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Novi Sad raid

The Novi Sad raid, also known as the Raid in southern Bačka, the Novi Sad massacre, the Újvidék massacre, or simply The Raid (Serbo-Croatian: Рација, Racija), was a military operation carried out by the Királyi Honvédség, the armed forces of Hungary, during World War II, after the Hungarian occupation and annexation of former Yugoslav territories. It resulted in the deaths of 3,000–4,000 civilians in the southern Bačka (Bácska) region.

Novi Sad Raid
Part of World War II in Yugoslavia
Corpses of killed civilians in the barracks in Novi Sad, Futoška Street, January 1942.
LocationSouthern Bačka, Hungarian occupation of Yugoslav territories (Serbia)
Date4–29 January 1942
TargetPredominantly Serb and Jewish civilians
Attack type
Mass murder, summary executions
Deaths3,000–4,000
PerpetratorsRoyal Hungarian Army

The Hungarian occupational authorities began raiding towns and villages in southern Bačka as early as 4 January 1942, ostensibly as a means of suppressing Partisan resistance, though the historical record shows that the Hungarian Government was attempting to improve its geopolitical standing vis-à-vis Germany. The first town to be raided was Čurug, followed by Gospođinci, Titel, Temerin, Đurđevo and Žabalj. The victims were seemingly detained at random while conducting everyday activities. On 20 January, the city of Novi Sad (Hungarian: Újvidék) was surrounded and placed on curfew; its telephone lines were cut. Over the next several days, the occupational authorities went about arresting "suspicious" individuals. More than 1,000 of the city's residents were killed by the time the raid ended. The victims in both Novi Sad and the wider region were mostly Serbs and Jews, though several Romani, Rusyns, Russians and Hungarians were killed as well. In Novi Sad, victims were forced to march across the frozen Danube, only to perish when the ice sheet was shattered by shelling from the shore. Some were pushed into holes in the ice sheet, causing them to drown or succumb to hypothermia, while others were shot in the street.

The Hungarian government and news media condemned the raid, calling for an immediate investigation. In 1943, the Hungarians conducted a mass trial of those suspected of organizing the raid, handing down four death sentences. The four escaped to Germany before their executions. After the war, several trials were held in Hungary and Yugoslavia, resulting in the conviction and execution of a number of key organizers. The final court proceedings relating to the raid took place in 2011, when Sándor Képíró was tried and acquitted of murdering over 30 civilians in Novi Sad.

The raid has been fictionalized in literature and film in both Serbia and Hungary. The killings continue to strain relations between the two countries. In June 2013, Hungarian President János Áder formally apologized for the war crimes that the Hungarian military had committed against Serbian civilians during the war.

Background Edit

 
Map of the Hungarian occupied and annexed areas of Yugoslavia; Bačka (Bácska) is shown in green.

Germany, Italy and Hungary invaded Yugoslavia on 6 April 1941, in response to a coup d'état that deposed the country's regent, Paul, and hastened the ascent of his underage cousin, Peter to the throne.[1] The country was overrun in less than two weeks, occupied and partitioned among its neighbours.[2] The area that constitutes the present-day province of Vojvodina, in northern Serbia, was divided between Germany, Hungary and the Axis puppet state known as the Independent State of Croatia (Croatian: Nezavisna Država Hrvatska; NDH), which was established shortly after the invasion.[3] The Germans assumed direct control of the Banat, which became an autonomous district of the German-occupied territory of Serbia, primarily to satisfy the demands of the region's sizeable ethnic German (Volksdeutsche) population.[4] The Croatians occupied Syrmia and incorporated it into the NDH, stopping just short of Belgrade.[5] The Hungarians occupied Bačka, which had been a part of Hungary until the Treaty of Trianon of 1920, when it was incorporated into the newly formed Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (later Yugoslavia). A large number of Hungarians and ethnic Germans had remained in the areas despite the cession.[6] Hungarian-occupied Bačka consisted of that part of the former Danube Banovina once bounded by the Hungarian–Yugoslav border to the north, the Danube to the south and west, and the Tisza to the east.[7] The total area of Hungarian-occupied Bačka was 8,558 km2 (3,304 sq mi).[8]

The Hungarian occupational authorities resolved to "rebalance" the ethnic makeup of Bačka while the invasion was still underway. Within days of the invasion, Serb and Jewish homes were attacked and looted. On 14 April 1941, as many as 500 Serbs and Jews were killed, likely in accordance with previously assembled lists of people marked for death. Legislation was soon passed requiring that all non-Hungarians and non-Germans who had moved to the area after 1918 be deported.[9][a] The Hungarian occupational authorities expelled between 25,000 and 60,000 Serbs from Bačka, both colonists from the interwar period, as well as pre-World War I inhabitants.[11][12] They were first interned in concentration camps before being deported to the German-occupied territory of Serbia.[13] The Hungarians originally intended to expel as many as 150,000, but this plan was opposed by the German command in Belgrade, and subsequently fell through.[11][12] More than 15,000 Hungarian colonists later settled the area, moving into the homes of the Serbs that were forced out.[14]

A policy of "systematic magyarization" was implemented within the occupied territories.[13] "Less-desirable elements" of the population, such as Serbs, Croats and Jews, were discriminated against in matters of communication and education. Hungarian and German were the only languages permitted in almost all secondary schools, and Serbo-Croatian books, newspapers and periodicals were virtually banned.[15] Despite this, most Serbs and Croats that had lived in the Hungarian-occupied territories prior to 1918 retained their citizenship rights as Hungarians, and some lower-level non-Hungarian public employees retained their jobs.[12] On 14 December 1941, Bačka, along with the other Hungarian-occupied areas of Yugoslavia, referred to by Hungary as the "Recovered Southern Territories" (Hungarian: Délvidék),[16][17] were officially annexed and formally incorporated into Hungary.[11]

Prelude Edit

Initial resistance Edit

Small-scale armed resistance broke out in Bačka in the second half of 1941 and the Hungarian military reacted with heavy repressive measures.[18] More than 300 prisoners were executed in September 1941 alone.[19] Thousands of Serbs and Jews were detained in concentration camps that had been established in Ada, Bačka Topola, Begeč, Odžaci, Bečej, Subotica and Novi Sad, as well as at Pécs and Baja, in Hungary-proper.[9] The communist-led Partisan resistance movement of Josip Broz Tito was never strong in Bačka because the region's flat terrain did not lend itself to guerilla warfare, and because South Slavs, from whom the Partisans drew most of their recruits, made up only one third of the regional population.[18] By the end of 1941, the Partisans of Bačka had largely been destroyed, as had their regional committee.[20] The Chetniks, Serbian nationalist irregulars seeking to reinstate the Yugoslav monarchy, offered sporadic resistance during the invasion, but were largely inactive for much of the occupation, maintaining some covert activity only.[18]

