Jasenovac – Holocaust promoted by Vatican

 

1/27/2010

Author : Ari Rusila

 

Jasenovac was third biggest extermination camp during WWII and probably the 
cruelest. The brutality may be explained with its more religious aspect that 
others. Vatican played important role during events involving afterwards money 
laundry and covering up war criminals.

 

The UN General Assembly chose January 27 as the official day for the 
commemoration, as it was on this day in 1945 that Soviet troops liberated the 
Auschwitz extermination camp, the last such camp still functioning. Throughout 
Europe, tributes will be paid to the 53 million people who died during World 
War II, of whom 31 million were civilians. Commemoration has linked usually 
also to International Holocaust Remembrance Day.

 

Auschwitz-Birkenau was the largest extermination center created by the Nazis. 
It has become the symbol of the Holocaust and of willful radical evil in our 
time. Few people know that 3rd biggest extermination center was Jasenovac. Two 
reasons maybe explain this: 1st it is located in Croatia and 2nd the main part 
of victims were Serbs. The death tolls in extermination centres vary but rough 
estimations are following (source Wikipedia):

 

    *

 

      Auschwitz II 1,400,000

    * Belzeg 600,000

    * Chelmno 320,000

    * Jasenovac 600,000

    * Majdanek 360,000

    * Maly Trostinets 65,000

    * Sobibor 250,000

    * Treblinka 870,000 

 

 

Background

 

Upon the occupation of Yugoslavia, the German Nazis and the Italian Fascists 
formed an "independent" state in Croatia, which was basically a Nazi puppet 
state. Immediately upon the establishment of its puppet government, the Ustashe 
set up militias and gangs that slaughtered Serbs, Jews, Romas and their 
political foes. Catholic priests, some of them Franciscans, also participated 
in the acts of slaughter. The cruelty of the Ustashe was so great that even the 
commander of the German army in Yugoslavia complained. The partisans, led by 
the Croat Communist Josip Broz Tito, and the Chetniks - Nationalist Serb 
royalists - fought the Ustashe.

 

 

Under the leadership of the Ustasha leader Ante Pavelic's right-hand man 
Andrija Artukovic, who earned the nickname "the Himmler of the Balkans," the 
Ustashe set up concentration camps, most notably at Jasenovac. According to 
various estimates, about 100,000 people were murdered at the camp, among them 
tens of thousands of Jews (it is interesting to note that some of the heads of 
the Ustashe were married to Jewish women). Throughout Croatia about 700,000 
people were murdered.

 

 

Jasenovac

 

Located in Croatia 62 miles south of Zagreb, Jasenovac was Croatia’s largest 
concentration and extermination camp. Jasenovac, was a network of several 
sub-camps, established in August 1941 and dissolved in April 1945. Jasenovac 
was not the only place where Serbia’s neighbour Croatia ran several 
concentration camps where Jews, Serbs and Roma have been murdered. Bosnian 
Muslims and Kosovo Albanians were allies of Hitler as well. (More about 
Jasenevac in my document library under headline Croatia )

 

In April 1945 the partisan army approached the camp. In an attempt to erase 
traces of the atrocities, the Ustaša blew up all the installations, killed most 
of the internees and tried to hide all evidence about brutalities in Jasenovac, 
all material evidence disappeared as if there had not been any camp in that 
place. Later – during Tito’s time – the state and the authorities tried to 
implement “Brotherhood and Unity” motto, with the aim of creating tolerance 
between the nations and the crime had to be forgotten as soon as possible.

 

 

Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, edited by Yisrael Gutman, vol. 1, 1995, pp. 
739-740 gives following description about problems to find exact numbers:

 

    “It is difficult to establish the number of victims killed in the Jasenovac 
concentration camp, since many documents were destroyed. The prisoners’ files 
were destroyed twice (at the beginning of 1943 and in April, 1945) and even if 
they had been preserved, they would have been of little help discerning the 
truth, because the Ustasha often killed the newly arrived prisoners 
immediately, without putting their names into the files. This is particularly 
true of those who arrived from Slavonia, Srem and Kozara, because it was only 
noted down that 9,830, or 155 wagons had arrived. For instance, a very small 
number of Gypsies was filed, only a few hundred, while it is known that all 
25,000-35,000 of them from the NDH were killed in Jasenovac. The Jewish 
community in Yugoslavia has established the number of 20,000 Jews that were 
killed in Jasenovac. The numbers of killed Serbs are truly varied. The sources 
from abroad mention numbers from 300,000 to 700,000. Be that as it may, most of 
the people killed in Jasenovac were Serbs. Exact number being still unknown, 
but it surely amounts to several hundreds of thousands. The National Committee 
of Croatia for the investigation of the crimes of the occupation forces and 
their collaborators stated in its report of November 15, 1945 that 
500,000-600,000 people were killed at Jasenovac. ”

 

The Yad Vashem center claims that over 500,000 Serbs were killed in the NDH 
(now Croatia), including those who were killed at Jasenovac, where 
approximately 600,000 victims of all ethnicities were killed.

 

A documentary film “Jasenovac - the cruellest death camp of all times” can be 
found from here!

