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Jasenovac concentration camp (Croatian,
Serbian:
Logor Jasenovac; Cyrillic script:
Логор Јасеновац. Yiddish: יאסענאוואץ, Hebrew: יסנובץ) was the
largest extermination camp in the Independent State of
Croatia (NDH) and occupied Yugoslavia during World War II. The camp was established by
the Ustaše (Ustasha)
regime in August 1941 and dismantled in April 1945. In Jasenovac,
the largest number of victims were ethnic Serbs, whom Ante Pavelić considered the main opponents
of the NDH. The camp also held Jews,
Slovenes, Roma, Muslims Bosniaks[1], Croatian communists[2], and
large numbers of Tito's Partisans who fought against Nazis
and their collaborators - Ustashas.[3]
Jasenovac was a complex of five subcamps[4] spread
over 240 km2 (93 sq mi) on the banks of
the Sava river. The largest camp
was at Jasenovac, about 100 km (62 mi)
southeast of Zagreb. The
complex also included large grounds at Donja Gradina directly
across the Sava river, a camp for children
in Sisak to the northwest, and a
women's camp in Stara
Gradiška to the southeast.
Background
NDH
Legislation
Some of the first legal orders issued by the NDH reflected the acceptance of
the ideology of Nazi
Germany and Fascist Italy, with an
emphasis placed on Croatian national issues. The "Legal order for
the defense of the people and the state" dated 17 April 1941
ordered the death penalty for "infringement of the
honour and vital interests of the Croatian people and the survival
of the Independent State of Croatia". It was soon followed by the
"Legal order of races" and the "Legal order of the protection of
Aryan blood and the honour of the Croatian people" dated 30 April
1941, as well as the "Order of the creation and definition of the
racial-political committee" dated 4 June 1941. These decrees were
enforced not only through the regular court system, but also
through new special courts and mobile court-martials with extended
jurisdiction. In July, 1941, when existing jails could no longer
contain the growing number of new inmates, the Ustaša government
began clearing ground for what would become the Jasenovac
concentration camp.[5]
Nazi
Germany
Ustaše guard in a mass grave at Jasenovac concentration camp.
On 10 April 1941, the Independent State of Croatia was
established, supported by Nazi Germany and fascist Italy. It
adopted their racial and political doctrines. Jasenovac's role in
the Nazi "final solution" was as the ethnic cleansing of Romany and
Serbian inhabitants.
The Ustase's death camps were directed by numerous Nazi
sources:
- The office of foreign affairs, represented in Croatia by Siegfried
Kasche.
- The S.S., represented by a Gestapo official whose identity has
not been fully established, but whom Jewish witnesses knew as
"Miller".
- The Reichsfuhrung and the Wehrmacht.
The competition between the different authorities would not
usually benefit the Jews, but actually caused each to try and excel
past its competitors in maltreatment of Jews and others. The Nazis
encouraged the Ustase's anti-Jewish and anti-Roma actions and
showed support for the extermination of Serb policy. Soon, the
Nazis began to make clear their genocidal goals, as shown by the
speech Hitler gave to Slavko Kvaternik, at their meeting on
21 July 1941:
The Jews are the bane of mankind. If the Jews will be allowed to
do as they will, like they are permitted in their Soviet heaven,
than they will fulfill their most insane plans. And thus Russia
became the center to the world's illness... if for any reason, one
nation would endure the existence of a single Jewish family, that
family would eventually become the center of a new plot. If there
are no more Jews in Europe, nothing will hold the unification of
the European nations... this sort of people cannot be integrated in
the social order or into an organized nation. They are parasites on
the body of a healthy society, that live off of expulsion of decent
people. One cannot expect them to fit into a state that requires
order and discipline. There is only one thing to be done with them:
To exterminate them. The state holds this right
since, while precious men die on the battlefront, it would be
nothing less than criminal to spare these bastards. They must be
expelled, or – if they pose no threat to the public – to be
imprisoned inside concentration camps and never be released."[6]
In the Wannsee Conference, Germany offered
the Croatian government transportation of its Jews southwards, but
questioned the importance of the offer, saying that: "the enactment
of the final solution of the Jewish question is not crucial, since
the key aspects of this problem were already solved by radical
actions these governments took".[7]
In addition to specifying the means of extermination, the Nazis
often arranged the imprisonment or transfer of inmates to
Jasenovac.[8][9][10]
Kasche's emissary, Major Knehe, visited the camp in 6 February
1942. Kasche thereafter reported to his superiors:
Capitan Luburic, the commander-in-action of the camp, explained
the construction plans of the camp. It turns out that he made these
plans while in exile. These plans he modified after visiting
concentration-camps installments in Germany.[11]
It thus appears that the Nazis inspected Jasenovac, possibly due
to doubts they had about Ustase devotion to the extermination of
Jews. Kasche wrote the following:"The Poglavnik asks General Bader
to realize that the Jasenovac camp cannot receive the refugees of
Kozara. I agreed since the camp is also required to solve the
problem in deporting the Jews to the east. Minister Turina can
deport the Jews to Jasenovac".[12]
It is unclear whether Jasenovac was to be used primarily as a
death camp in its own right, like Sajmiste, or more as a
collection depot from which Jews would be transported to Auschwitz. Stara-Gradiska was the primary
site from which Jews were transported to Auschwitz, but Kashe's
letter refers specifically to the subcamp Ciglana in this
regard.[13] The
extermination of Serbs at Jasenovac was precipitated by General
Bader, who ordered that refugees be taken to Jasenovac. Although
Jasenovac was expanded, officials were told that "Jasenovac
concentration and labor camp cannot hold an infinite number of
prisoners".[14]
Soon thereafter, German suspicions were renewed that the Ustaše
was more concerned with the elimination of Serbs than Jews, and
that Italian and Catholic pressure was dissuading the Ustase from
killing Jews.[15]
The Nazis revisited the possibility of transporting Jews to
Auschwitz for liquidation, not only because extermination was
easier there, but also because the profits produced from the
victims could be kept in German hands, rather than being left for
the Croats or Italians.[16]
Instead Jasenovac remained a place where Jews who could not be
deported would be interned and killed: In this way, while Jews were
deported from Tenje, two deportations were also made to
Jasenovac.[17] It is
also illustrated by the report sent by Hans Helm to Adolf Eichmann,
saying that the Jews will first be collected in Stara-Gradiska,and
that "Jews employed in 'forced labor' in Ustase camps", mentioning
only Jasenovac and Stara Gradiska," will not be deported".[18] The
Nazis also found interest in the Jews that remained inside the
camp, even in June 1944, after the visit of a Red Cross delegation. Kasche wrote:
"Schmidlin showed a special interest in the Jews... Luburic told me
that Schmidllin told him that the Jews must be treated in the
finest manner, and that they must survive, no matter what
happens... Luburic suspected Schmidllin is an English agent and
therefore prevented all contact between him and the Jews"[19]
Creation
and operation of Jasenovac concentration camp
The Jasenovac complex was built between August 1941 and February
1942. The first two camps, Krapje and Bročica, were closed in November
1941.[20]
The three newer camps continued to function until the end of the
war:
- Ciglana (Jasenovac III)
- Kozara (Jasenovac IV)
- Stara Gradiška
(Jasenovac V)
Ustase militia executing people over a mass grave near Jasenovac
concentration camp
The camp was constructed, managed and supervised by Department
III of the Ustaška Narodna Služba or UNS
(lit. "Ustaše People's Service"), a special police
force of the NDH. Vjekoslav "Maks" Luburić was head of the
UNS. Individuals managing the camp at different times included Miroslav Majstorović and Dinko
Šakić.[21] The
camp administration in times used other Ustase battalions, police
units, domobrani units, auxiliary units made up of Muslims, and
even the aid of German and Hungarian Nazis.[22]
The Ustaše interned, tortured and executed men, women and
