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The Holocaust in Hungary

The Holocaust in Hungary was the dispossession, deportation, and systematic murder of more than half of the Hungarian Jews, primarily after the German occupation of Hungary in March 1944.

The Holocaust in Hungary
Europe in 1942
LocationHungary
Date
  • April 1944 – 13 February 1945
  • (mainly 15 May – 9 July 1944)
PerpetratorsKingdom of Hungary, Nazi Germany, Adolf Eichmann, László Ferenczy, Arrow Cross Party
CampAuschwitz concentration camp
GhettoBudapest ghetto
Victims
  • 564,000 dead (1941–1945)
  • incl. over 434,000 (15 May–9 July 1944)
MemorialsShoes on the Danube Bank

At the time of the German invasion, Hungary had a Jewish population of 825,000,[1] the largest remaining in Europe,[2] further swollen by Jews escaping from elsewhere to the relative safety of that country. The Hungarian Prime Minister Miklós Kállay had been reluctant to deport them.[3] Fearing Hungary was trying to pursue peace with the Allies, Adolf Hitler ordered the invasion.[4] New restrictions against Jews were imposed soon after Germany occupied Hungary on 19 March 1944. The invading troops included a Sonderkommando led by SS officer Adolf Eichmann, who arrived in Budapest to supervise the deportation of the country's Jews to the Auschwitz concentration camp in occupied Poland. Between 15 May and 9 July 1944, over 434,000 Jews were deported on 147 trains,[5] most of them to Auschwitz, where about 80 percent were gassed on arrival.[6] The quick progress of the deportations was enabled by close cooperation between the Hungarian and German authorities.[7]

Diplomatic pressure and the Allied bombing of Budapest persuaded Miklós Horthy, the Regent of Hungary, to order a halt to the deportations on 6 July.[8] By the time they had stopped three days later, almost the entire community of Jews in the Hungarian countryside had gone.[a]

The mass deportation of Hungarian Jews was the largest Holocaust killing after 1942.[10] It took place as World War II appeared to be drawing to a close — and world leaders had known for some time that Jews were being murdered in gas chambers.[11] The expropriation of Jewish property was useful to achieve Hungarian economic goals and sending the Jews as forced laborers avoided the need to send non-Jewish Hungarians.[12] Those who survived the selection were forced to provide construction and manufacturing labor as part of a last-ditch effort to increase the production of fighter aircraft.[13]

Jews in Hungary edit

In the 1941 census, the population of Hungary was 14,683,323. Of these, 725,005 regarded themselves as Jews (4.94 percent) and another 100,000 were Jewish by descent who identified as Christian. Over 400,000 lived in post-Trianon Hungary and another 324,000 lived in territories acquired by Hungary since 1938: Northern Transylvania from Romania (164,000), part of Upper Hungary from Czechoslovakia (146,000), Carpathian Ruthenia (78,000), and Bácska and other areas that had been part of Yugoslavia (14,000).[1]

Budapest Provinces Total Acquired
territories
Total Source
Jews 184,453 216,528 400,981 324,026 725,007 [14]
Jewish Christians 62,350 27,290 89,640 10,360 100,000 [14]
Total 246,803 243,818 490,621 334,386 825,007 [14]

Anti-Jewish laws edit

Labor battalions edit

German occupation edit

Invasion edit

 
Adolf Eichmann

On 18 March 1944, Adolf Hitler summoned Horthy to a conference in Austria, where he demanded greater acquiescence from Hungary. Horthy resisted, but his efforts were fruitless. While he was at the conference, German tanks rolled into Budapest, and on 23 March the government of Döme Sztójay was installed. Among his first moves, Sztójay legalized the Arrow Cross Party, which quickly began organizing. During the four days' interregnum following the German occupation, the Ministry of the Interior was placed in the hands of László Endre and László Baky, right-wing politicians known for their hostility to Jews. Their boss, Andor Jaross, was another committed antisemite.[citation needed]

Adolf Eichmann edit

SS-Obersturmbannführer Adolf Eichmann, sent to Hungary to supervise the deportations, set up his staff in the Majestic Hotel in Budapest. The Yellow Star and ghettoization laws, and the deportations, were accomplished in less than eight weeks, with the enthusiastic help of the Hungarian authorities, particularly the gendarmerie (csendőrség). The plan was to use 45 cattle cars per train, four trains a day, to deport 12,000 Jews from the countryside every day, starting in mid-May; this was to be followed by the deportation of Jews from Budapest from about 15 July.[citation needed] Rudolf Höss, the first commandant of Auschwitz, returned to the camp between 8 May and 29 July 1944 as the local SS garrison commander to oversee the Hungarian Jews' arrival and gassing.[15] As a result, the Germans called the murders Aktion Höss ("Operation Höss").[16]

 
1944 special work ID issued by the SD to a Jewish woman in occupied Budapest.

Deportation to Auschwitz edit

First transports edit

The first train left Budapest on 29 April 1944 carrying 1,800 men and women aged 16–50 who were deemed fit to work. A second train left Topolya on 30 April carrying 2,000. The transports went through "selection"; 616 women (serial numbers 76385–76459 and 80000–80540) and 486 men (serial numbers 186645–187130) were chosen to work, and 2,698 were gassed.[17]

Mass transports edit

 
Jews arriving at Auschwitz from Hungary

The mass transports, the first organized by the Reichssicherheitshauptamt (Reich Security Head Office or RSHA),[18] began leaving Hungary for Poland on 14 May 1944. The Hungarian government was in charge of them up to the northern border. The commander of the Kassa railroad station kept a record of the trains. The first freight train passed through Kassa on 14 May. On a typical day, there were three or four, each carrying 3,000–4,000 people. There were 109 trains for 33 days, until 16 June. On several days, there were six trains. From 25–29 June, there were 10, then 18 on 5–9 July. Another 10 trains were sent to Auschwitz via other routes.[citation needed]

The first three trains, each consisting of 40–50 cars, arrived at Auschwitz on 16 May. After unloading their belongings, the deportees were organized into rows of five, then led to the crematoria. According to Danuta Czech, it was from this night onward that smoke became visible from the crematoria chimneys.[18] The camp resistance referred to the deportations in a report covering 5–25 May 1944:

