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Communist purges in Serbia in 1944–1945

The communist purges in Serbia in 1944–1945 are atrocities[1] that were committed by members of the Yugoslav Partisan Movement and the post-war communist authorities after they gained control over Serbia, against people perceived as war criminals, quislings and ideological opponents. Most of these purges were committed between October 1944 and May 1945. During this time, at least 55,973 people died of various causes, including death by execution or by illness in retention camps. The victims – the vast majority of them deliberately summarily executed, without a trial[1][2][3][4][5] – were of different ethnic backgrounds, but were mostly Germans, Serbs and Hungarians. Some contend that the killings were not planned, but were unorganised vendettas of individuals during the post-war chaos, or that those considered victims of execution instead died in battle against the Partisans.[6]

The exact number of victims remains controversial, as the investigation is ongoing.[7][8] There are different estimates regarding the number of victims. According to one source, at least 80,000 people were executed in the whole of Serbia,[9] while another source states that the number of victims was more than 100,000.[9] The names of about 4,000 individual Germans who were killed by the Partisans are known, but it is estimated that many more ethnic Germans were executed.[10] These events during the fall of 1944 are referred to as "bloody autumn" by some sources.[10][11][12] In 2009, the government of Serbia formed a State Commission to investigate the secret burial places of victims after 12 September 1944. The Commission compiled a registry of names, basic biographical data, and details of persecution. The registry contains a total of 55,973 names, including 27,367 Germans, 14,567 Serbs and 6,112 Hungarians.[13]

Background Edit

During World War II, in 1941, Nazi Germany invaded and occupied Yugoslavia. Central Serbia was put under the Military Administration in Serbia (MAS), Kosovo was annexed by the Italian protectorate of Albania, and eastern Serbia was occupied by Bulgaria. The Vojvodina region was divided into three occupation zones: Banat was placed under direct German control as an autonomous region within the area governed by the MAS, Bačka was annexed by Horthy's Hungary and Syrmia was annexed by the Independent State of Croatia.

The Axis powers found it difficult to combat the Yugoslav partisan uprising led by the Communist Party of Yugoslavia, due to a shortage of manpower and the rough terrain, and relied heavily on auxiliary anticommunist forces drawn from various Yugoslav peoples. In Serbia they used the Serbian Volunteer Corps, Serbian State Guard, and the Chetniks of Kosta Pećanac and Dragoljub Mihailović. From the German minority in Banat, Germany organized the 7th SS Volunteer Mountain Division Prinz Eugen. Some Hungarians in Bačka and Baranja joined the Turan Hunters. From the ranks of White Russian emigres, Germany recruited the Russian Protective Corps.

Aside from military and paramilitary formations, many national organizations that weren't originally fascist or irredentist, such as the German Kulturbund and the DMKSZ (Hungarian: Délvidéki Magyar Közművelődési Szövetségnek, English: Cultural Alliance of Hungarians of Southern Lands) also showed support to the occupying armies.

From the beginning of the occupation, the occupying powers committed numerous war crimes against the civilian population of the region, especially against Serbs, Jews and Roma.[14] Therefore, many citizens of Yugoslavia of all ethnic groups joined the partisan resistance movement to fight against the occupation.[15] The victims of the Axis troops were mostly civilians, while some were the fighters of the partisan resistance movement.[16] Vojvodina was a region with an ethnically mixed population.

In their struggle against the Axis forces, the partisans viewed the Chetniks as misled and continuously called on them to defect. A similar policy was conducted toward members of the Croatian Home Guard. Those who defected were included in the partisan ranks or were given amnesty.[17] On 17 August 1944, Josip Broz Tito proclaimed a general amnesty for Chetniks and members of the Croatian Home Guards on condition that they did not commit any crimes and join the partisans before 15 September 1944.[18] Members of voluntary anticommunist or quisling formations (Serbian Volunteer Corps, Ustashe Militia and Russian Protective Corps) were excluded from the offer. This amnesty, as well as the proclamation of King Peter II on 12 September 1944, that all armed formations should come under the command of Marshal Tito, led to a fall in the numbers of the Chetnik and the Croatian Home Guard.[19][18] Another amnesty was proclaimed on 21 November 1944,[20] and again by the adoption of the Amnesty and Pardoning Act of 6 July 1945.[21] Between 10,000-15,000 Chetniks were amnestied in this way, [22] which accounted for about a third to a half of the Chetniks in Serbia at that time.[18]

Central Serbia Edit

The number of victims in Central Serbia is estimated at 30,000.[9] According to Milovan Đilas, before communist forces entered Belgrade, their leaders decided that followers of Serbia's former pro-Axis puppet Government of National Salvation should be liquidated immediately.[23] According to communist leaders, Belgrade was the main center of Serbian reaction and, due to that, it was designed to be "very carefully cleansed from anti-communist elements".[24] The establishment of communist administration was, therefore, followed by a brutal showdown with notable participants in the cultural, political and public life of the German-occupied territory of Serbia, and also with members of the rival Chetnik resistance movement who were defeated in a civil war.[24]

Vojvodina Edit

 
Military administration in Banat, Bačka and Baranja (1944–1945)

In Vojvodina (which then included Bačka, Banat, Baranja and Syrmia regions), most of the executions were performed during Military Administration in Banat, Bačka and Baranja, between October 1944 and January 1945.

Background Edit

At the end of 1944, Axis troops were defeated by the Red Army and the whole of Vojvodina came under the control of the Yugoslav partisan forces. On 17 October 1944, by the order of Josip Broz Tito, the Banat, Bačka and Baranja regions were placed under military administration. About the establishment of this military government, Josip Broz Tito said the following: "The liberation of Bačka, Banat and Baranja requires the quickest possible return to normal life and the establishment of the people's democratic power in these territories. The specific circumstances under which these territories had to live during the occupation, and a mission to fully avert all adversities inflicted to our people by the occupying forces and foreign ethnic elements colonized here, requires that, in the beginning, we concentrate all power in order to mobilize the economy and carry on the war of liberation more successfully".[25]

The partisan troops in Bačka had a very strict order, they had to "show the strongest possible determination against fifth columnists, especially against Germans and Hungarians".

The term "fifth column" is applied to the subversive and resistant forces and organizations left behind by a retreating enemy. The National Committee for People's Liberation and the Red Army had agreed on the necessary cooperation in due time.

Brigadier General Ivan Rukavina was appointed commander of the military administration.[26] He was in constant and direct contact with Tito, the supreme commander. In his first decree, he ordered his troops to "protect the national future and the South Slavic character of the territories" .

In the 28 October 1944 issue of Slobodna Vojvodina, the newspaper of the People's Liberation Front in Vojvodina, one member of the Regional Committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia summarized the intentions suggested from above, with the obvious aim to raise spirit for revenge by exaggerations and distortions:

Although we destroyed the occupying German and Hungarian hordes and drove them back to the west, we have not yet eradicated the roots of the poisonous weeds planted by them... The hundreds of thousands of foreigners who were settled on the territories where our ancestors had cleared the forests, drained the swamps, and created the conditions necessary for civilized life. These foreigners still kept shooting at our soldiers and the Soviet soldiers from the dark. They do everything they can to prevent the return to normal life, preparing, in the midst of this difficult situation, to stab us in the back again at the appropriate moment... The people feel that determined, energetic steps are needed to ensure the Yugoslav character of Bačka.

Ethnic composition of victims Edit

Germans (Danube Swabians) Edit

The estimated number range of Germans victims in Vojvodina is between 17,000 [27] and 59,335.[28] According to Friedrich Binder, the total number of the German victims in Yugoslavia was 56,736, of which 240 died while escaping in October 1944, 8,049 were executed by the Yugoslav partisans and 48,447 died in prison camps from starvation, illness and in the coldness.[29]

Serbian State commission formed in 2009 established the list of 27.367 German victims in total.[30]

Before World War II, the German population of Vojvodina numbered about 350,000 people. Between 160.000 [31] and 200.000 [32] were left after the withdrawal of Nazi forces. As a consequence of the World War II events in Yugoslavia, the collaboration with Nazi forces and committed war crimes of the German community [33][34] the Yugoslav Communist government took a reprisals on ethnic citizens of German origin in Yugoslavia: they had their citizenship revoked, their belongings were taken by force, and they were forced to share their houses with ethnic Serb, Montenegrin, Croat and Macedonian refugees from other parts of Yugoslavia who were colonized in Vojvodina (houses of these refugees in other parts of Yugoslavia were mostly destroyed by German army during World War II).

Between 1944 and 1946, a prison camp system was established for all Vojvodina citizens of German origin in almost all settlements where they lived (see also: List of concentration and internment camps, Yugoslavia). In those camps, ethnic Germans were used as slave labor, they were tortured, beaten, and left to die from preventable illnesses and starvation. Some members of the German community were executed by Yugoslav Partisans in those camps. Yugoslav Partisans handed over some of the ethnic Germans to Soviet Red Army, who then took them to Siberia and used them for work in mines as slave labor. Some members of ethnic Germans of Vojvodina were expelled to Germany or Austria.