Before the war, Bačka had been home to around 15,000 Jews.[21] This constituted more than one-fifth of Yugoslavia's pre-war Jewish population. Moreover, more than 90 percent of the Jews living in the Hungarian-occupied territories of Yugoslavia hailed from the region.[22] The Hungarian government had passed anti-Semitic laws in 1939, and following the outbreak of the war, these were applied in the occupied and annexed territories.[9] After the violence of the initial occupation, no further massacres of Jews occurred in Bačka for the remainder of 1941,[9] though the Jewish community was subjected to a string of discriminatory measures, such as the confiscation of property, arbitrary detention and forced labour.[21]

Escalation Edit

By early 1942, the Hungarian military estimated that there were no more than 110 Partisans operating in all of Vojvodina, though in reality, the true figure was closer to 40.[23] On 4 January 1942, several dozen Partisans from the Šajkaška Partisan detachment were found hiding at a farm near Žabalj. They were engaged by the Hungary military, and in the ensuing clash, 10 Hungarian soldiers and seven Partisans were killed.[24] The remaining Partisans were arrested and deported to German-occupied Serbia. The Hungarian General Staff seized on the incident, using it as a pretext for launching attacks throughout the region that were intended to deter non-Hungarians from joining the resistance.[23]

On 5 January, Ferenc Szombathelyi, the Chief of the Hungarian General Staff, ordered punitive raids against the Partisans of Bačka. The order coincided with German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop's visit to Budapest on 6 January. Several days later, Generalfeldmarschall (Field Marshall) Wilhelm Keitel, the chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces, arrived in Budapest requesting that the entire Royal Hungarian Army be moved to the Eastern Front. Hungarian Prime Minister László Bárdossy declined, and in order to justify this decision, sought to demonstrate that Hungarian troops were desperately needed in the occupied territories. The Hungarian General Staff requested that the occupational authorities provide proof of an imminent, large-scale Partisan revolt in Bačka to show the Germans.[23] Hungary's leaders may also have been motivated to pursue a harsh response to demonstrate that they were strong enough to deal with Serb resistance and Jewish "subversion", and thus convince Germany that Hungary was competent enough to control the Banat, which had been part of the country before World War I.[25] According to the Holocaust scholar Mark Levene, the raid "may well have been intended as a dread signal from Budapest that Hungarian rule over non-Hungarians in the Balkans ... would be every bit as brutal as that of ... other occupying powers, or, for that matter, as it had previously been in Hungarian-occupied Serbia during the Great War."[17] Accordingly, further guerrilla attacks were orchestrated by the occupational authorities in order to magnify the size of the Partisan resistance. Bandages were distributed to gendarmes, and they were instructed to wear them on their heads and hands to simulate the effects of being wounded. These events were staged primarily for public consumption.[26]

Timeline Edit

Killings commence Edit

More than 8,000 Hungarian soldiers, gendarmes and border guards participated in the raid.[23] It began in the town of Čurug on 6 January, with suspected Partisans, including women and children, being removed to barns, storage buildings, and municipal buildings. Although some suspects were released, between 500 and 1,000 people were killed and their bodies stripped of all valuables. The raid moved onto other local settlements such as Gospođinci and Titel the same day and continued the day after. Over the next three days, additional killings took place in the towns of Temerin and Žabalj.[27] Civilians were rounded up at random and taken from their homes and businesses during their workday and while they were engaged in regular activities, even weddings.[28]

Novi Sad massacre Edit

On 20 January, Novi Sad was completely surrounded and placed on curfew. Its telephone and telegraph lines were cut.[29] The city was divided into multiple areas of responsibility, with a different officer tasked with organizing the round-ups in each.[30] Placards sprang up on buildings, warning citizens against going outdoors, except to buy food. Ferenc Feketehalmy-Czeydner summoned the local authorities and announced that the Royal Hungary Army would "take charge and clean things up" over the next three days. The raid began the following day. Between 6,000 and 7,000 people that were considered "suspicious" were arrested and taken to have their papers examined.[31] Others were detained on account that they had no papers.[23] Most were released, but at least 40 were taken to the banks of the Danube and shot.[31]

"The massacre was conducted systematically," the historian Leni Yahil writes, "street by street."[26] Many of the soldiers were visibly intoxicated.[26][31] Survivor accounts, delivered after the war, attest to the brutality of the killings. A woman recalled how, on 23 April, a soldier entered her apartment, demanding to know her family's religious affiliation. The woman told him that she and her family were Orthodox Christians. Infuriated, the soldier called her a "stinking Serb" and killed her five sons.[32] Thousands of men, women and children were imprisoned and interrogated at the Sokolski Dom, one of the city's main cultural centres. Many died during their interrogation.[30]

Temperatures reached −29 °C (−20 °F).[26] Victims were brought to an area known as the Štrand, along the Danube, and shot with machine guns. Their killers then broke up the frozen river's ice sheets with artillery fire and tossed the bodies into the water. According to another account, the victims were forced to tread the ice sheets, which were then shattered by shelling from the shore, causing them to fall into the freezing water and drown.[33] The killings only ceased after four days, when the city's Lord Lieutenant, László Deák, bypassed the curfew and alerted the authorities in Budapest.[26][31] He returned with orders that the massacre was to come to an immediate halt. Feketehalmy-Czeydner ordered that all executions be stopped by 9:00 p.m. Deák's mother was among the victims.[31] "The randomness and senselessness of the operation were evident especially by the fact that it hit not one single functionary of the Yugoslav Communist Party," the historian Krisztián Ungváry writes.[23]

Aftermath Edit

In Stari Bečej, the occupational authorities staged another "rebellion" and followed it up with further mass arrests. Around 200 people were detained and taken to the banks of the Tisza, where they were shot and their bodies thrown into the river. When the ice thawed, the corpses of those killed in the raid floated down the Danube and the Tisza.[34] The Hungarian news media denounced the raid as unparalleled in the country's military history. The Hungarian government also condemned the killings, vowing that the perpetrators would be brought to justice.[25]

Casualties Edit

 
Map of places affected by the raid

In a contemporary correspondence, Hungary's Minister of the Interior, Ferenc Keresztes-Fischer, wrote that 3,755 people lost their lives in the raid.[25] The historian Rudolph Rummel places the number of deaths resulting from the raid at 3,200.[35] The Holocaust scholar Leni Yahil writes that 4,116 individuals were killed – 2,842 Serbs, 1,250 Jews, 13 Russians and 11 Hungarians.[26] The historian Zvonimir Golubović places the total number of civilians killed in the raid at 3,809.[28] This figure is accepted by the Holocaust scholar Yehuda Bauer.[36] The following table, composed by Golubović, lists the victims according to their gender, ethnicity and the place that they were killed:[28]