 
László Ferenczy, Hungarian Royal Gendarmerie

Auschwitz: Operation Höss. Since the middle of May, numerous transports of Hungarian Jews. Every night, eight trains arrive; every day five. The trains consist of 48 to 50 cars each, and in each car are 100 people. "Settlers" arrive with these transports. Each train of "settlers" also has two freight cars of lumber, which the "settlers" unload on the "death ramp", bring to another site and stack in piles ... that are intended for them. In order to simplify the work, the people arrive already separated, for example, children in separate cars. The closed trains wait for several hours on the special track to be unloaded. They stand in the nearby small forest.[19]

From 3 June, the electric fence was kept switched on during the day, instead of only at night (as there were guards during the day), because of attempts by Hungarian Jews to escape from the crematoria.[20] The camp resistance reported on 15 July that there had been a pause of several days in the transports after 13 June, and that between 16 May and 13 June, over 300,000 Jews from Hungary had arrived at the camp in 113 trains.[21] According to Höss during his trial, the facilities at Auschwitz could not cope with the numbers, and he had to travel to Budapest to re-organize the transports, so that two or three trains would run on alternate days. Altogether, 111 trains were to be used. According to Höss, Heinrich Himmler, head of the SS, wanted the deportations to speed up.[18]

By 9 July 1944, 434,351 Jews in 147 trains had been deported, according to László Ferenczy of the Hungarian Royal Gendarmerie. According to Edmund Veesenmayer, the Reich plenipotentiary in Hungary, the figure was 437,402.[b][c] About 80 percent of deportees were gassed on arrival.[6] Because the crematoria were unable to cope with the number of corpses, pits were dug where bodies were burned. Photographs taken at Auschwitz (the Auschwitz Album) were found after the war showing the arrival of the Hungarian Jews at the camp.[24]

Selection edit

 
Jews in Budapest being rounded up by police in 1944

The 20 percent of new arrivals from Hungary selected as prisoners were used as slave labourers or in medical experiments. On 22 May and again on 29 May 2,000 were selected for admission.[25] On 28 May, 963 were transferred from Auschwitz I to the Mauthausen concentration camp in Austria;[26] and on 5 June 2,000 were sent to the Buchenwald concentration camp in Germany. The following day, Hungarian inmates with A-series serial numbers were transferred to Auschwitz III, a labour camp for IG Farben,[27] and another 2,000 were sent to Mauthausen that day and on 13 June.[28]

On 29 May, Miklós Nyiszli, a doctor who later worked for the camp's doctor, Josef Mengele, was admitted with his wife and daughter, although they were sent to different parts of the camp.[26] Any twins within the transports were selected; Mengele was notorious for his medical experiments on twins. On 17 May, any boys on the Hungarian transports born as a twin were admitted as prisoners (so-called "depot prisoners") and given serial numbers A-1419–A-1437. On 18 May, 20 females who were twin sisters were selected and given serial numbers A-3622–A-3641.[29] Twins were picked out repeatedly, including on 19, 20 and 21 May.[30]

Vrba–Wetzler report edit

Just before the deportations of Jews from Budapest began, the Vrba–Wetzler report reached the Allies. The report provided a detailed description of the gas chambers, and what was happening inside the camp; it had been dictated in April 1944 to the Slovakian Jewish Council by two Auschwitz escapees, Rudolf Vrba and Alfred Wetzler. Horthy's son and daughter-in-law both received copies of the report in early May, before mass deportations began.[31] Information from the report about the murder of Czech Jews in Auschwitz was broadcast in Germany by the BBC World Service on its women's program at noon on 16 June 1944, with a warning that the Germans would be held responsible after the war.[d] It was also published by the New York Times on 20 June.[33]

The Western Allies landed in Normandy on 6 June 1944. On 15 June, the Mayor of Budapest designated 2,000 "starred" houses to which every Jew had to move; the idea was that the Allies would not bomb Budapest with starred houses scattered around the town.[citation needed] On the basis of the Vrba–Wetzler report, world leaders, including Pope Pius XII on 25 June, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, on 26 June, and King Gustaf V of Sweden on 30 June, appealed to Horthy to stop the deportations. Roosevelt threatened military retaliation, and on 7 July, Horthy ordered an end to them.[34]

Rescue efforts edit

Aid and Rescue Committee edit

Carl Lutz edit

Carl Lutz was a Swiss diplomat. He served as the Swiss Vice-Consul in Budapest, Hungary, from 1942 until the end of World War II. He is credited with saving tens of thousands of Jews during the Second World War, marking the largest diplomatic rescue mission of the Holocaust.

Due to his actions, half of the Jewish population of Budapest survived and was not deported to Nazi extermination camps during the Holocaust. He was awarded the title of Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem.

Joel Brand edit

Joel Brand, a leading member of the Budapest Aid and Rescue Committee, became known for his efforts to negotiate with Eichmann to stop the deportations. In a meeting with Brand in Budapest on 25 April 1944, Eichmann offered to exchange one million Jews for 10,000 trucks from the Allies, to be used exclusively on the Eastern Front.[35] Eichmann called the proposal "blood for goods".[36] Using German travel documents, Brand travelled to Turkey to transmit the offer to the Jewish Agency, but the British government put an end to the talks by arresting Brand[37] and leaking details to the media.[38] On 20 July The Times called the proposal by the Germans "one of the most loathsome" stories of the war and that Germany had reached a "new level of fantasy and self-deception."[e]

Rudolf Kastner edit

Another member of the Aid and Rescue Committee, Rudolf Kastner, was involved with Brand in negotiating the "blood for goods" deal with Eichmann and a separate — successful — deal with SS officer Kurt Becher to allow 1,685 Jews to leave Hungary for Switzerland, in exchange for money and other goods. This became known as the "Kastner train". After the war, Kastner testified in favour of Becher and other Nazis at the Nuremberg tribunal.[40]

Kastner later emigrated to Israel, where he became involved with Mapai and worked as a press officer for the Ministry of Commerce and Industry.[41] In 1954, he became the subject of a libel case brought by the Israeli government on his behalf against Malchiel Gruenwald, who alleged that Kastner had collaborated with the Nazis. It was the first big Holocaust trial in Israel.[42] Gruenwald had alleged in a self-published pamphlet that Kastner had known Jews were being gassed at Auschwitz as early as April 1944, after being given a copy of the Vrba–Wetzler report, but he had done nothing to warn the wider Jewish community in Hungary. Through his inaction, Gruenwald alleged, Kastner had helped the SS avoid the spread of panic, which would have slowed down the transports.[43]

