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Đakovo internment camp

Đakovo was an internment camp for Jewish, and to a lesser extent Serb, women and children in the town of Đakovo in the Independent State of Croatia (NDH) that was operational between December 1941 and July 1942, during World War II.

Đakovo
Internment camp
The Peace in Heaven monument, by Dina Merhav, commemorates those who were interned at Đakovo
Location of Đakovo in the Independent State of Croatia
LocationĐakovo, Independent State of Croatia (modern-day Croatia)
Operated byCamp detainees (1941–1942), Ustaše (1942)
Original useFlour mill
Operational2 December 1941 – 7 July 1942
InmatesJewish and Serb women and children
Number of inmates~3,800
Killed569–800

The camp was established on the site of an abandoned flour mill that was once used by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Đakovo-Osijek and was initially run autonomously by the Jewish community. It received its first arrivals on 2 December 1941. In early 1942, the camp experienced an outbreak of typhoid fever which was exacerbated by the arrival of Jewish deportees from Slovenia. The NDH's ruling Ustaše movement subsequently assumed direct control of the camp and many detainees were consequently subjected to torture, rape and degradation. In mid-May, the NDH's Ministry of Health ordered that the camp be shut down. Between 15 June and 7 July 1942, 2,400–3,200 detainees were transported to the Jasenovac concentration camp, where they perished. As many as 3,800 women and children were interned at the camp over the course of its existence, and at least 569 women and children died, although this figure may have been as high as 800.

In 1945, Yugoslavia's new communist authorities undertook exhumations on the Đakovo camp's former grounds. In September 1952, the Union of Jewish Communities of Yugoslavia unveiled a monument to the victims of the camp. Following Croatia's independence from Yugoslavia, the former campsite was turned into a gas station. A commemorative ceremony is held every year at the site, as well as at a nearby cemetery where the bodies of detainees were buried. The cemetery is unique in that it is the only burial site in Europe where victims of the Holocaust were interred under their first and last names and not merely their inmate numbers. In 2013, a sculpture titled Peace in Heaven, by Croatian-born Israeli sculptor Dina Merhav, was unveiled in Đakovo to commemorate those who were interned at the camp.

Background edit

Interwar Yugoslavia edit

Ethnic tensions between Serbs and Croats increased following the establishment of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes in the aftermath of World War I. During the interwar period, many Croats came to resent Serb political hegemony in the newly established state, which resulted in the passing of legislation that favoured Serb political, religious and business interests.[1] Tensions flared in 1928, following the shooting of five Croatian parliamentary deputies by the Montenegrin Serb politician Puniša Račić. Two died on the spot and two others were wounded but survived. A fifth, the opposition leader Stjepan Radić, died nearly two months later of complications attributed to the shooting. In January 1929, King Alexander instituted a royal dictatorship and renamed the country Yugoslavia. Shortly thereafter, the Croatian politician Ante Pavelić formed the Ustaše, a Croatian nationalist and fascist movement which sought to achieve Croatian independence through violent means. The Ustaše were outlawed in Yugoslavia, but received covert assistance from Benito Mussolini's Italy, which had territorial pretensions in Istria and Dalmatia. The Ustaše carried out a number of actions aimed at undermining Yugoslavia, most notably the Velebit uprising in 1932 and the assassination of King Alexander in Marseilles in 1934. Following Alexander's assassination, the Ustaše movement's senior-most leaders, including Pavelić, were tried in absentia in both France and Yugoslavia and sentenced to death, but were granted protection by Mussolini and thus evaded capture.[2]

Following the 1938 Anschluss between Nazi Germany and Austria, Yugoslavia came to share its northwestern border with Germany and fell under increasing pressure as its neighbours aligned themselves with the Axis powers. In April 1939, Italy opened a second frontier with Yugoslavia when it invaded and occupied neighbouring Albania.[3] At the outbreak of World War II, the Royal Yugoslav Government declared its neutrality.[4] Between September and November 1940, Hungary and Romania joined the Tripartite Pact, aligning themselves with the Axis, and Italy invaded Greece. Yugoslavia was by then almost completely surrounded by the Axis powers and their satellites, and its neutral stance toward the war became strained.[3] In late February 1941, Bulgaria joined the Pact. The following day, German troops entered Bulgaria from Romania, closing the ring around Yugoslavia.[5] Intending to secure his southern flank for the impending attack on the Soviet Union, German dictator Adolf Hitler began placing heavy pressure on Yugoslavia to join the Axis. On 25 March 1941, after some delay, the Royal Yugoslav Government conditionally signed the Pact. Two days later, a group of pro-Western, Serbian nationalist Royal Yugoslav Air Force officers deposed the country's regent, Prince Paul, in a bloodless coup d'état. They placed his teenage nephew Peter on the throne and brought to power a "government of national unity" led by the head of the Royal Yugoslav Air Force, General Dušan Simović.[6] The coup enraged Hitler, who immediately ordered Yugoslavia's invasion, which commenced on 6 April 1941.[7]

