Kilibarda entered politics very early on, climbing into several ranks of the
League of Communists of Montenegro, including the position of MP in the Parliament of the
SR Montenegro. After writing the foreword to the book
Anegdote i priče iz Crne Gore ("Anecdotes and Stories from Montenegro") by Obrad Višnjić, which included a song glorifying
Krsto Zrnov Popović, he was expelled from all positions in the League of Communists and in the state apparatus in 1971. He was also replaced from the position of Director of the Pedagogical Academy. High-ranking official
Veljko Milatović was against firing him from the position of professor altogether and prevented it from happening. During this period, he acquired a strong
anti-communist position and
Serb nationalist attitude. In the late 1980s,
Serbian nationalist movements were strengthening in
SR Montenegro. In 1990, with the arrival of multi-party politics, Montenegrin intellectuals gathered around Novak Kilibarda and formed the
People's Party (NS). The party claimed heritage from the
early 20th century People's Party, which had been active in the
Kingdom of Montenegro. Kilibarda became a fierce opponent of
Slobodan Milošević, claiming Milošević was working against national interests. He and the leader of the
Liberal Alliance of Montenegro,
Slavko Perović, formed a coalition called
Popular Unity. Later, he joined the
DPS and
SDP in
Đukanović's For a Better Life coalition in 1997, supporting ousting
Bulatović and Milošević's supporters. He was part of the Đukanović government from 1998 to 2000. Because of this, Kilibarda lost support from Serbian nationalists who were against cooperation with the DPS, many of whom left the party to form the
Serb People's Party. Further moderating his views and having been disappointed by the Serbs' losses in the
Yugoslav Wars, Kilibarda gradually turned to
Montenegrin nationalism. He published brochures in opposition to Serb-conducted
war crimes and pleaded for forgiveness from Croatia and Bosnia for his previous actions. An outspoken supporter of the breakup of the
state union with Serbia, he was ousted from the NS in 2000 when the party withdrew from its coalition with the DPS. Forming close relations with writer and academician
Jevrem Brković and his
Doclean Academy of Sciences and Arts, he attained the view that
Montenegrins were a unique nation and not
Serbs. In the run-up to the
2006 independence referendum, he was a proponent of the independence bloc. Kilibarda died on 23 May 2023, at the age of 89. ==References==