In June 1955, the judge, Benjamin Halevi, decided in Gruenwald's favor, ruling that Kastner had "sold his soul to the devil".[44] Kastner and his associates had helped to persuade the Jewish community that they were being resettled, Halevi wrote in his 300-page judgement. In return, the SS had allowed the Kastner train to leave Hungary.[45] Israeli historian Tom Segev called the ruling "one of the most heartless in the history of Israel, perhaps the most heartless ever".[46] As a result of the verdict and its refusal to prosecute Kastner for collaboration, the Israeli government lost a vote of no confidence and collapsed.[47]

Kastner was assassinated in Tel Aviv in March 1957.[48] Most of the decision was reversed by the Israeli Supreme Court in January 1958. The majority opinion, written by Shimon Agranat, rejected the allegation of collaboration.[47] A dissenting opinion agreed with the original judgement that the ease with which the Nazis had murdered the Jews was "the direct result of the concealment of the horrifying truth from the victims".[49]

Raoul Wallenberg edit

 
Raoul Wallenberg

With the assistance of Acting Interior Minister Béla Horváth, who provided the use of his ministry's printing press, Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg and his staff prepared Protective Passports under the authority of the Swedish Legation, thus saving thousands of Jews in Hungary between July and December 1944. At one point, Wallenberg appeared personally at the railway station in Budapest, insisting that Jews on the train be removed and presenting the Arrow Cross guards with Protective Passports (Schutzpass) for many of them. Budapest named Wallenberg as an honorary citizen in 2003; several sites honour him, including Raoul Wallenberg Memorial Park and the building that housed the Swedish Embassy in 1945. Yad Vashem recognized him as Righteous Among the Nations in November 1963.[50]

Arrow Cross rule edit

 
Captured Jewish women in Wesselényi Street, Budapest, 20–22 October 1944

Horthy dismissed Prime Minister Sztójay on 29 August 1944, the same day the Slovak National Uprising against the Nazis began.[citation needed] After Prime Minister Ferenc Szálasi came to power in October, tens of thousands of Jews in Budapest were sent on foot to the Austrian border in death marches. Most forced laborers under Hungarian Army command were deported (for instance to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany).[citation needed]

Two ghettos were set up in Budapest. The small "international ghetto" consisted of several "starred" houses under the protection of neutral powers in the Újlipótváros district. Switzerland was allowed to issue 7,800 Schutzpasses (safe passage documents), Sweden 4,500, and the Vatican, Portugal and Spain 3,300 combined.[citation needed] The big Budapest ghetto walled in the Erzsébetváros part of Budapest on 29 November. Nyilas (Arrow Cross guards) raids and mass executions occurred in both ghettos regularly. In addition, between November 1944 and February 1945, the Nyilas shot 10,000–15,000 Jews on the banks of the Danube. Soviet troops liberated the big Budapest ghetto on 18 January 1945. On the Buda side of the town, the encircled Nyilas continued their murders until the Soviets took Buda on 13 February.[51]

Hungarian gold train edit

The Hungarian gold train was a Nazi-operated train that carried stolen goods, mostly the property of Hungarian Jews, from Hungary to Berlin, Germany, in 1945. After seizure of the train by the Seventh United States Army, almost none of the valuables were returned to Hungary or their rightful owners or surviving family members.[52]

Number of survivors edit

Around 119,000 Jews were liberated in Budapest (25,000 in the small "international" ghetto, 69,000 in the big ghetto, and 25,000 hiding with false papers), as were 20,000 camp survivors and 5,000 forced labourers.[53] Randolph Braham estimated that just over 564,000 Hungarian Jews died between 1941 and 1945.[54] From over 800,000 Jews living within Hungary's borders in 1941–1944, about 255,500 are thought to have survived.[53]

Holocaust commemoration edit

Holocaust memorialization and commemoration have taken place in Hungary through memorials and museums.

The House of Fates is a controversial Holocaust museum in Budapest. Construction on the $23 million museum was completed in 2015. However, the museum has not opened due to controversy surrounding its content.[55] One CNN article described the House of Fates as “whitewashing the country's role in the Holocaust” to advance what is feared to be the right-wing government’s effort to promote a revisionist Holocaust history.[56] In 2019, the chair of the International Holocaust Remembrance Association stated that “the IHRA Plenary agreed to appoint a group of IHRA experts to provide input or suggestions to the international advisory boards of the House of Fates museum.”[57] The museum remains unopened.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Randolph Braham (2011): "[F]rom May 15 through July 9 [1944], close to 440,000 of the Jews of Hungary were deported to Auschwitz–Birkenau, where most of them were murdered soon after their arrival. By July 9, when Horthy's decision to halt the deportations took effect, all of Hungary (with the notable exception of Budapest) had become judenrein."[9]
  2. ^ "By July 9, when Horthy's July order halting the deportations was finally heeded, Ferenczy could report the deportation of 434,351 Jews in 147 trains. Ferenczy's figures were slightly lower than the 437,402 reported by Veesenmayer to the German Foreign Office."[22]
  3. ^ Veesenmayer's telegram to Wilhelmstrasse (German Foreign Ministry) on July 11: "The concentration and transportation of the Jews from Zone V and the Budapest suburbs was concluded with 55,741 Jews on July 9, as planned. The total result from Zones I-V and the Budapest suburbs has been 437,402."[23]
  4. ^ "News has reached London that the German authorities in Czechoslovak [sic] have ordered the massacre of 3,000 Czechoslovak Jews in gas chambers at Birkenau on or about June 20th. ... 4,000 Czechoslovak Jews who were taken from Theresienstadt to Birkenau in September 1943 were massacred in the gas chambers on March 7th.
    The German authorities in Czechoslovakia and their subordinates should know that full information is received in London about the massacres in Birkenau. All those responsible for such massacres from top downwards will be called to account."[32]
  5. ^ The Times (20 July 1944): "It has long been clear that, faced with the certainty of defeat, the German authorities would intensify all their efforts to blackmail, deceive and split the allies. In their latest effort, made known in London yesterday, they have reached a new level of fantasy and self-deception. They have put forward, or sponsored, an offer to exchange the remaining Hungarian Jews for munitions of war—which, they said, would not be used on the Western front.
    "The whole story is one of the most loathsome of the war. It begins with a process of deliberate extirpation and ends, to date, with attempted blackmail. ... The British Government know what value to set on any German or German-sponsored offer ... they know, as well as the Germans, what happens when one begins paying blackmail. The blackmailer increases his price. Such considerations provided their own answer to the proposed bargain."[39]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Braham 2016a, p. 88.
  2. ^ Bauer, Yehuda (2002). Rethinking the Holocaust. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. p. 224. ISBN 0-300-09300-4.
  3. ^ Braham 2016a, pp. 429–430.
  4. ^ Braham 2016a, p. 434.
  5. ^ Braham, Randolph L. (2016a). The Politics of Genocide: The Holocaust in Hungary. Vol. 1. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 771, 774–775. ISBN 978-0880337113.
  6. ^ a b Kadar, Gabor; Vagi, Zoltan (2004). Self-financing Genocide: The Gold Train, the Becher Case and the Wealth of Hungarian Jews. Budapest and New York: Central European University Press. p. 125. ISBN 963-9241-53-9.
  7. ^ Gerlach 2016, pp. 114, 368.
  8. ^ Braham 2016b, pp. 960–961, 967.
  9. ^ Braham, Randolph L. (2011). "Hungary: The Controversial Chapter of the Holocaust". In Braham, Randolph L.; Vanden Heuvel, William (eds.). The Auschwitz Reports and the Holocaust in Hungary. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 45 (29–49). ISBN 978-0880336888.
  10. ^ Gerlach 2016, p. 103.
  11. ^ Braham 2016a, pp. xxxiv–xliii