Creation of the NDH edit

 
A map depicting the occupation and partition of Yugoslavia, 1941–1943

Yugoslavia was quickly overwhelmed by the combined strength of the Axis powers and surrendered in less than two weeks. The government and royal family went into exile, and the country was occupied and dismembered by its neighbours. Hitler wished to irrevocably dismantle Yugoslavia, which he dubbed a "Versailles construct".[8] Hitler was known to be a virulent Serbophobe.[9][10] He and other senior German leaders considered the Serbs to be subhuman (German: Untermenschen).[11] Thus, in Hitler's conception of the New Order of Europe, they were to be collectively punished.[8] Serbia was reduced to its pre-Balkan War borders, becoming the only country in the Western Balkans to be directly occupied by the Germans.[12] Serb-inhabited territories west of the Drina River were incorporated into the Axis puppet state known as the Independent State of Croatia (Croatian: Nezavisna država Hrvatska; NDH), which included most of modern-day Croatia, all of modern-day Bosnia and Herzegovina, and parts of modern-day Serbia.[13] The establishment of the NDH had been announced over the radio by Slavko Kvaternik, a former Austro-Hungarian Army officer who had been in contact with Croatian nationalists abroad, on 10 April.[14][15]

Pavelić entered the NDH on 13 April and reached Zagreb two days later. The same day, Germany and Italy extended diplomatic recognition to the NDH. Pavelić assumed control and bestowed himself the title Poglavnik ("leader").[14] At the time of its establishment, the NDH had a population of 6.5 million inhabitants, about half of whom were Croats. It was also inhabited by nearly two million Serbs, who constituted about one-third of its total population.[16] Lands inhabited by Serbs accounted for 60–70 percent of the NDH's total landmass. Nevertheless, Serbs – along with others whom the Ustaše deemed "undesirable", such as Jews and Roma – were denied citizenship on the basis that they were not Aryans. Within hours of the NDH's creation, businesses brandished signs reading: "No Serbs, Gypsies, Jews and dogs". Additionally, immediate measures were taken to expunge the presence of the Cyrillic alphabet from the public sphere.[17] On 17 April, the Ustaše instituted the Legal Provision for the Defence of the People and State, a law legitimizing the establishment of concentration camps and the mass shooting of hostages in the NDH. Thirty concentration camps in total were established across the puppet state.[18]

Operation edit

Establishment and first arrivals edit

Đakovo, located about 197 kilometres (122 mi) southeast of Zagreb, is notable as the seat of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Đakovo-Osijek, and prior to and during World War II, was the home to one of Croatia's largest concentrations of ethnic Germans.[19] In November 1941, two senior local Jewish community leaders, Dragutin Rosenberg and Aleksandar Klein, persuaded the head of the Jewish Bureau of the Ustaše Surveillance Service (Croatian: Ustaška nadzorna služba; UNS), Vilko Kühnel, to authorize the establishment of a refugee camp in Đakovo.[20] In late November, the Osijek police ordered the town's Jewish community to make room within five days for 2,000 Jewish women and children. Whereas women and children would be deported to Đakovo, Jewish males were to be deported to the largest of the NDH's concentration camps, Jasenovac. Local Jewish youths quickly converted a 40-metre (130 ft)-long, three-storey abandoned flour mill that had once been used by the archdiocese into a refugee camp to house the women and children. Several surrounding buildings were subsequently added to the camp.[19]

On 2 December, 1,800 Jewish women and children and fifty Bosnian Serb women arrived at the camp.[19] Most were from Sarajevo, but also from Zagreb, Požega, Pakrac, Slavonski and Bosanski Brod, Nova Gradiška, Zenica and Travnik.[21] On 8 December, the Jewish community in Sarajevo requested that the Jewish communities in Sarajevo, Zagreb and Osijek be permitted to provide donations to support the civilian populations of the Jasenovac, Loborgrad and Đakovo camps. Ten days later, the UNS's Jewish Bureau permitted the funds that had been raised by the Jewish communities to be allocated to the detainees at these camps.[22] During their confinement, the detainees were made to do manual labour. Ceramics and leather workshops were established within the camp, where most of the adult female detainees worked. As many as 400 women were made to do agricultural work on farms and in fields near the camp. A kindergarten was organized for the children.[19]

The campgrounds provided inadequate shelter from the elements.[19] The detainees were subjected to appalling sanitary conditions.[23] During the first several months of its existence, the camp was guarded by two or three police officers under the command of Dragutin Mayer.[19] The policemen allowed detainees to leave the camp to purchase necessary goods in the town, to visit the hospital in Osijek and to call relatives and friends.[24] Although the detainees were permitted to purchase medicine and the pesticide Zyklon B for disinfection, they were price gouged by the Ustaše.[25]

Typhoid epidemic edit

In early 1942, the camp experienced a typhoid outbreak. Prominent locals, most notably the Archbishop of Đakovo, Anton Akšamović, feared that the outbreak could spread outside the camp. On 30 January 1942, the authorities dispatched a medical commission to Đakovo, which took note of the inhumane living conditions to which the detainees were subjected, and recommended an increase in the amount and quality of medical supplies allocated to the camp.[19] No action was taken to remedy the situation.[26] A small number of prisoners were consequently taken to hospitals. Around the same time, local officials demanded that the camp be relocated further from the town to stem the epidemic, but because the arrest and deportation of Slovenian Jews had recently commenced, the UNS sought to enlarge the camp. These deportations led to an increase in the number and size of transports to the camp by February.[19] A transport of 1,161 women, originating from Stara Gradiška, arrived at Đakovo on 24 February 1942. By this time, the camp housed about 3,000 deportees, around one-quarter of them children under the age of 14.[19] Of the 1,073 women and children who arrived at Đakovo between 26 February and 6 March 1942, 274 – or just over one-quarter – were from Zagreb.[21]