children in Jasenovac. The largest number of victims were Serbs, but other victims included
Jews,[23]Gypsies, and Croatian resistance members
opposed to the regime (i.e. Partisans or their sympathizers,
categorized by the Ustaše as "communists"). Upon arrival at the
camp, the prisoners were marked with colors, similar to the use of
Nazi concentration camp
badges: blue for Serbs, and red for communists (non-Serbian
resistance members), while Gypsies had no marks (this practice was
later abandoned.).[24] Most
victims were killed at execution sites near the camp: Granik,
Gradina, and other places. Those kept alive were mostly skilled at
needed professions and trades (doctors, pharmacists, electricians,
shoemakers, goldsmiths, and so on) and were employed in services
and workshops at Jasenovac[25]
The population of
inmates in Jasenovac
Serbs
Serbs constituted the majority of inmates in Jasenovac.[26] In
several instances, inmates were immediately killed for confessing
their Serbian ethnicity and most considered it to be the reason for
their imprisonment.[27] The
Serbs were predominantly brought from the Kozara region, where the Ustasa captured areas
along with partisan guerrillas.[28] These
were brought to camp without sentence, almost destined to immediate
liquidation, accelerated via use of a machine-gun.[29]
Estimated deaths of Serb inmates range between 26,000 to over
700,000 depending on sources. [30]
The Jewish virtual library estimates the number of Serbs killed by
the Ustaša between 330,000 and 390,000, with 45,000 to 52,000 Serbs
murdered in Jasenovac.[31]
Younger university researchers such as Tomislav Dulic estimate the
death toll in Jasenovac to be around 100,000 (more than half of
casualties being of Serb origin) which still makes it the largest
extermination camp in the Balkans and among the largest in
Europe.[32] The
camp alone accounts for about 10% of the total number of killed
persons in wartime Yugoslavia.[33]
Another researcher, Bogoljub Kocevic, estimates roughly 1,000,000
victims in entire Yugoslavia, one half of whom (mostly ethnic
Serbs) were killed in wartime Croatia.[34] This
researcher seems to support the Tomislav Dulic in terms of the size
of Jasenovac camp. The victim list as of January 2007 was composed
of 70,000 names.[35] The
list is however subject to a constant update and has been expanding
for the last 3 years.
Jews
A report on the deportation of
Travnik area Jews to Jasenovac and Stara
Gradiška camps, March 1942
Jews, being the primary target of Nazi-oriented Genocide, were
the second-largest category of victims of Jasenovac. The number of
Jewish casualties is uncertain, but ranges from about 8,000 [36]
up to 25,000[37] Most
of the executions of Jews at Jasenovac occurred prior to August
1942. Thereafter, the NDH started to deport them
to Auschwitz. In general,
Jews were initially sent to Jasenovac from all parts of Croatia
after being gathered in Zagreb, and from Bosnia and Herzegovina after
being gathered in Sarajevo. Some, however, were transported
directly to Jasenovac from other cities and smaller towns.
Gypsies
Gypsies in Jasenovac consisted of both Roma and Sinti, who were
captured in various areas in Bosnia, especially in the Kozara
region. They were brought to Jasenovac and taken to area III-C,
under the open sky, in terms of nutrition, hydration, shelter and
sanitary that were below the camp's standards.[38] The
figures of murdered Gypsies are the most controversial, save
figures of Serbian casualties, and they range between 20,000 and
50,000.[39]
Croatian
anti-fascists
Anti-fascists were also a notable part of the inmate population.
These consisted of various sorts of political and ideological
antagonists of the Ustasa. In general, their treatment was similar
to other inmates, although known Communists were executed right away,[40] and
convicted Ustasa or law-enforcement officials,[41] or
others close to the Ustasa in opinion, such as Croatian peasants,
were held on beneficial terms and granted amnesty after serving a
duration of time.[42]
Various
The Ustasa also imprisoned various sorts of other ethnicities:
Ukrainians, Romanians, Austrians, Bosniaks, Slovenes and
Montenegrians.[43]
Living
conditions
The living conditions in the camp evidenced the severity typical
in Nazi death camps: a meager diet, deplorable accommodations, and
cruel behavior by the Ustaše guards. Also, as in many camps,
conditions would be improved temporarily during visits by
delegations – such as the press delegation that visited in February
1942 and a Red Cross delegation in June 1944 – and
reverted after the delegation left.[44]
- Food: Again, typical of Nazi death camps, the
diet of inmates at Jasenovac was insufficient to sustain life: The
sorts of food they consumed changed during the camp's existence. In
camp Brocice, inmates were given a "soup" made of hot water with
starch for breakfast, and beans for lunch and dinner (served at
6:00, 12:00 and 21:00).[45] Food
in Camp No. III was initially better, consisting of potatoes
instead of beans; however, in January the diet was changed to a
single daily serving of thin "turnip soup".[46] By
the end of the year, the diet had been changed again, to three
daily portions of thin gruel made of water and starch.[47] Food
changed repeatedly thereafter.
- Water: Jasenovac was even more severe than
most death camps in one respect: a general lack of potable water.
Prisoners were forced to drink water from the Sava river, which was
contaminated with ren (horseradish).[48]
- Accommodations: In the first camps, Brocice
and Krapje, inmates slept in standard concentration-camp barracks,
with three tiers of bunks. In Camp No. III, which housed some 3,000
inmates, inmates initially slept in the attics of the workshops, in
an open depot designated as a railway "tunnel", or simply in the
open. A short time later, eight barracks were erected.[49][50]
Inmates slept in six of these barracks, while the other two were
used as a "clinic" and a "hospital", where ill inmates were
concentrated to die or be liquidated.[51][52][53][54][55]
- Forced labor: As in all concentration camps,
Jasenovac inmates forced daily perform some 11 hours of hard labor,
under the eye of the Ustasa captors, who would execute any inmate
for the most trivial reasons, allegedly for "sabotaging labor".[56][57][58] The
labor section was overseen by Ustasas Hinko Dominik Picilli and
Tihomir Kordic. Picillii would personally lash inmates to work
harder.[59][60] He
divided the "Jasenovac labor force" into 16 groups, including
groups of construction, brickworks, metal-works, agriculture, etc.
The inmates would perish from the hard work. Work in the brickworks
was hard.[61]
Blacksmith work was also done, as the inmates forged knives and
other weapons for the Ustasa.[62] Dike
construction work was most feared.[63][64][65]
- Sanitation: Inside the camp, squalor and lack
of sanitation reigned: clutter, blood, vomit and bodies filled the
barracks, which were also full of pests and of the foul scent of
the often overflowing latrine bucket.[66][67] Due
to exposure to the elements, inmates suffered from impaired health
leading to epidemics of typhus, typhoid, malaria, pleuritis, influenza, dysentery and diphtheria.[68]
During pauses in labor (5:00-6:00; 12:00-13:00, 17:00-20:00[69])inmates
had to relief themselves at open latrines, which consisted of big
pits dug open fields, covered in planks. Inmates would tend to fall
inside, and often died. The Ustase encouraged this by either having
internees separate the planks, or by physically drowning inmates
inside. The pit would overflow during floods and rains, and was
also drained into the lake, from which inmate drinking water was
taken.[70][71][72][73] The
inmate's rags and blankets were too thin to prevent exposure to
frost, as was the shelter of the barracks.[74] the
clothes and blankets were rarely and poorly cleansed, as inmates
were only allowed to wash them briefly in the lake's waters once a
month[75] save
during winter time, when the lake froze. Then, a sanitation device
was erected in a warehouse, where a few clothes were insufficiently
boiled.[69]
- Lack of personal possessions: The inmates were
stripped of their belongings and personal attire. As inmates, only
ragged prison-issue clothing was given to them. In winter, inmates
were given thin "rain-coats" and they were allowed to make light
sandals. Inmates were given a personal food bowl, designated to
contain 0.4ltrs of "soup" they were fed with. Inmates whose bowl
was missing (stolen by another inmate to defecate in) would receive
no food.[76]
During delegation visits, inmates were given bowls twice as large
with spoons. Additionally, at such times, inmates were given
colored tags.