    Also see Braham, Randolph L. (2016b). The Politics of Genocide: The Holocaust in Hungary. Vol. 2. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 938–990. ISBN 978-0880337113.

  12. ^ Gerlach 2016, p. 114.
  13. ^ Spoerer 2020, p. 142.
  14. ^ a b c Braham 2016a, p. 88, citing Hungarian Jewry Before and After the Persecutions. Budapest: Hungarian Section of the World Jewish Congress, 1949, p. 2.
  15. ^ Lasik, Aleksander (2000). "Organizational Structure of Auschwitz Concentration Camp". In Długoborski, Wacław; Piper, Franciszek (eds.). Auschwitz, 1940–1945. Central Issues in the History of the Camp. Vol. I: The Establishment and Organization of the Camp. Oświęcim: Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. p. 154 (pp. 145–279). ISBN 978-8385047872. OCLC 874340863.
  16. ^ Lasik, Aleksander (1998) [1994]. "Rudolf Höss: Manager of Crime". In Gutman, Yisrael; Berenbaum, Michael (eds.). Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. p. 295 (pp. 288–300). ISBN 0-253-20884-X.
  17. ^ Czech, Danuta (1990). Auschwitz Chronicle 1939–1945. New York: Henry Holt and Company. p. 618. ISBN 0-8050-0938-8.
  18. ^ a b c Czech 1990, p. 627.
  19. ^ Czech 1990, pp. 633–634.
  20. ^ Czech 1990, p. 640.
  21. ^ Czech 1990, p. 666.
  22. ^ Braham 2016a, pp. 774–775.
  23. ^ Kadar & Vagi 2004, p. xxvi.
  24. ^ "The Auschwitz Album". Yad Vashem. from the original on 18 March 2013.
  25. ^ Czech 1990, pp. 630, 636.
  26. ^ a b Czech 1990, p. 636.
  27. ^ Czech 1990, p. 641.
  28. ^ Czech 1990, pp. 642–643.
  29. ^ Czech 1990, p. 628.
  30. ^ Czech 1990, pp. 628–630, 640ff.
  31. ^ Bauer 2002, p. 157.
  32. ^ Fleming, Michael (2014). Auschwitz, the Allies, and Censorship of the Holocaust. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 215, 366, note 190, citing the BBC Written Archives Centre (BBC WAC), C165, 16 June 1944. ISBN 978-1-107-06279-5.
  33. ^ "Czechs Report Massacre: Claim the Nazis Killed 7,000 in Prison Gas Chambers". New York Times. 20 June 1944. p. 5.
  34. ^ Szita, Szabolcs (2005). Trading in Lives? Operations of the Jewish Relief and Rescue Committee in Budapest, 1944–1945. Budapest and New York: Central European University Press. pp. 50–54. ISBN 963-7326-30-8.
  35. ^ Braham 2016b, p. 1254ff.
  36. ^ Fischel, Jack R. (2010). Historical Dictionary of the Holocaust. Lanham: Scarecrow Press. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-8108-6774-1.
  37. ^ Braham 2016b, pp. 1259–1261.
  38. ^ Fleming 2014, p. 236.
  39. ^ "A Monstrous 'Offer'". The Times. Issue 49913, 20 July 1944, p. 2.
  40. ^ Löb, Ladislaus (2008). Dealing with Satan. Rezsõ Kasztner's Daring Rescue Mission. New York: Jonathan Cape, pp. 274–277. ISBN 978-0-224-07792-7
  41. ^ Segev, Tom (1993). The Seventh Million: The Israelis and the Holocaust. New York: Hill and Wang. p. 257. ISBN 978-0809085637.
  42. ^ Segev 1993, p. 255.
  43. ^ Segev 1993, pp. 257–258.
  44. ^ Braham 2016b, p. 975.
  45. ^ Braham 2016b, p. 1290.
  46. ^ Segev 1993, pp. 282–283.
  47. ^ a b Braham 2016b, p. 1291.
  48. ^ Segev 1993, p. 308.
  49. ^ Braham 2016b, pp. 975, 1292.
  50. ^ "A Swedish Rescuer in Budapest". Yad Vashem.
  51. ^ Braham 2016b, p. 1505.
  52. ^ "The Mystery of the Hungarian 'Gold Train'". Presidential Advisory Commission on Holocaust Assets in the United States. 7 October 1999. from the original on 8 June 2011.
  53. ^ a b Braham 2016b, p. 1507.
  54. ^ Braham 2016b, p. 1509.
  55. ^ "Hungary's New Holocaust Museum Isn't Open Yet, But It's Already Causing Concern". NPR.org. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  56. ^ "House of Fates: Hungary's controversial Holocaust museum". www.cnn.com. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  57. ^ "IHRA Chair's Statement on House of Fates, Budapest". IHRA. Retrieved 14 December 2022.

