Forbidden shores whisper tales of Daksa. Daksa a small uninhabited island near Dubrovnik. It sits quietly in the Adriatic Sea a place of somber beauty. For years Daksa was shrouded in secrecy. Its past is marked by a chilling event a massacre.
In late 1944 Yugoslav Partisans entered Dubrovnik. They arrested 300 citizens many prominent figures. These people were accused of being Nazi sympathisers or collaborators with the Ustaše regime. They were taken to Daksa. There 53 were executed without trial. Among the victims was Niko Koprivica the mayor of Dubrovnik. Several Catholic priests also perished on Daksa.
The killings were brutal unlawful. No one was ever brought to justice for this crime. Leaflets were distributed naming some of the victims. The words in the name of the people of Yugoslavia threatened the local population. For years Daksa was forbidden to visitors. The island became known as the Island of Ghosts. Its haunting past lingers in the air.
The bodies of the victims lay on Daksa for decades. In 2010 they were exhumed and given a proper burial. Eighteen were identified. The identities of the others remain unknown. Daksa a place of silent suffering. Its dark history haunts this beautiful spot.
Even today an unsettling atmosphere surrounds Daksa. It is a place of solitude. Even seagulls avoid landing on its shores. Some believe only the spirits of the dead remain on Daksa. Daksa a place of beauty and tragedy. A place where the past refuses to be forgotten. The island stands as a chilling reminder of the atrocities of war. A war crime committed and unpunished on the island of Daksa. A dark chapter in Dubrovniks history and a solemn testament to the loss of innocent lives.