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Tezno massacre

The Tezno massacre (Croatian: Pokolj u Teznom) was the mass killing of POWs and civilians of the Independent State of Croatia (NDH) that took place in Tezno near Maribor after the end of World War II in Yugoslavia. The killings were perpetrated by units of the Yugoslav Partisans in May 1945, in the Bleiburg repatriations. Summary executions began on 19 May, when the first prisoners arrived in the Tezno Forest from nearby prison camps, and they continued until 26 May. Most of the bodies were buried in an antitank trench several kilometers long, which the Yugoslav authorities concealed and kept secret.

Tezno massacre
Part of the Bleiburg repatriations
Memorial to the victims in Tezno
LocationTezno, PR Slovenia, Yugoslavia
(now Slovenia)
Date19–26 May 1945
TargetNDH prisoners of war and civilians
Attack type
Mass executions
Deaths15,000[1][2]
PerpetratorsYugoslav Partisans

It is estimated that around 15,000 soldiers and civilians were killed in the massacre. The graves were discovered in 1999 during highway construction. Additional research on the burial sites was conducted in 2007 by the Commission on Concealed Mass Graves in Slovenia. In 2012, the Slovenian Government established a memorial park at Tezno, where an annual commemoration is held.

Background edit

 
The retreating column approaching the town of Bleiburg in May 1945

In May 1945, at the end of World War II in Yugoslavia, soldiers of the Independent State of Croatia began retreating towards Austria, where British forces were located, with the intention to surrender to them rather than the advancing Yugoslav Partisans.[3] Together with many civilians, the Croatian Armed Forces (HOS) fought their way to the Yugoslav–Austrian border and surrendered on 15 May to the British Army.[4][5]

Around 25,000 reached the border, mostly the town of Bleiburg, while around 175,000 were spread in nearby columns that were dozens of miles long. However, the British Army refused their surrender on the grounds that all Axis troops should surrender to the armies they were fighting against.[5] The prisoners of war at the border were thus repatriated to the Yugoslav Partisans.[6][7]

Forced marches and executions edit

 
Prisoners of war in Maribor
 
 
Tezno
class=notpageimage|
Location of Tezno on the map of Slovenia, marked in red.

The captured columns were subjected to forced marches from the border area in northern Slovenia.[8] A large number of prisoners marched towards the town of Maribor, where transit camps were set. The transit centres were located in a military barracks in the Studenci District, an aircraft parts factory in Tezno and several smaller buildings.[9]

As the columns moved away from the border with Austria, the prisoners were stripped of any valuables and given no food or water. To get to the destination more quickly, those who lagged behind were shot.[8] Some were killed for taking a break or for being too tired to continue walking. In the course of the march, small groups of men were being selected from the columns, led away into the forest and killed.[10] These killings were well organized and the work of entire units of men. Soon the killings of small groups turned into massive scale executions.[11]

The local Partisan headquarters that coordinated the columns was located in Maribor.[11] Organized executions were generally not conducted without the authorization of OZNA (Department of National Security). On 19 May, the Commander of the 3rd Army, Kosta Nađ, ordered the Majevica Brigade of the 17th Division to move to Maribor and subordinate itself to the local OZNA Command.[12]

At the transit camps a selection was made among the prisoners. Some were sent to Zagreb and Celje on forced marches or used as forced labour. Others were sent to Tezno near Maribor, where anti-tank trenches were located that were dug by the Germans during the war. Their length was several kilometers and stretched from the Drava River to the slopes of Pohorje Mountains. Prisoners were taken to the trenches by trucks from the transit sites. Their hands were tied behind their backs with wires and many were stripped of their clothes. Upon arrival, they were lined up on the edge of the trenches and shot. A former Partisan who witnessed the killings gave a description of one of them:

[...]prisoners were lined up at the edge of the hole where the older corpses lay. Next they were looted of what belongings they had. Finally, the hundred prisoners were machine-gunned. I watched this slaughter from a distance of one hundred yards or less. Some of the prisoners threw themselves down flat and escaped the machine gun fire. They pretended to be dead, but the Partisans went from one apparent corpse to another and ran their bayonets through everyone whom they suspected of being alive. Screams rent the air, providing grim evidence that those who had dodged the machine gun fire had not eluded death for long. All of the new victims were thrown into the hole on top of the old corpses. Then the Partisans directed several more bursts of machine gun fire into the pile of bodies, just to make sure that they had not left anyone alive.[13][9]

The executions started on 19 May. Partisan units that conducted them were the Majevica Brigade, 1st, 2nd, and parts of 3rd Battalion of the 6th Eastern Bosnian Brigade, which were all part of the 17th Eastern Bosnian Division of the 3rd Army.[12] The killings lasted continuously for several days and were delayed only in the case if trucks with prisoners were late.[14] When the trenches were full, special squads were ordered to cover them with soil. Some bodies were dug in separate mass graves or craters.[13] The last murders were carried out on 26 May.[15]

Aftermath edit

The corpses were shallowly buried and in the following weeks and months additional conceals were made. The OZNA made a list of all mass grave sites in Slovenia. Together with the People's Defence Corps of Yugoslavia (KNOJ) they organized covering of the sites with land and plants. Local authorities were informed to prevent any mourning at the graves.[16] Yugoslav authorities kept them secret; for decades, only limited access was allowed to the area. In 1984, it was designated by the government as a location of military cemeteries.[14][6]

Discovery and investigations of the graves edit

After the collapse of communism in Yugoslavia, hundreds of unmarked mass graves were found in Slovenia.[1] The Tezno mass graves were found during the construction of a motorway near Maribor in 1999, when workers came upon an anti-tank trench that stretched several kilometres. It was estimated that the part intended for the motorway contained around 600 corpses.[6]

Subsequent excavations revealed that there were 1,179 corpses in a 70 meter long part of the trench. On average there were 17 corpses found buried along each meter of it. The trench was covered with gravel and lime was found on top of the human remains. Most exhumed corpses indicated that the victims' arms were tied with wire. Individual skulls had visible gunshot wounds. In 1999, the Slovenian police initially estimated there were between 7,000 and 10,000 victims buried in the trenches.[17]

A new exhumation began in 2007. The Commission on Concealed Mass Graves in Slovenia reported that their analysis and conducted probing of what is now a forested area in Tezno found human remains at a length of 940 meters. Based on mathematical calculations and comparisons with the excavations in 1999, it is estimated to contain the remains of around 15,000 victims. The collected documentation and preserved items of victims indicate that they were largely members of the HOS. The historian Mitja Ferenc notes that among the victims were also some members of the Montenegrin National Army, who were incorporated into the HOS that year, and probably a few members of Muslim militias, the German Army, and the Hungarian and Albanian battalions of the HOS (Hungarista legion and Skanderbeg legion).[18] Jože Dežman, head of the Commission on Concealed Mass Graves, referred to Tezno as the largest mass grave in Europe following the end of World War II.[19]

The part of the trench in Tezno in Maribor is officially designated the Tezno Woods 1 Mass Grave. The Tezno Woods 2–6 Mass Graves (Slovene: Grobišče Tezenski gozd 2–6) lie west of the settlement of Dogoše, between the Zlatoličje hydroelectric plant canal and Maribor, and are part of a former antitank trench.[20]

Commemoration edit

 
Josip Leko, speaker of the Croatian Parliament, lays a wreath at the memorial park in Tezno in May 2015

After the discovery of the graves, memorials were erected commemorating the deaths of the victims.[21] In September 2007, the Slovene government started plans to make the mass grave site in Tezno a memorial park and a cemetery.[22] Croatian president Ivo Josipović visited the site in June 2010 and laid wreaths for the victims.[23]

In 2012, under Zoran Milanović's government, the Croatian Parliament decided to revoke funding for the annual Bleiburg commemoration and shifted to a smaller commemoration at the Tezno site. That year, President Josipović, Prime Minister Milanović and Speaker Boris Šprem, as well as Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Janša, visited the location and paid tribute to the victims.[24]

At the opening of the memorial park in June 2012, the President of Slovenia, Danilo Türk, said:[25]

The end of the Second World War also witnessed extra-judicial killings. And it was at Dobrava at Tezno that one of the major massacres took place. It is appropriate that these crimes are again decisively and clearly condemned today. On every suitable occasion, as the President of the Republic of Slovenia, I condemn all extra-judicial killings, and all forms of war and revolutionary violence. All those acts must be investigated and the whole truth must be told.