The large increase in the number of detainees swiftly worsened the typhoid epidemic.[19] According to several authors, the transfer of women and children from Stara Gradiška to Đakovo was made intentionally to further the spread of typhoid fever among the Đakovo detainees.[27][28] By March 1942, 631 detainees were hospitalized, an additional 219 were infected, and 131 had died. In response to the epidemic, the authorities and the local Jewish community agreed to place some of the Jewish children from the camp in the care of local Jewish foster families.[19] All Jewish children under the age of ten were to be removed from the camp as part of this arrangement.[24] Jewish community officials administered the camp until 29 March 1942. In mid-April 1942, the Ustaše assumed direct control of the camp with a detachment from Jasenovac led by Jozo Matijević. Some of these new guards set up living quarters in adjacent villages and others lived on the camp premises. The new camp guards ensured that none of the detainees could leave the campgrounds, as had previously been the case, and the detainees were thus no longer able to make contact with the outside world. All subsequent aid deliveries were seized by the Ustaše and detainees were often robbed.[19] Hunger became rampant; daily rations were reduced to two or three potatoes per person.[26] Many detainees were subjected to rape and torture.[29] Although no systematic killings took place, detainees were routinely abused and humiliated, and multiple individual killings occurred as well.[23] On one occasion, the Ustaše amused themselves by tossing loaves of bread to the starving children. When the children set upon the bread, the Ustaše released their hungry dogs upon them. According to one eyewitness, after a dog tore a piece of flesh from one of the children, one of the Ustaše dragged both the child and the dog into a storehouse and locked the door. As the child screamed, the Ustaše danced to the accordion.[30]

Closure edit

 
One of the trains that transported prisoners to Jasenovac on display in 2010

By May, as many as 800 detainees had succumbed to typhoid fever,[26] which killed between five and six detainees daily.[29] An additional 700 detainees contracted other diseases.[31] By this point, the camp had become a burden to the Ustaše.[32] On 18 May 1942, the Ministry of Health asked the Directorate for Public Order and Security (Croatian: Ravnateljstvo za javni red i sigurnost; RAVSIGUR) to dissolve the camp within one month.[19] This message was personally relayed to RAVSIGUR by the Minister of Health, Ivo Petrić, who proposed the "relocation" or "closing down" of the camp together with the provision of "improved and increased food for the prisoners". Despite Petrić's suggestions, RAVSIGUR decided it would be most expedient to kill all the detainees.[32] Zagreb's Jewish community subsequently offered to help restock the camp, but the authorities declined their offer because they had already decided to liquidate it.[26]

Between 15 June and 7 July, 2,400–3,200 detainees were transported from Đakovo to Jasenovac.[33] The operation was overseen by Lieutenant (Croatian: Poručnik) Joso Matković.[34] For days, they were left in locked railway carriages on the train tracks outside the camp, and many consequently died of heat, thirst and hunger. Those that survived this ordeal were taken off the railway carriages, ferried across the Sava River and killed.[33] Their bodies were then pushed into the Sava by Romani slave labourers, who were later killed themselves.[32] Unaware of their fate, between 7 July and 14 July, the Jewish community in Zagreb sent about 120 food parcels to Jasenovac for the former Đakovo detainees. By September 1942, members of Zagreb's Jewish community began to suspect that the detainees had been killed, although when asked, Ustaše officials would only reply that the detainees had been transported to Jasenovac.[35]

Legacy edit

During the course of its existence, the Đakovo camp housed as many as 3,800 civilians.[21] In August 1942, around 1,200 Jews were deported from Osijek, leaving all but 40 to 50 of the Jewish foster children that had been taken from the Đakovo camp left in the town. Many of these children subsequently escaped to Split, in the Italian occupation zone.[36] Around 25,000 Jews were killed in the NDH during the Holocaust, according to Yad Vashem.[37] In 1945, the Yugoslav authorities undertook exhumations on the Đakovo camp's former grounds. The following year, former Jasenovac concentration camp administrator Miroslav Filipović testified about the killing of the Đakovo detainees at Jasenovac in July 1942.[19]

