Rade Končar was born in the village of Končarev Kraj in Plitvička Jezera, near the town of Korenica. Some sources give his birthdate as 28 October 1911, while others state that he was born on 6 August 1911. A Serb from Croatia, Končar moved to the Serbian town of Leskovac where he finished school and became a metal worker. He became a member of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia in Belgrade in 1934. In 1936, the Belgrade branch of the party was outlawed. Končar was arrested and imprisoned for one year of hard labour, which he spent in Sremska Mitrovica prison. Upon being released, he moved to Zagreb and began working for Siemens. He formed a Communist movement in the city and organized a successful strike in 1938. That same year, he was elected to membership of the Communist party committee in Zagreb and to be the political secretary of the central committee of the Communist Party of Croatia. Končar was inaugurated as political secretary at the first conference of the KPH and was made a member of the central committee of the KPJ at the Fifth National Conference of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia in October 1940. He played an important role in the party's leadership due to his worker's background and contributed greatly to the strengthening of the party organization. In January 1941, he was named the head of the Regional committee of KPJ for Serbia.
With the Axis occupation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in April 1941, Končar moved to Zagreb on 8 April 1941. He became involved in planning a national anti-fascist revolt throughout the country and extended resistance actions to Independent State of Croatia despite encountering great difficulties. He personally organized diversions in Zagreb, including the September 1941 sabotage at the General Post Office in Zagreb. Later the same month, he participated in Stolice conference of Partisan commanders and representatives in the Serbian village of Stolice. Having participated in retaking areas of Serbia from the Germans, Končar was tasked with forming the General Staff Headquarters of the Yugoslav Partisans in Croatia. He went to Governorate of Dalmatia in October 1941 to work on improving the organization of Communist forces there and helping them gain momentum against the Axis. He personally organized many attacks against Axis forces in the city ofSplit. On 17 November 1941, returning from a trip to Šibenik, he discovered anti-Communist agents waiting to ambush him at his Split apartment. He was arrested and beaten before being taken to hospital. The Ustaše informed Italian authorities that Končar was an important prisoner. The Italians put him on trial in Šibenik, where he was sentenced to death. He was executed by firing squad on 22 May 1942. Twenty-five of his colleagues were killed alongside him.
Legacy
Končar was proclaimed a People's Hero of Yugoslavia by the Communists. The August 1942 issue of Proleter named him first on the list of the first ten People's Heroes. He quickly became one of the greatest Partisan icons. The later conventional depiction of his sentencing and execution says that, when asked whether he would ask for clemency, Končar said Milosti ne tražim, niti bih vam je dao ; when they aimed their guns at his back, he said Kukavice, pucajte u prsa. A military unit of the Yugoslav Partisans, the 13th Proletarian Brigade Rade Končar, was named after him and fought on the Yugoslav Front. It was composed primarily of Croats, most of whom were Roman Catholic. Končar was the only ethnic Serb leader of the SKH until the election of Stanko Stojčević in 1988. His only son, also named Rade Končar, was a prominent politician in post-war Yugoslavia. Rade Končar Enterprise, today the Končar Group, and Rade Koncar the largest producer of electrical equipment in Yugoslavia during the 1970s. The Electrical Engineering Highschool "Rade Končar" in Belgrade is also named after him. Končar-class missile boat of former Yugoslav Navy was also named after him. In November 2018, a 65-year-old man was injured after he attempted to topple a bust of Končar in the city of Split. When asked by the media why he had toppled the bust, the man replied, "I have nothing against personally. But I do not like Communists. I do not like Partisans, Communists, Serbs..."