Place Total Men Women Children Elderly Serbs Jews Romani Rusyns Hungarians Russians
Bečej 215 111 72 13 19 102 110 - - - -
Vilovo 64 44 6 8 6 64 - - - - -
Gardinovci 37 32 3 - 2 37 - - - - -
Gospođinci 85 47 19 15 4 73 10 - 2 - -
Đurđevo 223 107 60 41 15 173 22 - 27 - -
Žabalj 666 355 141 101 69 614 28 23 - 1 -
Lok 47 46 - - 1 46 - - - 1 -
Mošorin 205 94 41 44 26 170 - 34 - 1 -
Novi Sad 1,246 489 415 165 177 375 809 - 2 18 15
Srbobran 3 3 - - - 2 2 - - - -
Temerin 48 14 15 7 12 6 42 - - - -
Titel 51 45 - 1 5 49 1 - - - -
Čurug 893 554 153 82 104 842 44 7 - - -
Šajkaš 26 24 2 - - 25 1 - - - -
All places 3,809 1,965 927 477 440 2,578 1,068 64 31 21 15

Legal proceedings Edit

In 1943, Hungarian leader Miklós Horthy ordered an investigation into the massacres and charges were brought against some of those that had conducted them.[37] Those charged fled to Nazi Germany and returned only after German forces occupied Hungary in 1944.[38] Horthy used the investigation as a method of distinguishing his regime from that of Nazi Germany.[39]

Some Serbian historians, such as Golubović and Aleksandar Veljić, have claimed that Horthy himself was aware of the raids and approved them being carried out.[28][40] Horthy was a witness at the Nuremberg Trials after World War II but, despite strong demands from Yugoslavia, the Americans and the Soviets favored dropping any charges.[41][42]

 
The monument to the victims of the raid in Novi Sad
 
Crna Ćuprija monument to the victims of the raid in Žabalj

After questions were raised in the Hungarian parliament the prime minister László Bárdossy sent a commission of inquiry to investigate. That investigation supported the story that the army had been battling partisans. A further investigation by Bárdossy's successor Miklós Kállay came to similar conclusions.[26]

In 1943, Hungary organized a trial of several officers who were among those responsible for the raids leading to four death sentences.[43] Four of those charged escaped to Germany before their sentencing.[38] After the war, some of the individuals responsible for the raids, including Feketehalmy-Czeydner, were tried again by the new communist government of Hungary (which sentenced them to death or to life in prison) and again in Yugoslavia, where they were sentenced to death again, and executed. Horthy who was, according to Yugoslav/Serbian historians, among those responsible for the raids, was never indicted or tried.[citation needed] In September 2006, Efraim Zuroff of the Wiesenthal Center made public copies of a 1944 court verdict finding Sándor Képíró and 14 other Hungarian Army and police officers of taking part in 1942 raid in Novi Sad. In 1948, the government of Hungary retried him in absentia and sentenced him to 14 years. This verdict was based upon the testimony of János Nagy, a former Hungarian soldier of Képíró's platoon. However, the testimony was given after the communist secret service tortured Nagy. Képíró, however, stated that as a police officer, his participation was limited merely to arresting civilians, and he did not take part in the executions or any other illegal activity.[44] War crimes charges were subsequently brought against Képíró in a federal court in Budapest, for murders of civilians committed under his command during the January 1942 raids. His trial on those charges commenced in May 2011.[45] Képíró was acquitted on all counts in July 2011. He died of natural causes two months later.[46]

Retribution and formal apologies Edit

Mass killings targeting Jews, such as those that occurred during the raid, were relatively uncommon in Hungary-proper and the occupied areas until October 1944, when the Germans assumed direct control of the country and the regions it had occupied, deporting hundreds of thousands of Jews to death camps.[47][48]

In June 2013, 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. Some days earlier 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.[49]

Legacy Edit

Of the massacres perpetrated by the Hungarian occupational authorities in Yugoslavia, the raid in southern Bačka remains the most infamous.[50] The killings have been referred to as the Novi Sad massacre,[51] the Újvidék massacre,[51][52] or simply The Raid (Serbo-Croatian: Racija).[53][54]

In its aftermath, the historian Deborah S. Cornelius writes, "relations between Hungary and Serbia have never been the same." Decades hence, the raid continues to feature prominently in the Hungarian popular imagination, more so than most events from the war.[54] It was depicted in Hungarian director András Kovács' 1966 film Cold Days (Hungarian: Hideg napok).[55][56] It features prominently in Yugoslav writer Danilo Kiš's 1962 novel Psalm 44 (Serbo-Croatian: Psalm 44) and his 1972 novel Hourglass (Serbo-Croatian: Peščanik).[57] The massacre held special significance for Kiš as his father was nearly killed during it.[58][59]

The Yugoslav writer Aleksandar Tišma, who narrowly escaped being rounded up and killed in the massacre, explored the topic in his 1972 novel The Book About Blam (Serbo-Croatian: Knjiga o Blamu).[60][61] It is also described in Tibor Cseres' 1991 book Blood Feud in Bačka (Hungarian: Vérbosszú Bácskában).[60]

In 1971, a commemorative statue by the sculptor Jovan Soldatović was erected in Novi Sad, on the spot where the bodies of victims were tossed into the Danube.[62] The inscription at the base of the statue reads:[33][63]

Sećanje je spomenik tvrđi od kamena.
Ako smo ljudi oprostiti moramo, zaboraviti ne smemo.

Memory is a monument harder than stone.
If we are human, we must forgive, but not forget

Similar statues, also created by Soldatović, exist in Žabalj and Čurug.[62] Commemorative ceremonies are held annually in Novi Sad and the other massacre sites.[64]

In 2022, the Serbian Orthodox Church canonized the Orthodox Christian victims of the raid along with the victims of other Axis crimes committed in Bačka between 1941 and 1942 as the "Holy Martyrs of Bačka".[65][66]

See also Edit

Endnotes Edit

  1. ^ Between 1918 and 1924, nearly 45,000 Hungarians had been deported to Hungary from the territories transferred to the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, and more than 10,000 South Slavic military settlers (Serbo-Croatian: Solunski dobrovoljci, lit. Salonika volunteers), mainly Serbs, were settled in the region.[10]

