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Rašića Gaj massacres

The Rašića Gaj massacres were massacres of Serbs committed by the Muslim Ustaše forces at the beginning of the World War II in Rašića Gaj, Vlasenica in Bosnia and Herzegovina (contemporary Independent State of Croatia) in June and July 1941. The estimations of the number of Serbs killed in Rašića Gaj vary between at least 70 and 200. It was one of the most shocking early World War II war crimes for Serbs in Eastern Bosnia and the testimonies about the cruel slaughter of Serbs in Rašića Gaj spread among the population of the region, causing fear and anger among the Serbs.[1]

Rašića Gaj massacres
LocationRašića Gaj, Vlasenica in Bosnia and Herzegovina (contemporary Independent State of Croatia)
Coordinates44°13′24″N 18°56′29″E / 44.2232°N 18.9413°E / 44.2232; 18.9413
DateJune 22, 1941 (1941-06-22)-
July 20, 1941 (1941-07-20)
TargetGenocidal persecution of Serbs
Attack type
Mass killing
Deaths70-200
VictimsSerbs
PerpetratorsUstaše
MotiveAnti-Serbian Orthodoxy, anti-Serbian sentiment, Croatisation, Greater Croatia

Background edit

According to some sources (Krsmanović, corroborated by Yugoslav Partisan source authored by Jakšić), already before the outbreak of the World War II the local Muslim leaders who joined Ustaše prepared a list of 200 Serbs who were to be killed.[2] At the beginning of the World War II in Yugoslavia, Vlasenica and all of eastern Bosnia along with Sandžak in Serbia, became part of the Independent State of Croatia. The military units of the Independent State of Croatia in eastern Bosnia consisted of regular units of the Croatian Home Guard and members of the local Muslim population who were recruited into units of Ustaše militia which distinguished itself in persecution of Serbs already at the very beginning of the war.[3] The Serbs who lived in Vlasenica were not subjected to persecution immediately after the creation of the Independent State of Croatia, like Serbs in its other parts, because Vlasenica remained under control of the German forces until 22 June 1941.[4] During the summer 1941 the genocide against Serbs in eastern Bosnia achieved wider scale in the region of Vlasenica, Birč and Zvornik.[5]

Massacres edit

On 22 June 1941, on the same day when German forces left Vlasenica, Ustaše from Sarajevo came to Vlasenica.[6] The commander of local Ustaše forces was Mutevelić, a carpet salesman who already regularly visited Vlasenica before the war. Mutevelić was appointed as Ustaše commissar of Vlasenica District and organized extensive persecution of Serbs.[7] He organized daily persecutions of prominent Serbs who were transported to improvised prison in Vlasenica and killed there or in Rašića Gaj.[8] On 22 June 1941 the Ustaše captured seven most notable Serbs, including the local Orthodox priest Dušan Bobar and Serb Orthodox parish priests Dragomir J. Maskijević and Janko Savić,[9] and killed all of them in Rašića Gaj.[10]

Between 22 June and 20 July another 80 Serbs were killed there.[11][12] The first group of prominent local Serbs killed by Ustaše in Rašića Gaj had 40 and another group 45 Serbs.[7] They included Ljubo Jakšić, a parish priest from nearby Han Pijesak.[13] Additional 200 residents of Vlasenica were imprisoned by Ustaše and sent to Jadovno and Slana concentration camps.[14] The estimations of the number of Serbs killed in Rašića Gaj vary between at least 70 and 200.[15] According to the testimony of one witness, the bodies of killed Serbs were thrown in one pit cave in Rašića Gaj.[16]

Aftermath edit

At the end of July and beginning of August 1941 another group of 50 Serbs from Vlasenica District (mostly from Milići) were imprisoned and murdered.[17]

By 12 August 1941 more than hundred Serbs were killed in nearby Drinjača. According to Ivanisević, the basket full of Serb eyes seen by Italian war journalist Curzio Malaparte at Ante Pavelic's desk during his late-summer visit to Zagreb in 1941 and described in his autobiographical war novel Kaputt, were eyes of Serbs killed in Drinjača.[18]

Legacy edit

The massacres in Rašića Gaj were among the most shocking early World War II war crimes for Serbs in Eastern Bosnia.[19] The testimonies about the cruel slaughter of Serbs in Rašića Gaj spread among the population of the region, causing fear and anger.[1] Many Serbs considered all Muslims and Croats as Ustaše and threatened to kill them to avenge Serbs killed in Rašića Gaj.[20]