Serbs Edit

After king Peter's speech via BBC on 12 September 1944, those Chetniks who didn't join Partisans became effectively outlaws. In time of the king's speech, Chetniks and Partisans were engaged in Battle of Jelova Gora, which ended with serious Chetnik defeat. Mihailović with his party fled to Bosnia, while smaller Chetnik groups remained in Serbia, hoping that Red Army would accept them as allies. When this did not materialize, those groups, joined by former Serbian State Guard, began retreat toward Bosnia through Sandžak, on flanks of retreating German Army Group E from Greece. On their route through Sandžak, Chetniks and Germans were harassed by Partisans and air raids from Allied Balkan Air Force.

The number of the Serb victims in Vojvodina is estimated at about 23,000–24,000 (According to the professor Dragoljub Živković, 47,000 ethnic Serbs were killed in Vojvodina between 1941 and 1948. About half of the Serb victims were killed by occupational forces and the other half of them were executed by post-war communist authorities).[27]

In 1944, in Rajina Šuma near Novi Sad, partisans executed about 200–250 Serbs, who were accused that they sympathized with the Chetnik movement of Draža Mihajlović.[35][better source needed] They were buried into two mass graves, which were discovered in 1991 during communal works in that area. After the entry of partisan forces into Novi Sad on 23 October 1944, by the order of general Ivan Rukavina (who was a commandant of military area of Bačka and Baranja),[clarification needed] mass arrests of respectable Serbs had begun. They mostly were reputable and rich householders, industrialists and intellectuals, who were seen as a possible threat for the new communist authorities.[35][better source needed] Order was carried out by the 11th Vojvodinian people's liberation brigade and most of the arrested citizens were executed until the middle of November.

Citizens who were executed included dr Miloš Petrović (former mayor), dr Obrad Milutinović (doctor and vice-president of Novi Sad municipality), Dragoljub Ristić (an industrialist), Pavle Tatić (one of the founders of Socialist Party in Novi Sad), Vojislav Matić (editor and publisher of "Nova Pošta" magazine in Serbian language), Miloš Kostić (footballer of FK Vojvodina), Svetislav Vilovski and Đurica Vlaović (members of Serbian Soko society), Milan – Peca Popović (intellectual and member of Rotary club), Jovan Begović (provincial clerk), Aleksandar Silber (economist), Pera Savić (journalist), Fedor Radić (doctor), and Gaja Gračanin (director of "Putnik" agency).[35][better source needed] Especially tragic fate is that of pre-war mayor dr Miloš Petrović, who was creditable for elevation of monument dedicated to Svetozar Miletić that still stands in the centre of Novi Sad, and who also helped in saving lives of hundreds of Serbs who were imprisoned in concentration camp "Šarvar" during Hungarian occupation.[35][better source needed]

State commission formed in 2009 after thorough investigation made a list of all victims, available on its official site. List includes a total of 14.567 Serb victims. 917 of them are from Vojvodina, and further 101 from Zemun.[30]

Hungarians Edit

 
The Hungarian victims' memorial in Subotica cemetery, elevated for the 50th anniversary of the executions (1994). Behind: names of victims.
 
The Hungarian victims' monument in Čurug, shown here damaged.

Various sources provide very different numbers of Hungarians executed in Vojvodina at that time. "The Book of Evidence of Killed War Criminals in 1944/1945" published in Yugoslavia states that a total of 1,686 people were executed in Bačka of which approximately 1,000 people were presumed to be Hungarians. However, the estimation of historian Kasaš tells 5,000 executed Hungarians.[36]

According to other estimations, the number range of the executed Hungarians in Vojvodina may be between 40,000[37] and 50,000.[38] Some sources claim that the most probable number of the executed Hungarians in Vojvodina was between 20,000 and 25,000,[37][39][40] while others claim that it is about 35,000 (Cseres Tibor gives an exact estimate of 34,491 executed people).[41]

Some Hungarian houses were sacked and a number of Hungarian civilians were executed and tortured.[42] Some women and children were raped.[43] Some men who were able to work were deported to Siberia.[44]

People of Hungarian nationality are third in terms of the number of dead after the liberation, according to the 2014 data from Serbian state commission. In 2014 there were 6,112 registered persons (with 300 potential duplicate names), of which 589 are alleged to have disappeared (some of whom possibly fled to Hungary)[45] and 279 died in camps.[46] Unlike in Banat, in Bačka there were drastic punishment of members of the Hungarian national minority, especially those found, often on the basis of witness statements, that took direct or indirect involvement in the January 1942 raid and in the suffering of the Serbian population in April 1941. Members of Arrow Cross Party were especially targeted, as well as members of collaborationist apparatus, leadership of the DMKSZ (Cultural Union of the Hungarians of the Southern Territories that was also proclaimed to be a fascist organization), but also and others that were considered to fall under the category of associates of the occupiers.[47] The largest number of people of Hungarian ethnicity died after the liberation of Vojvodina was recorded in places where, during the occupation, the Hungarian army and local Hungarians participated in mass crimes against the Serbian, Jewish and Roma population. The largest number of Hungarians killed was recorded in the region of Šajkaška (towns Žabalj, Čurug and Mošorin), which were affected by the January 1942 raid.

The attitude towards the Hungarians began to change from November 1944. The military administration of Banat, Bačka and Baranja warned that in some cases, especially in Bačka, mistakes were made and that the treatment of Germans was better than the Hungarians. In its instructions, it is pointed out that only those Hungarians who committed or incited crimes against the Slovene population were to be detained in the camps, and that Hungarians who did not fall into the category of war criminals should be released from camps.[48] These guidelines are not accepted in all places with approval, especially in the Šajkaška region. In January and February 1945, some residents of Čurug and Mošorin demanded that all Germans and Hungarians should move out of these places, because their co-existence is impossible after events during the war. Almost the entire Hungarian population of Šajkaška was expelled and the largest number of detained in camps in Bački Jarak, Gajdobra and Mladenovo. Part was sent to Srem as a labor force in the preparation of the partisans for the breakthrough of the Syrmian Front and in repairing of the Belgrade-Zagreb railway. People detained in Bački Jarak were used as labor force for agricultural works. According to the book of the deceased from January to May 1945, due to poor conditions in the camp (maltreatment, hunger and disease), 66 adults and 55 children from the age of one month to 18 years have died.[citation needed]

Nevertheless, the Hungarian population was accepted into partisans ranks. At the time of these events, the 15th Vojvodina Shock Brigade "Sándor Petőfi" was formed from the Hungarians from area of Bačka Topola and Sombor. About ten thousand of Vojvodina Hungarians took part in the final operations for the liberation of Yugoslavia.[49]

Rusyns Edit

Some members of Rusyn (Ruthenian) population in Đurđevo were also targeted by partisan forces in 1944. According to Hungarian author Cseres, the majority of the Hungarian population of this village left with the retreating Hungarian army. The Yugoslav partisans then established control over this village and took their reprisals out on the Rusyns and Serbs who were sympathetic towards the Hungarians, the Serbian Royal Government or for their religious views. Several hundred Rusyns were executed and some prominent figures tortured.[50]

Serbian State commission formed in 2009 established the list of 40 Rusyn victims in total.[30]

Aftermath Edit

In June 2013, members of the Serbian Parliament adopted a declaration, which condemned the massacres and application of the principle of collective guilt against Hungarians in Vojvodina at the end of the Second World War. In response, the Hungarian President János Áder apologised in Belgrade for the war crimes committed against civilian Serbs and Jewish people during the Hungarian occupation of Yugoslav territories.[51]

The history of investigations Edit

I. The Federal Commission ("Državna komisija") – 1943 Edit

Even in the midst of the storm of the war, at the second session of the AVNOJ in Jajce, November 1943, a decision was made for a special task force to be formed to investigate the crimes committed by fascists at the territory of Yugoslavia during the war. It was named "Federal Commission for determination of the crimes conducted by the Occupators and their helpers during World War 2" (in Serbian: Državna komisija za utvrđivanje zločina okupatora i njihovih pomagača iz Drugog svetskog rata), and it immediately started its work. In following five years broad investigation was conducted nationwide. It is said that until 1948, this official body collected over a million cases of war crime, documented and reported.[52]

This investigation was very extensive, because the newly formed government wanted to collect the best possible set of data that can be presented in a demand for war reparations from Germany (both East and West), Italy, Bulgaria and Hungary – countries responsible for the attack on Yugoslavia and violation of its sovereignty. Although this nationwide program concentrated only on the victims of fascism (and rarely on the civilian innocent victims of communist reprisal), it plays an important part in the completing of the historical picture. Even though the assessment of its results, and its methodology for collecting data (mainly through civil reports of cases) would be different today, the work of this Commission is very important to the reconstruction of events, especially those that followed shortly after the war.