Further reading edit

  • "Winston Churchill to Anthony Eden, 11 July 1944". Churchill Papers, Churchill Archives Centre, Cambridge.
  • "German Troops Occupy Hungary". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
  • "Deportation of Hungarian Jews". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
  • Herczl, Moshe Y. (1993). Christianity and the Holocaust of Hungarian Jewry. New York: NYU Press. JSTOR j.ctt9qg6vj
  • Vági, Zoltán; Csősz, László; Kádár; Gábor (2013). The Holocaust in Hungary: Evolution of a Genocide. Lanham: AltaMira Press. ISBN 978-0-7591-2198-0

holocaust, hungary, dispossession, deportation, systematic, murder, more, than, half, hungarian, jews, primarily, after, german, occupation, hungary, march, 1944, hungarian, jews, arriving, auschwitz, birkenau, german, occupied, poland, june, 1944europe, 1942l. The Holocaust in Hungary was the dispossession deportation and systematic murder of more than half of the Hungarian Jews primarily after the German occupation of Hungary in March 1944 The Holocaust in HungaryHungarian Jews arriving at Auschwitz II Birkenau German occupied Poland May June 1944Europe in 1942LocationHungaryDateApril 1944 13 February 1945 mainly 15 May 9 July 1944 PerpetratorsKingdom of Hungary Nazi Germany Adolf Eichmann Laszlo Ferenczy Arrow Cross PartyCampAuschwitz concentration campGhettoBudapest ghettoVictims564 000 dead 1941 1945 incl over 434 000 15 May 9 July 1944 MemorialsShoes on the Danube Bank At the time of the German invasion Hungary had a Jewish population of 825 000 1 the largest remaining in Europe 2 further swollen by Jews escaping from elsewhere to the relative safety of that country The Hungarian Prime Minister Miklos Kallay had been reluctant to deport them 3 Fearing Hungary was trying to pursue peace with the Allies Adolf Hitler ordered the invasion 4 New restrictions against Jews were imposed soon after Germany occupied Hungary on 19 March 1944 The invading troops included a Sonderkommando led by SS officer Adolf Eichmann who arrived in Budapest to supervise the deportation of the country s Jews to the Auschwitz concentration camp in occupied Poland Between 15 May and 9 July 1944 over 434 000 Jews were deported on 147 trains 5 most of them to Auschwitz where about 80 percent were gassed on arrival 6 The quick progress of the deportations was enabled by close cooperation between the Hungarian and German authorities 7 Diplomatic pressure and the Allied bombing of Budapest persuaded Miklos Horthy the Regent of Hungary to order a halt to the deportations on 6 July 8 By the time they had stopped three days later almost the entire community of Jews in the Hungarian countryside had gone a The mass deportation of Hungarian Jews was the largest Holocaust killing after 1942 10 It took place as World War II appeared to be drawing to a close and world leaders had known for some time that Jews were being murdered in gas chambers 11 The expropriation of Jewish property was useful to achieve Hungarian economic goals and sending the Jews as forced laborers avoided the need to send non Jewish Hungarians 12 Those who survived the selection were forced to provide construction and manufacturing labor as part of a last ditch effort to increase the production of fighter aircraft 13 Contents 1 Jews in Hungary 2 Anti Jewish laws 3 Labor battalions 4 German occupation 4 1 Invasion 4 2 Adolf Eichmann 5 Deportation to Auschwitz 5 1 First transports 5 2 Mass transports 5 3 Selection 5 4 Vrba Wetzler report 6 Rescue efforts 6 1 Aid and Rescue Committee 6 1 1 Carl Lutz 6 1 2 Joel Brand 6 1 3 Rudolf Kastner 6 2 Raoul Wallenberg 7 Arrow Cross rule 8 Hungarian gold train 9 Number of survivors 10 Holocaust commemoration 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 Further readingJews in Hungary editFurther information History of the Jews in Hungary See also Austria Hungary Hungary in World War I Treaty of Trianon and Kingdom of Hungary 1920 1946 In the 1941 census the population of Hungary was 14 683 323 Of these 725 005 regarded themselves as Jews 4 94 percent and another 100 000 were Jewish by descent who identified as Christian Over 400 000 lived in post Trianon Hungary and another 324 000 lived in territories acquired by Hungary since 1938 Northern Transylvania from Romania 164 000 part of Upper Hungary from Czechoslovakia 146 000 Carpathian Ruthenia 78 000 and Bacska and other areas that had been part of Yugoslavia 14 000 1 Budapest Provinces Total Acquiredterritories Total Source Jews 184 453 216 528 400 981 324 026 725 007 14 Jewish Christians 62 350 27 290 89 640 10 360 100 000 14 Total 246 803 243 818 490 621 334 386 825 007 14 Anti Jewish laws editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it May 2023 Labor battalions editMain article Labour service in Hungary during World War II This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it May 2023 German occupation editInvasion edit Further information Operation Margarethe nbsp Adolf Eichmann On 18 March 1944 Adolf Hitler summoned Horthy to a conference in Austria where he demanded greater acquiescence from Hungary Horthy resisted but his efforts were fruitless While he was at the conference German tanks rolled into Budapest and on 23 March the government of Dome Sztojay was installed Among his first moves Sztojay legalized the Arrow Cross Party which quickly began organizing During the four days interregnum following the German occupation the Ministry of the Interior was placed in the hands of Laszlo Endre and Laszlo Baky right wing politicians known for their hostility to Jews Their boss Andor Jaross was another committed antisemite citation needed Adolf Eichmann edit SS Obersturmbannfuhrer Adolf Eichmann sent to Hungary to supervise the deportations set up his staff in the Majestic Hotel in Budapest The Yellow Star and ghettoization laws and the deportations were accomplished in less than eight weeks with the enthusiastic help of the Hungarian authorities particularly the gendarmerie csendorseg The plan was to use 45 cattle cars per train four trains a day to deport 12 000 Jews from the countryside every day starting in mid May this was to be followed by the deportation of Jews from Budapest from about 15 July citation needed Rudolf Hoss the first commandant of Auschwitz returned to the camp between 8 May and 29 July 1944 as the local SS garrison commander to oversee the Hungarian Jews arrival and gassing 15 As a result the Germans called the murders Aktion Hoss Operation Hoss 16 nbsp 1944 special work ID issued by the SD to a Jewish woman in occupied Budapest Deportation to Auschwitz editFirst transports edit The first train left Budapest on 29 April 1944 carrying 1 800 men and women aged 16 50 who were deemed fit to work A second train left Topolya on 30 April carrying 2 000 The transports went through selection 616 women serial numbers 76385 76459 and 80000 80540 and 486 men serial