In September 1952, the Union of Jewish Communities of Yugoslavia unveiled five monuments to the victims of the Holocaust in Belgrade, Zagreb, Sarajevo, Novi Sad and Đakovo.[38] Following Croatia's independence from Yugoslavia, the former campsite was turned into a gas station.[39] A commemorative ceremony is held at the site every year on the first Sunday in June. The commemoration also encompasses the nearby cemetery in which the camp detainees who died were buried. The cemetery is unique in that it is the only burial site in Europe where victims of the Holocaust were interred under their first and last names and not merely their inmate number.[40] There are 569 camp victims buried in the cemetery.[26] On this basis, the historians Jens Hoppe and Alexander Korb have concluded that the camp's mortality rate amounted to nearly 19 percent.[19] In June 2013, a sculpture titled Peace in Heaven, by Croatian-born Israeli sculptor Dina Merhav, was unveiled in Đakovo to commemorate those who were interned at the camp.[41]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Mojzes 2011, p. 158.
  2. ^ Tomasevich 2001, pp. 25–34.
  3. ^ a b Roberts 1973, pp. 6–7.
  4. ^ Pavlowitch 2008, p. 8.
  5. ^ Roberts 1973, p. 12.
  6. ^ Pavlowitch 2008, pp. 10–13.
  7. ^ Roberts 1973, p. 15.
  8. ^ a b Pavlowitch 2008, p. 21.
  9. ^ Shepherd 2012, p. 238.
  10. ^ Lampe 2014, p. 325, note 20.
  11. ^ Umbreit 2000, p. 97.
  12. ^ Pavlowitch 2008, p. 49.
  13. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 272.
  14. ^ a b Goldstein 1999, p. 133.
  15. ^ Ramet 2006, p. 155.
  16. ^ Hoare 2007, pp. 19–20.
  17. ^ Pavlowitch 2008, pp. 31–32.
  18. ^ Goldstein 1999, pp. 136–138.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Hoppe & Korb 2018, p. 53.
  20. ^ Bauer 1981, p. 281.
  21. ^ a b c Goldstein & Goldstein 2016, p. 315.
  22. ^ Dulić 2005, p. 160.
  23. ^ a b Matthäus 2013, p. 253.
  24. ^ a b Gitman 2016, p. 122.
  25. ^ Goldstein & Goldstein 2016, pp. 315–316.
  26. ^ a b c d e Goldstein & Goldstein 2016, p. 316.
  27. ^ van Arsdale 2006, p. 72.
  28. ^ Glenny 2012, p. 501.
  29. ^ a b Mojzes 2011, p. 62.
  30. ^ Jancar-Webster 1990, p. 132.
  31. ^ Dulić 2005, p. 160, note 190.
  32. ^ a b c Goldstein & Goldstein 2016, p. 360.
  33. ^ a b Goldstein & Goldstein 2016, p. 286.
  34. ^ Basta 1986, p. 176.
  35. ^ Goldstein & Goldstein 2016, p. 361.
  36. ^ Gitman 2016, p. 123.
  37. ^ Yad Vashem 2020.
  38. ^ Byford 2013, p. 523.
  39. ^ Subotić 2019, p. 122.
  40. ^ Friedman 2013, p. 94.
  41. ^ Ljubičić 2 June 2013.

References edit

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  • Bauer, Yehuda (1981). American Jewry and the Holocaust: The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, 1939–1945. Detroit, Michigan: Wayne State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8143-1672-6.
  • Byford, Jovan (2013). "Between Marginalization and Instrumentalization: Holocaust Memory in Serbia Since the Late 1980s". In Himka, John-Paul; Michlic, Joanna Beata (eds.). Bringing the Dark Past to Light: The Reception of the Holocaust in Postcommunist Europe. Lincoln, Nebraska: Nebraska University Press. pp. 516–548. ISBN 978-0-8032-4647-8.
  • Dulić, Tomislav (2005). Utopias of Nation: Local Mass Killing in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 1941–42. Uppsala, Sweden: Uppsala University Library. ISBN 978-9-1554-6302-1.
  • Friedman, Francine (2013). "Contemporary Responses to the Holocaust in Bosnia and Herzegovina". In Himka, John-Paul; Michlic, Joanna Beata (eds.). Bringing the Dark Past to Light: The Reception of the Holocaust in Postcommunist Europe. Lincoln, Nebraska: Nebraska University Press. pp. 83–107. ISBN 978-0-8032-4647-8.
  • Gitman, Esther (2016). "Courage to Resist: Jews of the Independent State of Croatia Fight Back". In Schoeps, Julius H.; Bingen, Dieter; Botsch, Gideon (eds.). Jüdischer Widerstand in Europa (1933–1945): Formen und Facetten. Berlin, Germany: Walter de Gruyter. pp. 106–125. ISBN 978-3-11041-535-3.
  • Glenny, Misha (2012) [1999]. The Balkans: 1804–2012. London, England: Granta Books. ISBN 978-1-77089-273-6.
  • Goldstein, Ivo (1999). Croatia: A History. Translated by Nikolina Jovanović. Montreal, Canada: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-2017-2.
  • Goldstein, Ivo; Goldstein, Slavko (2016). The Holocaust in Croatia. Translated by Sonia Wild Bicanić and Nikolina Jovanović. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 978-0-8229-4451-5.
  • Hoare, Marko Attila (2007). The History of Bosnia: From the Middle Ages to the Present Day. London, England: Saqi. ISBN 978-0-86356-953-1.
  • Hoppe, Jens; Korb, Alexander (2018). "Đakovo". In Megargee, Geoffrey P.; White, Joseph R. (eds.). Camps and Ghettos under European Regimes Aligned with Nazi Germany. The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945. Vol. III. Translated by Fred Flatow. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. pp. 53–54. ISBN 978-0-25302-386-5.
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45°19′05″N 18°25′03″E / 45.318063°N 18.417604°E / 45.318063; 18.417604

