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Jadovno concentration camp

The Jadovno concentration camp was a concentration and extermination camp in the Independent State of Croatia (NDH) during World War II. Commanded by Juco Rukavina, it was the first of twenty-six concentration camps in the NDH during the war. Established in a secluded area about 20 kilometres (12 mi) from the town of Gospić, it held thousands of Serbs and Jews over a period of 122 days from May to August 1941. Inmates were usually killed by being pushed into deep ravines located near the camp. Estimates of the number of deaths at Jadovno range from 10,000 to 68,000, mostly Serbs. The camp was closed on 21 August 1941, and the area where it was located was later handed over to the Kingdom of Italy and became part of Italian Zones II and III. Jadovno was replaced by the greater sized Jasenovac concentration camp and its extermination facilities.

Jadovno
Concentration and extermination camp
The Šaran pit, located one kilometer from the camp.
Location of Jadovno within the Independent State of Croatia
Coordinates44°32′18″N 15°14′20″E / 44.5382°N 15.2388°E / 44.5382; 15.2388Coordinates: 44°32′18″N 15°14′20″E / 44.5382°N 15.2388°E / 44.5382; 15.2388
LocationNear Gospić, Independent State of Croatia
Operated byUstaše
OperationalApril 1941 – August 1941
InmatesPrimarily Serbs and Jews
KilledEstimates generally range from 10,000–68,000
Notable inmates

The camp site remained unexplored after the war due to the depth of the gorges where bodies were disposed and the fact that some of them had been filled with concrete by Yugoslavia's Communist authorities. Additional sites containing the skeletal remains of camp victims were uncovered in the 1980s. Commemoration ceremonies honouring the victims of the camp have been organized by the Serb National Council (SNV), the Jewish community in Croatia, and local anti-fascists since 2009, and 24 June has since been designated as a "Day of Remembrance of the Jadovno Camp" in Croatia. A monument commemorating those killed in the camp was constructed in 1975 and stood for fifteen years before being removed in 1990. A replica of the original monument was constructed and dedicated in 2010, but disappeared within twenty-four hours of its inauguration.

History

Background

On 6 April 1941, Axis forces invaded the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. Poorly equipped and trained, the Royal Yugoslav Army was quickly defeated.[1] After the invasion, the extreme Croat nationalist and fascist Ante Pavelić, who had been in exile in Benito Mussolini's Italy, was appointed Poglavnik ("leader") of an Ustaše-led Croatian state – the Independent State of Croatia (often called the NDH, from the Croatian: Nezavisna Država Hrvatska).[2] The NDH combined most of modern Croatia, all of modern Bosnia and Herzegovina and parts of modern Serbia into an "Italian-German quasi-protectorate".[3] NDH authorities, led by the Ustaše militia,[4] then implemented genocidal policies against the Serb, Jewish and Romani populations living in the new state.[5]

Aiming to exterminate the entire Serb population of the NDH,[6] the Ustaše sought to murder one-third of Serbs, convert one-third to Roman Catholicism, and force the rest from the country.[7] A series of massacres were committed by the Ustaše, and the degree of cruelty with which the Serb population was persecuted shocked even the Germans.[8]

The Cyrillic script was banned, Orthodox Christian church schools were closed, and Serbs were ordered to wear identifying armbands.[9] Similar measures were enacted against Jews, who were required to wear a yellow armband with a black-on-yellow Star of David for identification. These armbands bore the word "Jew" in two languages: German ("Jude") and Croatian ("Židov").[10]

Operation

Located in a secluded area about 20 kilometres (12 mi) from the town of Gospić,[11] the Jadovno camp was formed during the early stages of the persecution of Serbs in the NDH[12] and was placed under the command of the Ustaša Juco Rukavina.[11] Intended as an extermination camp, it was established between 11 and 15 April 1941[12] and was the first of twenty-six concentration camps located in the NDH during the war.[13]

Most inmates at Ustaše camps – including Jadovno – were Croatian Serbs.[14] Other victims included Jews and anti-Ustaše Croats.[11] Notable Jadovno inmates included the Croatian Jewish mayor of Koprivnica, Ivica Hiršl,[15] and the Croatian Jewish Communist Aleksandar Savić.[16]

Immediately, the Ustaše trucked several hundred detainees to a site intended almost exclusively for extermination near Gospić. Located on Mount Velebit, the town contained gorges – some up to 91.5 metres (300 ft) deep – that were used as dumping grounds.[12] The Jadovno camp itself was surrounded by such abysses (Serbo-Croatian: jame) which were difficult to gain access to and characteristic of the karstic mountain range. The camp itself acted as a "way station" en route to these pits.[11] Here, prisoners had to work the entire day with almost no food until exhaustion.