II. The Surveying Committee ("Anketni odbor") – 2001 Edit

The first extensive study, and also the first ever attempt to systematically analize the events that occurred between 1941 and 1948 on the territory of Serbia happened in 2001 on the initiative of the Assembly of the Autonomous province of Vojvodina (Skupština Autonomne pokrajine Vojvodine).

On 22 January 2001 in the building of the Assembly in Novi Sad, this governmental department formed a specialist group with a long name "Surveying Committee for investigation of the truth on the events that took place between 1941. until 1945. in Vojvodina" (Anketni odbor za utvrđivanje istine o događajima u periodu od 1941. do 1945. godine u Vojvodini) and this institution became a formal body of the Assembly of Autonomous province of Vojvodina.[53]

This should be considered the first modern official investigation that took place after the Second World War, except for some studies done earlier in Slovenia. (There was also a Commission after the war, but it dealt only with the victims of 1941–1944.[54][52])

III. The Vojvodina Academy ("VANU") – 2004 Edit

The work of the Assembly Committee was three years later taken over by Vojvodinian Academy of Sciences and Arts (VANU), where it was in a great deal extended. The Academy expanded the research for the period up to 1948, and to some extent even to 1952, processing 10 volumes with over 4000 pages of data.

The data was mainly collected from the Historic Archive of Vojvodina (Arhiv Vojvodine) and the raw data was kept in the Museum of Vojvodina. The results were first published on paper in 2008. under the title "On the way to the truth. Book of victims of AP Vojvodina 1941-1948" (title in Serbian: Na putu ka istini. Imenik stradalih stanovnika AP Vojvodine 1941-1948.) Because of the enormous amount of text, forming 9 volumes (8 of which just lists names of the victims) there was not enough money to publish it, so just 10 copies were printed.[55] This makes this work inaccessible even to the researchers.

Although the results were raw and yet unstudied to detail, they were already shocking to the public.

Important step forward was the collecting of data about all known retention camps, and the victims of the period are classified by ethnic structure and also age and sex, as well as by the place of death. The weak point of this stage of the investigation was, because of the lack of material means, that about 20% of available data still remained unprocessed. As on the positive side, leader of the project dr. Dragoljub Živković claimed that much effort has been put and a lot of attention given to the task that there would be no duplicate entries.[27]

The public was presented only with preliminary results, primarily through the media.[55] The representatives said (and was briefly published[53]) that in Bačka, Banat, Srem and Baranja, and also in other countries but from the territory of Vojvodina, between 1941. and 1948. a total of 86.881 civilians perished (above 40.000 Serbs, above 20.000 ethnic Germans, above 15.000 Jews, about 5.000 Hungarians, about 2.700 Croats, about 1000 Slovaks and about 3000 others[53]). The full set of data with exact numbers is available in the published volume of the "Na putu ka istini. Imenik stradalih stanovnika AP Vojvodine 1941-1948".

It is important to say that this is not data that summarises victims of the 1944/45 communist purges, because it does not separates specifically the circumstances of death, but it is a raw list, with documents and literature, that was intended for future examination by experts. There is also an important statement that should be considered by the scholars of victimology, that this study showed independently that more than 12.000 inhabitants of Vojvodina, of different nationality ended up and were killed in Jasenovac and also in Banjica.[27]

It is important to stress that the publication pertains only to the civilians (unarmed persons) that lost their lives in the period 1941–1948, in retention camps, through executions etc. and not to military personnel who died in battles during the war. Two very large, unfortunate numbers demonstrate this: among the persons who lost their lives the percentage of women (as compared to men) was 49,90% in Jews, and about 60% in the group of the ethnic Germans.[53]

IV. The State Commission ("Državna komisija") – 2009 Edit

On 9 July 2009 the government of Serbia founded a "Commission for the secret graves of victims killed after September 12, 1944" (Državna komisija za tajne grobnice ubijenih posle 12. septembra 1944. godine).[56] The choice of the date is connected with the last stage of liberation from the occupator, when on 20 October 1944, with the help from the advancing Red Army, Belgrade was liberated. Soon after that the war activity ceased, but it marked a new period of sufferings. Even before the official declaration of the end of the war, atrocities against civilians that were assumed unsympathizing with communist rule started to happen. For example, in Vojvodina the first Hungarian victims were shot, some of them openly, convicted of being a fascist, in the middle of September 1944 in Bečej, where also the local German population was forced to wear white armbands as a sign that they will be sent to forced labor.[57]

The mission of the 2009 Commission was to locate and mark all secret graves in which bodies of those shot after the 1944. liberation lay, and also to exhume them, for the purpose of determining the cause and investigation of the circumstances of death. The first exhumations took place in 2010, in the vicinity of Zaječar.[58]

29 April of the same year marked a new era in the investigation of the 1944/45 events, as the government ruled a decision to remove the stamp of secrecy from the classified documents of the Archives, where the lists of liquidated persons and other important documents resided. Now the researchers were for the first time able to look at those papers. This was an important step forward, because this was the first time that a governmental investigation focused mainly at the victims of the "red terror".

V. The Academic Commission ("Međuakademska komisija") – 2010 Edit

After the collecting of data from literature and archives to build a database, the phase of in-depth scientific study and analysis followed, which is still going on. For this purpose the governments of Hungary and Serbia agreed to establish a joint Commission. This separate task force, that officially formed 15, December 2010 in Belgrade, is called "Hungarian–Serbian academic Joint Committee for the civilian victims during and after the Second World War in Vojvodina, 1941-1948"[59] (in Serbian: Mađarsko–Srpska Akademijska mešovita komisija;[60] in Hungarian: Magyar–Szerb Akadémiai Vegyes Bizottság[61][62]).

The Hungarian section of the Joint Committee held its inaugural meeting shortly after, at 6 January 2011. in Budapest.

Rehabilitation Edit

It is expected that the first to be rehabilitated will be public figures, such as teachers, priests and Church dignitaries, those that were executed or persecuted with clear aim to intimidate the wider public through fear, by setting a harsh example. During the purges in Vojvodina, between 13 and 22 Catholic clerics were reported to be missing, 13 of whom proven to be dead (executed).[63]

For example, if it was known or suspected that the priest was innocent, official forensic and court procedure was on the way. In some cases a memorial or a bust was already erected, even before the trial was completed.[64]

Bibliography Edit

  • Petranović, Branko (1992). Srbija u Drugom svetskom ratu 1939—1945 (Serbia in World War Two 1939-1945) (in Serbian). Belgrade: Vojnoizdavački i novinski centar.
  • Kasaš, Aleksandar (1996). Mađari u Vojvodini 1941-1946 (Hungarians in Vojvodina 1941-1946) (in Serbian). Novi Sad: Filozofski Fakultet u Novom Sadu.
  • Tomasevich, Jozo (1975). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: The Chetniks. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-0857-9.
  • Radanović, Milan (2014). Oslobođenje: Beograd, 20. oktobar 1944. (Liberation: Belgrade, October 20th, 1944). Beograd: Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung. ISBN 978-86-88745-15-4.
  • Radanović, Milan (2015). (PDF). Beograd: Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung. ISBN 978-86-88745-15-4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 August 2016. Retrieved 27 April 2019.
  • Fifty thousand Hungarian martyrs report about the Hungarian Holocaust in Jugoslavia, 1944–1992 – ed. István Nyárádi, 1992
  • Márton Matuska: Days of the revenge. Forum Publisher, Novi Sad, 1991
  • Anton Salwetter: Heimatbuch Deutsch-Etschka. Reutlingen-Betzingen 1974.
  • Erika Reusch-Meirer: Sigmundfelder Heimatbuch. Villingen-Schwenningen 1988.
  • Documentation Project Committee: Genocide of the Ethnic Germans in Yugoslavia 1944–1948. Donauschwäbische Kulturstiftung, München 2003. ISBN 3-926276-47-9