The World War II massacres of Serbs by their Muslim neighbors and their accounts had very strong impact on local Serbs during the last War in Bosnia. According to the Srebrenica report of the Netherlands Institute for War Documentation, the choice of Rašića Gaj for execution of at least 21 Muslim men during 1990's War in Bosnia was maybe more than a mere coincidence.[21]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b (Zekić 1971, p. 32)
  2. ^ (NIOD 2002, p. 32): "Before the start of the war a local Muslim official who joined the Ustashe drew up a list containing the names of over two hundred Serbs who were to be killed.140...140 Krsmanovic, The blood-stained hands, p.16. This is corroborated by another (Partisan) source. See: Jaksic, ‘Activity of the Communist Party’, p.382."
  3. ^ Зборник за историју Босне и Херцеговине. Академија. 1995. p. 254.
  4. ^ (Затезало 2011, p. и): "
  5. ^ (Redžić 2005, p. 74): "In the summer of 1941 the genocide against the Serbs in eastern Bosnia acquired broader proportions in the areas of Birce, Vlasenica, Zvornik, ..."
  6. ^ (Затезало 2011, p. и) "
  7. ^ a b (Kurdulija 1993, p. 23)
  8. ^ (NIOD 2002, p. 32): "The local Ustashe commander, Mutevelic, a carpet salesman who had regularly visited Vlasenica before the war, reigned by terror. Daily, black uniformed Ustashe rounded up prominent local Serbs, transported them to a makeshift prison in Vlasenica and were killed them there or executed them in Rasica Gaj. During those massacres, which continued for several weeks"
  9. ^ (Džomić 1995)
  10. ^ (Затезало 2011, p. и)"
  11. ^ PRILOZI I SJEĆANJA. Ferid Šljivić, Stojan Babić, Vukosava Kujović: O DJELOVANJU SKOJEVSKE ORGANIZACIJE U BRIGADI
  12. ^ (Затезало 2011, p. и)
  13. ^ "Парохија хан-пијесачка (Хан Пијесак)". Епархија Зворничко Тузланска, Архијерејско Намјесништво Сребреничко — Подрињско. Retrieved 18 October 2016. Љубо Јакшић (наслиједио је оца Стеву, али су га 1941. године убиле усташе у Рашића Гају код Власенице),
  14. ^ (Затезало 2011, p. и) "
  15. ^ (NIOD 2002, p. 32): "During those massacres, which continued for several weeks, at least seventy Serbs were killed, although other sources list death tolls as high as two hundred"
  16. ^ (Ivanišević 1994)
  17. ^ (Ivanišević 1994)
  18. ^ (NIOD 2002, p. 32): "For these events in Drinjaèa see: Ivanisevic, Hronika naseg groblja pp.228-229; Antonic, Zapisi Pere Djukanovica, p.65-66; Nikolic, ‘Kravica u proslosti’, p.23. According to the latter source, more than a hundred Serbs were killed in Drinjaèe by 12 August 1941. Ivanisevic claims that the basket full of eyes from Serbs came from Drinjaèa. This basket was found by Italian war journalist, Curzio Malaparte, at Ante Pavelic’s desk during a late-summer visit to Zagreb in 1941, (an episode which he described in his autobiographical war novel Kaputt). The Ustashe had sent these as a ‘present’ to their leader (Ivanisevic, Hronika naseg groblja, p.23). See Malaparte, Kaputt, pp.221-28."
  19. ^ (NIOD 2002, p. 32): "Among the crimes most shocking to the Serbs in this part of eastern Bosnia were the massacres in the village of Rasica Gaj, near Vlasenica, which occurred after the German army left the town on 21 June 1941. Even today, local Serbs refer to these events as one of the worst Ustashe crimes in the region at the beginning of the war"
  20. ^ (NIOD 2002, p. 39): "[m]any Serbs regarded the Croats and Muslims all as Ustashe and threatened to kill them, and thus to avenge the victims of Rasica Gaj and other massacres”."
  21. ^ (NIOD 2002, p. 33): "In July 1995, for instance, Rasica Gaj was one of the sites where Muslim captives from the safe area of Srebrenica were executed by Mladic’s forces, a choice of location that may have been more than mere coincidence. At least 21 Muslims were killed here."

Sources edit

  • Zekić, Miloš (1971). Istočna Bosna u NOB-u 1941-1945. Vojnoizdavački zavod.
  • NIOD, Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide Studies (2002). The Srebrenica report. The Netherlands Institute for War Documentation.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Затезало, Ђуро (2011). "Источна Босна". Јадовно – Комплекс усташких логора 1941. Књига 1. Музеј Жртава Геноцида.
  • Džomić, Velibor V. (1995). Ustaški zločini nad srbskim sveštenicima. Svetigora.
  • Ivanišević, Milivoje (1994). Hronika našeg groblja ili Slovo o stradanju srpskog naroda Bratunca, Milića, Skelana i Srebrenice. Bratunac.
  • Redžić, Enver (2005). Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Second World War. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-7146-5625-0.
  • Kurdulija, Strahinja (1993). Atlas of the Ustasha genocide of the Serbs 1941-1945. Privredne vesti "Europublic". ISBN 978-86-7941-002-3.