The nearest pit to the camp was the Šaran pit, located 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) away, while the pit where inmates were executed and dumped was 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) from the camp.[17] Here, inmates were bound together in a line and the first few victims were murdered with rifle butts or other objects. Afterwards, an entire row of inmates were pushed into the ravine.[18] In some cases, inmates were also killed by gunfire, as well as with knives and blunt objects. Once inmates were thrown into the ravine, hand grenades were hurtled inside in order to kill off the victims. Dogs would also be thrown in to feed on the wounded and the dead.[12][18] The pits in the vicinity of the camp were filled with the bodies of Jewish and later Serb inmates. However, killings were not confined to these two groups, and the bodies of some Croats and Roma were disposed of in this fashion as well.[18]

By the end of June, the Ustaše transferred several hundred Jewish families from Zagreb to Jadovno.[19] Afterwards, the camp was visited by Ustaše commander Vjekoslav Luburić, who opened his visit by cutting the throat of a two-year-old Jewish child. Luburić then forced a camp guard to murder and squash the skull of a second child with his foot.[20] The last group of inmates at Jadovno were killed with machine guns.[17]

The camp was closed on 21 August 1941, and the remaining Croat inmates were transferred to other NDH-controlled camps, while the remaining Serbs and Jews were murdered.[12] Work on the replacement Jasenovac concentration camp started in the same month. The area in which the Jadovno camp was located was later handed over to the Italians[19] and became part of Italian Zones II and III.[21]

Italian medical team report

In September 1941, two Italian army medical teams were sent to investigate reports of mass graves contaminating drinking water across the Velebit mountains and on the island of Pag, all part of the Jadovno system of Ustaše camps and killing pits. This description of the Plana pit, located above the village of Buđak, on Velebit, is from the report filed by Dr. Finderle Viktor:

In the area around the pit I found pieces of chains, padlocks of various sizes and shapes, railway employee badges, ribbons from trousers of Yugoslav customs officers, toothbrushes, pocket mirrors, combs, and very interestingly, emptied and torn wallets. On one spot I found pieces of a skull for which I believe to belong to an adult person between age 30 and 50, killed approximately two months before. The opening of the pit is 8x5m in size, and it seems to have no bottom. A rock I threw in did not stop, but fell so deeply that I could not hear it hit the bottom. The rim of the pit and its sides were covered with lime that seemed to be used several days before. Despite that the whole area is full of the terrible smell of decomposing corpses. It seems that around 500 victims were thrown into this pit.[22] [23]

The Italian team discovered additional Velebit killing pits - Jamina pit, near Tribnje (“hundreds of victims”, including women and children), Jama na Pločama, near Stupačinovo (2.000 Serb victims), Duliba jama (200 victims), etc. Dr. Vittori notes that due to very difficult terrain and the locals not assisting out of fear of Ustashe retaliation, they were unable to locate other suspected killing pits. Beyond that, the Italian medical teams investigated the Slana and Metajna concentration camps on Pag island, part of the same system of Ustaše camps, where they dug up 791 corpses in mass graves, with nearly half being women and children, and estimated that 8 to 9 thousand were killed by the Ustaše in the camps on Pag.[24][23]

Death toll

 
Monument to the victims of the camp.

The number of deaths at the camp is difficult to establish as many inmates often went unregistered as they were taken directly to the edge of ravines and murdered.[12] The highest recorded estimate of Jadovno deaths was made in 1942 by a former inmate of the Gospić prison, who claimed that 120,000 people were killed. In 1964, a survey of World War II victims by the War Victim Census Commission showed a figure of 1,794 individual victims in Jadovno. The results of this survey were not published until 1989.[25]