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b "Most of these people were murdered without a trial" (talking about at least 20.000) "...There is not even a smallest of doubt that these were war crimes." quoted from: Istina o streljanjima važnija od sudskih progona (PDF, in Serbian)
  2. ^ Quote: "Armed persons murdered unarmed civilians" p. 32 from Mészáros Z. (2012): Az 1944–45-os esemenyek minositesei (I) – Qualifications of the 1944-45 Events (I). Létünk 2012/1. (PDF, in Hungarian)
  3. ^ Translated quote: "Besides unintentional, accidental killings, which were minimal in numbers, the number of executed after regular trial is low, most victims were liquidated as a reprisal, without any court proceeding." p. 5 from Mačković, S. (2017): Szabadka és a felszabadulás után (1944-1945) áldozatul esett polgári személyek – Subotica and the civilian victims after the liberation (1944-1945). Subotica History, official page of the Historic Archive.
  4. ^ Quote: "For just a few days matter, all of them were murdered, mostly from our village. I personally buried them in the grave-hole." from Stijačić, M. (2018): Vreme je! – article published in Slobodni Srbobran 10 December 2018, archived using Google cache (in Serbian) (in Hungarian)
  5. ^ "These works negotiated the start of historical remembrance of the innocent persons' tragic fate, those that suffered cruel reprisal." Quote translated from p. 1. of A. Sajti E. (2018): A vajdasági helytörténetírás és a magyarok elleni megtorlások a Délvidéken – . (PDF, in Hungarian)
  6. ^ "Politika | Kako su dželati postali žrtve". Kontrapress. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  7. ^ Report on the stage of investigation, year 2011 (in Serbian)
  8. ^ Agenda of the round-table held in Belgrade, 2015 (in Serbian)
  9. ^ a b c S. Dedeić – V. Arsić. "Press Online :: Vesti dana – politika, skupstina, Srbija, Tadić, vlada, premijer :: Grobnice svuda po Srbiji". Pressonline.rs. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  10. ^ a b Ulrich Merten: Forgotten Voices: The Expulsion of the Germans from Eastern Europe After World War II, Transactions Publisher, New Jersey, USA, 2012 [1]
  11. ^ Kathryn Schaeffer Pabst, Douglas Schaeffer Pabst: Taken: A Lament for a Lost Ethnicity, iUniverse Books, 2006 [2]
  12. ^ Georg Wildmann, Hans Sonnleitner, Karl Weber: Genocide of the ethnic Germans in Yugoslavia, 1944–1948, Danube Swabian Association of the USA, 2001 [3]
  13. ^ State Commission Registry, accessed on 22 June 2014
  14. ^ Zvonimir Golubović, Racija u Južnoj Bačkoj, 1942. godine, Novi Sad, 1991.
  15. ^ Milorad Grujić, Vodič kroz Novi Sad i okolinu, Novi Sad, 2004.
  16. ^ Slobodan Ćurčić, Broj stanovnika Vojvodine, Novi Sad, 1996.
  17. ^ Petranović 1992, pp. 538, 657.
  18. ^ a b c Tomasevich 1975.
  19. ^ Radanović 2015, p. 187, 190.
  20. ^ Radanović 2015, p. 188.
  21. ^ Radanović 2015, p. 189.
  22. ^ Radanović 2015, p. 37.
  23. ^ "Po kratkom postupku | Ostali članci". Novosti.rs. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  24. ^ a b "Broz na belom konju | Ostali članci". Novosti.rs. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  25. ^ Jelena Popov, Vojvodina i Srbija, Veternik, 2001.
  26. ^ Janjetović, Zoran (2006). . Hereticus (in Serbian). 1. Archived from the original on 6 October 2011. Retrieved 9 June 2010.
  27. ^ a b c d "[sim] Srbe podjednako ubijali okupator i i "oslobodioci"". Mail-archive.com. 14 January 2009. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  28. ^ Dieter Blumenwitz, Rechtsgutachten über die Verbrechen an den Deutschen in Jugoslawien 1944–1948, Sonderausgabe: Juristische Studien, München 2002, S. 64.
  29. ^ Nenad Stefanović, Jedan svet na Dunavu, Beograd, 2003, page 133.
  30. ^ a b c State Commission Registry, accessed on 22 June 2014
  31. ^ Michael Portmann, Arnold Suppan: Serbien und Montenegro im Zweiten Weltkrieg. In: Österreichisches Ost- und Südosteuropa-Institut : Serbien und Montenegro: Raum und Bevölkerung – Geschichte – Sprache und Literatur – Kultur – Politik – Gesellschaft – Wirtschaft – Recht. LIT Verlag 2006, S. 277
  32. ^ Mathias Beer: Flucht und Vertreibung der Deutschen. Voraussetzungen, Verlauf, Folgen. München, 2011, ISBN 978-3-406-61406-4, S. 205, hier S. 91
  33. ^ Marie–Janine Calic: Geschichte Jugoslawiens im 20. Jahrhundert, C.H.Beck, München, 2010, S. 179.
  34. ^ Hans-Ulrich Wehler: Nationalitätenpolitik in Jugoslawien, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1980, ISBN 3-525-01322-1, S. 59f.
  35. ^ a b c d Jovanka SIMIĆ. "Proganja misterija iz Rajine šume | Aktuelno". Novosti.rs. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  36. ^ "Michael Portmann, Communist Retaliation and Persecution on Yugoslav Territory During and After WWII (1943–50)". Ceeol.com. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  37. ^ a b Dimitrije Boarov, Politička istorija Vojvodine, Novi Sad, 2001.
  38. ^ . Huncor.com. Archived from the original on 9 October 2014. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  39. ^ Dragomir Jankov, Vojvodina – propadanje jednog regiona, Novi Sad, 2004.
  40. ^ [4][dead link]
  41. ^ Cseres Tibor (1993). . Buffalo: Hunyadi Publishing. p. 141. Archived from the original on 18 October 2010. Retrieved 14 October 2010.
  42. ^ Kasaš, Aleksandar: Mađari u Vojvodini 1941–1946. (Novi Sad, 1996) Filozofski fakultet u Novom Sadu, Odsek za istoriju.
  43. ^ Kasaš, Aleksandar: Mađari u Vojvodini 1941–1946. (Novi Sad, 1996)
  44. ^ Karapandžić, Borivoje: Jugoslovensko krvavo proleće 1945. Titovi Katini i Gulagi. (Beograd 1990: Mladost).
  45. ^ Here the otherwise relevant article makes a biased statement, supposition not backed with proof. Here is the direct translation of the sentence from the source: "6.112 persons of hungarian nationality are evidented (11,03 percent) in the register, while this number includes about 300 duplicate names. For the 4.679 Hungarians it is declared they were murdered (586 "shot", 4.438 "liquidated", 7 "hanged"). For 589 Hungarians it is said that they "disappeared", in which number may be included a certain number of Vojvodina hungarians who escaped, and moved from the territory of Bačka before the days of liberation."
  46. ^ Radanović, Milan. "Kako su dželati postali žrtve". Retrieved 9 July 2017.
  47. ^ Kasaš 1996, p. 161.
  48. ^ Kasaš 1996, p. 179.
  49. ^ Kasaš 1996, p. 182.
  50. ^ Cseres, Tibor (1993). Titoist Atrocities in Vojvodina 1944–45 Serbian Vendetta in Bacska. Hunyadi Publishing. p. 113.
  51. ^ . Politics.hu. Archived from the original on 8 October 2013. Retrieved 2 September 2013.
  52. ^ a b "Državna komisija za utvrđivanje zločina okupatora i njihovih pomagača" (in Serbian). Centar za kulturnu dekontaminaciju. Retrieved 1 May 2019.
  53. ^ a b c d Tibor Pal (2010): Na putu istine. O radu Pokrajinskog anketnog odbora za utvrđivanje istine o događajima u periodu od 1941. do 1948. godine.
  54. ^ The "Federal Commission for determination of the crimes conducted by the Occupators and their helpers during World War 2" formed 1943. in Jajce and worked until 1948.
  55. ^ a b "Blic online | Print". Blic.rs. 15 May 2009. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  56. ^ The aims and rules of the Commission – official page (in Serbian)
  57. ^ Kasaš, Aleksandar: Mađari u Vojvodini 1941–1946. (Novi Sad, 1996) Filozofski fakultet u Novom Sadu, Odsek za istoriju. pp. 161-162
  58. ^ "Otkopavanje tajnih grobnica počinjemo na leto". Blic online. 28 February 2010. Retrieved 2 May 2019.
  59. ^ Full name in Serbian: Međuakademska komisija SANU I MAN za utvrđivanje civilnih žrtava u Vojvodini tokom i posle Drugog svetskog rata 1941-1948
  60. ^
  61. ^ . 19 August 2016. Archived from the original on 19 August 2016.
  62. ^ "Magyar-Szerb Múlt Akadémiai Vegyes Bizottság Magyar Tagozata - Magyar Tagozat". www.magyarszerbmult.btk.mta.hu.
  63. ^ Enikő A. Sajti (2010). Partizanska odmazda protiv mađara u Vojvodini (PDF). p. 28. There is a separate study dedicated just to these, by Matuska, M. in Csorba, B. 1999.
  64. ^ Forró, L. – Molnár, T. (2013). Tragikus emberi sorsok 1944-ből a partizániratok tükrében. COBISS.SR-ID 276694791. p. 111. ISBN 978-86-89039-01-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links Edit