- Anxiety: The fear of death, and the paradox of
a situation in which the living dwell next to the dead, had great
impact on the internees. Basically, an inmate's life in a
concentration camp can be viewed in the optimal way when looking at
it in three stages: arrival to camp, living inside it, and the
release. The first stage consisted of the shock caused by the
hardships in transit to camp. The Ustase would fuel this shock by
murdering a number of inmates on arrival and by temporarily housing
new-arrivals in warehouses, attics, in the train tunnel and
outdoors.[77] After
the inmates grew familiar with the life in camp, they would enter
the second and most critical phase: living through the anguish of
death, and the sorrow, hardships and abuse. The peril of death was
most prominent in "public performances for public punishment" or
selections, when inmates would be lined in groups and individuals
would be randomly pointed out to receive punishment of death before
the rest. The Ustase would intensify this by prolonging the
process, patrolling about and asking questions, gazing at inmates,
choosing them and then refrain and point out another.[78][79] As
inmates, people could react to the Ustase crimes in an active or
passive manner. The activists would form resistance movements and
groups, steal food, plot escapes and revolts, contacts with the
outside world.[80] The
passive inmates, the majority, would react by attempt to survive,
to go through the day unharmed. This is not "going in line to
slaughter", but rather another approach to survival, which deprived
the Ustase of the possibility of completely dehumanizing the
inmates. However, some of these inmates became in this way utterly
primitive, as their whole life revolved around following orders and
eating a bowl of soup. Thus they became "musselmans": physically
appearing as living skeletons, but mentally stripped of their
humanity beyond hope of salvation. All inmates suffered from
psychological phenomena to some extent: obsessive thoughts of food,
paranoia, delusions, day-dreams, lack of self-control.[81] Some
inmates reacted with attempts at documenting the atrocities, such
as Nikola Nikolic, Djuro Schawrtz and Ilija Ivanovic, who all tried
to memorize and even write of events, dates and details. Such deeds
were perilous, since writing was punishable by death and tracking
dates was hard.[82]
Mass
murder and cruelty
A knife nicknamed '
Serbcutter, strapped to the hand, which
was used by the
Ustaše
militia for the speedy killing of inmates in Jasenovac.
Butchered victims were thrown into the river.
In the late summer of 1942, tens of thousands of Serbian
villagers were deported to Jasenovac from the Kozara mountain area (in Bosnia) where NDH forces were fighting
against the Yugoslav Partisans.[83] Most
of the men were killed at Jasenovac, but women were sent to forced
labor in Germany. Children
were taken from their mothers and either killed or dispersed to
Catholic orphanages.[84]
On the night of 29 August 1942, the prison guards made bets
among themselves as to who could liquidate the largest number of
inmates. One of the guards, Petar Brzica, boasted [85]
cutting the throats of about 1,360 new arrivals with a butcher
knife that became known as srbosjek
("Serb-cutter"). Other participants who confessed to participating
in the bet included Ante Zrinusic, who killed some 600 inmates, and
Mile Friganovic, who gave a detailed and consistent report of the
incident.[86]
Friganovic admitted to having killed some 1,100 inmates. He
specifically recounted his torture of an old man named Vukasin; he
attempted to compel the man to bless Ante Pavelic, which the old
man refused to do, although Friganovic cut off his ears, nose and
tongue after each refusal. Ultimately, he cut out the old man's
eyes, tore out his heart, and slashed his throat. This incident was
witnessed by Dr. Nikola Nikolic.[87]
Systematic extermination
of prisoners
Besides sporadic killings and deaths due to the poor living
conditions, many inmates arriving at Jasenovac were scheduled for
systematic liquidation. An important criterion for selection was
the duration of a prisoner's anticipated detention. Strong men
capable of labor and sentenced to less than three years of
incarceration were allowed to live. All inmates with indeterminate
sentences or sentences of three years or more were immediately
scheduled for liquidation, regardless of their fitness.[88][89][90][91]
Systematic extermination varied both as to place and form. Some
of the executions were mechanical, following Nazi methodology,
while others were manual. The mechanical means of extermination
included:
- Cremation: The Ustase cremated living inmates,
who were sometimes drugged and sometimes fully awake, as well as
corpses. The first cremations took place in the brick factory ovens
in January, 1942.[92][93]
Engineer Hinko Dominik Picilli perfected this method by converting
seven of the kiln's furnace chambers into more sophisticated
crematories.[94][95][96].[97][98];[99][100]
Crematories were also placed in Gradina, across the Sava River.
According to the State Commission, however, "there is no
information that it ever went into operation.".[101]
Later testimony, however, say the Gradina crematory had become
operational.[102][103]
Some bodies were buried rather than cremated, as shown by
exhumation of bodies late in the war.
Manual methods, the Ustase's favorites, were liquidation that
took part in utilizing sharp or blunt craftsmen tools: knives,
saws, hammers, et cetera. These liquidations took place in various
locations:
- Granik: Granik was a ramp used to unload goods
of Sava boats. In winter 1943-44, season agriculture laborers
became unemployed, while large transports of new internees arrived
and the need for liquidation, in light of the expected Axis defeat,
were large. Therefore, "Maks" Luburic devised a plan to utilize the
crane as a gallows on which slaughter would be committed, so that
the bodies could be dumped into the stream of the flowing river. In
the autumn, the Ustase NCO's came in every night for some 20 days,
with lists of names of people who were incarcerated in the
warehouse, stripped, chained, beaten and than taken to the
"Granik", where weights were tied to the wire that was bent on
their arms, and their intestines and neck were slashed, and they
were thrown into the river with a blow of a blunt tool in the head.
The method was later enhanced, so that inmates were tied in pairs,
back to back, their bellies were cut before they were tossed into
the river alive.[114][115][116][117]
- Gradina: The Ustase utilized empty areas in
the vicinity of the villages Donja Gradina and Ustice, where they
encircled an area marked for slaughter and mass graves in wire. The
Ustase slew victims with knives or smashed their skulls with
mallets. When gypsies arrived in the camp, they did not undergo
selection, but were rather concentrated under the open skies at a
section of camp known as "III-C". From there the gypsies were taken
to liquidation in Gradina, working on the dike (men) or in the corn
fields in Ustice (women) in between liquidations. Thus Gradina and
Ustica became Roma mass grave sites. Furthermore, small groups of
gypsies were utilized as gravediggers that actually participated in
the slaughter at Gradina. Thus the extermination at the site grew
until it became the main killing-ground in Jasenovac. Grave sites
were also located in Ustica and in Draksenic.[118][119][120]
- Mlaka and Jablanac: Two sites used as
collection and labor camps for the women and children in camps III
and V, but also as places where many of these women and children,
as well as other groups, were liquidated at the Sava bank in
between the two locations.
- Velika Kustarica: According to the
state-commission, as far as 50,000 people were killed here in the
winter amid 1941 and 1942.[121]
There is more evidence suggesting that killings took place there at
that time and afterwards.[122][123]
Inmate
help
In 1942, Diana Budisavljević came into contact with German
officers at Stara Gradiška about releasing children from the
camp.[124]
With the help of the Ministry of Social Affairs, especially prof.