numbers 186645 187130 were chosen to work and 2 698 were gassed 17 Mass transports edit Further information Auschwitz concentration camp nbsp Jews arriving at Auschwitz from Hungary The mass transports the first organized by the Reichssicherheitshauptamt Reich Security Head Office or RSHA 18 began leaving Hungary for Poland on 14 May 1944 The Hungarian government was in charge of them up to the northern border The commander of the Kassa railroad station kept a record of the trains The first freight train passed through Kassa on 14 May On a typical day there were three or four each carrying 3 000 4 000 people There were 109 trains for 33 days until 16 June On several days there were six trains From 25 29 June there were 10 then 18 on 5 9 July Another 10 trains were sent to Auschwitz via other routes citation needed The first three trains each consisting of 40 50 cars arrived at Auschwitz on 16 May After unloading their belongings the deportees were organized into rows of five then led to the crematoria According to Danuta Czech it was from this night onward that smoke became visible from the crematoria chimneys 18 The camp resistance referred to the deportations in a report covering 5 25 May 1944 nbsp Laszlo Ferenczy Hungarian Royal Gendarmerie Auschwitz Operation Hoss Since the middle of May numerous transports of Hungarian Jews Every night eight trains arrive every day five The trains consist of 48 to 50 cars each and in each car are 100 people Settlers arrive with these transports Each train of settlers also has two freight cars of lumber which the settlers unload on the death ramp bring to another site and stack in piles that are intended for them In order to simplify the work the people arrive already separated for example children in separate cars The closed trains wait for several hours on the special track to be unloaded They stand in the nearby small forest 19 From 3 June the electric fence was kept switched on during the day instead of only at night as there were guards during the day because of attempts by Hungarian Jews to escape from the crematoria 20 The camp resistance reported on 15 July that there had been a pause of several days in the transports after 13 June and that between 16 May and 13 June over 300 000 Jews from Hungary had arrived at the camp in 113 trains 21 According to Hoss during his trial the facilities at Auschwitz could not cope with the numbers and he had to travel to Budapest to re organize the transports so that two or three trains would run on alternate days Altogether 111 trains were to be used According to Hoss Heinrich Himmler head of the SS wanted the deportations to speed up 18 By 9 July 1944 434 351 Jews in 147 trains had been deported according to Laszlo Ferenczy of the Hungarian Royal Gendarmerie According to Edmund Veesenmayer the Reich plenipotentiary in Hungary the figure was 437 402 b c About 80 percent of deportees were gassed on arrival 6 Because the crematoria were unable to cope with the number of corpses pits were dug where bodies were burned Photographs taken at Auschwitz the Auschwitz Album were found after the war showing the arrival of the Hungarian Jews at the camp 24 Selection edit Main article Nazi human experimentation nbsp Jews in Budapest being rounded up by police in 1944 The 20 percent of new arrivals from Hungary selected as prisoners were used as slave labourers or in medical experiments On 22 May and again on 29 May 2 000 were selected for admission 25 On 28 May 963 were transferred from Auschwitz I to the Mauthausen concentration camp in Austria 26 and on 5 June 2 000 were sent to the Buchenwald concentration camp in Germany The following day Hungarian inmates with A series serial numbers were transferred to Auschwitz III a labour camp for IG Farben 27 and another 2 000 were sent to Mauthausen that day and on 13 June 28 On 29 May Miklos Nyiszli a doctor who later worked for the camp s doctor Josef Mengele was admitted with his wife and daughter although they were sent to different parts of the camp 26 Any twins within the transports were selected Mengele was notorious for his medical experiments on twins On 17 May any boys on the Hungarian transports born as a twin were admitted as prisoners so called depot prisoners and given serial numbers A 1419 A 1437 On 18 May 20 females who were twin sisters were selected and given serial numbers A 3622 A 3641 29 Twins were picked out repeatedly including on 19 20 and 21 May 30 Vrba Wetzler report edit Further information Vrba Wetzler report Just before the deportations of Jews from Budapest began the Vrba Wetzler report reached the Allies The report provided a detailed description of the gas chambers and what was happening inside the camp it had been dictated in April 1944 to the Slovakian Jewish Council by two Auschwitz escapees Rudolf Vrba and Alfred Wetzler Horthy s son and daughter in law both received copies of the report in early May before mass deportations began 31 Information from the report about the murder of Czech Jews in Auschwitz was broadcast in Germany by the BBC World Service on its women s program at noon on 16 June 1944 with a warning that the Germans would be held responsible after the war d It was also published by the New York Times on 20 June 33 The Western Allies landed in Normandy on 6 June 1944 On 15 June the Mayor of Budapest designated 2 000 starred houses to which every Jew had to move the idea was that the Allies would not bomb Budapest with starred houses scattered around the town citation needed On the basis of the Vrba Wetzler report world leaders including Pope Pius XII on 25 June President Franklin D Roosevelt on 26 June and King Gustaf V of Sweden on 30 June appealed to Horthy to stop the deportations Roosevelt threatened military retaliation and on 7 July Horthy ordered an end to them 34 Rescue efforts editAid and Rescue Committee edit Carl Lutz edit Carl Lutz was a Swiss diplomat He served as the Swiss Vice Consul in Budapest Hungary from 1942 until the end of World War II He is credited with saving tens of thousands of Jews during the Second World War marking the largest diplomatic rescue mission of the Holocaust Due to his actions half of the Jewish population of Budapest survived and was not deported to Nazi extermination camps during the Holocaust He was awarded the title of Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem Joel Brand edit Joel Brand a leading member of the Budapest Aid and Rescue Committee became known for his efforts to negotiate with Eichmann to stop the deportations In a meeting with Brand in Budapest on 25 April 1944 Eichmann offered to exchange one million Jews for 10 000 trucks from the Allies to be used exclusively on the Eastern Front 35 Eichmann called the proposal blood for goods 36 Using German travel documents Brand travelled to Turkey to transmit the offer to the Jewish Agency but the British government put an