  • The State Commission for the secret burial places of victims after 12 September 1944, list of names with biographical information and details of persecution
  • Srbe podjednako ubijali okupatori i „oslobodioci”
  • Proganja misterija iz Rajine šume
  • Istorija bez anestezije
  • Službena internet stranica Komisije za tаjne grobnice ubijenih posle 12. septembrа 1944. Ministаrstvа prаvde Republike Srbije
  • Jugoslovensko krvаvo proleće, Sаvo Gregović, Večernje novosti, feljton, 10 nаstаvаkа, 8–17 July 2004.
  • Uništаvаnje srpske elite, LJubomir Tešić, Večernje novosti, feljton, 10 nаstаvаkа, 17. – 26. June 2006.
  • Između srpа i čekićа, Srđаn Cvetković, Večernje novosti, feljton, 11 nаstаvаkа, 14. – 24. December 2006.
  • Beogrаd u mreži OZNE, LJubomir Tešić, Večernje novosti, feljton, 10 nаstаvаkа, 2. – 12. Mаy 2007.
  • Igre kаžnjene smrću, Miodrаg – Mijа Ilić, Večernje novosti, feljton, 18 nаstаvаkа, 13. – 30. Mаy 2007.
  • Grobnice svudа po Srbiji, S. Dedić – V. Arsić, Pres, 7. June 2009.
  • Milan Radanović: An analysis of the State Commission for Secret Burial Places Registry of the Victims