Kamil Bresler, she was able to relocate child inmates from the camp
to Zagreb, and other places.[124]
The Red-Cross is in times accused of insufficient aid of the
persecuted Jews in Nazi Europe. In the NDH, however, the operation
of the Red-Cross was ambivalent, and although the assistance was
perhaps late or insufficient, it was the most help the victims ever
got. The local representative, Julius Schmidllin, was contacted by
the Jewish community, which sought financial aid. The organisation
helped to release Jews from camps, and even debated with the
Croatian government in relation to visiting the Jasenovac camp. The
wish was eventually granted in July 1944. The camp was prepared for
the arrival of the delegation, so that it found nothing
incriminating.[125] The
inmates also received help from Croat citizens and even of Ustase.
Borislav Seva was rescued by an Ustase Vladimir Cupic.[126]
Inmate resistance groups were aided by contacts amongst the Ustase:
one of these groups, operating in the tannery, was assisted by
Ustase Dr. Marin Jurcev and his wife, and by an Ustase that
defected to the Partisan side with information of the atrocities of
Jasenovac.[127]
Ustase found guilty of tender handling of inmates were killed.[128]
Civilians were mostly kind towards inmates that did exterior
labor.[129][130]
End of the
camp
In April 1945, as Partisan units approached the camp,
the Ustaše camp supervisors attempted to erase traces of the
atrocities by working the death camp at full capacity. On 22 April,
600 prisoners revolted; 520 were killed and 80 escaped.[131]
Before abandoning the camp shortly after the prisoner revolt, the
Ustaše killed the remaining prisoners, blasted and destroyed the
buildings, guardhouses, torture rooms, the "Picili Furnace", and
the other structures. Upon entering the camp, the partisans found
only ruins, soot, smoke, and dead bodies.
During the following months of 1945, the grounds of Jasenovac
were thoroughly destroyed by prisoners of war. The Allied forces captured 200 to
600 Home Guard members. Laborers completed
destruction of the camp, leveling the site and dismantling the
two-kilometer long, four-meter high wall that surrounded it.
Victims
Memorial signs with claims of victim counts, situated on the
Bosnian side of the Sava river
Total
Number
Historians have had difficulty calculating the number of victims
at Jasenovac, and the accurate-number will never be known and it
ranges between 49,600 to 600,000[132].
The first figures to be offered by the state-commission of Croatia
ranged around 500,000 and even 600,000. The official estimate of
the number of victims in SFRY was 700,000; however, beginning in the
90s, the Croatian side began suggesting substantially smaller
numbers. The exact numbers continue to be a subject of great
controversy and hot political dispute, with the Croatian government
and institutions pushing for a much lower number even as recently
as September 2009.
The estimates vary due to lack of accurate records, the methods
used for making estimates, and sometimes the political biases of
the estimators. In some cases, entire families were exterminated,
leaving no one to submit their names to the lists. On the other
hand, it has been found that the lists include the names of people
who died elsewhere, whose survival was not reported to the
authorities, or who are counted more than once on the lists.
The casualty figures for the whole of Yugoslavia sways between
the maximal 1,700,000 (nowadays refuted) and the more reliable
figures between 1,500,000[133] or
one million[134].
Historical documentation
sources
The documentation from the time of Jasenovac revolves around the
different sides in the battle for Yugoslavia: The Germans and
Italians on the one hand, and the Partisans on the other. There are
also sources originating from the documentation of the Ustase
themselves and of the Vatican. These sources are in times
considered contemporary because German and Ustase sources tend to
exaggerate, but the comparison of all different sources can give a
reliable portrait of the historical truth.
German generals issued reports of the number of victims as the
war progressed. German
military commanders gave different figures for the number of Serbs, Jews and others killed on the territory of
the Independent State of
Croatia. They circulated figures of 400,000 Serbs (Alexander
Löhr); 350,000 Serbs (Lothar Rendulic); around 300,000 (Edmund Glaise von Horstenau);
in 1943; "600-700,000 until March 1944" (Ernst Fick); 700,000
(Massenbach). Hermann Neubacher calculates:
"A third must become Catholic, a third must leave the country,
and a third must die!" This last point of their program was
accomplished. When prominent Ustasha leaders claimed that they
slaughtered a million Serbs, that is, in my opinion, a boastful
exaggeration. On the basis of the reports submitted to me, I
believe that the number of defenseless victims slaughtered to be
three quarters of a million. (Neubacher, Dr. Hermann. Special
Assignment in the Southeast, p. 18-30.)
Italian generals, who were more overwhelmed by the atrocious
Ustase slaughter, also reported of similar figures to their
commanders.[135] The
Vatican's sources also speak of similar figures, that is, for an
example, of 350,000 Serbs slaughtered by the end of 1942 (Eugen
Tisserant[136])
and "over 500,000 people" at all (Godfried Danneels.[137])
The Ustase themselves gave more exaggerated assumptions of the
number of people they killed. Vjekoslav "Maks"
Luburić, commander-in-chief of all the Croatian camps,
announced the great "efficiency" of the Jasenovac camp at a
ceremony as early as 9 October 1942. During the banquet which
followed, he reported with pride, intoxicated: "We have slaughtered
here at Jasenovac more people than the Ottoman Empire was able to
do during its occupation of Europe.".[138]
Other Ustase sources give more canon estimations: a circular of the
Ustase general headquarters that reads: "the concentration and
labor camp in Jasenovac can receive an unlimited number of
internees"[139]. In
the same spirit, Miroslav Filipovic-Majstorovic, once captured by
Yugoslav forces, addmitted, that during his three months of
administration, 20,000 to 30,000 people died.[140]
Since it became clear that his confession was an attempt to
somewhat minimize the rate of crimes committed in Jasenovac,
having, for an example, claimed to have personally killed 100
people, extremlly understated[141],
Miroslav's figures are evaluated so that in some sources they
appear as 30,000-40,000.[142][143]
A report of the National Committee of Croatia for the investigation of the crimes of
the occupation forces and their collaborators, dated 15 November
1945, which was commissioned by the new government of Yugoslavia
under Tito,
stated that 500,000-600,000 people were killed at the Jasenovac
complex. These figures were cited by researchers Israel Gutman and
Menachem Shelach in the "Encyclopedia of the
Holocaust" from 1990 and Simon Wiesenthal Center.
Menachem Shelach will in his book speak that number, of some
300,000 bodies being found and exhumed is reliable [144]
Mosa Pijade and Eduard Kardelij used this number in the war
reparations meetings. Thus the proponents of these numbers were
subsequently accused of artificially inflating them for purpose of
obtaining war
reparations. All in all, The state-commission's report has been
only public and official document about number of victims during 45
years of second Yugoslavia.[145]
The state's total war casualties of 1,700,000 as presented by
Yugoslavia at the Paris Peace Treaties, were
produced by a math student, Vladeta Vučković, at the Federal Bureau
of Statistics.[146]
He later admitted that his estimates included demographic losses
(i.e. also factoring in the estimated population increase), while
actual losses would have been significantly less.[146]
This number of victims has been refused by Germany during war
reparations talks.
Živanović:
a Contemporary Forensic source
Between 22 and 27 June 1964 [147],
exhumations of bodies and use of sampling methods was conducted at
Jasenovac by Vida Brodar and Anton Pogačnik from Ljubljana
university and Srboljub Živanović from Novi Sad university [147].
