Death and state funeral of Josip Broz Tito
The funeral of Josip Broz Tito, President of Yugoslavia, was held on 8 May 1980, four days after his death on 4 May. His funeral drew many world statesmen, both of non-aligned and aligned countries. Based on the number of attending politicians and state delegations, it is the largest state funeral in history. This included four kings, 36 heads of state, six princes, 40 heads of government, eight Vice Presidents and 47 ministers of foreign affairs, from both sides of the Iron Curtain and beyond. In total, 128 countries out of the 154 UN members at the time were represented.. Also present were delegates from seven multilateral organizations, six movements and 40 political parties.
Tito had become increasingly ill throughout the course of 1979. On 7 January and again on 11 January 1980, Tito was admitted to the University Medical Centre in Ljubljana, the capital city of SR Slovenia, with circulation problems in his legs. His left leg was amputated soon afterward due to arterial blockages, and he died of gangrene at the Medical Centre Ljubljana on 4 May 1980 at 3:05 pm, three days short of his 88th birthday. The "Plavi voz" brought his body to the Yugoslav capital Belgrade where it lay in state at the Federal Parliament building until the funeral.
Illness
By 1979, Tito's health had declined rapidly, mainly due to an arterial embolism in his left leg. In that year, he participated in the Havana Conference of the Non-Aligned Movement and spent New Year's Eve in his residence in Karađorđevo. Throughout the televised event, Tito remained seated while exchanging greetings, causing concern to the watching audience. During this time Vila Srna was built for his use near Morović in the event of his recovery.On January 3, 1980, Tito was admitted to the Ljubljana University Medical Centre for tests on blood vessels in his leg. Two days later, after the angiography, he was discharged to his residence in Brdo Castle near Kranj, with a recommendation for further intensive treatment. Angiography revealed that Tito's superficial femoral artery and Achilles tendon artery were clogged. The medical council consisted of eight Yugoslav doctors, Michael DeBakey from the United States and Marat Knyazev from the Soviet Union.
Following the advice of DeBakey and Knyazev, the medical team attempted an arterial bypass. The first surgery was done in the night of January 12. At first, the operation appeared to have been a success, but after several hours it became clear that it had not. Due to severe damage to the arteries, which led to the interruption of blood flow and accelerated tissue devitalization of the left leg, Tito's left leg was amputated on January 20, to prevent the spread of gangrene. When Tito was told about the required amputation, he resisted it as long as possible. Finally, after meeting with his sons, Žarko and Mišo, he agreed to the amputation. After the amputation, Tito's health improved and he began rehabilitation. On 28 January, he was transferred from the Department of Cardiovascular Surgery to the Department of Cardiology. In the first days of February his health had improved enough to allow him to perform some of his regular duties.
By the beginning of January 1980, however, it became clear that Tito's life was in grave danger and Yugoslav political leadership secretly began preparations for his funeral. Tito's wish was that he be buried in the House of Flowers on Dedinje hill, that overlooks Belgrade. Moma Marković, a director for Radio Television Belgrade, was summoned by Dragoljub Stavrev, a vice president in the federal government, to devise plans for broadcasting the funeral.
Death
Tito died in the Department of Cardiovascular Surgery at the University Medical Centre, Ljubljana on May 4, 1980 at 3:05 pm, three days before his 88th birthday. He died on the seventh floor, in a small room on the south-east corner. A commemorative inscription in the main hall later read "Pot do osvoboditve človeka bo še dolga, a bila bi daljša da ni živel Tito". That inscription was later removed. Immediately upon learning of Tito's death, a full extraordinary session of both the Presidency of Yugoslavia and the Presidency of the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia was held in Belgrade starting at 6:00 pm, at which Tito's death was formally declared via a joint statement:After the declaration was read, Stevan Doronjski said, "Eternal glory be to the memory of our great leader and father of the revolution, President of Yugoslavia and General Secretary and President of the League, our comrade Josip Broz Tito."
At the same meeting, in accordance with the 1974 Yugoslav Constitution, as amended, it was decided that Lazar Koliševski, Vice President of the Presidency of Yugoslavia, would temporarily take the office of the President of the Presidency of Yugoslavia, and that Cvijetin Mijatović, former member of the Presidency of SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, would take Koliševski's place as state vice president. In accordance with the LCY Statute as amended, former chairman of Presidency of Central Committee of League of Communists of Yugoslavia Stevan Doronjski assumed the post of President of the Presidency of the Central Committee of League of Communists of Yugoslavia. Immediately afterwards the Federal Executive Council decided to formally announce a week of national mourning across the country.