The 1960 edition of the Encyclopedia of Yugoslavia states at least 35,000 were killed in Jadovno, with a possible final death toll of 50,000–60,000.[17] The 1967 Military Encyclopedia of Yugoslavia estimates that 72,000 inmates perished in the camp.[11] The 1971 edition of the Encyclopedia of Yugoslavia also revised the number to 72,000, which became the most commonly cited estimate in the 1960s and the 1970s.[26] Rev Atanasije Jevtić stated in 1983 that 80,000 inmates were killed. Historian Jozo Tomasevich said this claim was "exaggerated" and not based on any documentation or detailed investigation.[11] Historian estimates in the late 1980s and the 1990s mostly ranged from 15,000 to 48,000 victims.[27]

A 2007 research study by historian Đuro Zatezalo, using 17 archives,[28] estimated that the total number of deaths at the camp was 40,123 (38,010 Serbs, 1,998 Jews, 88 Croats and 27 others) and listed the names of 10,502 identified victims, of whom 9,663 were Serbs, 762 Jews, 55 Croats and 22 others.[26] 1,029 children were identified (1,014 Serb and 15 Jewish),[28] as was 55 Serbian Orthodox priests according to Zatezalo's data. As it operated over a period of 122 days, this would suggest that an average of 329 people were killed there every day.[12] Paul Mojzes cites Zatezalos's data.[12]

According to a 2009 research by the Belgrade Museum of Genocide Victims, between 15,300–15,900 people were killed in the Gospić, Jadovno and Pag camps.[29] Sources generally offer a range of 10,000–68,000 deaths at the camp. Estimates of the number of Jewish deaths range from several hundred[12] to 2,500–2,800.[18]

Aftermath and legacy

The Jadovno camp site remained unexplored after the war due to the depth of the gorges where bodies were disposed of and the fact that some of these had been filled with concrete by Yugoslavia's Communist authorities. Additional sites containing the skeletal remains of camp victims were uncovered in the 1980s.[12]

Commemoration ceremonies honouring the victims of the camp have been organized by the Serb National Council (SNV), representatives of the Jewish community in Croatia, and local anti-fascists since 2009. 24 June has since been designated as a Day of Remembrance of the Jadovno Camp in Croatia. A monument commemorating those who perished was constructed in 1975 and stood for fifteen years before being removed in 1990 prior to the outbreak of ethnic violence during the Croatian War of Independence. A replica of the original monument was constructed and dedicated in 2010, but disappeared within twenty-four hours of its inauguration.[30]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Cohen 1996, p. 28.
  2. ^ Goldstein 1999, p. 133.
  3. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 272.
  4. ^ Tomasevich 2001, pp. 397–409.
  5. ^ Hoare 2007, pp. 20–24.
  6. ^ Cox 2007, p. 224.
  7. ^ Velikonja 2003, p. 165.
  8. ^ Cox 2007, p. 225.
  9. ^ Judah 2000, p. 126.
  10. ^ Donia 2006, p. 174.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Tomasevich 2001, p. 726.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Mojzes 2011, p. 60.
  13. ^ Israeli 2013, p. 184.
  14. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 747.
  15. ^ Kraus 1998, p. 382.
  16. ^ Romano 1980, p. 478.
  17. ^ a b c Israeli 2013, p. 67.
  18. ^ a b c d Mojzes 2009, p. 160.
  19. ^ a b Cohen 1996, p. 91.
  20. ^ Balen 1952, pp. 78–80.
  21. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 399.
  22. ^ Zemljar, Ante (11 July 2010). "Charon and Destinies, Original documents of Italian military medical service".
  23. ^ a b Zemljar, Ante (11 July 2010). "Charon and Destinies, Translation of original Italian documents".
  24. ^ Goldstein, Slavko (2013-11-05). 1941: The Year That Keeps Returning. New York Review of Books. p. 280. ISBN 978-1-59017-700-6.
  25. ^ Geiger 2011, p. 730.
  26. ^ a b Geiger 2011, pp. 730–31.
  27. ^ Geiger 2011, p. 733.
  28. ^ a b Mirkovic 2010.
  29. ^ Geiger 2011, p. 732.
  30. ^ RTS 29 June 2013.