At the 2015 commemoration, the Croatian leadership condemned all crimes regardless of the ideology in whose name they were committed. After laying a wreath in Tezno, then-Prime Minister Milanović said:[26]

I came here for the people who were killed at the end of a war. This is a tragic, horrible event which puts a stain on a just fight and one should not run from it, nor do I run from it. Places like this always cause uneasiness, but they must be accepted and heads must not be turned away from them.

Tezno memorial park edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Kurapovna 2010, p. 244.
  2. ^ Ferenc 2012, p. 564.
  3. ^ Tanner 2001, p. 168.
  4. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 761.
  5. ^ a b Lowe 2012, p. 253.
  6. ^ a b c Corsellis & Ferrar 2005, p. 202.
  7. ^ Tanner 2001, p. 169.
  8. ^ a b Lowe 2012, p. 254.
  9. ^ a b Ferenc 2012, p. 540.
  10. ^ Lowe 2012, p. 255.
  11. ^ a b Lowe 2012, p. 257.
  12. ^ a b Ferenc 2012, p. 541.
  13. ^ a b Lowe 2012, pp. 257–258.
  14. ^ a b Ferenc 2012, p. 551.
  15. ^ Ferenc 2012, p. 542.
  16. ^ Ferenc 2012, pp. 546–547.
  17. ^ Ferenc 2012, pp. 554–556.
  18. ^ Ferenc 2012, pp. 564–565.
  19. ^ "Forgotten Victims: Slovenian Mass Grave Could Be Europe's Killing Fields". Spiegel Online. 21 August 2007.
  20. ^ Prostorski sloj Prikrita vojna grobišča na geopedia.si, geopedia.si; accessed 27 July 2016.(in Slovene)
  21. ^ Lowe 2012, p. 261.
  22. ^ Ferenc 2012, p. 567.
  23. ^ "Croatian leader to pay tribute to Partisan victims". dalje.com. 18 June 2010.
  24. ^ "Milanović u Teznom: Ovdje se dogodio ratni zločin, mahom nedužni mladići likvidirani su bez suda". Slobodna Dalmacija. 15 May 2012.
  25. ^ "Speech at the opening of the Memorial Park in Maribor". gov.si. 20 June 2012.
  26. ^ "Prime Minister condemns all crimes in Tezno". vlada.gov.hr. 15 May 2015.

References edit

  • Corsellis, John; Ferrar, Marcus (2005). Slovenia 1945: Memories of Death and Survival After World War II. London: I.B.Tauris. ISBN 9781250015044.
  • Ferenc, Mitja (2012). "Tezno – najveće prikriveno grobište u Sloveniji. O istraživanju grobišta u protutenkovskom rovu u Teznom (Maribor)" [Tezno – The Biggest Hidden Mass Burial Site in Slovenia. On the Research of the Hidden Burial Site in the Antitank Ditch in Tezno (Maribor)]. Journal of Contemporary History (in Croatian). 44. Ljubljana: Oddelek za zgodovino Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani: 539–69.
  • Kurapovna, Marcia (2010). Shadows on the mountain: the Allies, the Resistance, and the rivalries that doomed WWII Yugoslavia. John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 978-0-470-08456-4.
  • Lowe, Keith (2012). Savage Continent - Europe in the Aftermath of World War II. New York: Macmillan. ISBN 9781250015044.
  • Tanner, Marcus (2001). Croatia: a nation forged in war (2nd ed.). New Haven; London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-09125-7.
  • Tomasevich, Jozo (2001). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration. Stanford Univ: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-3615-2.