Grief in the nation
Citizen's usual activities were interrupted when TV screens went black for 30 seconds. After that, Miodrag Zdravković, newsreader of Radio Television Belgrade, read the following statement live with chroma key:The same announcement was read out on the TV stations of each constituent republic in their respective languages.
On Sunday afternoons, Yugoslav Television often broadcast association football games of the Yugoslav First League. That day, there was a league match in Split between NK Hajduk Split and FK Crvena Zvezda. When the match was in its 41st minute, three men entered the Poljud Stadium pitch, signaling the referee to stop the match. Ante Skataretiko, the president of Hajduk, took the microphone and announced Tito's death. What followed were sudden scenes of mass crying with some players such as Zlatko Vujović collapsing down to the ground and weeping. Players of both teams and referees aligned to stand in a moment of silence. Once the stadium announcer said "May he rest in peace", the entire stadium of 50,000 football fans spontaneously started to sing "Comrade Tito we swear to you, from your path we will never depart". The match was halted, and replayed later in the month.
Grief for the statesman's death was largely based on his place in the Yugoslav political scene. He had lead the fight against Nazi German occupation in the Second World War and helped to create the second Yugoslavia. In addition he had again stood for Yugoslav independence by going against Joseph Stalin in 1948, securing for his country a self-determined path, unlike some Eastern Bloc states that were more dependent on Moscow.
Dignitaries
The "Plavi voz" brought an empty coffin to the capital Belgrade, due to the bad condition of his deceased body. Tito was actually transferred to Belgrade by a military helicopter.Tito's funeral drew many statesmen to Belgrade. Two notably absent statesmen were Jimmy Carter and Fidel Castro. His death came just as the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan had ended the American-Soviet détente. Yugoslavia, though a communist state, was non-aligned during the Cold War due to the Tito-Stalin split in 1948.
After learning that Chinese Premier Hua Guofeng would lead the Chinese delegation, the ailing Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev decided to lead his nation's delegation. In order to avoid meeting Brezhnev whilst in the middle of his campaign for the 1980 United States presidential election, Carter opted to send his mother Lilian Carter and Vice President Walter Mondale as heads of the US delegation. After realizing that leaders of all Warsaw Pact nations would attend the funeral, Carter's decision was criticized by presidential candidate George H. W. Bush as a sign that the United States "inferentially slams Yugoslavs at time that country has pulled away from Soviet Union". Carter visited Yugoslavia later in June 1980 and made a visit to Tito's grave.
Helmut Schmidt, chancellor of West Germany, was highly active at the funeral, meeting with Brezhnev, East Germany's Erich Honecker, and Poland's Edward Gierek. British prime minister Margaret Thatcher sought to rally world leaders in order to harshly condemn the Soviet invasion. While she was in Belgrade, she held talks with Kenneth Kaunda, Schmidt, Francesco Cossiga, and Nicolae Ceaușescu. Brezhnev met with Kim Il-sung and Honecker. James Callaghan, leader of the British Labour Party, explained his presence in Belgrade as an attempt to warm relations between his party and Yugoslav communists, which was severed more than a decade ago after dissident Milovan Đilas was welcomed by Jennie Lee, Minister for the Arts under Harold Wilson. Mondale avoided the Soviets, ignoring Brezhnev while passing close to him. Soviet and Chinese delegations also avoided each other.
The pomp and scale of the funeral had been widely documented and the event was a source of pride for the country for years to come. On the fifteenth anniversary of his death in 1995, the Croatian newspaper Arkzin noted that "turbulent times still do not allow for a truly historical assessment of his stature and achievements, but the appraisal which the world showed those days in May 1980, confirms that small nations and small states may produce world giants."
Tito was interred twice on May 8. The first interment was for cameras and dignitaries. The grave was shallow with only a replica of the sarcophagus. The second interment was held privately during the night. His coffin was removed, and the shallow grave was deepened. The coffin was enclosed with a copper mask and interred again into a much deeper grave which was sealed with cement and topped with a 9-ton sarcophagus. Communist officials were afraid that someone might steal the corpse, as had happened to Charlie Chaplin. However, the 9 ton sarcophagus had to be put in place with a crane, which would make the funeral unattractive.