Đakovo, internment, camp, Đakovo, internment, camp, jewish, lesser, extent, serb, women, children, town, Đakovo, independent, state, croatia, that, operational, between, december, 1941, july, 1942, during, world, Đakovointernment, campthe, peace, heaven, monum. Đakovo was an internment camp for Jewish and to a lesser extent Serb women and children in the town of Đakovo in the Independent State of Croatia NDH that was operational between December 1941 and July 1942 during World War II ĐakovoInternment campThe Peace in Heaven monument by Dina Merhav commemorates those who were interned at ĐakovoĐakovoLocation of Đakovo in the Independent State of CroatiaLocationĐakovo Independent State of Croatia modern day Croatia Operated byCamp detainees 1941 1942 Ustase 1942 Original useFlour millOperational2 December 1941 7 July 1942InmatesJewish and Serb women and childrenNumber of inmates 3 800Killed569 800The camp was established on the site of an abandoned flour mill that was once used by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Đakovo Osijek and was initially run autonomously by the Jewish community It received its first arrivals on 2 December 1941 In early 1942 the camp experienced an outbreak of typhoid fever which was exacerbated by the arrival of Jewish deportees from Slovenia The NDH s ruling Ustase movement subsequently assumed direct control of the camp and many detainees were consequently subjected to torture rape and degradation In mid May the NDH s Ministry of Health ordered that the camp be shut down Between 15 June and 7 July 1942 2 400 3 200 detainees were transported to the Jasenovac concentration camp where they perished As many as 3 800 women and children were interned at the camp over the course of its existence and at least 569 women and children died although this figure may have been as high as 800 In 1945 Yugoslavia s new communist authorities undertook exhumations on the Đakovo camp s former grounds In September 1952 the Union of Jewish Communities of Yugoslavia unveiled a monument to the victims of the camp Following Croatia s independence from Yugoslavia the former campsite was turned into a gas station A commemorative ceremony is held every year at the site as well as at a nearby cemetery where the bodies of detainees were buried The cemetery is unique in that it is the only burial site in Europe where victims of the Holocaust were interred under their first and last names and not merely their inmate numbers In 2013 a sculpture titled Peace in Heaven by Croatian born Israeli sculptor Dina Merhav was unveiled in Đakovo to commemorate those who were interned at the camp Contents 1 Background 1 1 Interwar Yugoslavia 1 2 Creation of the NDH 2 Operation 2 1 Establishment and first arrivals 2 2 Typhoid epidemic 2 3 Closure 3 Legacy 4 Citations 5 ReferencesBackground editInterwar Yugoslavia edit Ethnic tensions between Serbs and Croats increased following the establishment of the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes in the aftermath of World War I During the interwar period many Croats came to resent Serb political hegemony in the newly established state which resulted in the passing of legislation that favoured Serb political religious and business interests 1 Tensions flared in 1928 following the shooting of five Croatian parliamentary deputies by the Montenegrin Serb politician Punisa Racic Two died on the spot and two others were wounded but survived A fifth the opposition leader Stjepan Radic died nearly two months later of complications attributed to the shooting In January 1929 King Alexander instituted a royal dictatorship and renamed the country Yugoslavia Shortly thereafter the Croatian politician Ante Pavelic formed the Ustase a Croatian nationalist and fascist movement which sought to achieve Croatian independence through violent means The Ustase were outlawed in Yugoslavia but received covert assistance from Benito Mussolini s Italy which had territorial pretensions in Istria and Dalmatia The Ustase carried out a number of actions aimed at undermining Yugoslavia most notably the Velebit uprising in 1932 and the assassination of King Alexander in Marseilles in 1934 Following Alexander s assassination the Ustase movement s senior most leaders including Pavelic were tried in absentia in both France and Yugoslavia and sentenced to death but were granted protection by Mussolini and thus evaded capture 2 Following the 1938 Anschluss between Nazi Germany and Austria Yugoslavia came to share its northwestern border with Germany and fell under increasing pressure as its neighbours aligned themselves with the Axis powers In April 1939 Italy opened a second frontier with Yugoslavia when it invaded and occupied neighbouring Albania 3 At the outbreak of World War II the Royal Yugoslav Government declared its neutrality 4 Between September and November 1940 Hungary and Romania joined the Tripartite Pact aligning themselves with the Axis and Italy invaded Greece Yugoslavia was by then almost completely surrounded by the Axis powers and their satellites and its neutral stance toward the war became strained 3 In late February 1941 Bulgaria joined the Pact The following day German troops entered Bulgaria from Romania closing the ring around Yugoslavia 5 Intending to secure his southern flank for the impending attack on the Soviet Union German dictator Adolf Hitler began placing heavy pressure on Yugoslavia to join the Axis On 25 March 1941 after some delay the Royal Yugoslav Government conditionally signed the Pact Two days later a group of pro Western Serbian nationalist Royal Yugoslav Air Force officers deposed the country s regent Prince Paul in a bloodless coup d etat They placed his teenage nephew Peter on the throne and brought to power a government of national unity led by the head of the Royal Yugoslav Air Force General Dusan Simovic 6 The coup enraged