He was born on 26 August 1899 as Radojko Jovanović in Trbunje, a village in the municipality of Blace.[1] He studied in Serbia and lived in Paris for a short period, where he played the violin during silent films projections.[2] Drainac followed Serbian Army during the Great Retreat.[1] He started writing poetry as a young man, with first volume of poetry published in 1921.[3]
Besides writing poetry, Drainac worked as a journalist for several magazines, including Hipnos, Novo čovečanstvo, Front, Slike aktuelnih događaja and Nova brazda.[4][5] As a reporter for Pravda, Drainac traveled extensively across the Balkans, Asia Minor and Russia, Austria, Latvia, France, Sweden, Greece, Romania, Poland and other countries.[6]
During World War II he enlisted to fight, holding the rank of gefreiter. He was caught by Bulgarian army in 1941 and had spent a month in Crveni Krst concentration camp. Drainac pretended to be a Bulgarian and managed to get a release. Upon returning home, he found that his personal library with more than one thousand volumes had been burned down. Severely sick, Drainac died in 1943 in a state hospital in Belgrade.[8]
Literary historian Jovan Deretić described Drainac as "poet of the city" and wrote affirmatively about his work.[4]
National library in Prokuplje,[9] several cultural institutions across country, a school in Belgrade[10] and several streets in Serbia are named after him.
In 1998 Rade Drainac Award for Poetry was established in his honour and his bust can be found in Skadarlija and Prokuplje.[11][12]
Dragoljub Jovanović ili seljački Napoleon, Belgrade, 1935
Uzurpatori (Uzunović, Jevtić i V. Popović), Belgrade, 1935
Ulis, Belgrade, 1938
Osvrti, Belgrade, 1938
Čovek peva, Belgrade, 1938
Dah zemlje, Belgrade, 1940
Crni dani, Belgrade, 1963
Azil za beskućnike ili univerzalna radionica mrtvačkih sanduka Rusin a. d.
Ja ne žalim što sam voleo i patio, 1987
Plamen u pustinji, Belgrade, 1993
Works of Rade Drainac, I–X, Belgrade, 1998–1999
References
^ abBoško Novaković (1971). Živan Milisavac (ed.). Jugoslovenski književni leksikon [Yugoslav Literary Lexicon] (in Serbo-Croatian). Novi Sad (SAP Vojvodina, SR Serbia): Matica srpska. pp. 101–102.