External links edit

  • Tezno Woods 1 Mass Grave on Geopedia (in Slovene)
  • Tezno Woods 2 Mass Grave on Geopedia (in Slovene)
  • Memorial website (in Slovene)

46°31′4.18″N 15°41′31.65″E / 46.5178278°N 15.6921250°E / 46.5178278; 15.6921250

tezno, massacre, croatian, pokolj, teznom, mass, killing, pows, civilians, independent, state, croatia, that, took, place, tezno, near, maribor, after, world, yugoslavia, killings, were, perpetrated, units, yugoslav, partisans, 1945, bleiburg, repatriations, s. The Tezno massacre Croatian Pokolj u Teznom was the mass killing of POWs and civilians of the Independent State of Croatia NDH that took place in Tezno near Maribor after the end of World War II in Yugoslavia The killings were perpetrated by units of the Yugoslav Partisans in May 1945 in the Bleiburg repatriations Summary executions began on 19 May when the first prisoners arrived in the Tezno Forest from nearby prison camps and they continued until 26 May Most of the bodies were buried in an antitank trench several kilometers long which the Yugoslav authorities concealed and kept secret Tezno massacrePart of the Bleiburg repatriationsMemorial to the victims in TeznoLocationTezno PR Slovenia Yugoslavia now Slovenia Date19 26 May 1945TargetNDH prisoners of war and civiliansAttack typeMass executionsDeaths15 000 1 2 PerpetratorsYugoslav PartisansIt is estimated that around 15 000 soldiers and civilians were killed in the massacre The graves were discovered in 1999 during highway construction Additional research on the burial sites was conducted in 2007 by the Commission on Concealed Mass Graves in Slovenia In 2012 the Slovenian Government established a memorial park at Tezno where an annual commemoration is held Contents 1 Background 2 Forced marches and executions 3 Aftermath 4 Discovery and investigations of the graves 5 Commemoration 6 Tezno memorial park 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksBackground editMain article Bleiburg repatriations nbsp The retreating column approaching the town of Bleiburg in May 1945In May 1945 at the end of World War II in Yugoslavia soldiers of the Independent State of Croatia began retreating towards Austria where British forces were located with the intention to surrender to them rather than the advancing Yugoslav Partisans 3 Together with many civilians the Croatian Armed Forces HOS fought their way to the Yugoslav Austrian border and surrendered on 15 May to the British Army 4 5 Around 25 000 reached the border mostly the town of Bleiburg while around 175 000 were spread in nearby columns that were dozens of miles long However the British Army refused their surrender on the grounds that all Axis troops should surrender to the armies they were fighting against 5 The prisoners of war at the border were thus repatriated to the Yugoslav Partisans 6 7 Forced marches and executions edit nbsp Prisoners of war in Maribor nbsp nbsp Teznoclass notpageimage Location of Tezno on the map of Slovenia marked in red The captured columns were subjected to forced marches from the border area in northern Slovenia 8 A large number of prisoners marched towards the town of Maribor where transit camps were set The transit centres were located in a military barracks in the Studenci District an aircraft parts factory in Tezno and several smaller buildings 9 As the columns moved away from the border with Austria the prisoners were stripped of any valuables and given no food or water To get to the destination more quickly those who lagged behind were shot 8 Some were killed for taking a break or for being too tired to continue walking In the course of the march small groups of men were being selected from the columns led away into the forest and killed 10 These killings were well organized and the work of entire units of men Soon the killings of small groups turned into massive scale executions 11 The local Partisan headquarters that coordinated the columns was located in Maribor 11 Organized executions were generally not conducted without the authorization of OZNA Department of National Security On 19 May the Commander of the 3rd Army Kosta Nađ ordered the Majevica Brigade of the 17th Division to move to Maribor and subordinate itself to the local OZNA Command 12 At the transit camps a selection was made among the prisoners Some were sent to Zagreb and Celje on forced marches or used as forced labour Others were sent to Tezno near Maribor where anti tank trenches were located that were dug by the Germans during the war