian prisons until the fall of Italy, when she founded the one of the first overseas partisan brigades.
Vida Tomšič eventually returned to Yugoslavia and settled in Slovenia, where she was elected to the Slovenian National Liberation Council (SNOS) and threw herself into wartime political activities, particularly among women. In May 1945, she is appointed Minister for Social Policy by the National Government of Slovenia, and continued to hold important posts in the Government of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia until her retirement. She taught as a professor of Family Law at the Faculty of Law at the University of Ljubljana in the 1970s. She was the first president of the Federal Women’s organization.