Hitler who immediately ordered Yugoslavia s invasion which commenced on 6 April 1941 7 Creation of the NDH edit nbsp A map depicting the occupation and partition of Yugoslavia 1941 1943Yugoslavia was quickly overwhelmed by the combined strength of the Axis powers and surrendered in less than two weeks The government and royal family went into exile and the country was occupied and dismembered by its neighbours Hitler wished to irrevocably dismantle Yugoslavia which he dubbed a Versailles construct 8 Hitler was known to be a virulent Serbophobe 9 10 He and other senior German leaders considered the Serbs to be subhuman German Untermenschen 11 Thus in Hitler s conception of the New Order of Europe they were to be collectively punished 8 Serbia was reduced to its pre Balkan War borders becoming the only country in the Western Balkans to be directly occupied by the Germans 12 Serb inhabited territories west of the Drina River were incorporated into the Axis puppet state known as the Independent State of Croatia Croatian Nezavisna drzava Hrvatska NDH which included most of modern day Croatia all of modern day Bosnia and Herzegovina and parts of modern day Serbia 13 The establishment of the NDH had been announced over the radio by Slavko Kvaternik a former Austro Hungarian Army officer who had been in contact with Croatian nationalists abroad on 10 April 14 15 Pavelic entered the NDH on 13 April and reached Zagreb two days later The same day Germany and Italy extended diplomatic recognition to the NDH Pavelic assumed control and bestowed himself the title Poglavnik leader 14 At the time of its establishment the NDH had a population of 6 5 million inhabitants about half of whom were Croats It was also inhabited by nearly two million Serbs who constituted about one third of its total population 16 Lands inhabited by Serbs accounted for 60 70 percent of the NDH s total landmass Nevertheless Serbs along with others whom the Ustase deemed undesirable such as Jews and Roma were denied citizenship on the basis that they were not Aryans Within hours of the NDH s creation businesses brandished signs reading No Serbs Gypsies Jews and dogs Additionally immediate measures were taken to expunge the presence of the Cyrillic alphabet from the public sphere 17 On 17 April the Ustase instituted the Legal Provision for the Defence of the People and State a law legitimizing the establishment of concentration camps and the mass shooting of hostages in the NDH Thirty concentration camps in total were established across the puppet state 18 Operation editEstablishment and first arrivals edit Đakovo located about 197 kilometres 122 mi southeast of Zagreb is notable as the seat of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Đakovo Osijek and prior to and during World War II was the home to one of Croatia s largest concentrations of ethnic Germans 19 In November 1941 two senior local Jewish community leaders Dragutin Rosenberg and Aleksandar Klein persuaded the head of the Jewish Bureau of the Ustase Surveillance Service Croatian Ustaska nadzorna sluzba UNS Vilko Kuhnel to authorize the establishment of a refugee camp in Đakovo 20 In late November the Osijek police ordered the town s Jewish community to make room within five days for 2 000 Jewish women and children Whereas women and children would be deported to Đakovo Jewish males were to be deported to the largest of the NDH s concentration camps Jasenovac Local Jewish youths quickly converted a 40 metre 130 ft long three storey abandoned flour mill that had once been used by the archdiocese into a refugee camp to house the women and children Several surrounding buildings were subsequently added to the camp 19 On 2 December 1 800 Jewish women and children and fifty Bosnian Serb women arrived at the camp 19 Most were from Sarajevo but also from Zagreb Pozega Pakrac Slavonski and Bosanski Brod Nova Gradiska Zenica and Travnik 21 On 8 December the Jewish community in Sarajevo requested that the Jewish communities in Sarajevo Zagreb and Osijek be permitted to provide donations to support the civilian populations of the Jasenovac Loborgrad and Đakovo camps Ten days later the UNS s Jewish Bureau permitted the funds that had been raised by the Jewish communities to be allocated to the detainees at these camps 22 During their confinement the detainees were made to do manual labour Ceramics and leather workshops were established within the camp where most of the adult female detainees worked As many as 400 women were made to do agricultural work on farms and in fields near the camp A kindergarten was organized for the children 19 The campgrounds provided inadequate shelter from the elements 19 The detainees were subjected to appalling sanitary conditions 23 During the first several months of its existence the camp was guarded by two or three police officers under the command of Dragutin Mayer 19 The policemen allowed detainees to leave the camp to purchase necessary goods in the town to visit the hospital in Osijek and to call relatives and friends 24 Although the detainees were permitted to purchase medicine and the pesticide Zyklon B for disinfection they were price gouged by the Ustase 25 Typhoid epidemic edit In early 1942 the camp experienced a typhoid outbreak Prominent locals most notably the Archbishop of Đakovo Anton Aksamovic feared that the outbreak could spread outside the camp On 30 January 1942 the authorities dispatched a medical commission to Đakovo which took note of the inhumane living conditions to which the detainees were subjected and recommended an increase in the amount and quality of medical supplies allocated to the camp 19 No action was taken to remedy the situation 26 A small number of prisoners were consequently taken to hospitals Around the same time local officials demanded that the camp be relocated further from the town to stem the