communist, purges, serbia, 1944, 1945, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, factual, accuracy, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, pa. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced June 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged or deleted October 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The communist purges in Serbia in 1944 1945 are atrocities 1 that were committed by members of the Yugoslav Partisan Movement and the post war communist authorities after they gained control over Serbia against people perceived as war criminals quislings and ideological opponents Most of these purges were committed between October 1944 and May 1945 During this time at least 55 973 people died of various causes including death by execution or by illness in retention camps The victims the vast majority of them deliberately summarily executed without a trial 1 2 3 4 5 were of different ethnic backgrounds but were mostly Germans Serbs and Hungarians Some contend that the killings were not planned but were unorganised vendettas of individuals during the post war chaos or that those considered victims of execution instead died in battle against the Partisans 6 The exact number of victims remains controversial as the investigation is ongoing 7 8 There are different estimates regarding the number of victims According to one source at least 80 000 people were executed in the whole of Serbia 9 while another source states that the number of victims was more than 100 000 9 The names of about 4 000 individual Germans who were killed by the Partisans are known but it is estimated that many more ethnic Germans were executed 10 These events during the fall of 1944 are referred to as bloody autumn by some sources 10 11 12 In 2009 the government of Serbia formed a State Commission to investigate the secret burial places of victims after 12 September 1944 The Commission compiled a registry of names basic biographical data and details of persecution The registry contains a total of 55 973 names including 27 367 Germans 14 567 Serbs and 6 112 Hungarians 13 Contents 1 Background 2 Central Serbia 3 Vojvodina 3 1 Background 3 2 Ethnic composition of victims 3 2 1 Germans Danube Swabians 3 2 2 Serbs 3 2 3 Hungarians 3 2 4 Rusyns 4 Aftermath 4 1 The history of investigations 4 1 1 I The Federal Commission Drzavna komisija 1943 4 1 2 II The Surveying Committee Anketni odbor 2001 4 1 3 III The Vojvodina Academy VANU 2004 4 1 4 IV The State Commission Drzavna komisija 2009 4 1 5 V The Academic Commission Međuakademska komisija 2010 4 2 Rehabilitation 5 Bibliography 6 See also 7 Notes 8 External linksBackground EditDuring World War II in 1941 Nazi Germany invaded and occupied Yugoslavia Central Serbia was put under the Military Administration in Serbia MAS Kosovo was annexed by the Italian protectorate of Albania and eastern Serbia was occupied by Bulgaria The Vojvodina region was divided into three occupation zones Banat was placed under direct German control as an autonomous region within the area governed by the MAS Backa was annexed by Horthy s Hungary and Syrmia was annexed by the Independent State of Croatia The Axis powers found it difficult to combat the Yugoslav partisan uprising led by the Communist Party of Yugoslavia due to a shortage of manpower and the rough terrain and relied heavily on auxiliary anticommunist forces drawn from various Yugoslav peoples In Serbia they used the Serbian Volunteer Corps Serbian State Guard and the Chetniks of Kosta Pecanac and Dragoljub Mihailovic From the German minority in Banat Germany organized the 7th SS Volunteer Mountain Division Prinz Eugen Some Hungarians in Backa and Baranja joined the Turan Hunters From the ranks of White Russian emigres Germany recruited the Russian Protective Corps Aside from military and paramilitary formations many national organizations that weren t originally fascist or irredentist such as the German Kulturbund and the DMKSZ Hungarian Delvideki Magyar Kozmuvelodesi Szovetsegnek English Cultural Alliance of Hungarians of Southern Lands also showed support to the occupying armies From the beginning of the occupation the occupying powers committed numerous war crimes against the civilian population of the region especially against Serbs Jews and Roma 14 Therefore many citizens of Yugoslavia of all ethnic groups joined the partisan resistance movement to fight against the occupation 15 The victims of the Axis troops were mostly civilians while some were the fighters of the partisan resistance movement 16 Vojvodina was a region with an ethnically mixed population In their struggle against the Axis forces the partisans viewed the Chetniks as misled and continuously called on them to defect A similar policy was conducted toward members of the Croatian Home Guard Those who defected were included in the partisan ranks or were given amnesty 17 On 17 August 1944 Josip Broz Tito proclaimed a general amnesty for Chetniks and members of the Croatian Home Guards on condition that they did not commit any crimes and join the partisans before 15 September 1944 18 Members of voluntary anticommunist or quisling formations Serbian Volunteer Corps Ustashe Militia and Russian Protective Corps were excluded from the offer This amnesty as well as the proclamation of King Peter II on 12 September 1944 that all armed formations should come under the command of Marshal Tito led to a fall in the numbers of the Chetnik and the Croatian Home Guard 19 18 Another amnesty was proclaimed on 21 November 1944 20 and again by the adoption of the Amnesty and Pardoning Act of 6 July 1945 21 Between 10 000 15 000 Chetniks were amnestied in this way 22 which accounted for about a third to a half of the Chetniks in Serbia at that time 18 Central Serbia EditThe number of victims in Central Serbia is estimated at 30 000 9 According to Milovan Đilas before communist forces entered Belgrade their leaders decided that followers of Serbia s former pro Axis puppet Government of National Salvation should be liquidated immediately 23 According to communist leaders Belgrade was the main center of Serbian reaction and due to that it was designed to be very carefully cleansed from anti communist elements 24 The establishment of communist administration was therefore followed by a brutal showdown with notable participants in the cultural political and public life of the German occupied territory of Serbia and also with members of the rival Chetnik resistance movement who were defeated in a civil war 24 Vojvodina Edit nbsp Military administration in Banat Backa and Baranja 1944 1945 In Vojvodina which then included Backa Banat Baranja and Syrmia regions most of the executions were performed during Military Administration in Banat Backa and Baranja between October 1944 and January 1945 Background Edit At the end of 1944 Axis troops were defeated by the Red Army and the whole of Vojvodina came under the control of the Yugoslav partisan forces On 17 October 1944 by the order of Josip Broz Tito the Banat Backa and Baranja regions were placed under military administration About the establishment of this military government Josip Broz Tito said the following The liberation of Backa Banat and Baranja requires the quickest possible return to normal life and the establishment of the people s democratic power in these territories The specific circumstances under which these territories had to live during the occupation and a mission to fully avert all adversities inflicted to our people by the occupying forces and foreign ethnic elements colonized here requires that in the beginning we concentrate all power in order to mobilize the economy and carry on the war of liberation more successfully 25 This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The partisan troops in Backa had a very strict order they had to show the strongest possible determination against fifth columnists especially against Germans and Hungarians The term fifth column is applied to the subversive and resistant forces and organizations left behind by a retreating enemy The National Committee for People s Liberation and the Red Army had agreed on the necessary cooperation in due time Brigadier General Ivan Rukavina was appointed commander of the military administration 26 He was in constant and direct contact with Tito the supreme commander In his first decree he ordered his troops to protect the national future and the South Slavic character of the territories In the 28 October 1944 issue of Slobodna Vojvodina the newspaper of the People s Liberation Front in Vojvodina one member of the Regional Committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia summarized the intentions suggested from above with the obvious aim to raise spirit for revenge by exaggerations and distortions Although we destroyed the occupying German and Hungarian hordes and drove them back to the west we have not yet eradicated the roots of the poisonous weeds planted by them The hundreds of thousands of foreigners who were settled on the territories where our ancestors had cleared the forests drained the swamps and created the conditions necessary for civilized life These foreigners still kept shooting at our soldiers and the Soviet soldiers from the dark They do everything they can to prevent the return to normal life preparing in the midst of this difficult situation to stab us in the back again at the appropriate moment The people feel that determined energetic steps are needed to ensure the Yugoslav character of Backa Ethnic composition of victims Edit Germans Danube Swabians Edit The estimated number range of Germans victims in Vojvodina is between 17 000 27 and 59 335 28 According to Friedrich Binder the total number of the German victims in Yugoslavia was 56 736 of which 240 died while escaping in October 1944 8 049 were executed by the Yugoslav partisans and 48 447 died in prison camps from starvation illness and in the coldness 29 Serbian State commission formed in 2009 established the list of 27 367 German victims in total 30 Before World War II the German population of Vojvodina numbered about 350 000 people Between 160 000 31 and 200 000 32 were left after the withdrawal of Nazi forces As a consequence of the World War II events in Yugoslavia the collaboration with Nazi forces and committed war crimes of the German community 33 34 the Yugoslav Communist government took a reprisals on ethnic citizens of German origin in Yugoslavia they had their citizenship revoked their belongings were taken by force and they were forced to share their houses with ethnic Serb Montenegrin Croat and Macedonian refugees from other parts of Yugoslavia who were colonized in Vojvodina houses of these refugees in other parts of Yugoslavia were mostly destroyed by German army during World War II Between 1944 and 1946 a prison camp system was established for all Vojvodina citizens of German origin in almost all settlements where they lived see also List of concentration and internment camps Yugoslavia In those camps ethnic Germans were used as slave labor they were tortured beaten and left to die from preventable illnesses and starvation Some members of the German community were executed by Yugoslav Partisans in those camps Yugoslav Partisans handed over some of the ethnic Germans to Soviet Red Army who then took them to Siberia and used them for work in mines as slave labor Some members of ethnic Germans of Vojvodina were expelled to Germany or Austria nbsp The German victims memorial in Gakovo nbsp The German victims memorial at the edge of the old German graveyard in Knicanin dedicated to those who died of hunger disease and cold according to the sign nbsp The German victims memorial in Backi Jarak Serbs Edit After king Peter s speech via BBC on 12 September 1944 those Chetniks who didn t join Partisans became effectively outlaws In time of the king s speech Chetniks and Partisans were engaged in Battle of Jelova Gora which ended with serious Chetnik defeat Mihailovic with his party fled to Bosnia while smaller Chetnik groups remained in Serbia hoping that Red Army would accept them as allies When this did not materialize those groups joined by former Serbian State Guard began retreat toward Bosnia through Sandzak on flanks of retreating German Army Group E from Greece On their route through Sandzak Chetniks and Germans were harassed by Partisans and air raids from Allied Balkan Air Force The number of the Serb victims in Vojvodina is estimated at about 23 000 24 000 According to the professor Dragoljub Zivkovic 47 000 ethnic Serbs were killed in Vojvodina between 1941 and 1948 About half of the Serb victims were killed by occupational forces and the other half of them were executed by post war communist authorities 27 In 1944 in Rajina Suma near Novi Sad partisans executed about 200 250 Serbs who were accused that they sympathized with the Chetnik movement of Draza Mihajlovic 35 better source needed They were buried into two mass graves which were discovered in 1991 during communal works in that area After