References Edit

  1. ^ Roberts 1973, p. 15.
  2. ^ Pavlowitch 2007, p. 49.
  3. ^ Tomasevich 2001, pp. 63–64.
  4. ^ Lemkin 2008, pp. 251–252.
  5. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 272.
  6. ^ Lemkin 2008, pp. 261–262.
  7. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 62.
  8. ^ Ungváry 2011, p. 70.
  9. ^ a b c d Mojzes 2011, p. 87.
  10. ^ Ungváry 2011, p. 75.
  11. ^ a b c Tomasevich 2001, p. 170.
  12. ^ a b c Pavlowitch 2007, p. 84.
  13. ^ a b Tomasevich 2001, p. 171.
  14. ^ Ramet 2006, p. 138.
  15. ^ Tomasevich 2001, pp. 170–171.
  16. ^ Lemkin 2008, p. 631.
  17. ^ a b Levene 2013, p. 179.
  18. ^ a b c Tomasevich 2001, pp. 172–173.
  19. ^ Ungváry 2011, p. 73.
  20. ^ Banac 1988, p. 107.
  21. ^ a b Byford 2011, p. 114.
  22. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 583.
  23. ^ a b c d e f Ungváry 2011, pp. 77–78.
  24. ^ Sajti 2003, pp. 347–349.
  25. ^ a b c Patai 1996, p. 550.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g Yahil 1991, p. 503.
  27. ^ Mojzes 2011, p. 88.
  28. ^ a b c d Golubović 1992, pp. 43–44, 147, 194.
  29. ^ Yahil 1991, p. 503; Cornelius 2011, p. 189; Ungváry 2011, pp. 77–78.
  30. ^ a b Zuroff 2009, p. 209.
  31. ^ a b c d e Cornelius 2011, p. 189.
  32. ^ Klajn 2007, p. 132.
  33. ^ a b Cymet 2010, p. 355.
  34. ^ Mojzes 2011, pp. 88–89.
  35. ^ Rummel 1998, p. 176.
  36. ^ Bauer 1996, p. 149.
  37. ^ Mazower 2008, p. 329.
  38. ^ a b Golubović 1992, p. 187.
  39. ^ Szinai, M. & L. Szücs (eds; 1965), The Confidential Papers of Admiral Horthy (1919-1944), Corvina Press, Budapest, pp. 269-672
  40. ^ Veljić, Aleksandar. Mikloš Horti - Nekažnjeni zločinac, Belgrade, 2009.
  41. ^ Thomas L. Sakmyster, Miha Tavcar Hungary, the Great Powers, and the Danubian Crisis, 1936-1939; ISBN 0820304697
  42. ^ Sakmyster, Thomas L. (1980). Miklós Horthy. University of Georgia Press. ISBN 978-3-902494-14-6.
  43. ^ Yahil 1991, p. 504.
  44. ^ Wood, Nicholas"Nazi hunters identify convicted war criminal", International Herald Tribune, 28 September 2006.
  45. ^ ""97-year-old Hungarian Sandor Kepiro on trial for Nazi war crimes"".
  46. ^ "Hungary Nazi war crimes suspect Sandor Kepiro dead". BBC News. 3 September 2011. Retrieved 30 April 2017.
  47. ^ Bloxham & Moses 2011, p. 109.
  48. ^ Byford 2013, pp. 520–521.
  49. ^ . Politics.hu. Archived from the original on 8 October 2013. Retrieved 2 September 2013.
  50. ^ Byford 2011, p. 520.
  51. ^ a b Patai 1996, p. 590.
  52. ^ Thomas & Szabo 2012, p. 14.
  53. ^ Mojzes 2011, p. 121.
  54. ^ a b Cornelius 2011, p. 191.
  55. ^ Burns 1996, p. 73.
  56. ^ Iordanova 2003, pp. 76–79.
  57. ^ Thompson 2013, pp. 3, 44–45.
  58. ^ Mazower 2008, pp. 329–330.
  59. ^ Thompson 2013, p. 3.
  60. ^ a b Neubauer 2006, p. 231.
  61. ^ Thompson 2013, p. 80, note 25.
  62. ^ a b "Napukao spomenik žrtvama Novosadske racije". Radio Televizija Vojvodine. 3 April 2013. Retrieved 27 April 2017.
  63. ^ Mojzes 2011, p. 52.
  64. ^ Byford 2013, p. 525.
  65. ^ Serbian Orthodox Church 2 October 2022.
  66. ^ "New saints canonized by Serbian Church with hierarchs from 6 Local Churches". OrthoChristian.Com. Retrieved 2023-03-25.

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  • Tomasevich, Jozo (2001). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-3615-2.
  • Ungváry, Krisztián (2011). "Vojvodina under Hungarian Rule". In Ramet, Sabrina P.; Listhaug, Ola (eds.). Serbia and the Serbs in World War Two. London, England: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 70–89. ISBN 978-0-230-27830-1.
  • Yahil, Leni (1991). The Holocaust: The Fate of European Jewry, 1932–1945. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19504-523-9.
  • Zuroff, Efraim (2009). Operation Last Chance: One Man's Quest to Bring Nazi Criminals to Justice. New York, New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-23010-138-8.

Further reading Edit

  • Zvonimir Golubović, Racija 1942, Enciklopedija Novog Sada, knjiga 23, Novi Sad, 2004.
  • Aleksandar Veljić, Racija - Zaboravljen genocid, Beograd, 2007.
  • Aleksandar Veljić, Istina o Novosadskoj raciji, Sremska Kamenica, 2010.
  • Aleksandar Veljić, Mikloš Horti - Nekažnjeni zločinac, Beograd, 2009.
  • Jovan Pejin, Velikomađarski kapric, Zrenjanin, 2007.
  • Dimitrije Boarov, Politička istorija Vojvodine, Novi Sad, 2001.
  • Đorđe M. Srbulović, Kratka istorija Novog Sada, Novi Sad, 2011.
  • Peter Rokai - Zoltan Đere - Tibor Pal - Aleksandar Kasaš, Istorija Mađara, Beograd, 2002.
  • Enike A. Šajti, Mađari u Vojvodini 1918-1947, Novi Sad, 2010.

External links Edit

  • Godišnjica Novosadske racije (Commemoration dedicated to the raid victims) in Serbian); accessed 9 November 2015.
  • Partial list of victims of the raid in Novi Sad, in the area that was under command of Sandor Kepiro (in Serbian); accessed 9 November 2015.
  •   Media related to 1942 raid in southern Bačka at Wikimedia Commons