 

 

Religious aspect

 

While for Nazi-Germany Jasenovac was more a tool for ethnic cleansing for 
Ustashe religious aspect played crucial role. The aim and its implementation 
efficiency is described differently by people who actually were in Balkans 
during that period. Ustashe leaders declared they would slaughter a third of 
the Serb population in Croatia, deport a third and convert the remaining third 
from Orthodoxy to Roman Catholicism. Anyone who refused to convert was murdered.

 

 

One may claim that the religious motivation and the brutality of butchers were 
leading principles in Jasenovac. The fact that 743 Roman Catholic priests were 
members of the Ustashi and personally murdered Serbs, Jews and Gypsies. 
Jasenovac was for a time, run by Fr. Filipovic-Majstorovic, a Catholic priest 
who admitted to killing “40,000 Serbs with his own hands.” So at one point, a 
Franciscan monk was camp commandant of what the second largest concentration 
camp of the war.

 

The Jasenovac system of Croatian camps also included a camp for children run by 
Catholic nuns who used toxic soda to save bullets.

 

Roman Catholic priests who participated in the killing of tens of thousands of 
Serbs, Jews and Gypsies and the running of Jasenovac escaped Europe through the 
“Vatican Ratline” run by Fr. Draganovich, a Croatian Catholic priest who helped 
morons like Clause Barbe escape from Europe. Those Catholic priests escaped to 
Argentina where they also escaped justice.

 

 

Vatican connection

 

 

In 1999 a class action law suit was filed at a court in San Franciso against 
the Vatican Bank (Institute for Religious Works) and against the Franciscan 
order, the Croatian Liberation Movement (the Ustashe), the National Bank of 
Switzerland and others to recover $100 million in damages for the Vatican’s 
participation in these war crimes and money laundering the proceeds from their 
Serb, Jewish and Roma victims. The suit was filed by Jewish, Ukrainian, Serb 
and Roma survivors, as well as relatives of victims and various organizations 
that together represent 300,000 World War II victims. The plaintiffs demanded 
accounting and restitution.

 

Franciscans in Rome helped smuggle the Ustasha Tresury and assisted Ustasha war 
criminals in escaping justice. The Vatican Bank is alleged to have laundered a 
portion of the Ustasha Treasury. The Vatican not only hoarded the gold the 
Croats looted, it also helped them escape - with a nod and wink from the OSS 
and MI6. In 1986 for example, the US government released documents that 
revealed the Vatican had organised the Ustasha leader Ante Pavelic's 
safe-flight from Europe to Argentina, along with 200 senior officials of his 
regime. Pavelic was given refuge by the Vatican, fascist Spain, and Peronist 
Argentine. The Ustasha Minister of the Interior, Artukovic, lived openly in 
California from 1949-1986 when he was finally deported to Yugoslavia and 
convicted of murder. Thousands of Ustasha escaped justice for their crimes due 
to their wealth and influence and the backing of the Roman Catholic Church and 
who along with certain rogue elements in the US and UK governments portrayed 
these war criminals as anticommunist freedom fighters.

 

As the war ended, it is now known that the Vatican Bank and other world banks 
helped to launder and transfer funds out of the Reich, and helped many war 
criminals to escape justice in what is now nicknamed the "Vatican Ratline"

 

 

The Vatican Bank has claimed ignorance of any participation in Ustasha crimes 
or the disappearance of the Croatian Treasury. The Vatican has refused to open 
its wartime records despite requests from the US government, Jewish and Roma 
organizations. My main source about Vatican connection has been “Vatican Bank 
Claims”

 

 

A class action law suit against the Vatican Bank to recover $100 million in 
damages for the Vatican’s participation in these war crimes and money 
laundering the proceeds from their Serb, Jewish and Roma victims is still 
ongoing. Vatican lawyers have three times tried to get this case thrown out of 
court. The Supreme court has rejected their claims.

 

In US District Court the case against the Vatican Bank (but not the Franciscan 
Order) was dismissed on grounds the Vatican Bank is an organ of a sovereign 
entity, the Vatican, which is immune from lawsuits. The just filed appeal 
however argues that the Vatican Bank is not sovereign and engages in commercial 
activity in the United States and therefore should be held accountable in a 
United States Federal Court.

 

 

Memory today

 

On Summer 2008 Israel’s ambassador to Croatia, Shmuel Meirom, harshly 
criticized the funeral given to a head of a WWII Jasenovac concentration camp 
in Zagreb, saying also that it insulted the memory of those killed in the camp 
run by Croatia’s Nazi-allied Ustasha regime. “I’m convinced that the majority 
of the Croatian people are shocked by the way the funeral of the Jasenovac 
commander and murderer, dressed in an Ustasha uniform, was conducted,” 
ambassador Meirom said in a written statement. “At the same time, I strongly 
condemn the inappropriate words of the priest who served at the funeral and 
said that Sakic was a model for all Croats” Meirom said. (More about this in my 
article "Nazi's funeral shadows Croatias past")

 

 

Yearly commemoration is important remainder for fair picture of history. At 
least one day per year is good to think what ultra nationalism can be at its 
worst level, what kind of interests, power game, attitudes and hidden 
motivations are creating possibilities for murdering civil populations or 
ethnic groups.

 

Ari Rusila is a development project management expert and freelancer from 
Finland with a special interest in the Balkan region.

 

 

Keyword search

Croatia, Jasenovac, Holocaust, Vatican, BalkanBlog-EUROPE

 

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