During the Yugoslav
Wars, Serbian anthropologist, Srboljub Živanović, published
during war between Croatia and Serbia what he claimed were the full
results of the studies, which in his words has been suppressed by
Tito's government in the name of brotherhood and unity, in order
to put less emphasis on the crimes of the Ustashe.[148][149]
According to Živanović, the research gave strong support to the
victim counts of more than 500,000, with estimates of
700,000-800,000 being realistic and that in every mass grave there
is 800 skeletons, but reports signed by all members of this
sampling has shown that seven mass graves has been excavated and
that number of skeletons has been between 2 and 48 in six graves
and only in last has been 197. On other side other surviving team
member dr. Vida Brodar that this are Živanović manipulations
because during exhumations it was never spoken about victims
numbers and for evidence she has shown copy of 1964 team report
signed by Anton Pogačnik, Srboljub Živanović and Vida Brodar.[147]
Victim
Lists
Jasenovac Memorial Area victims list (2007)[150]
| Nationality |
Casualties |
| Serbs |
40,251 |
| Roma |
14,750 |
| Jews |
11,723 |
| Croats |
3,583 |
| Muslims |
1,063 |
| Slovenes |
233 |
| Others |
328 |
| Unknown |
262 |
| Total |
72,193 |
- The Jasenovac Memorial Area maintains a list of the names of
69,842 Jasenovac victims, including 39,580 Serbs, 14,599 Romanies,
10,700 Jews, 3,462 Croats, as well as people of some other
ethnicities. The memorial estimates total deaths at 85,000 to
100,000.[151]
- The Belgrade Museum of the Holocaust keeps a list of the names
of 80,022 victims (mostly from Jasenovac), including approximately
52,000 Serbs, 16,000 Jews, 12,000 Croats and 10,000 Romanies..
- Antun Miletić, a researcher at the Military Archives in
Belgrade, has collected data on Jasenovac since 1979.[152]
His list contains the names of 77,200 victims, of which 41,936 are
Serbs.[152]
- In 1998, the Bosniak Institute published SFR Yugoslavia's final List of war
victims from the Jasenovac camp (created in 1992).[30]
The list contained the names of 49,602 victims at Jasenovac,
including 26,170 Serbs, 8,121 Jews, 5,900 Croats, 1471 Romanies,
787 Muslims (nationality unknown), 6,792 of unidentifiable
ethnicity, and some listed simply as "others".[30]
Another list from that institution, naming victims that died
between April and November 1944, lists 4,892 names.[153]
Estimates by Holocaust
institutions
The Yad Vashem center claims that over 500,000 Serbs were killed
in the NDH,[154]
including those who were killed at Jasenovac, where approximately
600,000 victims of all ethnicities were killed.[132]
The same figures are concluded by the Simon-Wiesentall center. Thus
Menachem Shelach and Israel Gutman conclude at "the encyclopedia of
the holocaust":
"Some six hundred thousand people were murdered at Jasenovac,
mostly Serbs, Jews, Gypsies, and opponents of the Ustase regime.
The number of Jewish victims was between twenty thousand and
twenty-five thousand, most of whom were murdered there up to August
1942, when deportation of the Croatian Jews to Auschwitz for
extermination began." (Entry in Encyclopedia of the Holocaust,
edited by Israel Gutman, vol.1, 1995, pp.739-740)"
On the other hand, however, as of 2009, the United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum estimates that the Ustaša regime murdered
between 66,000 and 99,000 people in Jasenovac between 1941 and
1945, and that during the period of Ustaša rule, a total of between
330,000 and 390,000 ethnic Serbs and more than 30,000 Croatian Jews
were killed either in Croatia or at Auschwitz-Birkenau[36]
Statistical estimates
In the 1980s, calculations were done by Serb statistician Bogoljub Kočović, and by Croat
economist Vladimir Žerjavić, who claimed that
total number of victims in Yugoslavia was less than 1.7 million, an
official estimate at the time, both concluding that the number of
victims was around one million. Žerjavić calculated furthermore,
claiming that the number of victims in the Independent State of
Croatia was between 300,000 and 350,000, including 80,000
victims in Jasnovac, as well as thousands of deaths in other camps
and prisons.[155]
Kočović, who made an estimate of the total number of victims,
accused Žerjavić of being motivated by nationalism.
However, these estimates have been dismissed as biased and
unreliable especially on the Serbian side. The mere 0.1% change of
the (unknown) birth rate would contribute more to the number of
victims than the Zerjavic's claim of the number of Serbs killed in
Jasenovac (50,000) and his calculation has a deficiency rate of
30%. Zerjavic has been dismissed as a nationalist even by Kocovic,
and his estimates of number of victims in the Bosnian war of the
90s (300,000 killed) was three times greater than ICTY data and
Bosnian official estimates after the war, and sheds light on
problems with his credibility. Accused by some Croatian historians
of being a plagiarist and the 'court statistician'.[156].
Commentators in Serbia criticized these estimates as far too
low, since the demographic calculations assumed arbitrarily that
the growth rate for Serbs in Bosnia (which was part of the
Independent State of Croatia during the war time) was equal to the
total growth rate throughout the former Yugoslavia (1.1% at the
time). According to Serbian sources, however, the actual growth
rate in this region was 2.4% (in 1921-1931) and 3.5% (in
1949-1953). This method is considered very unreliable by critics
because there is no reliable data on total births during this
period, yet the results depend strongly on the birth rate - just a
change of 0.1% in birth rate changes the victim count by 50,000.
According to the census, the number of Serbs between last prewar
([1931]) and first post war (1948) census has gone up from
1,028,139 to around 1,200,000. The Yugoslav
Federal Bureau of Statistics has in 1964 created list of World War
II victims with 597,323 names and deficiency estimated at 20-30%
which is giving between 750,000 and 780,000 victims. Together with
estimated 200,000 killed collaborators and quislings, the total
number would reach about one million. This Yugoslav Federal Bureau
of Statistics list was declared a state secret in 1964 and it was
published only in 1989[134].
Camp officials and their
fate
Some of the camp officials and their post-war fate are listed
below:
- Miroslav
Majstorović, an Ustasa infamous for his command periods in
Jasenovac and Stara-Gradiska,[157]
named "Fra Sotona" (father devil) for his cruelty and Christian
upbringing, was captured by the Yugoslav communist forces, tried
and executed in 1946.
- Maks Luburić was the commandant of the
Ustaska Obrana, or Ustase defense, thus being held responsible for
all crimes committed under his supervision in Jasenovac, which he
visited two-three times a month or so[158]
fled to Spain, but was
assassinated by a Yugoslav agent in 1969.
- Dinko
Šakić fled to Argentina, but was eventually extradited,
tried and sentenced, in 1999, by Croatian authorities to 20 years
in prison, dying in prison in 2008.
- Petar Brzica
was an Ustasa officer who, in the night of 29 August 1942,
allegedly slaughtered 1,360 people or so, Brzica's fellow Ustasa
also took part in that crime, as part of a competition of throat
cutting. Brzica is also known for having killed an inmate by
beating him, on the departure of administrator Ivica Matkovic,
March 1943.[159]
Brzica's post-war fate is unknown; he was born in 1917, so he would
be 92 in 2009 if still alive.
Later
events
Yugoslav Marshal Josip Broz Tito never visited the site,
as he sought to make the people of Yugoslavia forget the Ustase
crimes in the name of "brotherhood and unity" in Yugoslavia.[160]
This policy continued to modern times.[161]
The Socialist Republic of
Croatia adopted a new law on the Jasenovac Memorial Area in
1990, shortly before the first democratic
elections in the country.[162] The
Jasenovac Memorial Museum was temporarily abandoned during the Yugoslav wars when it was taken over by the
rebel Republic of
Serb Krajina.[163] In
November 1991, Simo Brdar, a former associate director of the
Memorial, stole the documentation from the museum and brought it to
Bosnia and Herzegovina. Brdar
kept the documents until 2001, when he transferred them to the United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum, with the help of SFOR and the government of Republika
Srpska.