novi, raid, also, known, raid, southern, bačka, novi, massacre, Újvidék, massacre, simply, raid, serbo, croatian, Рација, racija, military, operation, carried, királyi, honvédség, armed, forces, hungary, during, world, after, hungarian, occupation, annexation,. The Novi Sad raid also known as the Raid in southern Backa the Novi Sad massacre the Ujvidek massacre or simply The Raid Serbo Croatian Raciјa Racija was a military operation carried out by the Kiralyi Honvedseg the armed forces of Hungary during World War II after the Hungarian occupation and annexation of former Yugoslav territories It resulted in the deaths of 3 000 4 000 civilians in the southern Backa Bacska region Novi Sad RaidPart of World War II in YugoslaviaCorpses of killed civilians in the barracks in Novi Sad Futoska Street January 1942 LocationSouthern Backa Hungarian occupation of Yugoslav territories Serbia Date4 29 January 1942TargetPredominantly Serb and Jewish civiliansAttack typeMass murder summary executionsDeaths3 000 4 000PerpetratorsRoyal Hungarian ArmyThe Hungarian occupational authorities began raiding towns and villages in southern Backa as early as 4 January 1942 ostensibly as a means of suppressing Partisan resistance though the historical record shows that the Hungarian Government was attempting to improve its geopolitical standing vis a vis Germany The first town to be raided was Curug followed by Gospođinci Titel Temerin Đurđevo and Zabalj The victims were seemingly detained at random while conducting everyday activities On 20 January the city of Novi Sad Hungarian Ujvidek was surrounded and placed on curfew its telephone lines were cut Over the next several days the occupational authorities went about arresting suspicious individuals More than 1 000 of the city s residents were killed by the time the raid ended The victims in both Novi Sad and the wider region were mostly Serbs and Jews though several Romani Rusyns Russians and Hungarians were killed as well In Novi Sad victims were forced to march across the frozen Danube only to perish when the ice sheet was shattered by shelling from the shore Some were pushed into holes in the ice sheet causing them to drown or succumb to hypothermia while others were shot in the street The Hungarian government and news media condemned the raid calling for an immediate investigation In 1943 the Hungarians conducted a mass trial of those suspected of organizing the raid handing down four death sentences The four escaped to Germany before their executions After the war several trials were held in Hungary and Yugoslavia resulting in the conviction and execution of a number of key organizers The final court proceedings relating to the raid took place in 2011 when Sandor Kepiro was tried and acquitted of murdering over 30 civilians in Novi Sad The raid has been fictionalized in literature and film in both Serbia and Hungary The killings continue to strain relations between the two countries In June 2013 Hungarian President Janos Ader formally apologized for the war crimes that the Hungarian military had committed against Serbian civilians during the war Contents 1 Background 2 Prelude 2 1 Initial resistance 2 2 Escalation 3 Timeline 3 1 Killings commence 3 2 Novi Sad massacre 4 Aftermath 4 1 Casualties 4 2 Legal proceedings 4 3 Retribution and formal apologies 5 Legacy 6 See also 7 Endnotes 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksBackground Edit Map of the Hungarian occupied and annexed areas of Yugoslavia Backa Bacska is shown in green Germany Italy and Hungary invaded Yugoslavia on 6 April 1941 in response to a coup d etat that deposed the country s regent Paul and hastened the ascent of his underage cousin Peter to the throne 1 The country was overrun in less than two weeks occupied and partitioned among its neighbours 2 The area that constitutes the present day province of Vojvodina in northern Serbia was divided between Germany Hungary and the Axis puppet state known as the Independent State of Croatia Croatian Nezavisna Drzava Hrvatska NDH which was established shortly after the invasion 3 The Germans assumed direct control of the Banat which became an autonomous district of the German occupied territory of Serbia primarily to satisfy the demands of the region s sizeable ethnic German Volksdeutsche population 4 The Croatians occupied Syrmia and incorporated it into the NDH stopping just short of Belgrade 5 The Hungarians occupied Backa which had been a part of Hungary until the Treaty of Trianon of 1920 when it was incorporated into the newly formed Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes later Yugoslavia A large number of Hungarians and ethnic Germans had remained in the areas despite the cession 6 Hungarian occupied Backa consisted of that part of the former Danube Banovina once bounded by the Hungarian Yugoslav border to the north the Danube to the south and west and the Tisza to the east 7 The total area of Hungarian occupied Backa was 8 558 km2 3 304 sq mi 8 The Hungarian occupational authorities resolved to rebalance the ethnic makeup of Backa while the invasion was still underway Within days of the invasion Serb and Jewish homes were attacked and looted On 14 April 1941 as many as 500 Serbs and Jews were killed likely in accordance with previously assembled lists of people marked for death Legislation was soon passed requiring that all non Hungarians and non Germans who had moved to the area after 1918 be deported 9 a The Hungarian occupational authorities expelled between 25 000 and 60 000 Serbs from Backa both colonists from the interwar period as well as pre World War I inhabitants 11 12 They were first interned in concentration camps before being deported to the German occupied territory of Serbia 13 The Hungarians originally intended to expel as many as 150 000 but this plan was opposed by the German command in Belgrade and subsequently fell through 11 12 More than 15 000 Hungarian colonists later settled the area moving into the homes of the Serbs that were forced out 14 A policy of systematic magyarization was implemented within the occupied territories 13 Less desirable elements of the population such as Serbs Croats and Jews were discriminated against in matters of communication and education Hungarian and German were the only languages permitted in almost all secondary schools and Serbo Croatian books newspapers and periodicals were virtually banned 15 Despite this most Serbs and Croats that had lived in the Hungarian occupied territories prior to 1918 retained their citizenship rights as Hungarians and some lower level non Hungarian public employees retained their jobs 12 On 14 December 1941 Backa along with the other Hungarian occupied areas of Yugoslavia referred to by Hungary as the Recovered Southern Territories Hungarian Delvidek 16 17 were officially annexed and formally incorporated into Hungary 11 Prelude EditInitial resistance Edit Small scale armed resistance broke out in Backa in the second half of 1941 and the Hungarian military reacted with heavy repressive measures 18 More than 300 prisoners were executed in September 1941 alone 19 Thousands of Serbs and Jews were detained in concentration camps that had been established in Ada Backa Topola Begec Odzaci Becej Subotica and Novi Sad as well as at Pecs and Baja in Hungary proper 9 The communist led Partisan resistance movement of Josip