Born in Jozefovo near Nova Kanjiza, then part of the Habsburg Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, and now part of Vojvodina, Serbia.
He completed his undergrad studies in Vienna and Belgrade prior to receive his PhD in 1932 from the Friedrich Willem University in Berlin. He mixed with several intellectuals of the time and was the assistant to professor Nikola Popovic and he became assistant professor at the department of Logic and Theory of Cognition after Nikola's retirement in 1940.
In April 1941, he participated in the defense of Kingdom of Yugoslavia as part of World War 2 as an reserve infantry lieutenant. He spent the remainder of the war in german captivity as a prisoner of war.
After the war, marked as a royalist and anti-communist, Kajica could not return to professorships. He then immigrated with his future wife to Hungary in 1947 where he spent two years in a refugee camp.
He moved to Australia, and became a teacher in the department of philosophy at the Hobart University in 1954.
He wrote a book: Titovština u Jugoslaviji [Tito's Ideology in Yugoslavia] examining the Marxist theory in communism and methods of systematic subjugation of humanity in dictatorial regimes.
Source: https://ies.rs/en/kajica-milanov-titovstina-u-jugoslaviji-titos-ideology-in-yugoslavia-society-for-economic-history-institute-of-european-studies-belgrade-2021/
Born in Jozefovo near Nova Kanjiza, then part of the Habsburg Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, and now part of Vojvodina, Serbia.
He completed his undergrad studies in Vienna and Belgrade prior to receive his PhD in 1932 from the Friedrich Willem University in Berlin. He mixed with several intellectuals of the time and was the assistant to professor Nikola Popovic and he became assistant professor at the department of Logic and Theory of Cognition after Nikola's retirement in 1940.
In April 1941, he participated in the defense of Kingdom of Yugoslavia as part of World War 2 as an reserve infantry lieutenant. He spent the remainder of the war in german captivity as a prisoner of war.
After the war, marked as a royalist and anti-communist, Kajica could not return to professorships. He then immigrated with his future wife to Hungary in 1947 where he spent two years in a refugee camp.
He moved to Australia, and became a teacher in the department of philosophy at the Hobart University in 1954.
He wrote a book: Titovština u Jugoslaviji [Tito's Ideology in Yugoslavia] examining the Marxist theory in communism and methods of systematic subjugation of humanity in dictatorial regimes.
Source: https://ies.rs/en/kajica-milanov-titovstina-u-jugoslaviji-titos-ideology-in-yugoslavia-society-for-economic-history-institute-of-european-studies-belgrade-2021/
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