In the first days of the war, Javad a graduate of the Tbilisi and Ordzhonikidze Military School was sent to the Crimean Front. In 1942, in the Kalach District of Russia he was seriously wounded in battle and captured by the Wehrmacht, later receiving treatment in a hospital in Pryluky.[3] Javad was soon transferred to Mirgorod, where he encountered fellow Soviet POWMehdi Huseynzade.[4]
Javad Hakimli spent one and a half years in the German POW camps in Northern Italy and Yugoslavia.[5] In February 1944, Javad was near Trieste in the village of Vila Opicina with fellow Soviet POWs Mehdi Huseynzade and Asad Gurbanov escaped into the Slovenian woods, where they joined up with the 9th Corps of the Yugoslav Partisans.[6][7] Javad later took part in Vila Opicina's liberation in collaboration with Josip Broz Tito's army, where on May 3, 1945, he crossed the streets of the city with his companions.[8]
Yugoslavia
Javad formed and became the commander of the 1st "Russian company" and Mehdi Huseynzade (Partisan pseudonym "Mikhailo") was appointed deputy commander for political affairs eventually to transition to a sabotage and reconnaissance role.[9] According to the recollections of Javad Hakimli, "Mehdi caused such fear that the Germans were even afraid to go out into the city alone", "it seemed to them that ‘Mikhailo’ was the name of a large detachment commanded by the hero".[10]
Javad’s battalion quickly manifested their combat capability in March 1944, after an attack on the German-held town of Godovič, which was noted by the Yugoslav command as among the most distinguished.[11] On 7th August 1944, on the decision of the command of the 9th Corps, the company was transferred to the 2nd "Russian" battalion of the 18th Slovene Brigade, in which its fighters fought until the end of the war.[12]
Death of Mehdi Huseynzade
Mehdi Huseynzade was killed in November 1944 in a village of Vitovlje in the Vipava Valley and was hastily buried by local residents. It was Javad Hakimli who insisted that "Mikhailo" be reburied according to Muslim custom with full honours, he personally washed Mehdi’s body, wrapped it in silk from a parachute in replacement of a shroud with his face directed towards Mecca. The first inscription on the homemade obelisk above Mehdi’s grave was carved by Javad himself.[6][13]
Another Soviet Partisan of Georgian origin, David Tatuashvili, described the funeral as follows:
"The first monument in his honour was sculpted by Javad Hakimli, while I built the tomb despite the tears streaming down my face, I carved a star for Mikhailo".[14]
Repatriated to Podolsk in the USSR in late 1945 he passed a background check and interrogation from the counter-intelligence unit SMERSH. According to Javad Hakimli, it was in Podolsk he personally wrote an alibi and description of Mehdi Huseynzadeh to the KGB archives of the SMERSH, so that Mehdi would not be considered a traitor or a defector. Few years after in 1957, the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union posthumously awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union to Mehdi Huseynzade.[6]
After demobilisation in December 1946, Javad first went to Baku to notify the family of Mehdi Huseynzade of his exploits in Yugoslavia and to hand over his personal belongings (jacket, silver cigarette case, ring, pocket Franco-Russian dictionary, etc.). He later returned to his village in Lyambyali in the Armenian SSR.[6]
Later years
In 1963, Javad published a book in Yerevan entitled ‘Intiqam’ (Revenge), about Mehdi Huseynzade’s military feats and the Partisan war in Yugoslavia.[6]
From 1989, he lived with his family in Baku, was a member of the Veterans Council and met with young people to share his war experiences.[16]
In an interview in 1998, "My character was very difficult from my youth," Javad Hakimli recollected, "I hardly met people, but Mehdi for some reason fell in love with me brotherly. He became attached to me with his heart and soul. Do you know how I protect it? He did not allow him to risk himself once more, every time he worried, worried when Mehdi was going to another task or subversive action. Sometimes he and I knew about his future diversionary acts. I frequently changed passwords, for example, today the password was ‘Sun over the Adriatic’, and tomorrow: ‘On the coast - a gusty wind’".[6]
In October 2004, Javad Hakimli celebrated his 90th birthday at a Baku restaurant amongst members of Mehdi Huseynzade's and his own family in addition to the SlovenianConsul in Baku, Borut Megushar who conveyed his congratulations on behalf of Slovenia for Javad's personal contributions to the war effort with greetings from the surviving Slovenian Partisans and veterans of the war.[6] Javad Hakimli died in Baku on February 27, 2006.
^Talalay, Mikhail (2013). "From the Caucasus to the Apennines; Azerbaijanis in the Italian Resistance Movement" (in Italian). Rome: Sandro Teti Publishing House. p. 56. ISBN978-88-88249-24-7.
^Heroes of the Soviet Union: historical and statistical review. Military Publishing House. 1984. pp. S. 174.
^Arnhemer, Willem-Alexander (1 February 2018). "'Azerbeidzjan – Mehdi Huseynzade'"(PDF). Oosterhoutse Vereniging Van Postzegelverzamelaars (OVVP) (in Dutch). Retrieved 3 July 2020.
^Talalay, Mikhail (2013). "From the Caucasus to the Apennines; Azerbaijanis in the Italian Resistance Movement" (in Italian). Rome: Sandro Teti Publishing House. p. 56. ISBN978-88-88249-24-7.
^Шоржинский, Видади (2015). "АЗЕРБАЙДЖАН В ВЕЛИКОЙ ОТЕЧЕСТВЕННОЙ ВОЙНЕ (AZERBAIJAN IN THE GREAT PATRIOTIC WAR)". Мой Народ (My People)(PDF) (in Russian). Moscow: У Никитских ворот. p. 102.
^Stanko, Petelin (1983). Gradnikovsky brigade. Ljubljana. p. 317.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Bushueva, TS (1972). "Russian" companies and battalions in the People's Liberation Army of Yugoslavia. Moscow: Nauka Publishers - Soviet Slavic Studies. pp. № 3 – Стр.17.
^Talalay, Mikhail (2013). "From the Caucasus to the Apennines; Azerbaijanis in the Italian Resistance Movement" (in Italian). Rome: Sandro Teti Publishing House. p. 48. ISBN978-88-88249-24-7.