end to the talks by arresting Brand 37 and leaking details to the media 38 On 20 July The Times called the proposal by the Germans one of the most loathsome stories of the war and that Germany had reached a new level of fantasy and self deception e Rudolf Kastner edit Main article Kastner train Another member of the Aid and Rescue Committee Rudolf Kastner was involved with Brand in negotiating the blood for goods deal with Eichmann and a separate successful deal with SS officer Kurt Becher to allow 1 685 Jews to leave Hungary for Switzerland in exchange for money and other goods This became known as the Kastner train After the war Kastner testified in favour of Becher and other Nazis at the Nuremberg tribunal 40 Kastner later emigrated to Israel where he became involved with Mapai and worked as a press officer for the Ministry of Commerce and Industry 41 In 1954 he became the subject of a libel case brought by the Israeli government on his behalf against Malchiel Gruenwald who alleged that Kastner had collaborated with the Nazis It was the first big Holocaust trial in Israel 42 Gruenwald had alleged in a self published pamphlet that Kastner had known Jews were being gassed at Auschwitz as early as April 1944 after being given a copy of the Vrba Wetzler report but he had done nothing to warn the wider Jewish community in Hungary Through his inaction Gruenwald alleged Kastner had helped the SS avoid the spread of panic which would have slowed down the transports 43 In June 1955 the judge Benjamin Halevi decided in Gruenwald s favor ruling that Kastner had sold his soul to the devil 44 Kastner and his associates had helped to persuade the Jewish community that they were being resettled Halevi wrote in his 300 page judgement In return the SS had allowed the Kastner train to leave Hungary 45 Israeli historian Tom Segev called the ruling one of the most heartless in the history of Israel perhaps the most heartless ever 46 As a result of the verdict and its refusal to prosecute Kastner for collaboration the Israeli government lost a vote of no confidence and collapsed 47 Kastner was assassinated in Tel Aviv in March 1957 48 Most of the decision was reversed by the Israeli Supreme Court in January 1958 The majority opinion written by Shimon Agranat rejected the allegation of collaboration 47 A dissenting opinion agreed with the original judgement that the ease with which the Nazis had murdered the Jews was the direct result of the concealment of the horrifying truth from the victims 49 Raoul Wallenberg edit nbsp Raoul Wallenberg With the assistance of Acting Interior Minister Bela Horvath who provided the use of his ministry s printing press Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg and his staff prepared Protective Passports under the authority of the Swedish Legation thus saving thousands of Jews in Hungary between July and December 1944 At one point Wallenberg appeared personally at the railway station in Budapest insisting that Jews on the train be removed and presenting the Arrow Cross guards with Protective Passports Schutzpass for many of them Budapest named Wallenberg as an honorary citizen in 2003 several sites honour him including Raoul Wallenberg Memorial Park and the building that housed the Swedish Embassy in 1945 Yad Vashem recognized him as Righteous Among the Nations in November 1963 50 Arrow Cross rule editFurther information Arrow Cross Party This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp Captured Jewish women in Wesselenyi Street Budapest 20 22 October 1944 Horthy dismissed Prime Minister Sztojay on 29 August 1944 the same day the Slovak National Uprising against the Nazis began citation needed After Prime Minister Ferenc Szalasi came to power in October tens of thousands of Jews in Budapest were sent on foot to the Austrian border in death marches Most forced laborers under Hungarian Army command were deported for instance to the Bergen Belsen concentration camp in Germany citation needed Two ghettos were set up in Budapest The small international ghetto consisted of several starred houses under the protection of neutral powers in the Ujlipotvaros district Switzerland was allowed to issue 7 800 Schutzpasses safe passage documents Sweden 4 500 and the Vatican Portugal and Spain 3 300 combined citation needed The big Budapest ghetto walled in the Erzsebetvaros part of Budapest on 29 November Nyilas Arrow Cross guards raids and mass executions occurred in both ghettos regularly In addition between November 1944 and February 1945 the Nyilas shot 10 000 15 000 Jews on the banks of the Danube Soviet troops liberated the big Budapest ghetto on 18 January 1945 On the Buda side of the town the encircled Nyilas continued their murders until the Soviets took Buda on 13 February 51 Hungarian gold train editMain article Hungarian gold train The Hungarian gold train was a Nazi operated train that carried stolen goods mostly the property of Hungarian Jews from Hungary to Berlin Germany in 1945 After seizure of the train by the Seventh United States Army almost none of the valuables were returned to Hungary or their rightful owners or surviving family members 52 Number of survivors editAround 119 000 Jews were liberated in Budapest 25 000 in the small international ghetto 69 000 in the big ghetto and 25 000 hiding with false papers as were 20 000 camp survivors and 5 000 forced labourers 53 Randolph Braham estimated that just over 564 000 Hungarian Jews died between 1941 and 1945 54 From over 800 000 Jews living within Hungary s borders in 1941 1944 about 255 500 are thought to have survived 53 Holocaust commemoration editHolocaust memorialization and commemoration have taken place in Hungary through memorials and museums The House of Fates is a controversial Holocaust museum in Budapest Construction on the 23 million museum was completed in 2015 However the museum has not opened due to controversy surrounding its content 55 One CNN article described the House of Fates as whitewashing the country s role in the Holocaust to advance what is feared to be the right wing government s effort to promote a revisionist Holocaust history 56 In 2019 the chair of the International Holocaust Remembrance Association stated that the IHRA Plenary agreed to appoint a group of IHRA experts to provide input or suggestions to the international advisory boards of the House of Fates museum 57 The museum remains unopened See also editAndras KunNotes edit Randolph Braham 2011 F rom May 15 through July 9 1944 close to 440 000 of the Jews of Hungary were deported to Auschwitz Birkenau where most of them were murdered soon after their arrival By July 9 when Horthy s decision to halt the deportations took effect all of Hungary with the notable exception of Budapest had become judenrein 9 By July 9 when Horthy s July order halting the deportations was finally heeded Ferenczy could report the deportation