In stark contrast to the pageantry of the funeral, Tito's tomb was constructed of marble with a simple inscription that states JOSIP BROZ - TITO 1892–1980. It did not incorporate a red star or any emblem linked to communism. Historians stated that the burial location, which was the garden of the place he lived during the postwar years more popularly known as the House of Flowers, was selected according to Tito's wishes. The House of Flowers, together with the Museum of Yugoslavia, has since become a tourist destination and landmark of Belgrade visited by millions of people.
State delegations
Source:Heads of state
State delegations of the below countries were lead by their heads of state:- : Chadli Bendjedid, Mohammed Seddik Benyahia
- : Rudolf Kirchschläger, Bruno Kreisky, Willibald Pahr
- : Ziaur Rahman, Muhammad Shamsul Haque
- : King Baudouin I, Wilfried Martens, Henri Simonet
- Bulgaria: Todor Zhivkov
- : Edward Schreyer
- Czechoslovakia: Gustáv Husák, Miloš Jakeš, Bohuslav Chňoupek
- Ethiopia: Mengistu Haile Mariam
- : Urho Kekkonen, Paavo Väyrynen
- : Konstantinos Tsatsos
- : Ahmed Sékou Touré, Moussa Diakité
- : Luís Cabral
- Hungary: János Kádár
- Iraq: Saddam Hussein, Sa'dun Hammadi
- : Patrick Hillery, George Colley
- : Sandro Pertini, Francesco Cossiga
- : King Hussein, Abdelhamid Sharaf
- : Spyros Kyprianou, Nicos A. Rolandis
- : Kim Il-sung, Ho Dam
- Democratic Kampuchea: Khieu Samphan , although in 1980 Cambodia was de facto ruled as the People's Republic of Kampuchea.
- : Jean, Gaston Thorn
- : Moussa Traoré, Alain Blondel Bey
- : Anton Buttigieg
- : Erich Honecker, Oskar Fischer
- : Karl Carstens, Helmut Schmidt, Hans-Dietrich Genscher
- : King Olav V, Odvar Nordli
- : Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq, Riaz Piracha
- : Aristides Royo, Carlos Osores
- : Edward Gierek, Wojciech Jaruzelski
- : António Ramalho Eanes, Francisco de Sá Carneiro
- Romania: Nicolae Ceaușescu, Ilie Verdeț, Ștefan Andrei
- : Pietro Chiaruzzi and Primo Marani
- : Leonid Brezhnev, Andrei Gromyko
- : King Carl XVI Gustaf, Ola Ullsten
- : Hafez al-Assad, Abdul Halim Khaddam
- : Julius Nyerere, Benjamin Mkapa
- : Gnassingbé Eyadéma
- : Kenneth Kaunda
Heads of government or vice-heads of state
- Afghanistan: Sultan Ali Keshtmand, Shah Mohamad Dost
- Burma: Maung Maung Kha
- : Pedro Pires
- : Hua Guofeng, Ji Pengfei
- : Gustavo Balcázar Monzón
- : Hosni Mubarak
- : Raymond Barre, Jean François-Poncet
- : Joseph W.S. deGraft-Johnson, Isaac Chinebuah
- : Ptolemy Reid
- : Indira Gandhi
- : Adam Malik
- : Masayoshi Ōhira
- Madagascar: Désiré Rakotoarijaona
- Mongolia: Jambyn Batmönkh
- : Prince Claus, Prince Bernhard, Dries van Agt, Chris van der Klaauw
- : Qadi Abdel
- : Pedro Richter Prada
- : Adolfo Suárez, Marcelino Oreja, 1st Marquis of Oreja
- : Süleyman Demirel, Hayrettin Erkmen
- : Prince Philip, Margaret Thatcher, Lord Carrington, Fitzroy Maclean.
- : Walter Mondale, Lillian Gordy Carter and W. Averell Harriman.
