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From: Steve Wagner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: Documenting a Death Camp in Nazi Croatia  [WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK]

HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
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Documenting a Death Camp in Nazi Croatia

November 14, 2001 

By NEIL A. LEWIS

WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 - Officials of the United States
Holocaust Museum said today that they had discovered and
preserved a cache of decaying documents and artifacts from
one of the lesser-known but most brutal concentration camps
of World War II. The camp, known as Jasenovac, was operated
in Croatia by the Ustasha, the Nazi puppet government.

  The artifacts were found deteriorating in a building in
Banja Luka in the Serbian part of Bosnia last year,
officials said. 

  Peter Black, the museum's chief historian, told reporters
today that Jasenovac was crude in comparison to the
industrialized Nazi extermination camps like Auschwitz. Mr.
Black said there were no gas chambers or crematories, so
prisoners were murdered one by one with axes, guns, knives
or prolonged torture. Bodies were buried or thrown into the
adjacent Sava River.

  Jasenovac (pronounced ya-SEN-oh-vatz), actually a complex
of five camps about 60 miles from the Croatian capital,
Zagreb, has been little studied in the West, but the
history has long resonated in the modern Balkans, where
analysts and historians have debated about how much of the
region's violence may be traced to historic ethnic
enmities. 

  Mr. Black estimated that nearly 100,000 people had been
killed in Jasenovac, the largest number being Serbs,
followed by Jews and Gypsies.

  The camp was established by the Republic of Croatia to
eliminate anyone who was not an ethnic Croatian. Mr. Black
said a combination of factors, including the reluctance of
officials to agree on what happened, had led to its
history's remaining largely hidden from scholars until now.

  The collection includes 2,000 photographs, many of
atrocities; tens of thousands of papers; and thousands of
artifacts, like inmate crafts.

  Sara J. Bloomfield, director of the Holocaust Museum, said
the project to save the documents and artifacts was
especially significant because of the cooperation of the
government of Croatia, whose history is cast in a poor
light, as well as the governments of Serbia and Bosnia. Ms.
Bloomfield said the governments had cooperated despite "the
continuing sensitivity of all sides to this collection."

  That sensitivity was on display moments after the museum's
presentation today when a diplomat from Croatia, Mate
Maras, objected to the assertion by museum officials that
more than 300,000 Serbs had died at the hands of the
Ustasha throughout Croatia in World War II.

  Mr. Maras complained to Ms. Bloomfield and Mr. Black that
the number was misleading because it included what he said
were combatants throughout Croatia and thus was comparable
to the hundreds of thousands of Croats killed in the war.

  Mr. Maras said that while he thought the assertions of the
museum's personnel about Serb casualties were misleading,
he agreed it was "a good day for Croatia to open up these
sad pages of our history."

  Copies of the collection have been made and will be
maintained at the Holocaust Museum and in Israel, officials
said. The original collection will be returned to a museum
in Croatia, where it will be put on display at the site of
the Jasenovic complex, officials said.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2001/11/14/national/14CAMP.html?ex=1006905587&ei=1&en
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Copyright 2001 The New York Times Company
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