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The Rasica Gaj massacres were massacres of Serbs committed by the Muslim Ustase forces at the beginning of the World War II in Rasica Gaj Vlasenica in Bosnia and Herzegovina contemporary Independent State of Croatia in June and July 1941 The estimations of the number of Serbs killed in Rasica Gaj vary between at least 70 and 200 It was one of the most shocking early World War II war crimes for Serbs in Eastern Bosnia and the testimonies about the cruel slaughter of Serbs in Rasica Gaj spread among the population of the region causing fear and anger among the Serbs 1 Rasica Gaj massacresLocationRasica Gaj Vlasenica in Bosnia and Herzegovina contemporary Independent State of Croatia Coordinates44 13 24 N 18 56 29 E 44 2232 N 18 9413 E 44 2232 18 9413DateJune 22 1941 1941 06 22 July 20 1941 1941 07 20 TargetGenocidal persecution of SerbsAttack typeMass killingDeaths70 200VictimsSerbsPerpetratorsUstaseMotiveAnti Serbian Orthodoxy anti Serbian sentiment Croatisation Greater Croatia Contents 1 Background 2 Massacres 3 Aftermath 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 References 7 SourcesBackground editAccording to some sources Krsmanovic corroborated by Yugoslav Partisan source authored by Jaksic already before the outbreak of the World War II the local Muslim leaders who joined Ustase prepared a list of 200 Serbs who were to be killed 2 At the beginning of the World War II in Yugoslavia Vlasenica and all of eastern Bosnia along with Sandzak in Serbia became part of the Independent State of Croatia The military units of the Independent State of Croatia in eastern Bosnia consisted of regular units of the Croatian Home Guard and members of the local Muslim population who were recruited into units of Ustase militia which distinguished itself in persecution of Serbs already at the very beginning of the war 3 The Serbs who lived in Vlasenica were not subjected to persecution immediately after the creation of the Independent State of Croatia like Serbs in its other parts because Vlasenica remained under control of the German forces until 22 June 1941 4 During the summer 1941 the genocide against Serbs in eastern Bosnia achieved wider scale in the region of Vlasenica Birc and Zvornik 5 Massacres editOn 22 June 1941 on the same day when German forces left Vlasenica Ustase from Sarajevo came to Vlasenica 6 The commander of local Ustase forces was Mutevelic a carpet salesman who already regularly visited Vlasenica before the war Mutevelic was appointed as Ustase commissar of Vlasenica District and organized extensive persecution of Serbs 7 He organized daily persecutions of prominent Serbs who were transported to improvised prison in Vlasenica and killed there or in Rasica Gaj 8 On 22 June 1941 the Ustase captured seven most notable Serbs including the local Orthodox priest Dusan Bobar and Serb Orthodox parish priests Dragomir J Maskijevic and Janko Savic 9 and killed all of them in Rasica Gaj 10 Between 22 June and 20 July another 80 Serbs were killed there 11 12 The first group of prominent local Serbs killed by Ustase in Rasica Gaj had 40 and another group 45 Serbs 7 They included Ljubo Jaksic a parish priest from nearby Han Pijesak 13 Additional 200 residents of Vlasenica were imprisoned by Ustase and sent to Jadovno and Slana concentration camps 14 The estimations of the number of Serbs killed in Rasica Gaj vary between at least 70 and 200 15 According to the testimony of one witness the bodies of killed Serbs were thrown in one pit cave in Rasica Gaj 16 Aftermath editAt the end of July and beginning of August 1941 another group of 50 Serbs from Vlasenica District mostly from Milici were imprisoned and murdered 17 By 12 August 1941 more than hundred Serbs were killed in nearby Drinjaca According to Ivanisevic the basket full of Serb eyes seen by Italian war journalist Curzio Malaparte at Ante Pavelic s desk during his late summer visit to Zagreb in 1941 and described in his autobiographical war novel Kaputt were eyes of Serbs killed in Drinjaca 18 Legacy editThe massacres in Rasica Gaj were among the most shocking early World War II war crimes for Serbs in Eastern Bosnia 19 The testimonies about the cruel slaughter of Serbs in Rasica Gaj spread among the population of the region causing fear and anger 1 Many Serbs considered all Muslims and Croats as Ustase and threatened to kill them to avenge Serbs killed in Rasica Gaj 20 The World War II massacres of Serbs by their Muslim