Croatian president Franjo Tudjman made
an official visit to the site in 1995.[164]
The New York
City Parks Department, the Holocaust Park Committee and the
Jasenovac Research Institute, with the help of US Congressman Anthony Weiner,
established a public monument to the victims of Jasenovac in April
2005 (the sixtieth anniversary of the liberation of the camps.) The
dedication ceremony was attended by ten Yugoslavian Holocaust
survivors, as well as diplomats from Serbia, Bosnia and Israel. It
remains the only public monument to Jasenovac victims outside of
the Balkans. Annual commemorations are held there every April.
The Jasenovac Memorial Museum reopened in November 2006 with a
new exhibition designed by the Croatian architect, Helena Paver
Njirić, and an Educational Center designed by the firm Produkcija.
The Memorial Museum features an interior of rubber-clad steel
modules, video and projection screens, and glass cases displaying
artifacts from the camp. Above the exhibition space, which is quite
dark, is a field of glass panels inscribed with the names of the
victims. Helena Njirić won the first prize of the 2006 Zagreb
Architectural Salon for her work on the museum.[165] The
new exhibition is however seen as scandalous by some, due to the
removal of the Ustase killing instruments from the display and a
possible intent to minimise the crimes committed there.[166][167][168]
Notes
- ^
United States Holocaust Museum confirms that Muslims were also
among the victims of Jasenovac [1]
- ^
Christopher Hitchens, p.152 "For the sake of argument: essays
and minority reports"
- ^
Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, ed. in chief Israel Gutman,
Macmillan, New York and London, 1990 - entry Jasenovac.
(אנציקלופדיה של השואה: יאסנובאץ)
- ^
Breitman, Richard; U.S.
Intelligence and the Nazis
- ^
For Ustase regulations and legislations, lo scanned documents in
here: http://public.carnet.hr/sakic/materijali/eng/index.html
and translation herein: http://pavelic-papers.com/documents/isc/index.html
- ^
Hilgruber, Staatsmanner und Diplomaten bei Hitler, p. 611.
- ^
Wansee, Nuremberg trail documents, NG-2568-G
- ^
M. Shelach, p. 166-169, 171, 185-189, 192, 194-196, 208,
442-443
- ^
Tibor Lovrencic testimony, trail of Dinko Sakic
- ^
Djuro Schwartz, "in the Jasenovac camps of death". (ג'ורו שווארץ,
"במחנות המוות של יאסנובאץ", קובץ מחקרים כ"ה, יד-ושם)p. 301
- ^
Menachem Shelach (ed.)"History of the holocaust: Yugoslavia".
(רמנחם שלח (עו'),"תולדות השואה: יוגוסלביה". חלק שני: פרק חמישי,
"יאסנובאץ"), p. 195.
- ^
A.A. Nachlass Kasche- 105
- ^
In all documentation, The term "Jasenovac" relates to either the
complex at large. or, when referring to a specific camp, to camp
nr. III, which was the main camp since November 1941. and compare
with the following article:
www.jasenovac.org/whatwasjasenovac.php
- ^
Dinko Sakic indictment, case file p- 1603
- ^
Lo Menachem Shelach (ed.), Yossef Lewinger & Alexander
Matkovski: "History of the holocaust: Yugoslavia (מנחם שלח (עו' ),
"תולדות השואה: יוגוסלביה", יד ושם, תש"ן. ) pp. 207-339"
- ^
Ibidem, p. 153, n' 20
- ^
M. Shelach, "History of the holocaust: Yugoslavia"
- ^
Eichmann crimes in Yugoslavia: facts and views, p. 8-9
- ^
M. Persen,"Ustaski Logori", p. 97
- ^
Encyclopedia of the Holocaust (1990) Israel Gutman edition, page
739-740)
- ^
For the administrative structure of the command, lo here:
www.jasenovac.org/whatwasjasenovac.php and in the testimony of
witness Milijenko Bobanac, Dinko Sakic indictment
- ^
See: Cadik Dannon, "Smell of human flesh". Cf. State-commission,
ep. D, section IV and ep. E.
- ^
*Bosniaks in Jasenovac
Concentration Camp—Congress of Bosniak Intellectuals, Sarajevo.
ISBN 9789958471025. October 2006. (Holocaust Studies)
- ^
Djuro Schwartz,"in the death camps of Jasenovac"(במחנות המוות של
יאסנובץ, קובץ מחקרים כ"ה של יד-ושם), p. 329
- ^
See: Encyclopedia of the holocaust, "Jasenovac"
- ^
In all lists of names, great are the figures of Serbs past those of
any other sorts of victims. E.g. See Menachem Shelach, "The history
of the holocaust:Yugoslavia", p. 189.
- ^
Lo State-commission, pp. 30, 40-41
- ^
See: Secanja jevreja na logor Jasenovac, pp. 40-41, 98, 131,
171
- ^
See: Trail of Dinko Sakic, testimony of Gabrijel Winter, a former
choachmen of Gradina, and also in the documentary: "Jasenovac:
blood and ashes" or "Jasenovac: The cruellest death camp of all
times".
- ^ a
b
c
Bošnjački Institut. Jasenovac: Žrtve rata prema podacima
statističkog zavoda Jugoslavije. Bošnjački Institut Sarajevo,
Sarajevo 1998.
- ^
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Holocaust/Jasenovac.html
- ^
http://books.google.com/books?id=R8d2409V9tEC&pg=PA34&lpg=PA34&dq=tomislav+dulic+ndh&source=bl&ots=O1bws0hBZN&sig=Wm0_ewM1kWh7g8lgybfZJlDB4m4&hl=en&ei=qIIzS6HRL4uInQPF5p3PBA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4&ved=0CBMQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=tomislav%20dulic%20ndh&f=false
- ^
http://books.google.com/books?id=R8d2409V9tEC&pg=PA34&lpg=PA34&dq=tomislav+dulic+ndh&source=bl&ots=O1bws0hBZN&sig=Wm0_ewM1kWh7g8lgybfZJlDB4m4&hl=en&ei=qIIzS6HRL4uInQPF5p3PBA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4&ved=0CBMQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=victim&f=false
- ^
http://books.google.com/books?id=R8d2409V9tEC&pg=PA34&lpg=PA34&dq=tomislav+dulic+ndh&source=bl&ots=O1bws0hBZN&sig=Wm0_ewM1kWh7g8lgybfZJlDB4m4&hl=en&ei=qIIzS6HRL4uInQPF5p3PBA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4&ved=0CBMQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=victim&f=false
- ^
http://www.setimes.com/cocoon/setimes/xhtml/hr/features/setimes/articles/2007/01/08/reportage-01
- ^ a
b
Jasenovac
- ^
[2]
- ^
See: state-commission, p. 43-44
- ^
Ibidem. Compare with "What was Jasenovac?"
- ^
Ilija Ivanovic, "Witness to the Jasenovac hell"
- ^
State-commission, p. 32
- ^
case of Vladko Macek
- ^
See: US holocaust museum Jasenovac exhibition
- ^
Gutman Israel (Ed.), "Encyclopedia of the holocaust", vol. 1, p.
739
- ^
Djuro Schwartz,"in the death camps of Jasenovac", p. 299-300
- ^
Cadik Danon, "The smell of human flesh".
- ^
Lazar Lukajc:"Fratri i Ustase Kolju", interview with Borislav Seva
on pages 625-639
- ^
Dinko Sakic indictment, available at http://public.carnet.hr/sakic/documents/optuznica/optuznica.html),
overview of witnesses' testimonies, witnesses Mara Cvetko, Jakov
Finci and others
- ^
State-commission for the investigation of the Ustasa crimes and
their collaborators, P. 19-20, 40.
- ^
Djuro Schwartz, p. 299, 302-303, 306, 313, 315, 319-320, 322
- ^
Sakic indictment, Dragan Roller testimony.