- : Robert Mugabe
Deputies or foreign ministers
- : Andrew Peacock
- : Gaston Aroas Levi
- : Oto Agripino Maia
- : Jean Keucha
- : Isidoro Malmierca Peoli
- : Henrik, Kjeld Olesen
- : Sadegh Ghotbzadeh
- : Harold Edward Water
- : Enrique Olivares Santana
- : Ishaya Audu
- : Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann
- : Brian Talboys
- : Jacques Hodoul
- : Abdul Cader Shahul Hameed
- : Pierre Aubert
- : Thanat Khoman
- : Otema Allimadi
- : José Zambrano Velasco
- : Huỳnh Tấn Phát
Other state delegations
- :
- : Ambrósio Lukoki
- : Alberto Rodríguez Varela
- :
- Benin: Tonakpon Capo-Chichi and Agbahe Gregoire
- : A. V. Kgarebe
- : Jose Ferraz de Rosa
- : Reni Nkonkengurute
- : General Mbale
- : Mario Aleman
- : Abaga Julian Esono
- : Leon ma Guerrero
- : Jean Robert Fungu
- : Ingvi Sigurður Ingvarsson
- : K. G. Hill
- : Okvanyo
- People's Republic of the Congo:
- : Fernando Aldman
- : Sheikh Abdullah al Jaber
- : Ali el Halil
- : Robert Kvele Kennedy
- Libya: Abu-Bakr Yunis Jabr
- : Walter Oehry, Mario Ledebur
- : Ahmed Zaki
- : Abdul Taib Mahmud
- : Dej Ould Sidi, Mohammed Doniri
- : Mohamme Ulg el-Hussein
- :
- Mozambique:
- Nepal: Prince Gyanendra of Nepal and K. B. Shahi
- : Mahamane Karmou
- : K. Nalobamba, Tousagnon Benoit
- : Fahad bin Mahmoud Al-Said
- : Jules Kanadra
- :
- :
- : Philip Faboe
- : David Marshall
- Somalia: Ismail Ali Abokor
- : M. S. Muti
- Sudan: Sherif Ghasim
- : James O'Neil
- : Sadok Mokaddem and Habib Bourguiba, Jr.
- : Tiemoko Marc Garango
- : Walter Ravenna
- : Achille Silvestrini
- : Nzondomyo a' Dokpe Lingo
Delegations of parties and organizations
International organizations
- : Chedli Klibi
- European Parliament: Simone Veil
- Council of Europe: Franz Karasek
- European Commission: Wilhelm Haferkamp
- OECD: Emiel van Lennep
- : Kurt Waldheim
- : Amadou-Mahtar M'Bow
Liberation movements
- Kurdistan Peoples Liberation Army: Abdullah Öcalan
- Palestine Liberation Organization: Yasser Arafat
- Polisario Front: Mohamed Abdelaziz
- Provisional Irish Republican Army: Billy McKee
- SWAPO: David Meroro
- Umkhonto we Sizwe: Chris Hani
Political parties
- National Liberation Front: Abdelaziz Bouteflika
- Communist Party of Austria: Franz Muhri
- Communist Party of Belgium: Louis Van Geyt
- Progressive Party of Working People: Ezekias Papaioannou
- Communist Party of Denmark: Jørgen Jensen
- Socialist People's Party: Gert Petersen
- Communist Party of France: Georges Marchais
- Socialist Party: François Mitterrand
- Unified Socialist Party: Huguette Bouchardeau
- Communist Party of Greece : Babis Drakopoulos
- Communist Party of Greece: Charilaos Florakis
- PASOK: Andreas Papandreou
- Communist Party of the Netherlands: Henk Hustra
- Labour Party: Joop den Uyl
- Communist Party of Ireland: Andy Barr
- Sinn Féin: Ruairí Ó Brádaigh
- Communist Party of Italy: Enrico Berlinguer
- Italian Socialist Party: Bettino Craxi
- Lebanese Communist Party: Nicolas Shawi
- Progressive Socialist Party: Walid Jumblatt
- Labour Party: Karmenu Mifsud Bonnici
- Socialist Union of Popular Forces: Abderahime Buabid
- Party of Progress and Socialism: Ali Yata
- Communist Party of Mauritius: President
- Social Democratic Party of Germany: Willy Brandt
- National Party of Nigeria: Augustus Akinloye
- Portuguese Communist Party: Álvaro Cunhal
- Socialist Party: Mário Soares
- Sammarinese Communist Party: Umberto Barulli
- African National Congress: Oliver Tambo
- South African Communist Party: Moses Mabhida
- Communist Party of Spain: Santiago Carrillo
- Spanish Socialist Workers' Party: Felipe González
- Sri Lanka Freedom Party: Sirimavo Bandaranaike
- Swiss Party of Labour: :fr:Jean Vincent |Jean Vincent
- Swedish Left Party – Communists: Lars Werner
- Republican People's Party: Bülent Ecevit
- Communist Party of Turkey: İsmail Bilen
- Communist Party of Britain: Gordon McLennan
- Labour Party: James Callaghan