Broz Tito was never strong in Backa because the region s flat terrain did not lend itself to guerilla warfare and because South Slavs from whom the Partisans drew most of their recruits made up only one third of the regional population 18 By the end of 1941 the Partisans of Backa had largely been destroyed as had their regional committee 20 The Chetniks Serbian nationalist irregulars seeking to reinstate the Yugoslav monarchy offered sporadic resistance during the invasion but were largely inactive for much of the occupation maintaining some covert activity only 18 Before the war Backa had been home to around 15 000 Jews 21 This constituted more than one fifth of Yugoslavia s pre war Jewish population Moreover more than 90 percent of the Jews living in the Hungarian occupied territories of Yugoslavia hailed from the region 22 The Hungarian government had passed anti Semitic laws in 1939 and following the outbreak of the war these were applied in the occupied and annexed territories 9 After the violence of the initial occupation no further massacres of Jews occurred in Backa for the remainder of 1941 9 though the Jewish community was subjected to a string of discriminatory measures such as the confiscation of property arbitrary detention and forced labour 21 Escalation Edit By early 1942 the Hungarian military estimated that there were no more than 110 Partisans operating in all of Vojvodina though in reality the true figure was closer to 40 23 On 4 January 1942 several dozen Partisans from the Sajkaska Partisan detachment were found hiding at a farm near Zabalj They were engaged by the Hungary military and in the ensuing clash 10 Hungarian soldiers and seven Partisans were killed 24 The remaining Partisans were arrested and deported to German occupied Serbia The Hungarian General Staff seized on the incident using it as a pretext for launching attacks throughout the region that were intended to deter non Hungarians from joining the resistance 23 On 5 January Ferenc Szombathelyi the Chief of the Hungarian General Staff ordered punitive raids against the Partisans of Backa The order coincided with German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop s visit to Budapest on 6 January Several days later Generalfeldmarschall Field Marshall Wilhelm Keitel the chief of the Supreme Command of the Armed Forces arrived in Budapest requesting that the entire Royal Hungarian Army be moved to the Eastern Front Hungarian Prime Minister Laszlo Bardossy declined and in order to justify this decision sought to demonstrate that Hungarian troops were desperately needed in the occupied territories The Hungarian General Staff requested that the occupational authorities provide proof of an imminent large scale Partisan revolt in Backa to show the Germans 23 Hungary s leaders may also have been motivated to pursue a harsh response to demonstrate that they were strong enough to deal with Serb resistance and Jewish subversion and thus convince Germany that Hungary was competent enough to control the Banat which had been part of the country before World War I 25 According to the Holocaust scholar Mark Levene the raid may well have been intended as a dread signal from Budapest that Hungarian rule over non Hungarians in the Balkans would be every bit as brutal as that of other occupying powers or for that matter as it had previously been in Hungarian occupied Serbia during the Great War 17 Accordingly further guerrilla attacks were orchestrated by the occupational authorities in order to magnify the size of the Partisan resistance Bandages were distributed to gendarmes and they were instructed to wear them on their heads and hands to simulate the effects of being wounded These events were staged primarily for public consumption 26 Timeline EditKillings commence Edit More than 8 000 Hungarian soldiers gendarmes and border guards participated in the raid 23 It began in the town of Curug on 6 January with suspected Partisans including women and children being removed to barns storage buildings and municipal buildings Although some suspects were released between 500 and 1 000 people were killed and their bodies stripped of all valuables The raid moved onto other local settlements such as Gospođinci and Titel the same day and continued the day after Over the next three days additional killings took place in the towns of Temerin and Zabalj 27 Civilians were rounded up at random and taken from their homes and businesses during their workday and while they were engaged in regular activities even weddings 28 Novi Sad massacre Edit On 20 January Novi Sad was completely surrounded and placed on curfew Its telephone and telegraph lines were cut 29 The city was divided into multiple areas of responsibility with a different officer tasked with organizing the round ups in each 30 Placards sprang up on buildings warning citizens against going outdoors except to buy food Ferenc Feketehalmy Czeydner summoned the local authorities and announced that the Royal Hungary Army would take charge and clean things up over the next three days The raid began the following day Between 6 000 and 7 000 people that were considered suspicious were arrested and taken to have their papers examined 31 Others were detained on account that they had no papers 23 Most were released but at least 40 were taken to the banks of the Danube and shot 31 The massacre was conducted systematically the historian Leni Yahil writes street by street 26 Many of the soldiers were visibly intoxicated 26 31 Survivor accounts delivered after the war attest to the brutality of the killings A woman recalled how on 23 April a soldier entered her apartment demanding to know her family s religious affiliation The woman told him that she and her family were Orthodox Christians Infuriated the soldier called her a stinking Serb and killed her five sons 32 Thousands of men women and children were imprisoned and interrogated at the Sokolski Dom one of the city s main cultural centres Many died during their interrogation 30 Temperatures reached 29 C 20 F 26 Victims were brought to an area known as the Strand along the Danube and shot with machine guns Their killers then broke up the frozen river s ice sheets with artillery fire and tossed the bodies into the water According to another account the victims were forced to tread the ice sheets which were then shattered by shelling from the shore causing them to fall into the freezing water and drown 33 The killings only ceased after four days when the city s Lord Lieutenant Laszlo Deak bypassed the curfew and alerted the authorities in Budapest 26 31 He returned with orders that the massacre was to come to an immediate halt Feketehalmy Czeydner ordered that all executions be stopped by 9 00 p m Deak s mother was among the victims 31 The randomness and senselessness of the operation were evident especially by the fact that it hit not one single functionary of the Yugoslav Communist Party the historian Krisztian Ungvary writes 23 Aftermath EditIn Stari Becej the occupational authorities staged another rebellion and followed it up with further mass arrests Around 200 people were detained and taken to the banks of the Tisza where they were shot and their bodies thrown into the river When the ice thawed the corpses of those killed in the raid floated down the Danube and the Tisza 34 The Hungarian news media denounced