- ^
State-commission, P. 20, 39 (testimonies: Hinko Steiner,Marijan
Setinc, Sabetaj Kamhi, Kuhada Nikola)
- ^
Sakic indictment, testimonies: Dragan Roller, Anton Milkovic, Mara
Cvetko, Jakov Finci, Adolf Friedrich and Abinun Jesua
- ^
Djuro Schwartz, p. 316,324-328, 330
- ^
Cadik Danon, "The Smell of Human Flesh", as presented here (under
the heading "Hunger"): http://www.srpska-mreza.com/History/ww2/book/Danon/index.html#doc
- ^
See: State-commission, pp. 20-22
- ^
various examples in: Schwartz, pp. 299-301, 303, 307 and many more
examples therein
- ^
Sakic trail and indictment, all witnesses' testimonies
- ^
State-commission, p. 30-31
- ^
See Sakic trail, Vladimir Cvija testimony, Sakic indictment,
Milijenko Bobanac testimoy. Here: http://public.carnet.hr/sakic/documents/optuznica/optuznica.html
- ^
Schwartz, p. 308. compare with Elizabeta Jevric, "Blank pages of
the holocaust: Gypsies in Yugoslavia during World-war II", p. 120,
111-112
- ^
Documentary, "Jasenovac: The cruellest death camp of all times",
from: "Jasenovac: blood and ashes" as presented hereby: http://grayfalcon.blogspot.com/2008/06/jasenovac-blood-and-ashes.html
- ^
Ibidem, and compare with Schwartz, 299-301, 303, 332
- ^
Cadik Danon, chapters "New Ustasha", "The dike". Here: http://www.srpska-mreza.com/History/ww2/book/Danon/NewUstasha.doc
- ^
Interview with Borislav Seva, http://www.srpska-mreza.com/History/ww2/book/Lukajic/Borislav_Sheva.html
- ^
Schwartz, p. 313
- ^
Cadik Danon, "The smell of human flesh":"Hunger": http://www.srpska-mreza.com/History/ww2/book/Danon/index.html#doc
- ^
Jakov Danon in the trail of Dinko Sakic
- ^ a
b
Schwartz, p. 311
- ^
Schwartz, p. 311, 313
- ^
Borislav Seva testimony
- ^
Cadik Danon, "Smell of human flesh", "Talit", "ultimate
villeness"
- ^
Ljubomir Saric testifies against Dinko Sakic, http://public.carnet.hr/sakic/hinanews/arhiva/9904/hina-15-g.html
- ^
See: State-commission, p. 20. Compare with Egon Berger's testimony,
at Carl Savich column on Serbianna.com on Jasenovac (front
page)
- ^
State-commission, p. 20
- ^
Schwartz, p. 324
- ^
State-commission, p. 16-18
- ^
See: State-commission, p. 23-24
- ^
Marijana Cvetko testimony, New-York times, 3rd may 1998. "War
crimes revive as Croat faces possible trial"
- ^
See: State-commission, p.53-55
- ^
Ilija Ivanovic, "witness to the Jasenovac hell"
- ^
See: Djuro Schwartz, who said that a father and his three sons were
killed for writing. The witness wrote his memories on a piece of
paper in tiny script and planted it in his shoe.
- ^
see: M. Shelach, "History of the holocaust: Yugoslavia", pp.
432-434
- ^
Ibidem, pp. 192, 196
- ^
The Glass Half Full by Alan Greenhalgh ISBN 0977584410 page 68
- ^
The Role of the Vatican in the Breakup of the Yugoslav
State, by Dr. Milan Bulajić, Belgrade, 1994: 156-157; from a
Jan., 1943, interview with Mile Friganović by psychiatrist Dr. Nedo
Zec, who was also an inmate at Jasenovac. http://www.jasenovac-info.com/cd/biblioteka/wschindley-jasenovac_en.html
- ^
Avro Manhattan, The Vatican's Holocaust, p. 48.
- ^
State-commission, p. 9-11, 46-47
- ^
Cadik Danon, The Smell of Human Flesh chapter 1,"The First
Day". This article can be found at http://www.srpska-mreza.com/History/ww2/book/Danon/FirstDay.html
- ^
Avro Manhattan, The Vatican's Holocaust, chapter 4, "The
Nightmare of a Nation". Found at http://www.reformation.org/holoc4.html
- ^
various testimony in the Dinko Sakic trail and indictment, found at
http://public.carnet.hr/sakic/
- ^
Lukajic, "Fratri i Ustase Kolju", interview with Borislav Seva,
"they threw Rade Zrnic into the brick factory fires alive!".
Available at http://www.srpska-mreza.com/History/ww2/book/Lukajic/Borislav_Sheva.html
- ^
C. Savic column on Serbianna.com/Jasenovac (http://www.serbianna.com/columns/savich/007.shtml
). Sado Cohen-Davko testimony.
- ^
Savic, Jasenovac. Testimonies: Jakov Atijas, Jakov Kablij, Sado
Cohen-Davko
- ^
State-commission, p. 14, 27, 31, 42-43, 70
- ^
testimony in the Dinko Sakic case
- ^
Cadik Danon, The Smell of Human Flesh, Chapter "The Smell
of Human Flesh". See http://www.srpska-mreza.com/History/ww2/book/Danon/Furnace.html
- ^
interview with Borislav Seva
- ^
Shorthand notes of the Ljubo Milos case. Also in: indictment of
Ante Pavelic and presented in The Vatican's Holocaust", http://www.reformation.org/holoc4.html
- ^
Dr. Edmund Paris, Genocide in Satellite Croatia, p.
132.
- ^ State-commission, p. 43
- ^ Sakic trial, Tibor Lovrencic
testimony, 30.3.99, available at http://public.carnet.hr/sakic/hinanews/arhiva/9903/hina-30-t.html
- ^ Djuro Schwartz, p. 331-332
- ^ Dinko Sakic trail, Simo Klaic
testimony, 23.3.99
- ^ Dragan Roller, statement to the
press during the Dinko Sakic case, new-york times, May 2nd, 1998:
"War crimes horrors revive as Croat faces a possible trial", by
Chris Hedges
- ^ http://www.reformation.org/archive.html ,
Alberto Rivera testimony from: "The Yugoslav Auschwitz and the
Vatican"
- ^ Savic, Jasenovac, testimonies:
Sado Cohen-Davko,Misha Danon, Jakov Atijas
- ^ "Zlocini Okupatora Nijhovih
Pomagaca Harvatskoj Protiv Jevrija". Pages 144-145
- ^ Shorthand notes of the Ljubo
Milos case, p. 292-293. Antun Vrban himself admmitted of his
crimes: "Q. And what did you do with the children A. The weaker
ones we poisoned Q. How? A. We led them into a yard... and into it
we threw gas Q. What gas? A. Zyklon."(Qtd. M. Shelach (Ed.),"The
History of the holocaust: Yugoslavia")
- ^ Sakic trail, testimonies of
witnesses: Milka Zabicic, Jesua Abinun, Jakov Finci, Simo Klaic and
others
- ^ "Blank pages of the
holocaust"
- ^ M. Persen, "Ustasi Logore", p.
105
- ^ Secanja Jevreja na logor
Jasenovac", p. 40-41,58, 76, 151
- ^ Regarding "Granik", see:
www.jasenovac.org/whatwasjasenovac.php and compare with Egon Berger
testimony here: www.serbianna.com/columns/savich/007.shtml
- ^ Jovo Iluric testimony in:
"Jasenovac Then and Now: A Conspiracy of Silence" by William
Dorich, Serbian Orthodox Dioceses of Western America,1991. p. 39,
here: http://www.logon.org/_domain/holocaustrevealed.org/Jasenovac/Testimonial.htm
- ^ Ilija Ivanovic testimony here:
http://www.srpska-mreza.com/History/ww2/book/Ivanovic/Bench.html
- ^ State-commission, pp. 13 ,25,
27, 56-57, 58-60
- ^ State-commission of Croatia for
the investigation of the crimes of the occupation forces and their
collaborators
- ^ C. Danon, "Smell of human
flesh": http://www.srpska-mreza.com/History/ww2/book/Danon/Gradina.html
, http://www.srpska-mreza.com/History/ww2/book/Danon/SerbianWoman.html
- ^ Ilija Ivanovic, http://www.srpska-mreza.com/History/ww2/book/Ivanovic/Bench.html
- ^ State-commission, p. 38-39
- ^ Dragutin Skrgatic testifies in
the trail of Dinko Sakic, 14.4.99 (http://public.carnet.hr/sakic/hinanews/arhiva/9904/hina-14-f.html).