References

Books
Journals and documents
  • Švarc, B. (2006). "The Testimony of a Survivor of Jadovno and Jasenovac". In Lituchy, Barry (ed.). Jasenovac and the Holocaust in Yugoslavia: Analyses and Survivor Testimonies. New York: Jasenovac Research Institute.
  • Zatezalo, Đ. (2007). "Jadovno: kompleks ustaških logora 1941" [Jadovno: complex of Ustascha camps in 1941]. Belgrade: Muzej žrtava genocida. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Zatezalo, Đ. (2011). "The Jadovno complex of ustascha concentration camps 1941". First International Conference on Ustasha Concentration Camps in Jadovno-Gospic 1941. Belgrade: Muzej žrtava genocida.
  • Mirkovic, D. (2010). "Book reviews: Jadovno: Kompleks ustaskih logora 1941 [Jadovno: A Complex of Ustasha Camps, 1941] Djuro Zatezalo". Journal of Genocide Research. 12 (1–2): 141–143. doi:10.1080/14623521003633503. S2CID 72885398.
News articles
  • "Pomen žrtvama logora u Jadovnom" (in Serbo-Croatian). RTS. 29 June 2013.

External links

  • Association of Descendants and Supporters of Victims of Ustashian Concentration Camps in Jadovno 1941.