the entry of partisan forces into Novi Sad on 23 October 1944 by the order of general Ivan Rukavina who was a commandant of military area of Backa and Baranja clarification needed mass arrests of respectable Serbs had begun They mostly were reputable and rich householders industrialists and intellectuals who were seen as a possible threat for the new communist authorities 35 better source needed Order was carried out by the 11th Vojvodinian people s liberation brigade and most of the arrested citizens were executed until the middle of November Citizens who were executed included dr Milos Petrovic former mayor dr Obrad Milutinovic doctor and vice president of Novi Sad municipality Dragoljub Ristic an industrialist Pavle Tatic one of the founders of Socialist Party in Novi Sad Vojislav Matic editor and publisher of Nova Posta magazine in Serbian language Milos Kostic footballer of FK Vojvodina Svetislav Vilovski and Đurica Vlaovic members of Serbian Soko society Milan Peca Popovic intellectual and member of Rotary club Jovan Begovic provincial clerk Aleksandar Silber economist Pera Savic journalist Fedor Radic doctor and Gaja Gracanin director of Putnik agency 35 better source needed Especially tragic fate is that of pre war mayor dr Milos Petrovic who was creditable for elevation of monument dedicated to Svetozar Miletic that still stands in the centre of Novi Sad and who also helped in saving lives of hundreds of Serbs who were imprisoned in concentration camp Sarvar during Hungarian occupation 35 better source needed State commission formed in 2009 after thorough investigation made a list of all victims available on its official site List includes a total of 14 567 Serb victims 917 of them are from Vojvodina and further 101 from Zemun 30 Hungarians Edit nbsp The Hungarian victims memorial in Subotica cemetery elevated for the 50th anniversary of the executions 1994 Behind names of victims nbsp The Hungarian victims monument in Curug shown here damaged Various sources provide very different numbers of Hungarians executed in Vojvodina at that time The Book of Evidence of Killed War Criminals in 1944 1945 published in Yugoslavia states that a total of 1 686 people were executed in Backa of which approximately 1 000 people were presumed to be Hungarians However the estimation of historian Kasas tells 5 000 executed Hungarians 36 According to other estimations the number range of the executed Hungarians in Vojvodina may be between 40 000 37 and 50 000 38 Some sources claim that the most probable number of the executed Hungarians in Vojvodina was between 20 000 and 25 000 37 39 40 while others claim that it is about 35 000 Cseres Tibor gives an exact estimate of 34 491 executed people 41 Some Hungarian houses were sacked and a number of Hungarian civilians were executed and tortured 42 Some women and children were raped 43 Some men who were able to work were deported to Siberia 44 People of Hungarian nationality are third in terms of the number of dead after the liberation according to the 2014 data from Serbian state commission In 2014 there were 6 112 registered persons with 300 potential duplicate names of which 589 are alleged to have disappeared some of whom possibly fled to Hungary 45 and 279 died in camps 46 Unlike in Banat in Backa there were drastic punishment of members of the Hungarian national minority especially those found often on the basis of witness statements that took direct or indirect involvement in the January 1942 raid and in the suffering of the Serbian population in April 1941 Members of Arrow Cross Party were especially targeted as well as members of collaborationist apparatus leadership of the DMKSZ Cultural Union of the Hungarians of the Southern Territories that was also proclaimed to be a fascist organization but also and others that were considered to fall under the category of associates of the occupiers 47 The largest number of people of Hungarian ethnicity died after the liberation of Vojvodina was recorded in places where during the occupation the Hungarian army and local Hungarians participated in mass crimes against the Serbian Jewish and Roma population The largest number of Hungarians killed was recorded in the region of Sajkaska towns Zabalj Curug and Mosorin which were affected by the January 1942 raid The attitude towards the Hungarians began to change from November 1944 The military administration of Banat Backa and Baranja warned that in some cases especially in Backa mistakes were made and that the treatment of Germans was better than the Hungarians In its instructions it is pointed out that only those Hungarians who committed or incited crimes against the Slovene population were to be detained in the camps and that Hungarians who did not fall into the category of war criminals should be released from camps 48 These guidelines are not accepted in all places with approval especially in the Sajkaska region In January and February 1945 some residents of Curug and Mosorin demanded that all Germans and Hungarians should move out of these places because their co existence is impossible after events during the war Almost the entire Hungarian population of Sajkaska was expelled and the largest number of detained in camps in Backi Jarak Gajdobra and Mladenovo Part was sent to Srem as a labor force in the preparation of the partisans for the breakthrough of the Syrmian Front and in repairing of the Belgrade Zagreb railway People detained in Backi Jarak were used as labor force for agricultural works According to the book of the deceased from January to May 1945 due to poor conditions in the camp maltreatment hunger and disease 66 adults and 55 children from the age of one month to 18 years have died citation needed Nevertheless the Hungarian population was accepted into partisans ranks At the time of these events the 15th Vojvodina Shock Brigade Sandor Petofi was formed from the Hungarians from area of Backa Topola and Sombor About ten thousand of Vojvodina Hungarians took part in the final operations for the liberation of Yugoslavia 49 Rusyns Edit Some members of Rusyn Ruthenian population in Đurđevo were also targeted by partisan forces in 1944 According to Hungarian author Cseres the majority of the Hungarian population of this village left with the retreating Hungarian army The Yugoslav partisans then established control over this village and took their reprisals out on the Rusyns and Serbs who were sympathetic towards the Hungarians the Serbian Royal Government or for their religious views Several hundred Rusyns were executed and some prominent figures tortured 50 Serbian State commission formed in 2009 established the list of 40 Rusyn victims in total 30 Aftermath EditIn June 2013 members of the Serbian Parliament adopted a declaration which condemned the massacres and application of the principle of collective guilt against Hungarians in Vojvodina at the end of the Second World War In response the Hungarian President Janos Ader apologised in Belgrade for the war crimes committed against civilian Serbs and Jewish people during the Hungarian occupation of Yugoslav territories 51 The history of investigations Edit I The Federal Commission Drzavna komisija 1943 Edit Even in the midst of the storm of the war at the second session of the AVNOJ in Jajce November 1943 a decision was made for a special task force to be formed to investigate the crimes committed by fascists at the territory of Yugoslavia during the war It was named Federal Commission for determination of the crimes conducted by the Occupators and their helpers during World War 2 in Serbian Drzavna komisija za utvrđivanje zlocina okupatora i njihovih pomagaca iz Drugog svetskog rata and it immediately started its work In following five years broad investigation was conducted nationwide It is said that until 1948 this official body collected over a million cases of war crime documented and reported 52 This investigation was very extensive because the newly formed government wanted to collect the best possible set of data that can be presented in a demand for war reparations from Germany both East and West Italy Bulgaria and Hungary countries responsible for the attack on Yugoslavia and violation of its sovereignty Although this nationwide program concentrated only on the victims of fascism and rarely on the civilian innocent victims of communist reprisal it plays an important part in the completing of the historical picture Even though the assessment of its results and its methodology for collecting data mainly through civil reports of cases would be different today the work of this Commission is very important to the reconstruction of events especially those that followed shortly after the war II The Surveying Committee Anketni odbor 2001 Edit The first extensive study and also the first ever attempt to systematically analize the events that occurred between 1941 and 1948 on the territory of Serbia happened in 2001 on the initiative of the Assembly of the Autonomous province of Vojvodina Skupstina Autonomne pokrajine Vojvodine On 22 January 2001 in the building of the Assembly in Novi Sad this governmental department formed a specialist group with a long name Surveying Committee for investigation of the truth on the events that took place between 1941 until 1945 in Vojvodina Anketni odbor za utvrđivanje istine o događajima u periodu od 1941 do 1945 godine u Vojvodini and this institution became a formal body of the Assembly of Autonomous province of Vojvodina 53 This should be considered the first modern official investigation that took place after the Second World War except for some studies done earlier in Slovenia There was also a Commission after the war but it dealt only with the victims of 1941 1944 54 52 III The Vojvodina Academy VANU 2004 Edit The work of the Assembly Committee was three years later taken over by Vojvodinian Academy of Sciences and Arts VANU where it was in a great deal extended The Academy expanded the research for the period up to 1948 and to some extent even to 1952 processing 10 volumes with over 4000 pages of data The data was mainly collected from the Historic Archive of Vojvodina Arhiv Vojvodine and the raw data was kept in the Museum of Vojvodina The results were first published on paper in 2008 under the title On the way to the truth Book of victims of AP Vojvodina 1941 1948 title in Serbian Na putu ka istini Imenik stradalih stanovnika AP Vojvodine 1941 1948 Because of the enormous amount of text forming 9 volumes 8 of which just lists names of the victims there was not enough money to publish it so just 10 copies were printed 55 This makes this work inaccessible even to the researchers Although the results were raw and yet unstudied to detail they were already shocking to the public Important step forward was the collecting of data about all known retention camps and the victims of the period are classified by ethnic structure and also age and sex as well as by the place of death The weak point of this stage of the investigation was because of the lack of material means that about 20 of available data still remained unprocessed As on the positive side leader of the project dr Dragoljub Zivkovic claimed that much effort has been put and a lot of attention given to the task that there would be no duplicate entries 27 The public was presented only with preliminary results primarily through the media 55 The representatives said and was briefly published 53 that in Backa Banat Srem and Baranja and also in other countries but from the territory of Vojvodina between 1941 and 1948 a total of 86 881 civilians perished above 40 000 Serbs above 20 000 ethnic Germans above 15 000 Jews about 5 000 Hungarians about 2 700 Croats about 1000 Slovaks and about 3000 others 53 The full set of data with exact numbers is available in the published volume of the Na putu ka istini Imenik stradalih stanovnika AP Vojvodine 1941 1948 It is important to say that this is not data that summarises victims of the 1944 45 communist purges because it does not separates specifically the circumstances of death but it is a raw list with documents and literature that was intended for future examination by experts There is also an important statement that should be considered by the scholars of victimology that this study showed independently that more than 12 000 inhabitants of Vojvodina of different nationality ended up and were killed in Jasenovac and also in Banjica 27 It is important to stress that the publication pertains only to the civilians unarmed persons that lost their lives in the period 1941 1948 in retention camps through executions etc and not to military personnel who died in battles during the war Two very large unfortunate numbers demonstrate this among the persons who lost their lives the percentage of women as compared to men was 49 90 in Jews and about 60 in the group of the ethnic Germans 53 IV The State Commission Drzavna komisija 2009 Edit On 9 July 2009 the government of Serbia founded a Commission for the secret graves of victims killed after September 12 1944 Drzavna