of 434 351 Jews in 147 trains Ferenczy s figures were slightly lower than the 437 402 reported by Veesenmayer to the German Foreign Office 22 Veesenmayer s telegram to Wilhelmstrasse German Foreign Ministry on July 11 The concentration and transportation of the Jews from Zone V and the Budapest suburbs was concluded with 55 741 Jews on July 9 as planned The total result from Zones I V and the Budapest suburbs has been 437 402 23 News has reached London that the German authorities in Czechoslovak sic have ordered the massacre of 3 000 Czechoslovak Jews in gas chambers at Birkenau on or about June 20th 4 000 Czechoslovak Jews who were taken from Theresienstadt to Birkenau in September 1943 were massacred in the gas chambers on March 7th The German authorities in Czechoslovakia and their subordinates should know that full information is received in London about the massacres in Birkenau All those responsible for such massacres from top downwards will be called to account 32 The Times 20 July 1944 It has long been clear that faced with the certainty of defeat the German authorities would intensify all their efforts to blackmail deceive and split the allies In their latest effort made known in London yesterday they have reached a new level of fantasy and self deception They have put forward or sponsored an offer to exchange the remaining Hungarian Jews for munitions of war which they said would not be used on the Western front The whole story is one of the most loathsome of the war It begins with a process of deliberate extirpation and ends to date with attempted blackmail The British Government know what value to set on any German or German sponsored offer they know as well as the Germans what happens when one begins paying blackmail The blackmailer increases his price Such considerations provided their own answer to the proposed bargain 39 References edit a b Braham 2016a p 88 Bauer Yehuda 2002 Rethinking the Holocaust New Haven and London Yale University Press p 224 ISBN 0 300 09300 4 Braham 2016a pp 429 430 Braham 2016a p 434 Braham Randolph L 2016a The Politics of Genocide The Holocaust in Hungary Vol 1 New York Columbia University Press pp 771 774 775 ISBN 978 0880337113 a b Kadar Gabor Vagi Zoltan 2004 Self financing Genocide The Gold Train the Becher Case and the Wealth of Hungarian Jews Budapest and New York Central European University Press p 125 ISBN 963 9241 53 9 Gerlach 2016 pp 114 368 Braham 2016b pp 960 961 967 Braham Randolph L 2011 Hungary The Controversial Chapter of the Holocaust In Braham Randolph L Vanden Heuvel William eds The Auschwitz Reports and the Holocaust in Hungary New York Columbia University Press p 45 29 49 ISBN 978 0880336888 Gerlach 2016 p 103 Braham 2016a pp xxxiv xliii Also see Braham Randolph L 2016b The Politics of Genocide The Holocaust in Hungary Vol 2 New York Columbia University Press pp 938 990 ISBN 978 0880337113 Gerlach 2016 p 114 Spoerer 2020 p 142 a b c Braham 2016a p 88 citing Hungarian Jewry Before and After the Persecutions Budapest Hungarian Section of the World Jewish Congress 1949 p 2 Lasik Aleksander 2000 Organizational Structure of Auschwitz Concentration Camp In Dlugoborski Waclaw Piper Franciszek eds Auschwitz 1940 1945 Central Issues in the History of the Camp Vol I The Establishment and Organization of the Camp Oswiecim Auschwitz Birkenau State Museum p 154 pp 145 279 ISBN 978 8385047872 OCLC 874340863 Lasik Aleksander 1998 1994 Rudolf Hoss Manager of Crime In Gutman Yisrael Berenbaum Michael eds Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp Bloomington IN Indiana University Press p 295 pp 288 300 ISBN 0 253 20884 X Czech Danuta 1990 Auschwitz Chronicle 1939 1945 New York Henry Holt and Company p 618 ISBN 0 8050 0938 8 a b c Czech 1990 p 627 Czech 1990 pp 633 634 Czech 1990 p 640 Czech 1990 p 666 Braham 2016a pp 774 775 Kadar amp Vagi 2004 p xxvi The Auschwitz Album Yad Vashem Archived from the original on 18 March 2013 Czech 1990 pp 630 636 a b Czech 1990 p 636 Czech 1990 p 641 Czech 1990 pp 642 643 Czech 1990 p 628 Czech 1990 pp 628 630 640ff Bauer 2002 p 157 Fleming Michael 2014 Auschwitz the Allies and Censorship of the Holocaust Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 215 366 note 190 citing the BBC Written Archives Centre BBC WAC C165 16 June 1944 ISBN 978 1 107 06279 5 Czechs Report Massacre Claim the Nazis Killed 7 000 in Prison Gas Chambers New York Times 20 June 1944 p 5 Szita Szabolcs 2005 Trading in Lives Operations of the Jewish Relief and Rescue Committee in Budapest 1944 1945 Budapest and New York Central European University Press pp 50 54 ISBN 963 7326 30 8 Braham 2016b p 1254ff Fischel Jack R 2010 Historical Dictionary of the Holocaust Lanham Scarecrow Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 8108 6774 1 Braham 2016b pp 1259 1261 Fleming 2014 p 236 A Monstrous Offer The Times Issue 49913 20 July 1944 p 2 Lob Ladislaus 2008 Dealing with Satan Rezso Kasztner s Daring Rescue Mission New York Jonathan Cape pp 274 277 ISBN 978 0 224 07792 7 Segev Tom 1993 The Seventh Million The Israelis and the Holocaust New York Hill and Wang p 257 ISBN 978 0809085637 Segev 1993 p 255 Segev 1993 pp 257 258 Braham 2016b p 975 Braham 2016b p 1290 Segev 1993 pp 282 283 a b Braham 2016b p 1291 Segev 1993 p 308 Braham 2016b pp 975 1292 A Swedish Rescuer in Budapest Yad Vashem Braham 2016b p 1505 The Mystery of the Hungarian Gold Train Presidential Advisory Commission on Holocaust Assets in the United States 7 October 1999 Archived from the original on 8 June 2011 a b Braham 2016b p 1507 Braham 2016b p 1509 Hungary s New Holocaust Museum Isn t Open Yet But It s Already Causing Concern NPR org Retrieved 14 December 2022 House of Fates Hungary s controversial Holocaust museum www cnn com Retrieved 14 December 2022 IHRA Chair s Statement on House of Fates Budapest IHRA Retrieved 14 December 2022 Gerlach Christian 2016 The Extermination of the European Jews Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 70689 6 Spoerer Mark 2020 The Nazi War Economy the Forced Labor System and the Murder of Jewish and Non Jewish Workers A Companion to the Holocaust Wiley 135 151 doi 10 1002 9781118970492 ch7 Further reading edit Winston Churchill to Anthony Eden 11 July 1944 Churchill Papers Churchill Archives Centre Cambridge German Troops Occupy Hungary United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Deportation of Hungarian Jews United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Herczl Moshe Y 1993 Christianity and the Holocaust of Hungarian Jewry New York NYU Press JSTOR j ctt9qg6vj Vagi Zoltan Csosz Laszlo Kadar Gabor 2013 The Holocaust in Hungary Evolution of a Genocide Lanham AltaMira Press ISBN 978 0 7591 2198 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Holocaust in Hungary amp oldid 1219413133, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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