neighbors and their accounts had very strong impact on local Serbs during the last War in Bosnia According to the Srebrenica report of the Netherlands Institute for War Documentation the choice of Rasica Gaj for execution of at least 21 Muslim men during 1990 s War in Bosnia was maybe more than a mere coincidence 21 See also editList of mass executions and massacres in Yugoslavia during World War IIReferences edit a b Zekic 1971 p 32 NIOD 2002 p 32 Before the start of the war a local Muslim official who joined the Ustashe drew up a list containing the names of over two hundred Serbs who were to be killed 140 140 Krsmanovic The blood stained hands p 16 This is corroborated by another Partisan source See Jaksic Activity of the Communist Party p 382 Zbornik za istoriјu Bosne i Hercegovine Akademiјa 1995 p 254 Zatezalo 2011 p i Redzic 2005 p 74 In the summer of 1941 the genocide against the Serbs in eastern Bosnia acquired broader proportions in the areas of Birce Vlasenica Zvornik Zatezalo 2011 p i a b Kurdulija 1993 p 23 NIOD 2002 p 32 The local Ustashe commander Mutevelic a carpet salesman who had regularly visited Vlasenica before the war reigned by terror Daily black uniformed Ustashe rounded up prominent local Serbs transported them to a makeshift prison in Vlasenica and were killed them there or executed them in Rasica Gaj During those massacres which continued for several weeks Dzomic 1995 Zatezalo 2011 p i PRILOZI I SJECANJA Ferid Sljivic Stojan Babic Vukosava Kujovic O DJELOVANJU SKOJEVSKE ORGANIZACIJE U BRIGADI Zatezalo 2011 p i Parohiјa han piјesachka Han Piјesak Eparhiјa Zvornichko Tuzlanska Arhiјereјsko Namјesnishtvo Srebrenichko Podriњsko Retrieved 18 October 2016 Љubo Јakshiћ nasliјedio јe oca Stevu ali su ga 1941 godine ubile ustashe u Rashiћa Gaјu kod Vlasenice Zatezalo 2011 p i NIOD 2002 p 32 During those massacres which continued for several weeks at least seventy Serbs were killed although other sources list death tolls as high as two hundred Ivanisevic 1994 Ivanisevic 1994 NIOD 2002 p 32 For these events in Drinjaea see Ivanisevic Hronika naseg groblja pp 228 229 Antonic Zapisi Pere Djukanovica p 65 66 Nikolic Kravica u proslosti p 23 According to the latter source more than a hundred Serbs were killed in Drinjaee by 12 August 1941 Ivanisevic claims that the basket full of eyes from Serbs came from Drinjaea This basket was found by Italian war journalist Curzio Malaparte at Ante Pavelic s desk during a late summer visit to Zagreb in 1941 an episode which he described in his autobiographical war novel Kaputt The Ustashe had sent these as a present to their leader Ivanisevic Hronika naseg groblja p 23 See Malaparte Kaputt pp 221 28 NIOD 2002 p 32 Among the crimes most shocking to the Serbs in this part of eastern Bosnia were the massacres in the village of Rasica Gaj near Vlasenica which occurred after the German army left the town on 21 June 1941 Even today local Serbs refer to these events as one of the worst Ustashe crimes in the region at the beginning of the war NIOD 2002 p 39 m any Serbs regarded the Croats and Muslims all as Ustashe and threatened to kill them and thus to avenge the victims of Rasica Gaj and other massacres NIOD 2002 p 33 In July 1995 for instance Rasica Gaj was one of the sites where Muslim captives from the safe area of Srebrenica were executed by Mladic s forces a choice of location that may have been more than mere coincidence At least 21 Muslims were killed here Sources editZekic Milos 1971 Istocna Bosna u NOB u 1941 1945 Vojnoizdavacki zavod NIOD Institute for War Holocaust and Genocide Studies 2002 The Srebrenica report The Netherlands Institute for War Documentation a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Zatezalo Ђuro 2011 Istochna Bosna Јadovno Kompleks ustashkih logora 1941 Kњiga 1 Muzeј Zhrtava Genocida Dzomic Velibor V 1995 Ustaski zlocini nad srbskim svestenicima Svetigora Ivanisevic Milivoje 1994 Hronika naseg groblja ili Slovo o stradanju srpskog naroda Bratunca Milica Skelana i Srebrenice Bratunac Redzic Enver 2005 Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Second World War Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 7146 5625 0 Kurdulija Strahinja 1993 Atlas of the Ustasha genocide of the Serbs 1941 1945 Privredne vesti Europublic ISBN 978 86 7941 002 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rasica Gaj massacres amp oldid 1184150115, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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