epidemic but because the arrest and deportation of Slovenian Jews had recently commenced the UNS sought to enlarge the camp These deportations led to an increase in the number and size of transports to the camp by February 19 A transport of 1 161 women originating from Stara Gradiska arrived at Đakovo on 24 February 1942 By this time the camp housed about 3 000 deportees around one quarter of them children under the age of 14 19 Of the 1 073 women and children who arrived at Đakovo between 26 February and 6 March 1942 274 or just over one quarter were from Zagreb 21 The large increase in the number of detainees swiftly worsened the typhoid epidemic 19 According to several authors the transfer of women and children from Stara Gradiska to Đakovo was made intentionally to further the spread of typhoid fever among the Đakovo detainees 27 28 By March 1942 631 detainees were hospitalized an additional 219 were infected and 131 had died In response to the epidemic the authorities and the local Jewish community agreed to place some of the Jewish children from the camp in the care of local Jewish foster families 19 All Jewish children under the age of ten were to be removed from the camp as part of this arrangement 24 Jewish community officials administered the camp until 29 March 1942 In mid April 1942 the Ustase assumed direct control of the camp with a detachment from Jasenovac led by Jozo Matijevic Some of these new guards set up living quarters in adjacent villages and others lived on the camp premises The new camp guards ensured that none of the detainees could leave the campgrounds as had previously been the case and the detainees were thus no longer able to make contact with the outside world All subsequent aid deliveries were seized by the Ustase and detainees were often robbed 19 Hunger became rampant daily rations were reduced to two or three potatoes per person 26 Many detainees were subjected to rape and torture 29 Although no systematic killings took place detainees were routinely abused and humiliated and multiple individual killings occurred as well 23 On one occasion the Ustase amused themselves by tossing loaves of bread to the starving children When the children set upon the bread the Ustase released their hungry dogs upon them According to one eyewitness after a dog tore a piece of flesh from one of the children one of the Ustase dragged both the child and the dog into a storehouse and locked the door As the child screamed the Ustase danced to the accordion 30 Closure edit nbsp One of the trains that transported prisoners to Jasenovac on display in 2010By May as many as 800 detainees had succumbed to typhoid fever 26 which killed between five and six detainees daily 29 An additional 700 detainees contracted other diseases 31 By this point the camp had become a burden to the Ustase 32 On 18 May 1942 the Ministry of Health asked the Directorate for Public Order and Security Croatian Ravnateljstvo za javni red i sigurnost RAVSIGUR to dissolve the camp within one month 19 This message was personally relayed to RAVSIGUR by the Minister of Health Ivo Petric who proposed the relocation or closing down of the camp together with the provision of improved and increased food for the prisoners Despite Petric s suggestions RAVSIGUR decided it would be most expedient to kill all the detainees 32 Zagreb s Jewish community subsequently offered to help restock the camp but the authorities declined their offer because they had already decided to liquidate it 26 Between 15 June and 7 July 2 400 3 200 detainees were transported from Đakovo to Jasenovac 33 The operation was overseen by Lieutenant Croatian Porucnik Joso Matkovic 34 For days they were left in locked railway carriages on the train tracks outside the camp and many consequently died of heat thirst and hunger Those that survived this ordeal were taken off the railway carriages ferried across the Sava River and killed 33 Their bodies were then pushed into the Sava by Romani slave labourers who were later killed themselves 32 Unaware of their fate between 7 July and 14 July the Jewish community in Zagreb sent about 120 food parcels to Jasenovac for the former Đakovo detainees By September 1942 members of Zagreb s Jewish community began to suspect that the detainees had been killed although when asked Ustase officials would only reply that the detainees had been transported to Jasenovac 35 Legacy editDuring the course of its existence the Đakovo camp housed as many as 3 800 civilians 21 In August 1942 around 1 200 Jews were deported from Osijek leaving all but 40 to 50 of the Jewish foster children that had been taken from the Đakovo camp left in the town Many of these children subsequently escaped to Split in the Italian occupation zone 36 Around 25 000 Jews were killed in the NDH during the Holocaust according to Yad Vashem 37 In 1945 the Yugoslav authorities undertook exhumations on the Đakovo camp s former grounds The following year former Jasenovac concentration camp administrator Miroslav Filipovic testified about the killing of the Đakovo detainees at Jasenovac in July 1942 19 In September 1952 the Union of Jewish Communities of Yugoslavia unveiled five monuments to the victims of the Holocaust in Belgrade Zagreb Sarajevo Novi Sad and Đakovo 38 Following Croatia s independence from Yugoslavia the former campsite was turned into a gas station 39 A commemorative ceremony is held at the site every year on the first Sunday in June The commemoration also encompasses the nearby cemetery in which the camp detainees who died were buried The cemetery is unique in that it is the only burial site in Europe where victims of the Holocaust were interred under their first and last names and not merely their inmate number 40 There are 569 camp victims buried in the cemetery 26 On this basis the historians Jens Hoppe and Alexander Korb have concluded that