How are you related to Nikola Tesla?
Nikola Tesla's Youngest Descendant, Serbian Refugee
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Jun 25th, 2009 | By De-Construct.net | In Croatia, Featured
Articles, Weekend
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Danijela Tesla, great inventor's youngest descendant, was only
5-years-old when she was forced to flee Croatia, along with all the
Serbs from Krajina
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Her name is Danijela Tesla, she is 18-years-old and lives in
Smederevo, Serbian town near Belgrade. She is the youngest
descendant of the "man who invented 20th century", Serbian-born
American immigrant Nikola Tesla.
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Ever since the world's greatest inventor - also regarded as "the
greatest genius" that ever lived - closed his eyes in New York
hotel on 7 January 1943, Tesla's name and revolutionary inventions
have been the subject of vicious contention between the
governments, state officials and institutions, nations and
corporations.
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Recently, Walt Disney studio which wants to create a Tesla
character for one sequence of their new animated film, had to ask
Belgrade Nikola Tesla Museum - the only legal copyright owner of
Tesla's name and work - for permission. On the other hand, Croat
designer Dragica Mihajlovic believes it is her God-given right to
claim personal ownership of "all of Tesla's intellectual-property
rights", an issue Tesla Museum intends to clear up.
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Son of Serbian Orthodox priest Fr. Milutin Tesla and Đuka Mandić
(herself a daughter of Serbian Orthodox priest, Fr. Nikola Mandić),
Tesla was born on 10 July 1856 in Serbian Krajina (also known as
Military Frontier - Vojna Krajina) in Austro-Hungary, today's
Croatia, which was populated with Serbian soldiers and their
families by the Hapsburg Monarchy in 16th century, along the border
with Ottoman Empire, as the last line of Western defense against
the Turks.
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Tesla, who was proud of his Serbian nationality and Orthodox
heritage, said his "most exiting thought" in the struggle to
achieve his ideals "on behalf of the whole of humanity," was the
fact "that it is a deed of a Serb".
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It is not surprising that Croats, who generally feel no shame
over misappropriating the great inventor's name and ethnic roots,
see no contradiction in claiming Nikola Tesla as their own on the
one hand and, on the other, committing monstrous genocides twice in
20th century against Tesla's kith and kin - the Serbian population
in Krajina.
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The world can only thank divine providence Nikola Tesla was in
United States and not in Serbian Krajina during WWII, at the time
Croatia was a fascist state ruled by demented Ustasha butchers,
when all of Krajina - including village Smiljan, Tesla's birthplace
- was drowned in Serbian blood, and 750,000 Serbs in Croatia were
mutilated and slaughtered in Jasenovac, a complex of grisly Croat
death camps.
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Tesla's descendants are a living proof of Croat hypocrisy and
shamelessness, among them Danijela, who was only 5-years-old when
Croat army under Franjo Tudjman launched another pogrom on Krajina
Serbs, codenamed operation "Storm" (Oluja), in 1995. Without a
father who passed away two years before, Danijela was forced to
flee her village Raduč, where all the Teslas come from, with her
mother Milka and more than 250,000 other Krajina Serbs. Their
family house was dynamited and torched by the raging Croat army,
but Danijela Tesla managed to reach Serbia.
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"My father Dane is Nikola Tesla's grand-grandchild - Nikola
Tesla's first cousin is the grand-grandfather of my father,"
Danijela explains quietly, and only if asked.
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She carries her name and heritage silently and unassumingly,
along with the war scars, refugee status and life-long struggle for
survival. Her mother works in Italy as a construction worker, to
support herself and pay for her daughter's education.
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"She works at men's jobs, painting, laying ceramic tiles,
cementing… She was never doing that before, but she had to learn…,"
Danijela said.
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Although a talented artist, Danijela has decided to study
economy since, as she puts it, "the life has taught me I can't live
off the love for art".
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She says she looks like her father, but the physical resemblance
to her glorious ancestor is uncanny - the same gentle facial
contours, same dreamy, introspective gaze, and refined, slender
figure.
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"My dad wrote two books. Tesla about Tesla was published in
1968, and Josip Broz Tito was among those who attended the
promotion in Smiljan [in Serbian Krajina]. His second book, From
Raduč to New York, was written in 1980," Danijela said.
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"I was in the seventh grade when I wrote an essay about Nikola
Tesla where, in addition to all the data, I also included the
family tree. It shows that my father Dane was Nikola's
grand-grandchild or, rather, that Nikola's first cousin was my
father's grand-grandfather. My friends never realized my last name
was connected to Nikola Tesla, and I never boasted about my
heritage. I would only tell about it if someone asked," Danijela
told Belgrade daily Vecernje Novosti.
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Although the youngest, Danijela is not the last of Teslas. Her
father had three brothers, all of them Tesla's descendants from
Raduč in Serbian Krajina and all presently living in Serbia - two
in Belgrade and one in Leskovac.
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After the Yugoslav civil war has ended, Milka Tesla submitted a
request to Croat authorities for rebuilding of their destroyed
family house in Raduč. When Milka and Danijela went to Zagreb to
collect the necessary documents, Tesla's kin were subjected to
hostility and maltreatment, and police interrogation "like we were
some criminals". Even the Helsinki Board for Human Rights was
forced to intervene in their defense - another nasty episode that
speaks volumes about the Croat rights to Tesla's name and
legacy.