the raid as unparalleled in the country s military history The Hungarian government also condemned the killings vowing that the perpetrators would be brought to justice 25 Casualties Edit Map of places affected by the raidIn a contemporary correspondence Hungary s Minister of the Interior Ferenc Keresztes Fischer wrote that 3 755 people lost their lives in the raid 25 The historian Rudolph Rummel places the number of deaths resulting from the raid at 3 200 35 The Holocaust scholar Leni Yahil writes that 4 116 individuals were killed 2 842 Serbs 1 250 Jews 13 Russians and 11 Hungarians 26 The historian Zvonimir Golubovic places the total number of civilians killed in the raid at 3 809 28 This figure is accepted by the Holocaust scholar Yehuda Bauer 36 The following table composed by Golubovic lists the victims according to their gender ethnicity and the place that they were killed 28 Place Total Men Women Children Elderly Serbs Jews Romani Rusyns Hungarians RussiansBecej 215 111 72 13 19 102 110 Vilovo 64 44 6 8 6 64 Gardinovci 37 32 3 2 37 Gospođinci 85 47 19 15 4 73 10 2 Đurđevo 223 107 60 41 15 173 22 27 Zabalj 666 355 141 101 69 614 28 23 1 Lok 47 46 1 46 1 Mosorin 205 94 41 44 26 170 34 1 Novi Sad 1 246 489 415 165 177 375 809 2 18 15Srbobran 3 3 2 2 Temerin 48 14 15 7 12 6 42 Titel 51 45 1 5 49 1 Curug 893 554 153 82 104 842 44 7 Sajkas 26 24 2 25 1 All places 3 809 1 965 927 477 440 2 578 1 068 64 31 21 15Legal proceedings Edit In 1943 Hungarian leader Miklos Horthy ordered an investigation into the massacres and charges were brought against some of those that had conducted them 37 Those charged fled to Nazi Germany and returned only after German forces occupied Hungary in 1944 38 Horthy used the investigation as a method of distinguishing his regime from that of Nazi Germany 39 Some Serbian historians such as Golubovic and Aleksandar Veljic have claimed that Horthy himself was aware of the raids and approved them being carried out 28 40 Horthy was a witness at the Nuremberg Trials after World War II but despite strong demands from Yugoslavia the Americans and the Soviets favored dropping any charges 41 42 The monument to the victims of the raid in Novi Sad Crna Cuprija monument to the victims of the raid in ZabaljAfter questions were raised in the Hungarian parliament the prime minister Laszlo Bardossy sent a commission of inquiry to investigate That investigation supported the story that the army had been battling partisans A further investigation by Bardossy s successor Miklos Kallay came to similar conclusions 26 In 1943 Hungary organized a trial of several officers who were among those responsible for the raids leading to four death sentences 43 Four of those charged escaped to Germany before their sentencing 38 After the war some of the individuals responsible for the raids including Feketehalmy Czeydner were tried again by the new communist government of Hungary which sentenced them to death or to life in prison and again in Yugoslavia where they were sentenced to death again and executed Horthy who was according to Yugoslav Serbian historians among those responsible for the raids was never indicted or tried citation needed In September 2006 Efraim Zuroff of the Wiesenthal Center made public copies of a 1944 court verdict finding Sandor Kepiro and 14 other Hungarian Army and police officers of taking part in 1942 raid in Novi Sad In 1948 the government of Hungary retried him in absentia and sentenced him to 14 years This verdict was based upon the testimony of Janos Nagy a former Hungarian soldier of Kepiro s platoon However the testimony was given after the communist secret service tortured Nagy Kepiro however stated that as a police officer his participation was limited merely to arresting civilians and he did not take part in the executions or any other illegal activity 44 War crimes charges were subsequently brought against Kepiro in a federal court in Budapest for murders of civilians committed under his command during the January 1942 raids His trial on those charges commenced in May 2011 45 Kepiro was acquitted on all counts in July 2011 He died of natural causes two months later 46 Retribution and formal apologies Edit Mass killings targeting Jews such as those that occurred during the raid were relatively uncommon in Hungary proper and the occupied areas until October 1944 when the Germans assumed direct control of the country and the regions it had occupied deporting hundreds of thousands of Jews to death camps 47 48 In June 2013 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 Some days earlier 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 49 Legacy EditOf the massacres perpetrated by the Hungarian occupational authorities in Yugoslavia the raid in southern Backa remains the most infamous 50 The killings have been referred to as the Novi Sad massacre 51 the Ujvidek massacre 51 52 or simply The Raid Serbo Croatian Racija 53 54 In its aftermath the historian Deborah S Cornelius writes relations between Hungary and Serbia have never been the same Decades hence the raid continues to feature prominently in the Hungarian popular imagination more so than most events from the war 54 It was depicted in Hungarian director Andras Kovacs 1966 film Cold Days Hungarian Hideg napok 55 56 It features prominently in Yugoslav writer Danilo Kis s 1962 novel Psalm 44 Serbo Croatian Psalm 44 and his 1972 novel Hourglass Serbo Croatian Pescanik 57 The massacre held special significance for Kis as his father was nearly killed during it 58 59 The Yugoslav writer Aleksandar Tisma who narrowly escaped being rounded up and killed in the massacre explored the topic in his 1972 novel The Book About Blam Serbo Croatian Knjiga o Blamu 60 61 It is also described in Tibor Cseres 1991 book Blood Feud in Backa Hungarian Verbosszu Bacskaban 60 In 1971 a commemorative statue by the sculptor Jovan Soldatovic was erected in Novi Sad on the spot where the bodies of victims were tossed into the Danube 62 The inscription at the base of the statue reads 33 63 Secanje je spomenik tvrđi od kamena Ako smo ljudi oprostiti moramo zaboraviti ne smemo Memory is a monument harder than stone If we are human we must forgive but not forgetSimilar statues also created by Soldatovic exist in Zabalj and Curug 62 Commemorative ceremonies are held annually in Novi Sad and the other massacre sites 64 In 2022 the Serbian Orthodox Church canonized the Orthodox Christian victims of the raid along with the victims of other Axis crimes committed in Backa between 1941 and 1942 as the Holy Martyrs of Backa 65 66 See also EditGreater Hungary political concept Endnotes Edit Between 1918 and 1924 nearly 45 000 Hungarians had been deported to Hungary from the territories transferred to the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes and more than 10 000 South Slavic military settlers Serbo Croatian Solunski dobrovoljci lit Salonika volunteers mainly Serbs were settled in the region 10 References Edit Roberts 1973 p 15 Pavlowitch 2007 p 49 Tomasevich 2001 pp 63 64 Lemkin 2008 pp 251 252 Tomasevich 2001 p 272 Lemkin 2008 pp 261 262 Tomasevich 2001 p 62 Ungvary 2011 p 70 a b c d Mojzes 2011 p 87 Ungvary 2011 p 75 a b c Tomasevich 2001 p 170 a b c Pavlowitch 2007 p 84 a b Tomasevich 2001 p 171 Ramet 2006 p 138 Tomasevich 2001 pp 170 171 Lemkin 2008 p 631 a b Levene 2013 p 179 a b c Tomasevich 2001 