TIGR
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
TIGR, abbreviation for Trst (Trieste), Istra (Istria), Gorica (Gorizia) and Reka (Rijeka), was a anti-Fascist insurgent organization, active in the 1920s and the 1930s in the eastern Italian region of Julian March.
The organization, which is considered to be one of the first antifascist resistance movements in Europe, was composed by Slovenes from the regions that were annexed to the Kingdom of Italy with the Rapallo Treaty of 1920. It was active between 1927 and 1941. Many members of this organization were connected with Yugoslav and British intelligence services and many of them were militarily trained.
In 1930 the Italian fascist police discovered some TIGR's cells and four members (Ferdo Bidovec, Fran Marušič, Zvonimir Miloš and Alojzij Valenčič) were sentenced and executed at Bazovica (Basovizza). Nevertheless, the organization re-organized itself in the early 1930s under the leadership of Albert Rejec. Among the actions planned by the organization, the most daring and far-reaching was probably the attempt on Benito Mussolini's life in 1938. The plan was supposed to be carried out in 1938, when the Italian Fascist dictator visited Kobarid (Caporetto). The plan was however put off at the last minute.
In 1941 several members of TIGR were condemned for espionage and terrorism, and four of them (Viktor Bobek, Ivan Ivančič, Simon Kos and Ivan Vadnal) were executed in Villa Opicina near Trieste the same year, jointly with the Communist activist Pino Tomažič. By the time of the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941, most of the organization was already dismantled by both Italian and Nazi German secret police and most of its prominent members either sent to concentration camps, killed or exiled.
During World War II, many of its members joined the partisan resistance, although the organization itself was not invited to join the Liberation Front of the Slovenian People. After the establishment of the Communist regime in Yugoslavia in 1945, most of them were removed from public life and the Communist Party of Slovenia continued to closely monitor some of TIGR's members up to the 1970s. Their activity was removed from the official historical accounts. Only in the 1980s their resistance activity started to be appreciated again, with several historical books written on the matter.
In 1997 on athe 50th anniversary of annexation of the Slovenian Littoral to the Socialist Republic of Slovenia, the then president of Slovenia Milan Kučan symbolically insignated the organization TIGR with the Golden Honour Insignia of Freedom of the Republic of Slovenia (Zlati častni znak svobode Republike Slovenije), the highest state decoration in Slovenia.