komisija za tajne grobnice ubijenih posle 12 septembra 1944 godine 56 The choice of the date is connected with the last stage of liberation from the occupator when on 20 October 1944 with the help from the advancing Red Army Belgrade was liberated Soon after that the war activity ceased but it marked a new period of sufferings Even before the official declaration of the end of the war atrocities against civilians that were assumed unsympathizing with communist rule started to happen For example in Vojvodina the first Hungarian victims were shot some of them openly convicted of being a fascist in the middle of September 1944 in Becej where also the local German population was forced to wear white armbands as a sign that they will be sent to forced labor 57 The mission of the 2009 Commission was to locate and mark all secret graves in which bodies of those shot after the 1944 liberation lay and also to exhume them for the purpose of determining the cause and investigation of the circumstances of death The first exhumations took place in 2010 in the vicinity of Zajecar 58 29 April of the same year marked a new era in the investigation of the 1944 45 events as the government ruled a decision to remove the stamp of secrecy from the classified documents of the Archives where the lists of liquidated persons and other important documents resided Now the researchers were for the first time able to look at those papers This was an important step forward because this was the first time that a governmental investigation focused mainly at the victims of the red terror V The Academic Commission Međuakademska komisija 2010 Edit After the collecting of data from literature and archives to build a database the phase of in depth scientific study and analysis followed which is still going on For this purpose the governments of Hungary and Serbia agreed to establish a joint Commission This separate task force that officially formed 15 December 2010 in Belgrade is called Hungarian Serbian academic Joint Committee for the civilian victims during and after the Second World War in Vojvodina 1941 1948 59 in Serbian Mađarsko Srpska Akademijska mesovita komisija 60 in Hungarian Magyar Szerb Akademiai Vegyes Bizottsag 61 62 The Hungarian section of the Joint Committee held its inaugural meeting shortly after at 6 January 2011 in Budapest Rehabilitation Edit It is expected that the first to be rehabilitated will be public figures such as teachers priests and Church dignitaries those that were executed or persecuted with clear aim to intimidate the wider public through fear by setting a harsh example During the purges in Vojvodina between 13 and 22 Catholic clerics were reported to be missing 13 of whom proven to be dead executed 63 For example if it was known or suspected that the priest was innocent official forensic and court procedure was on the way In some cases a memorial or a bust was already erected even before the trial was completed 64 Bibliography EditPetranovic Branko 1992 Srbija u Drugom svetskom ratu 1939 1945 Serbia in World War Two 1939 1945 in Serbian Belgrade Vojnoizdavacki i novinski centar Kasas Aleksandar 1996 Mađari u Vojvodini 1941 1946 Hungarians in Vojvodina 1941 1946 in Serbian Novi Sad Filozofski Fakultet u Novom Sadu Tomasevich Jozo 1975 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 The Chetniks Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0857 9 Radanovic Milan 2014 Oslobođenje Beograd 20 oktobar 1944 Liberation Belgrade October 20th 1944 Beograd Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung ISBN 978 86 88745 15 4 Radanovic Milan 2015 Kazna i zlocin Snage kolaboracije u Srbiji Punishment and Crime Collaborationist forces in Serbia PDF Beograd Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung ISBN 978 86 88745 15 4 Archived from the original PDF on 26 August 2016 Retrieved 27 April 2019 Fifty thousand Hungarian martyrs report about the Hungarian Holocaust in Jugoslavia 1944 1992 ed Istvan Nyaradi 1992 Marton Matuska Days of the revenge Forum Publisher Novi Sad 1991 Anton Salwetter Heimatbuch Deutsch Etschka Reutlingen Betzingen 1974 Erika Reusch Meirer Sigmundfelder Heimatbuch Villingen Schwenningen 1988 Documentation Project Committee Genocide of the Ethnic Germans in Yugoslavia 1944 1948 Donauschwabische Kulturstiftung Munchen 2003 ISBN 3 926276 47 9See also EditAllied war crimes during World War II Hungarian occupation of Baranja and Backa 1941 1944 Foibe massacres Mass killings under communist regimesNotes Edit a b Most of these people were murdered without a trial talking about at least 20 000 There is not even a smallest of doubt that these were war crimes quoted from Istina o streljanjima vaznija od sudskih progona PDF in Serbian Quote Armed persons murdered unarmed civilians p 32 from Meszaros Z 2012 Az 1944 45 os esemenyek minositesei I Qualifications of the 1944 45 Events I Letunk 2012 1 PDF in Hungarian Translated quote Besides unintentional accidental killings which were minimal in numbers the number of executed after regular trial is low most victims were liquidated as a reprisal without any court proceeding p 5 from Mackovic S 2017 Szabadka es a felszabadulas utan 1944 1945 aldozatul esett polgari szemelyek Subotica and the civilian victims after the liberation 1944 1945 Subotica History official page of the Historic Archive Quote For just a few days matter all of them were murdered mostly from our village I personally buried them in the grave hole from Stijacic M 2018 Vreme je article published in Slobodni Srbobran 10 December 2018 archived using Google cache here in Serbian in Hungarian These works negotiated the start of historical remembrance of the innocent persons tragic fate those that suffered cruel reprisal Quote translated from p 1 of A Sajti E 2018 A vajdasagi helytortenetiras es a magyarok elleni megtorlasok a Delvideken source PDF in Hungarian Politika Kako su dzelati postali zrtve Kontrapress Retrieved 6 June 2014 Report on the stage of investigation year 2011 in Serbian Agenda of the round table held in Belgrade 2015 in Serbian a b c S Dedeic V Arsic Press Online Vesti dana politika skupstina Srbija Tadic vlada premijer Grobnice svuda po Srbiji Pressonline rs Retrieved 6 June 2014 a b Ulrich Merten Forgotten Voices The Expulsion of the Germans from Eastern Europe After World War II Transactions Publisher New Jersey USA 2012 1 Kathryn Schaeffer Pabst Douglas Schaeffer Pabst Taken A Lament for a Lost Ethnicity iUniverse Books 2006 2 Georg Wildmann Hans Sonnleitner Karl Weber Genocide of the ethnic Germans in Yugoslavia 1944 1948 Danube Swabian Association of the USA 2001 3 State Commission Registry accessed on 22 June 2014 Zvonimir Golubovic Racija u Juznoj Backoj 1942 godine Novi Sad 1991 Milorad Grujic Vodic kroz Novi Sad i okolinu Novi Sad 2004 Slobodan Curcic Broj stanovnika Vojvodine Novi Sad 1996 Petranovic 1992 pp 538 657 a b c Tomasevich 1975 Radanovic 2015 p 187 190 Radanovic 2015 p 188 Radanovic 2015 p 189 Radanovic 2015 p 37 Po kratkom postupku Ostali clanci Novosti rs Retrieved 6 June 2014 a b Broz na belom konju Ostali clanci Novosti rs Retrieved 6 June 2014 Jelena Popov Vojvodina i Srbija Veternik 2001 Janjetovic Zoran 2006 Proterivanje nemackog i mađarskog zivlja iz Vojvodine na kraju drugog svetskog rata Hereticus in Serbian 1 Archived from the original on 6 October 2011 Retrieved 9 June 2010 a b c d sim Srbe podjednako ubijali okupator i i oslobodioci Mail archive com 14 January 2009 Retrieved 6 June 2014 Dieter Blumenwitz Rechtsgutachten uber die Verbrechen an den Deutschen in Jugoslawien 1944 1948 Sonderausgabe Juristische Studien Munchen 2002 S 64 Nenad Stefanovic Jedan svet na Dunavu Beograd 2003 page 133 a b c State Commission Registry accessed on 22 June 2014 Michael Portmann Arnold Suppan Serbien und Montenegro im Zweiten Weltkrieg In Osterreichisches Ost und Sudosteuropa Institut Serbien und Montenegro Raum und Bevolkerung Geschichte Sprache und Literatur Kultur Politik Gesellschaft Wirtschaft Recht LIT Verlag 2006 S 277 Mathias Beer Flucht und Vertreibung der Deutschen Voraussetzungen Verlauf Folgen Munchen 2011 ISBN 978 3 406 61406 4 S 205 hier S 91 Marie Janine Calic Geschichte Jugoslawiens im 20 Jahrhundert C H Beck Munchen 2010 S 179 Hans Ulrich Wehler Nationalitatenpolitik in Jugoslawien Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht 1980 ISBN 3 525 01322 1 S 59f a b c d Jovanka SIMIC Proganja misterija iz Rajine sume Aktuelno Novosti rs Retrieved 6 June 2014 Michael Portmann Communist Retaliation and Persecution on Yugoslav Territory During and After WWII 1943 50 Ceeol com Retrieved 6 June 2014 a b Dimitrije Boarov Politicka istorija Vojvodine Novi Sad 2001 Memorial site of the victims Huncor com Archived from the original on 9 October 2014 Retrieved 6 June 2014 Dragomir Jankov Vojvodina propadanje jednog regiona Novi Sad 2004 4 dead link Cseres Tibor 1993 Serbian Vendetta in Bacska Buffalo Hunyadi Publishing p 141 Archived from the original on 18 October 2010 Retrieved 14 October 2010 Kasas Aleksandar Mađari u Vojvodini 1941 1946 Novi Sad 1996 Filozofski fakultet u Novom Sadu Odsek za istoriju Kasas Aleksandar Mađari u Vojvodini 1941 1946 Novi Sad 1996 Karapandzic Borivoje Jugoslovensko krvavo prolece 1945 Titovi Katini i Gulagi Beograd 1990 Mladost Here the otherwise relevant article makes a biased statement supposition not backed with proof Here is the direct translation of the sentence from the source 6 112 persons of hungarian nationality are evidented 11 03 percent in the register while this number includes about 300 duplicate names For the 4 679 Hungarians it is declared they were murdered 586 shot 4 438 liquidated 7 hanged For 589 Hungarians it is said that they disappeared in which number may be included a certain number of Vojvodina hungarians who escaped and moved from the territory of Backa before the days of liberation Radanovic Milan Kako su dzelati postali zrtve Retrieved 9 July 2017 Kasas 1996 p 161 Kasas 1996 p 179 Kasas 1996 p 182 Cseres Tibor 1993 Titoist Atrocities in Vojvodina 1944 45 Serbian Vendetta in Bacska Hunyadi Publishing p 113 Hungarian president in Belgrade visit apologizes for crimes against innocent Serbs in World War II Politics hu Archived from the original on 8 October 2013 Retrieved 2 September 2013 a b Drzavna komisija za utvrđivanje zlocina okupatora i njihovih pomagaca in Serbian Centar za kulturnu dekontaminaciju Retrieved 1 May 2019 a b c d Tibor Pal 2010 Na putu istine O radu Pokrajinskog anketnog odbora za utvrđivanje istine o događajima u periodu od 1941 do 1948 godine The Federal Commission for determination of the crimes conducted by the Occupators and their helpers during World War 2 formed 1943 in Jajce and worked until 1948 a b Blic online Print Blic rs 15 May 2009 Retrieved 6 June 2014 The aims and rules of the Commission official page in Serbian Kasas Aleksandar Mađari u Vojvodini 1941 1946 Novi Sad 1996 Filozofski fakultet u Novom Sadu Odsek za istoriju pp 161 162 Otkopavanje tajnih grobnica pocinjemo na leto Blic online 28 February 2010 Retrieved 2 May 2019 Full name in Serbian Međuakademska komisija SANU I MAN za utvrđivanje civilnih zrtava u Vojvodini tokom i posle Drugog svetskog rata 1941 1948 Official site of the Serbian department Bemutatkozas Magyar Szerb Akademiai Vegyes Bizottsag 19 August 2016 Archived from the original on 19 August 2016 Magyar Szerb Mult Akademiai Vegyes Bizottsag Magyar Tagozata Magyar Tagozat www magyarszerbmult btk mta hu Eniko A Sajti 2010 Partizanska odmazda protiv mađara u Vojvodini PDF p 28 There is a separate study dedicated just to these by Matuska M in Csorba B 1999 Forro L Molnar T 2013 Tragikus emberi sorsok 1944 bol a partizaniratok tukreben COBISS SR ID 276694791 p 111 ISBN 978 86 89039 01 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link External links EditThe State Commission for the secret burial places of victims after 12 September 1944 list of names with biographical information and details of persecution Srbe podjednako ubijali okupatori i oslobodioci Proganja misterija iz Rajine sume Istorija bez anestezije Sluzbena internet stranica Komisije za tajne grobnice ubijenih posle 12 septembra 1944 Ministarstva pravde Republike Srbije Jugoslovensko krvavo prolece Savo Gregovic Vecernje novosti feljton 10 nastavaka 8 17 July 2004 Unistavanje srpske elite LJubomir Tesic Vecernje novosti feljton 10 nastavaka 17 26 June 2006 Između srpa i cekica Srđan Cvetkovic Vecernje novosti feljton 11 nastavaka 14 24 December 2006 Beograd u mrezi OZNE LJubomir Tesic Vecernje novosti feljton 10 nastavaka 2 12 May 2007 Igre kaznjene smrcu Miodrag Mija Ilic Vecernje novosti feljton 18 nastavaka 13 30 May 2007 Grobnice svuda po Srbiji S Dedic V Arsic Pres 7 June 2009 Memorial site of the victims Milan Radanovic An analysis of the State Commission for Secret Burial Places Registry of the Victims Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Communist purges in Serbia in 1944 1945 amp oldid 1160801610, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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