He played a leading role in political and national affairs at a time when Old Serbia was in conflict with the Turks and Arnauts just before the Balkan Wars, and later as a politician.
[5] He was politically active in the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes as a member of Pribićević's Independent Democratic Party, and was elected to parliament between 1924 and 1927.
[7] In 1926, Božović insulted the Albanian MP and diplomat Cena-beg in a newspaper article, for which he was sued in court by the Mayor of Belgrade.
He stated that Cena-beg should not be a representative of his country, due to his previous activities towards Serbs, including a robbery of a monastery carried out by men loyal to him.
The brother of the deceased, Sait Kriziu, tried to protect the reputation and honor of his relative in an open letter through the pages of the "Vreme" newspaper.
[8] Under the presidency of Branislav Nušić, Božović was appointed a member of the state "Council of Experts in the Field of Copyright" from 1932.
Before the first assembly, which was held in Belgrade in March of that year in the Skadarlija tavern "Kod dva jelena", the founding rules were signed by the Serbian side, namely Veljko Petrović, Božović and Siniša Paunović.
[10] Before the Second World War, Božović was elected president of the Belgrade Pen Club after the death of his predecessor, the poet Milan Rakić.
[17] A request for [rehabilitation] was submitted in January 2008 by Božović's cousin Marinko, a full professor in the Faculty of Philosophy in Kosovska Mitrovica.
A "Grigorije Božović" literary prize was established and awarded by the Cultural Center "Stari Kolašin" in Zubin Potok.