- ^ Illija Ivanovic, "witness to
Jasenovac hell", "the last day in Jasenovac"
- ^ a
b
Prof. dr. sc. Mirjana Ajduković, The Activity of Diana Budisavljević with the
children victims of World War II. Annual of Social work, Vol.13
No.1 October 2006.
- ^ See: Shelach, pp. 313-314.
- ^ Interview with Borislav
Seva
- ^ See: Dinko Sakic
indictment
- ^ Ibidem.
- ^ Schwartz, pp. 304, 312,
332-333
- ^ C. Danon, "Smell of human
flesh", chapter "New Ustasa"
- ^ Timebase Multimedia
Chronography(TM) - Timebase 1945
- ^ a
b
[3] Yad Vashem
- ^ "History of the holocaust:
Yugoslavia"
- ^ a
b
Federal Bureau of Statistics in 1964. Published in Newspaper Danas
on November 21, 1989
- ^ Le Operazioni della unita
Italiane in Jugislavja. Rome 1978. pp. 141-148
- ^ C. Falconi, The silence of pius
XII, London 1970,p. 3308
- ^ Brussels, Vatican's radio,
interview in October 20, 1994. See in: Carl Savich column on
Serbianna.com, front page, Jasenovac:
www.serbianna.com/columns/savich/007.shtml
- ^ "Dr. Edmund Paris, "Genocide in
satellite Croatia", P. 132
- ^ Dinko Sakic indictment, case
file page 1298
- ^ State-commission, p. 62
- ^ Sakic trail, testimony of Simo
Klaic, 23.3.99,http://public.carnet.hr/sakic/hinanews/arhiva/9903/hina-23-m.html
- ^ Avro Manhattan, "the Vatican's
holocaust
- ^ Jasenovac,
Savic\collumns\serbianna.com, confession of Miroslav Filipovic-
Majstorovic at http://www.serbianna.com/columns/savich/007.shtml
- ^ Shelach, p. 189
- ^ Tomasevic, 'War and Revolution
in Yugoslavia, 1941-1945' (http://books.google.com/books?id=fqUSGevFe5MC&pg=RA1-PA718&dq=%22alleged+and+true+population+losses&lr=),
states that these numbers are indeed exaggerated, but that the
original copy of the state-commission circulated 400,000
victims.
- ^ a
b
Vladimir Zerjavic - How the
number of 1.7 million casualties of the Second World War has been
derived
- ^ a
b
c
Kako je Živanović 284 kostura
pretvorio u 700.000 žrtava
- ^ Jasenovac - Donja Gradina:
Večan pomen Jasenovac
- ^ Politika Newspapers &
Magazines d.o.o. - Ilustrovana Politika
- ^ Poimenični popis žrtava
Koncentracijskog logora Jasenovac: 1941. - 1945. :
istraživanja Spomen-područja Jasenovac do 31. kolovoza 2007.,
Spomen područje Jasenovac. Jasenovac, 2007.
- ^ Southeast Times: Exhibition
aims to show truth about Jasenovac
- ^ a
b
Anzulovic, Branimir. Heavenly Serbia: From Myth to
Genocide, Hurst & Company. London, 1999
- ^ Indictment of Dinko Sakic.
- ^ http://www1.yadvashem.org/odot_pdf/Microsoft%20Word%20-%205930.pdf
- ^ Zerjavic actually first
calculated 53,000, later brought up to 70,000 and eventually to
80,000. The details of his calculations remain desputable.
- ^ Zerjavic - plagiarist
//www.hic.hr/bleiburg03.htm
- ^ State-commission for the
investigation of the crimes of the occupation forces and their
collaborators, p. 31-32 as hereby posted on: http://pavelic-papers.com/features/jasenovac1946.pdf
- ^ State-commission, p. 28-29
- ^ State-commission, p. 50,72
- ^ President Mesić in
Vojnić
- ^ see: State-commission, pp. 8,
70.
- ^ Ukaz o proglašenju Zakona o
Spomen-podruèju Jasenovac
- ^ Jasenovac: Spomen Područje
Jasenovac
- ^ "Clear denouncement of crimes
in Jasenovac and Bleiburg will stabilize Croatia and its position
in the world."Nacional, 2002.
- ^ Southeast European Times,
"exhibition aims to show the truth about Jasenovac, 8.1.2007: http://www.setimes.com/cocoon/setimes/xhtml/en_GB/features/setimes/articles/2007/01/08/reportage-01
- ^ Ibidem; and compare with http://emperors-clothes.com/interviews/tisma.htm
- ^ http://emperors-clothes.com/croatia/encr.htm#I.1
- ^ See: http://emperors-clothes.com/croatia/zuroff.htm
and compare with a discussion amongst Efraim Zurrof and Croatian
president Stjephan Mesic, in which Mesic himself addmitted the
problematic nature of comparison between Ustase and communist
crimes, and of the exhibition in Jasenovac, although he still
continued to use the 100,000 victims' count figure. Further
criticism in a newsletter of the Jasenovac Research Institution
(Vol. I, Nr. 1), p. 4-5.
See also
References
- The Yugoslav Auschwitz and the Vatican, Vladimir
Dedijer (Editor), Harvey Kendall (Translator) Prometheus Books,
1992.
- Witness to Jasenovac's Hell Ilija Ivanovic, Wanda
Schindley (Editor), Aleksandra Lazic (Translator) Dallas
Publishing, 2002
- Crimes in the Jasenovac Camp, State Commission
investigation of crimes of the occupiers and their collaborators in
Croatia, Zagreb, 1946.
- Ustasha Camps by Mirko Percen, Globus, Zagreb, 1966.
Second expanded printing 1990.
- Ustashi and the Independent State of Croatia
1941-1945, by Fikreta Jelic-Butic, Liber, Zagreb, 1977.
- Romans, J. Jews of Yugoslavia, 1941- 1945: Victims of
Genocide and Freedom Fighters, Belgrade, 1982
- Antisemitism in the anti-fascist Holocaust: a collection of
works, The Jewish Center, Zagreb, 1996.
- The Jasenovac Concentration Camp, by Antun Miletic,
Volumes One and Two, Belgrade, 1986. Volume Three, Belgrade, 1987.
Second edition, 1993.
- Hell's Torture Chamber by Djordje Milica, Zagreb,
1945.
- Die Besatzungszeit das Genozid in Jugoslawien
1941-1945 by Vladimir Umeljic, Graphics High Publishing, Los
Angeles, 1994.
- Srbi i genocidni XX vek (Serbs and XX century, Ages of
Genocide) by Vladimir Umeljić, (vol 1, vol 2), Magne, Belgrade,
2004. ISBN 86-903763-1-3
- Magnum
Crimen, by Viktor Novak, Zagreb, 1948.
- Kaputt, by Curzio Malaparte, translated by Cesare
Foligno, Nortwestern University Press Evanston, Illinois,
1999.
- Der kroatische Ustascha-Staat 1941-1945, by Ladislaus
Hory and Martin
Broszat, Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, Stuttgart 1964.
External
links
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