jadovno, concentration, camp, concentration, extermination, camp, independent, state, croatia, during, world, commanded, juco, rukavina, first, twenty, concentration, camps, during, established, secluded, area, about, kilometres, from, town, gospić, held, thou. The Jadovno concentration camp was a concentration and extermination camp in the Independent State of Croatia NDH during World War II Commanded by Juco Rukavina it was the first of twenty six concentration camps in the NDH during the war Established in a secluded area about 20 kilometres 12 mi from the town of Gospic it held thousands of Serbs and Jews over a period of 122 days from May to August 1941 Inmates were usually killed by being pushed into deep ravines located near the camp Estimates of the number of deaths at Jadovno range from 10 000 to 68 000 mostly Serbs The camp was closed on 21 August 1941 and the area where it was located was later handed over to the Kingdom of Italy and became part of Italian Zones II and III Jadovno was replaced by the greater sized Jasenovac concentration camp and its extermination facilities JadovnoConcentration and extermination campThe Saran pit located one kilometer from the camp Location of Jadovno within the Independent State of CroatiaCoordinates44 32 18 N 15 14 20 E 44 5382 N 15 2388 E 44 5382 15 2388 Coordinates 44 32 18 N 15 14 20 E 44 5382 N 15 2388 E 44 5382 15 2388LocationNear Gospic Independent State of CroatiaOperated byUstaseOperationalApril 1941 August 1941InmatesPrimarily Serbs and JewsKilledEstimates generally range from 10 000 68 000Notable inmatesIvica Hirsl Aleksandar Savic Spiro Bocaric Bogdan TosovicThe camp site remained unexplored after the war due to the depth of the gorges where bodies were disposed and the fact that some of them had been filled with concrete by Yugoslavia s Communist authorities Additional sites containing the skeletal remains of camp victims were uncovered in the 1980s Commemoration ceremonies honouring the victims of the camp have been organized by the Serb National Council SNV the Jewish community in Croatia and local anti fascists since 2009 and 24 June has since been designated as a Day of Remembrance of the Jadovno Camp in Croatia A monument commemorating those killed in the camp was constructed in 1975 and stood for fifteen years before being removed in 1990 A replica of the original monument was constructed and dedicated in 2010 but disappeared within twenty four hours of its inauguration Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Operation 1 3 Italian medical team report 2 Death toll 3 Aftermath and legacy 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditBackground Edit On 6 April 1941 Axis forces invaded the Kingdom of Yugoslavia Poorly equipped and trained the Royal Yugoslav Army was quickly defeated 1 After the invasion the extreme Croat nationalist and fascist Ante Pavelic who had been in exile in Benito Mussolini s Italy was appointed Poglavnik leader of an Ustase led Croatian state the Independent State of Croatia often called the NDH from the Croatian Nezavisna Drzava Hrvatska 2 The NDH combined most of modern Croatia all of modern Bosnia and Herzegovina and parts of modern Serbia into an Italian German quasi protectorate 3 NDH authorities led by the Ustase militia 4 then implemented genocidal policies against the Serb Jewish and Romani populations living in the new state 5 Aiming to exterminate the entire Serb population of the NDH 6 the Ustase sought to murder one third of Serbs convert one third to Roman Catholicism and force the rest from the country 7 A series of massacres were committed by the Ustase and the degree of cruelty with which the Serb population was persecuted shocked even the Germans 8 The Cyrillic script was banned Orthodox Christian church schools were closed and Serbs were ordered to wear identifying armbands 9 Similar measures were enacted against Jews who were required to wear a yellow armband with a black on yellow Star of David for identification These armbands bore the word Jew in two languages German Jude and Croatian Zidov 10 Operation Edit Located in a secluded area about 20 kilometres 12 mi from the town of Gospic 11 the Jadovno camp was formed during the early stages of the persecution of Serbs in the NDH 12 and was placed under the command of the Ustasa Juco Rukavina 11 Intended as an extermination camp it was established between 11 and 15 April 1941 12 and was the first of twenty six concentration camps located in the NDH during the war 13 Most inmates at Ustase camps including Jadovno were Croatian Serbs 14 Other victims included Jews and anti Ustase Croats 11 Notable Jadovno inmates included the Croatian Jewish mayor of Koprivnica Ivica Hirsl 15 and the Croatian Jewish Communist Aleksandar Savic 16 Immediately the Ustase trucked several hundred detainees to a site intended almost exclusively for extermination near Gospic Located on Mount Velebit the town contained gorges some up to 91 5 metres 300 ft deep that were used as dumping grounds 12 The Jadovno camp itself was surrounded by such abysses Serbo Croatian jame which were difficult to gain access to and characteristic of the karstic mountain range The camp itself acted as a way station en route to these pits 11 Here prisoners had to work the entire day with almost no food until exhaustion The nearest pit to the camp was the Saran pit located 1 kilometre 0 62 mi away while the pit where inmates were executed and dumped was 5 kilometres 3 1 mi from the camp 17 Here inmates were bound together in a line and the first few victims were murdered with rifle butts or other objects Afterwards an entire row of inmates were pushed into