the camp s mortality rate amounted to nearly 19 percent 19 In June 2013 a sculpture titled Peace in Heaven by Croatian born Israeli sculptor Dina Merhav was unveiled in Đakovo to commemorate those who were interned at the camp 41 Citations edit Mojzes 2011 p 158 Tomasevich 2001 pp 25 34 a b Roberts 1973 pp 6 7 Pavlowitch 2008 p 8 Roberts 1973 p 12 Pavlowitch 2008 pp 10 13 Roberts 1973 p 15 a b Pavlowitch 2008 p 21 Shepherd 2012 p 238 Lampe 2014 p 325 note 20 Umbreit 2000 p 97 Pavlowitch 2008 p 49 Tomasevich 2001 p 272 a b Goldstein 1999 p 133 Ramet 2006 p 155 Hoare 2007 pp 19 20 Pavlowitch 2008 pp 31 32 Goldstein 1999 pp 136 138 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Hoppe amp Korb 2018 p 53 Bauer 1981 p 281 a b c Goldstein amp Goldstein 2016 p 315 Dulic 2005 p 160 a b Matthaus 2013 p 253 a b Gitman 2016 p 122 Goldstein amp Goldstein 2016 pp 315 316 a b c d e Goldstein amp Goldstein 2016 p 316 van Arsdale 2006 p 72 Glenny 2012 p 501 a b Mojzes 2011 p 62 Jancar Webster 1990 p 132 Dulic 2005 p 160 note 190 a b c Goldstein amp Goldstein 2016 p 360 a b Goldstein amp Goldstein 2016 p 286 Basta 1986 p 176 Goldstein amp Goldstein 2016 p 361 Gitman 2016 p 123 Yad Vashem 2020 Byford 2013 p 523 Subotic 2019 p 122 Friedman 2013 p 94 Ljubicic 2 June 2013 References editBasta Milan 1986 Rat je zavrsen 7 dana kasnije in Serbo Croatian Belgrade Yugoslavia Privredni pregled OCLC 23576362 Bauer Yehuda 1981 American Jewry and the Holocaust The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee 1939 1945 Detroit Michigan Wayne State University Press ISBN 978 0 8143 1672 6 Byford Jovan 2013 Between Marginalization and Instrumentalization Holocaust Memory in Serbia Since the Late 1980s In Himka John Paul Michlic Joanna Beata eds Bringing the Dark Past to Light The Reception of the Holocaust in Postcommunist Europe Lincoln Nebraska Nebraska University Press pp 516 548 ISBN 978 0 8032 4647 8 Dulic Tomislav 2005 Utopias of Nation Local Mass Killing in Bosnia and Herzegovina 1941 42 Uppsala Sweden Uppsala University Library ISBN 978 9 1554 6302 1 Friedman Francine 2013 Contemporary Responses to the Holocaust in Bosnia and Herzegovina In Himka John Paul Michlic Joanna Beata eds Bringing the Dark Past to Light The Reception of the Holocaust in Postcommunist Europe Lincoln Nebraska Nebraska University Press pp 83 107 ISBN 978 0 8032 4647 8 Gitman Esther 2016 Courage to Resist Jews of the Independent State of Croatia Fight Back In Schoeps Julius H Bingen Dieter Botsch Gideon eds Judischer Widerstand in Europa 1933 1945 Formen und Facetten Berlin Germany Walter de Gruyter pp 106 125 ISBN 978 3 11041 535 3 Glenny Misha 2012 1999 The Balkans 1804 2012 London England Granta Books ISBN 978 1 77089 273 6 Goldstein Ivo 1999 Croatia A History Translated by Nikolina Jovanovic Montreal Canada McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 2017 2 Goldstein Ivo Goldstein Slavko 2016 The Holocaust in Croatia Translated by Sonia Wild Bicanic and Nikolina Jovanovic Pittsburgh Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 978 0 8229 4451 5 Hoare Marko Attila 2007 The History of Bosnia From the Middle Ages to the Present Day London England Saqi ISBN 978 0 86356 953 1 Hoppe Jens Korb Alexander 2018 Đakovo In Megargee Geoffrey P White Joseph R eds Camps and Ghettos under European Regimes Aligned with Nazi Germany The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933 1945 Vol III Translated by Fred Flatow Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press pp 53 54 ISBN 978 0 25302 386 5 Jancar Webster Barbara 1990 Women amp Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Denver Colorado Arden Press ISBN 978 0 9128 6909 4 Lampe John 2014 Balkans into Southeastern Europe 1914 2014 A Century of War and Transition New York City Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 13705 777 8 Ljubicic Mile 2 June 2013 Davidova zvijezda i drvo zivota spomen na stradale logorase Radio Đakovo in Croatian Retrieved 23 March 2020 Matthaus Jurgen 2013 Jewish Responses to Persecution 1941 1942 Plymouth England AltaMira Press ISBN 978 0 75912 259 8 Mojzes Paul 2011 Balkan Genocides Holocaust and Ethnic Cleansing in the 20th Century Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 0665 6 Murder of the Jews of the Balkans and Slovakia Yad Vashem Retrieved 23 March 2020 Pavlowitch Stevan K 2008 Hitler s New Disorder The Second World War in Yugoslavia London England Hurst amp Company ISBN 978 1 85065 895 5 Ramet Sabrina P 2006 The Three Yugoslavias State Building and Legitimation 1918 2005 Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 34656 8 Roberts Walter R 1973 Tito Mihailovic and the Allies 1941 1945 Durham North Carolina Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 0773 0 Shepherd Ben 2012 Terror in the Balkans German Armies and Partisan Warfare Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 04891 1 Subotic Jelena 2019 Yellow Star Red Star Holocaust Remembrance after Communism Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 978 1 50174 241 5 Tomasevich Jozo 2001 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Occupation and Collaboration Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 3615 2 Umbreit Hans 2000 Stages in the Territorial New Order in Europe In Kroener Bernhard R Muller Rolf Dieter Umbreit Hans eds The Global War Germany and the Second World War Vol 5 Oxford England Clarendon Press pp 22 167 ISBN 978 0 1982 2887 5 van Arsdale Peter W 2006 Forced to Flee Human Rights and Human Wrongs in Refugee Homelands Lanham Maryland Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 73915 506 6 45 19 05 N 18 25 03 E 45 318063 N 18 417604 E 45 318063 18 417604 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Đakovo internment camp amp oldid 1036459971, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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