Their length was several kilometers and stretched from the Drava River to the slopes of Pohorje Mountains Prisoners were taken to the trenches by trucks from the transit sites Their hands were tied behind their backs with wires and many were stripped of their clothes Upon arrival they were lined up on the edge of the trenches and shot A former Partisan who witnessed the killings gave a description of one of them prisoners were lined up at the edge of the hole where the older corpses lay Next they were looted of what belongings they had Finally the hundred prisoners were machine gunned I watched this slaughter from a distance of one hundred yards or less Some of the prisoners threw themselves down flat and escaped the machine gun fire They pretended to be dead but the Partisans went from one apparent corpse to another and ran their bayonets through everyone whom they suspected of being alive Screams rent the air providing grim evidence that those who had dodged the machine gun fire had not eluded death for long All of the new victims were thrown into the hole on top of the old corpses Then the Partisans directed several more bursts of machine gun fire into the pile of bodies just to make sure that they had not left anyone alive 13 9 The executions started on 19 May Partisan units that conducted them were the Majevica Brigade 1st 2nd and parts of 3rd Battalion of the 6th Eastern Bosnian Brigade which were all part of the 17th Eastern Bosnian Division of the 3rd Army 12 The killings lasted continuously for several days and were delayed only in the case if trucks with prisoners were late 14 When the trenches were full special squads were ordered to cover them with soil Some bodies were dug in separate mass graves or craters 13 The last murders were carried out on 26 May 15 Aftermath editThe corpses were shallowly buried and in the following weeks and months additional conceals were made The OZNA made a list of all mass grave sites in Slovenia Together with the People s Defence Corps of Yugoslavia KNOJ they organized covering of the sites with land and plants Local authorities were informed to prevent any mourning at the graves 16 Yugoslav authorities kept them secret for decades only limited access was allowed to the area In 1984 it was designated by the government as a location of military cemeteries 14 6 Discovery and investigations of the graves editAfter the collapse of communism in Yugoslavia hundreds of unmarked mass graves were found in Slovenia 1 The Tezno mass graves were found during the construction of a motorway near Maribor in 1999 when workers came upon an anti tank trench that stretched several kilometres It was estimated that the part intended for the motorway contained around 600 corpses 6 Subsequent excavations revealed that there were 1 179 corpses in a 70 meter long part of the trench On average there were 17 corpses found buried along each meter of it The trench was covered with gravel and lime was found on top of the human remains Most exhumed corpses indicated that the victims arms were tied with wire Individual skulls had visible gunshot wounds In 1999 the Slovenian police initially estimated there were between 7 000 and 10 000 victims buried in the trenches 17 A new exhumation began in 2007 The Commission on Concealed Mass Graves in Slovenia reported that their analysis and conducted probing of what is now a forested area in Tezno found human remains at a length of 940 meters Based on mathematical calculations and comparisons with the excavations in 1999 it is estimated to contain the remains of around 15 000 victims The collected documentation and preserved items of victims indicate that they were largely members of the HOS The historian Mitja Ferenc notes that among the victims were also some members of the Montenegrin National Army who were incorporated into the HOS that year and probably a few members of Muslim militias the German Army and the Hungarian and Albanian battalions of the HOS Hungarista legion and Skanderbeg legion 18 Joze Dezman head of the Commission on Concealed Mass Graves referred to Tezno as the largest mass grave in Europe following the end of World War II 19 The part of the trench in Tezno in Maribor is officially designated the Tezno Woods 1 Mass Grave The Tezno Woods 2 6 Mass Graves Slovene Grobisce Tezenski gozd 2 6 lie west of the settlement of Dogose between the Zlatolicje hydroelectric plant canal and Maribor and are part of a former antitank trench 20 Commemoration edit nbsp Josip Leko speaker of