the ravine 18 In some cases inmates were also killed by gunfire as well as with knives and blunt objects Once inmates were thrown into the ravine hand grenades were hurtled inside in order to kill off the victims Dogs would also be thrown in to feed on the wounded and the dead 12 18 The pits in the vicinity of the camp were filled with the bodies of Jewish and later Serb inmates However killings were not confined to these two groups and the bodies of some Croats and Roma were disposed of in this fashion as well 18 By the end of June the Ustase transferred several hundred Jewish families from Zagreb to Jadovno 19 Afterwards the camp was visited by Ustase commander Vjekoslav Luburic who opened his visit by cutting the throat of a two year old Jewish child Luburic then forced a camp guard to murder and squash the skull of a second child with his foot 20 The last group of inmates at Jadovno were killed with machine guns 17 The camp was closed on 21 August 1941 and the remaining Croat inmates were transferred to other NDH controlled camps while the remaining Serbs and Jews were murdered 12 Work on the replacement Jasenovac concentration camp started in the same month The area in which the Jadovno camp was located was later handed over to the Italians 19 and became part of Italian Zones II and III 21 Italian medical team report EditIn September 1941 two Italian army medical teams were sent to investigate reports of mass graves contaminating drinking water across the Velebit mountains and on the island of Pag all part of the Jadovno system of Ustase camps and killing pits This description of the Plana pit located above the village of Buđak on Velebit is from the report filed by Dr Finderle Viktor In the area around the pit I found pieces of chains padlocks of various sizes and shapes railway employee badges ribbons from trousers of Yugoslav customs officers toothbrushes pocket mirrors combs and very interestingly emptied and torn wallets On one spot I found pieces of a skull for which I believe to belong to an adult person between age 30 and 50 killed approximately two months before The opening of the pit is 8x5m in size and it seems to have no bottom A rock I threw in did not stop but fell so deeply that I could not hear it hit the bottom The rim of the pit and its sides were covered with lime that seemed to be used several days before Despite that the whole area is full of the terrible smell of decomposing corpses It seems that around 500 victims were thrown into this pit 22 23 The Italian team discovered additional Velebit killing pits Jamina pit near Tribnje hundreds of victims including women and children Jama na Plocama near Stupacinovo 2 000 Serb victims Duliba jama 200 victims etc Dr Vittori notes that due to very difficult terrain and the locals not assisting out of fear of Ustashe retaliation they were unable to locate other suspected killing pits Beyond that the Italian medical teams investigated the Slana and Metajna concentration camps on Pag island part of the same system of Ustase camps where they dug up 791 corpses in mass graves with nearly half being women and children and estimated that 8 to 9 thousand were killed by the Ustase in the camps on Pag 24 23 Death toll Edit Monument to the victims of the camp The number of deaths at the camp is difficult to establish as many inmates often went unregistered as they were taken directly to the edge of ravines and murdered 12 The highest recorded estimate of Jadovno deaths was made in 1942 by a former inmate of the Gospic prison who claimed that 120 000 people were killed In 1964 a survey of World War II victims by the War Victim Census Commission showed a figure of 1 794 individual victims in Jadovno The results of this survey were not published until 1989 25 The 1960 edition of the Encyclopedia of Yugoslavia states at least 35 000 were killed in Jadovno with a possible final death toll of 50 000 60 000 17 The 1967 Military Encyclopedia of Yugoslavia estimates that 72 000 inmates perished in the camp 11 The 1971 edition of the Encyclopedia of Yugoslavia also revised the number to 72 000 which became the most commonly cited estimate in the 1960s and the 1970s 26 Rev Atanasije Jevtic stated in 1983 that 80 000 inmates were killed Historian Jozo Tomasevich said this claim was exaggerated and not based on any documentation or detailed investigation 11 Historian estimates in the late 1980s and the 1990s mostly ranged from 15 000 to 48 000 victims 27 A 2007 research study by historian Đuro Zatezalo using 17 archives 28 estimated that the total number of deaths at the camp was 40 123 38 010 Serbs 1 998 Jews 88 Croats and 27 others and listed the names of 10 502 identified victims of whom 9 663 were Serbs 762 Jews 55 Croats and 22 others 26 1 029 children were identified 1 014 Serb and 15 Jewish 28 as was 55 Serbian Orthodox priests according to Zatezalo s data As it operated over a period of 122 days this would suggest that an average of 329 people were killed there every day 12 Paul Mojzes cites Zatezalos s data 12 According to a 2009 research by the Belgrade Museum of Genocide Victims between 15 300 15 900 people were killed in the Gospic Jadovno and Pag camps 29 Sources generally offer a range of 10 000 68 000 deaths at the camp Estimates of the number of Jewish deaths range from several hundred 12 to 2 500 2 800 18 Aftermath and legacy EditThe Jadovno camp site remained unexplored after the war due to the depth of the gorges where bodies were disposed of and the fact that some of these had been filled with concrete by Yugoslavia s Communist authorities Additional sites containing the skeletal remains of camp victims were uncovered in