pp 172 173 Ungvary 2011 p 73 Banac 1988 p 107 a b Byford 2011 p 114 Tomasevich 2001 p 583 a b c d e f Ungvary 2011 pp 77 78 Sajti 2003 pp 347 349 a b c Patai 1996 p 550 a b c d e f g Yahil 1991 p 503 Mojzes 2011 p 88 a b c d Golubovic 1992 pp 43 44 147 194 Yahil 1991 p 503 Cornelius 2011 p 189 Ungvary 2011 pp 77 78 a b Zuroff 2009 p 209 a b c d e Cornelius 2011 p 189 Klajn 2007 p 132 a b Cymet 2010 p 355 Mojzes 2011 pp 88 89 Rummel 1998 p 176 sfn error no target CITEREFRummel1998 help Bauer 1996 p 149 Mazower 2008 p 329 a b Golubovic 1992 p 187 Szinai M amp L Szucs eds 1965 The Confidential Papers of Admiral Horthy 1919 1944 Corvina Press Budapest pp 269 672 Veljic Aleksandar Miklos Horti Nekaznjeni zlocinac Belgrade 2009 Thomas L Sakmyster Miha Tavcar Hungary the Great Powers and the Danubian Crisis 1936 1939 ISBN 0820304697 Sakmyster Thomas L 1980 Miklos Horthy University of Georgia Press ISBN 978 3 902494 14 6 Yahil 1991 p 504 Wood Nicholas Nazi hunters identify convicted war criminal International Herald Tribune 28 September 2006 97 year old Hungarian Sandor Kepiro on trial for Nazi war crimes Hungary Nazi war crimes suspect Sandor Kepiro dead BBC News 3 September 2011 Retrieved 30 April 2017 Bloxham amp Moses 2011 p 109 Byford 2013 pp 520 521 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 Byford 2011 p 520 a b Patai 1996 p 590 Thomas amp Szabo 2012 p 14 Mojzes 2011 p 121 a b Cornelius 2011 p 191 Burns 1996 p 73 Iordanova 2003 pp 76 79 Thompson 2013 pp 3 44 45 Mazower 2008 pp 329 330 Thompson 2013 p 3 a b Neubauer 2006 p 231 Thompson 2013 p 80 note 25 a b Napukao spomenik zrtvama Novosadske racije Radio Televizija Vojvodine 3 April 2013 Retrieved 27 April 2017 Mojzes 2011 p 52 Byford 2013 p 525 Serbian Orthodox Church 2 October 2022 sfn error no target CITEREFSerbian Orthodox Church 2 October 2022 help New saints canonized by Serbian Church with hierarchs from 6 Local Churches OrthoChristian Com Retrieved 2023 03 25 Bibliography EditBanac Ivo 1988 The National Question in Yugoslavia Origins History Politics Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 9493 2 Bauer Yehuda 1996 Jews for Sale Nazi Jewish Negotiations 1933 1945 New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 3000 6852 8 Bloxham Donald Moses A Dirk 2011 Genocide and Ethnic Cleansing In Bloxham Donald Gerwarth Robert eds Political Violence in Twentieth Century Europe Cambridge England Cambridge University Press pp 87 139 ISBN 978 1 13950 129 3 Burns Bryan 1996 World Cinema Hungary Teaneck New Jersey Fairleigh Dickinson University Press ISBN 978 0 83863 722 7 Byford Jovan 2011 The Collaborationist Administration and the Treatment of the Jews in German Occupied Serbia In Ramet Sabrina P Listhaug Ola eds Serbia and the Serbs in World War Two London England Palgrave Macmillan pp 109 127 ISBN 978 0 230 27830 1 Byford Jovan 2013 Himka John Paul Michlic Joanna Beata eds Bringing the Dark Past to Light The Reception of the Holocaust in Postcommunist Europe Lincoln Nebraska Nebraska University Press pp 516 548 ISBN 978 0 8032 4647 8 Cornelius Deborah S 2011 Hungary in World War II Caught in the Cauldron New York New York Fordham University Press ISBN 978 0 82323 773 9 Cymet David 2010 History vs Apologetics The Holocaust the Third Reich and the Catholic Church Lanham Maryland Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 73913 293 7 Golubovic Zvonimir 1992 Racija u Juznoj Backoj 1942 godine The Raid in Southern Backa in 1942 in Serbo Croatian Novi Sad Yugoslavia Istorijski muzej Vojvodine ISBN 978 8 68207 701 5 Iordanova Dina 2003 Cinema of the Other Europe The Industry and Artistry of East Central European Film London England Wallflower Press ISBN 978 1 90336 461 1 Klajn Lajco 2007 The Past in Present Times The Yugoslav Saga Lanham Maryland University Press of America ISBN 978 0 7618 3647 6 Lemkin Raphael 2008 Axis Rule in Occupied Europe Clark New Jersey The Lawbook Exchange ISBN 978 1 58477 901 8 Levene Mark 2013 Annihilation The European Rimlands 1939 1953 The Crisis of Genocide Vol 2 Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 150555 3 Mazower Mark 2008 Hitler s Empire Nazi Rule in Occupied Europe London England Allen Lane ISBN 978 0 7139 9681 4 Mojzes Paul 2011 Balkan Genocides Holocaust and Ethnic Cleansing in the 20th Century Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 0665 6 Neubauer John 2006 Upstream and Downstream the Danube In Cornis Pope Marcel Neubauer John eds Junctures and Disjunctures in the 19th and 20th centuries History of the Literary Cultures of East Central Europe Vol 2 Philadelphia Pennsylvania John Benjamins Publishing pp 224 231 ISBN 978 9 02729 340 4 Patai Raphael 1996 The Jews of Hungary History Culture Psychology Detroit Michigan Wayne State University Press ISBN 978 0 81432 561 2 Pavlowitch Stevan K 2007 Hitler s New Disorder The Second World War in Yugoslavia New York New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 1 85065 895 5 Ramet Sabrina P 2006 The Three Yugoslavias State Building and Legitimation 1918 2005 Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 34656 8 Roberts Walter R 1973 Tito Mihailovic and the Allies 1941 1945 Durham North Carolina Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 0773 0 Sajti Eniko A 2003 Hungarians in the Voivodina 1918 1947 Boulder Colorado Social Science Monographs ISBN 978 0 88033 522 5 Thomas Nigel Szabo Laszlo 2012 The Royal Hungarian Army in World War II Oxford England Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84603 795 5 Thompson Mark 2013 Birth Certificate The Story of Danilo Kis Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 4888 1 Tomasevich Jozo 2001 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Occupation and Collaboration Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 3615 2 Ungvary Krisztian 2011 Vojvodina under Hungarian Rule In Ramet Sabrina P Listhaug Ola eds Serbia and the Serbs in World War Two London England Palgrave Macmillan pp 70 89 ISBN 978 0 230 27830 1 Yahil Leni 1991 The Holocaust The Fate of European Jewry 1932 1945 Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19504 523 9 Zuroff Efraim 2009 Operation Last Chance One Man s Quest to Bring Nazi Criminals to Justice New York New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 23010 138 8 Further reading EditZvonimir Golubovic Racija 1942 Enciklopedija Novog Sada knjiga 23 Novi Sad 2004 Aleksandar Veljic Racija Zaboravljen genocid Beograd 2007 Aleksandar Veljic Istina o Novosadskoj raciji Sremska Kamenica 2010 Aleksandar Veljic Miklos Horti Nekaznjeni zlocinac Beograd 2009 Jovan Pejin Velikomađarski kapric Zrenjanin 2007 Dimitrije Boarov Politicka istorija Vojvodine Novi Sad 2001 Đorđe M Srbulovic Kratka istorija Novog Sada Novi Sad 2011 Peter Rokai Zoltan Đere Tibor Pal Aleksandar Kasas Istorija Mađara Beograd 2002 Enike A Sajti Mađari u Vojvodini 1918 1947 Novi Sad 2010 External links EditGodisnjica Novosadske racije Commemoration dedicated to the raid victims in Serbian accessed 9 November 2015 Partial list of victims of the raid in Novi Sad in the area that was under command of Sandor Kepiro in Serbian accessed 9 November 2015 Media related to 1942 raid in southern Backa at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Novi Sad raid amp oldid 1161914969, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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