the Croatian Parliament lays a wreath at the memorial park in Tezno in May 2015After the discovery of the graves memorials were erected commemorating the deaths of the victims 21 In September 2007 the Slovene government started plans to make the mass grave site in Tezno a memorial park and a cemetery 22 Croatian president Ivo Josipovic visited the site in June 2010 and laid wreaths for the victims 23 In 2012 under Zoran Milanovic s government the Croatian Parliament decided to revoke funding for the annual Bleiburg commemoration and shifted to a smaller commemoration at the Tezno site That year President Josipovic Prime Minister Milanovic and Speaker Boris Sprem as well as Slovenian Prime Minister Janez Jansa visited the location and paid tribute to the victims 24 At the opening of the memorial park in June 2012 the President of Slovenia Danilo Turk said 25 The end of the Second World War also witnessed extra judicial killings And it was at Dobrava at Tezno that one of the major massacres took place It is appropriate that these crimes are again decisively and clearly condemned today On every suitable occasion as the President of the Republic of Slovenia I condemn all extra judicial killings and all forms of war and revolutionary violence All those acts must be investigated and the whole truth must be told At the 2015 commemoration the Croatian leadership condemned all crimes regardless of the ideology in whose name they were committed After laying a wreath in Tezno then Prime Minister Milanovic said 26 I came here for the people who were killed at the end of a war This is a tragic horrible event which puts a stain on a just fight and one should not run from it nor do I run from it Places like this always cause uneasiness but they must be accepted and heads must not be turned away from them Tezno memorial park edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp See also editMass graves in Slovenia Mass graves in Maribor Mass killings under communist regimesNotes edit a b Kurapovna 2010 p 244 Ferenc 2012 p 564 Tanner 2001 p 168 Tomasevich 2001 p 761 a b Lowe 2012 p 253 a b c Corsellis amp Ferrar 2005 p 202 Tanner 2001 p 169 a b Lowe 2012 p 254 a b Ferenc 2012 p 540 Lowe 2012 p 255 a b Lowe 2012 p 257 a b Ferenc 2012 p 541 a b Lowe 2012 pp 257 258 a b Ferenc 2012 p 551 Ferenc 2012 p 542 Ferenc 2012 pp 546 547 Ferenc 2012 pp 554 556 Ferenc 2012 pp 564 565 Forgotten Victims Slovenian Mass Grave Could Be Europe s Killing Fields Spiegel Online 21 August 2007 Prostorski sloj Prikrita vojna grobisca na geopedia si geopedia si accessed 27 July 2016 in Slovene Lowe 2012 p 261 Ferenc 2012 p 567 Croatian leader to pay tribute to Partisan victims dalje com 18 June 2010 Milanovic u Teznom Ovdje se dogodio ratni zlocin mahom neduzni mladici likvidirani su bez suda Slobodna Dalmacija 15 May 2012 Speech at the opening of the Memorial Park in Maribor gov si 20 June 2012 Prime Minister condemns all crimes in Tezno vlada gov hr 15 May 2015 References editCorsellis John Ferrar Marcus 2005 Slovenia 1945 Memories of Death and Survival After World War II London I B Tauris ISBN 9781250015044 Ferenc Mitja 2012 Tezno najvece prikriveno grobiste u Sloveniji O istrazivanju grobista u protutenkovskom rovu u Teznom Maribor Tezno The Biggest Hidden Mass Burial Site in Slovenia On the Research of the Hidden Burial Site in the Antitank Ditch in Tezno Maribor Journal of Contemporary History in Croatian 44 Ljubljana Oddelek za zgodovino Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani 539 69 Kurapovna Marcia 2010 Shadows on the mountain the Allies the Resistance and the rivalries that doomed WWII Yugoslavia John Wiley and Sons ISBN 978 0 470 08456 4 Lowe Keith 2012 Savage Continent Europe in the Aftermath of World War II New York Macmillan ISBN 9781250015044 Tanner Marcus 2001 Croatia a nation forged in war 2nd ed New Haven London Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 09125 7 Tomasevich Jozo 2001 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Occupation and Collaboration Stanford Univ Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 3615 2 External links editTezno Woods 1 Mass Grave on Geopedia in Slovene Tezno Woods 2 Mass Grave on Geopedia in Slovene Memorial website in Slovene 46 31 4 18 N 15 41 31 65 E 46 5178278 N 15 6921250 E 46 5178278 15 6921250 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tezno massacre amp oldid 1213026186, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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