the 1980s 12 Commemoration ceremonies honouring the victims of the camp have been organized by the Serb National Council SNV representatives of the Jewish community in Croatia and local anti fascists since 2009 24 June has since been designated as a Day of Remembrance of the Jadovno Camp in Croatia A monument commemorating those who perished was constructed in 1975 and stood for fifteen years before being removed in 1990 prior to the outbreak of ethnic violence during the Croatian War of Independence A replica of the original monument was constructed and dedicated in 2010 but disappeared within twenty four hours of its inauguration 30 See also EditGerman Resistance to Nazism Glossary of Nazi Germany The Holocaust List of books about Nazi Germany List of Nazi German concentration camps Nazi concentration camps Nazi Party Nazi songs World War II Portals Croatia Genocide Germany World War IINotes Edit Cohen 1996 p 28 Goldstein 1999 p 133 Tomasevich 2001 p 272 Tomasevich 2001 pp 397 409 Hoare 2007 pp 20 24 Cox 2007 p 224 Velikonja 2003 p 165 Cox 2007 p 225 Judah 2000 p 126 Donia 2006 p 174 a b c d e f Tomasevich 2001 p 726 a b c d e f g h i j Mojzes 2011 p 60 Israeli 2013 p 184 Tomasevich 2001 p 747 Kraus 1998 p 382 Romano 1980 p 478 a b c Israeli 2013 p 67 a b c d Mojzes 2009 p 160 a b Cohen 1996 p 91 Balen 1952 pp 78 80 Tomasevich 2001 p 399 Zemljar Ante 11 July 2010 Charon and Destinies Original documents of Italian military medical service a b Zemljar Ante 11 July 2010 Charon and Destinies Translation of original Italian documents Goldstein Slavko 2013 11 05 1941 The Year That Keeps Returning New York Review of Books p 280 ISBN 978 1 59017 700 6 Geiger 2011 p 730 a b Geiger 2011 pp 730 31 Geiger 2011 p 733 a b Mirkovic 2010 Geiger 2011 p 732 RTS 29 June 2013 References EditBooksAtkins Stephen E 2009 Holocaust Denial as an International Movement Westport Connecticut Praeger Publishers ISBN 978 0 313 34538 8 Balen Sime 1952 Pavelic in Serbo Croatian Zagreb Hrvatska seljacka tiskara OCLC 718318103 Cohen Philip J 1996 Serbia s Secret War Propaganda and the Deceit of History College Station Texas Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 0 89096 760 7 Cox John K 2007 Ante Pavelic and the Ustasa State in Croatia In Fischer Bernd Jurgen ed Balkan Strongmen Dictators and Authoritarian Rulers of South Eastern Europe West Lafayette Indiana Purdue University Press ISBN 978 1 55753 455 2 Donia Robert J 2006 Sarajevo A Biography Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 11557 0 Geiger Vladimir 2011 Ljudski gubici Hrvatske u Drugom svjetskom ratu koje su prouzrocili okupatori i njihovi pomagaci Brojidbeni pokazatelji procjene izracuni popisi Human losses in Croatia during the Second World War instigated by the occupiers and their accomplices Quantitative indicators estimates calculations lists Journal of Contemporary History in Croatian Croatian Institute of History 43 3 699 749 Goldstein Ivo 1999 Croatia A History Montreal McGill Queen s Press ISBN 978 0 7735 2017 2 Hoare Marko Attila 2007 The History of Bosnia From the Middle Ages to the Present Day London Saqi ISBN 978 0 86356 953 1 Israeli Raphael 2013 The Death Camps of Croatia Visions and Revisions 1941 1945 New Brunswick New Jersey Transaction Publishers ISBN 978 1 4128 4975 3 Judah Tim 2000 The Serbs History Myth and the Destruction of Yugoslavia 2nd ed New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 08507 5 Kraus Ognjen 1998 Dva stoljeca povijesti i kulture Zidova u Zagrebu i Hrvatskoj in Serbo Croatian Zagreb Zidovska opcina Zagreb ISBN 953 96836 2 9 Mojzes Paul 2009 The Genocidal Twentieth Century in the Balkans In Jacobs Steven L ed Confronting Genocide Judaism Christianity Islam Lanham Maryland Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 3590 7 Mojzes Paul 2011 Balkan Genocides Holocaust and Ethnic Cleansing in the 20th Century Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 0665 6 Romano Jasa 1980 Jevreji Jugoslavije 1941 1945 zrtve genocida i ucesnici narodnooslobodilackog rata in Serbo Croatian Belgrade Jevrejski Istorijski Muzej Saveza jevrejskih opstina Jugoslavije Tomasevich Jozo 2001 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Occupation and Collaboration Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 3615 2 Velikonja Mitja 2003 Religious Separation and Political Intolerance in Bosnia Herzegovina College Station Texas Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 1 58544 226 3 Journals and documentsSvarc B 2006 The Testimony of a Survivor of Jadovno and Jasenovac In Lituchy Barry ed Jasenovac and the Holocaust in Yugoslavia Analyses and Survivor Testimonies New York Jasenovac Research Institute Zatezalo Đ 2007 Jadovno kompleks ustaskih logora 1941 Jadovno complex of Ustascha camps in 1941 Belgrade Muzej zrtava genocida a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Zatezalo Đ 2011 The Jadovno complex of ustascha concentration camps 1941 First International Conference on Ustasha Concentration Camps in Jadovno Gospic 1941 Belgrade Muzej zrtava genocida Mirkovic D 2010 Book reviews Jadovno Kompleks ustaskih logora 1941 Jadovno A Complex of Ustasha Camps 1941 Djuro Zatezalo Journal of Genocide Research 12 1 2 141 143 doi 10 1080 14623521003633503 S2CID 72885398 News articles Pomen zrtvama logora u Jadovnom in Serbo Croatian RTS 29 June 2013 External links EditAssociation of Descendants and Supporters of Victims of Ustashian Concentration Camps in Jadovno 1941 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jadovno concentration camp amp oldid 1109739927, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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