jpost.com 
<https://www.jpost.com/diaspora/remembering-jasenovac-the-lesser-recognized-concentration-camp-626666>
  


Remembering Jasenovac: the lesser recognized concentration camp


By ALEKSANDRA PETROVIC   MAY 2, 2020 21:21

6-8 minutes

  _____  


While the numbers are not as high as Auschwitz or Treblinka, Jasenovac was 
notorious for its cruelty and the high number of young children who were 
victims.


Birkenau concentration camp in Poland in the snow

(photo credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST)

April 22 is a date that binds two groups of people who shared the same tragic 
fate. It is the date that commemorates the revolt of the prisoners of 
Jasenovac, the death camp that claimed the lives of hundreds of thousands of 
Jews, Serbs and Roma.

While the numbers are not as high as Auschwitz or Treblinka, Jasenovac was 
notorious for its cruelty and the high number of young children who were 
victims. The saddest point is that there is no final decision on what the final 
number of victims is. The Croatian authorities have been decreasing it down to 
a mere 30,000 and sweeping it under the carpet, only officially commemorating 
Jasenovac in haste on this specific day.

The Jewish and Serbian people have a history together based on positive 
relations and suffering together.

When the Sephardi Jews were forced to leave Spain, a large number of them 
settled in the Balkans. This was a place where they were able to practice their 
religion freely and conduct their trades undeterred. There were no pogroms, nor 
did they live in ghettos. This was a region that treated them as equals, and 
the Serbian people who were continuously harassed by the Ottomans due to their 
refusal to convert to Islam knew exactly how it felt to be persecuted.

After 500 years under the yoke of the Ottoman Empire, the Balkan peoples 
succeeded in fighting back for their freedom and a new era began. In the 
Kingdom of Yugoslavia, the Jewish people were an integral part of society and 
enjoyed a respectable life without fears of repercussion. Many felt so strongly 
for the country they lived in that they fought on the side of the Serbs against 
the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the Central Powers in the First World War as 
brothers in arms. The years after the Great War were also prosperous for the 
Jewish community in Serbia.

With the Second World War, disaster struck the two ethnicities. The kingdom 
fell apart, with the Slovenian, Croatian and Bosniak people siding with the 
Axis powers in exchange for land and power. The Serbian people, who bravely 
protested in the streets against joining the Axis powers, were brutally 
punished by having their capital city bombed ruthlessly on April 6, 1941.

Hitler, furious that such a small ethnic group would show such staunch 
rejection of his country’s offers, ordered Operation Retribution to be carried 
out, bombing that began in the early hours of Sunday morning when unprepared 
civilians were sleeping in their beds. More than 2,000 people were killed and 
the Nazis targeted monuments of Serbian culture, such as the National Library, 
which lost thousands of precious antique books in the fires that broke out from 
the bombing.

After that treatment, the Nazis occupied the country and set up a puppet 
government, just like they had done in France. This was a difficult time for 
both Serbs and the Jews, but some of the worst horrors were seen just across 
the border in Croatia, whose newly independent government had eagerly taken up 
the mantle of fascism.

The Jasenovac concentration camp 
<https://www.jpost.com/diaspora/nazi-death-camp-buchenwald-marks-75-years-since-liberation-amid-coronavirus-624483>
  was established in 1941, which lead to a four-year horror of torture and 
murders. Prisoners were starved to the point that they resorted to eating grass 
and dirt. Those who were executed were not shot nor gassed, but had their 
throats slit open in killing competitions among the guards, and parts of their 
bodies were cut off as souvenirs.

Children were poisoned, beaten and locked away to sleep on the cold floors of 
cells where they were not given food for days. Even the German officers who 
visited the camp found the brutality unimaginable. Cardinal Aloysius Stepinac – 
which the contemporary Croatian government is lobbying to be canonised by the 
Catholic Church – enthusiastically recommended this as an opportunity to 
pressure prisoners into converting to Catholicism.

Some of the most notable Jewish victims were rabbis Leib Weissberg and Simon 
Ungar, activist Armin Schreiner and feminist Julia Batino.

On April 22, 1945, 600 inmates made a desperate rush for their freedom, with 
only 60 of them managing to escape. On April 30, the Ustashe (Croatian 
fascists) burned down the camp to conceal their crimes, and they have 
unfortunately been successful, as only the survivors’ accounts provide an 
insight of what had happened there.

Many of the Ustashe escaped abroad, never having to face justice. Yugoslavia 
became a socialist country, and for the sake of upholding “brotherhood and 
unity” among the constituent peoples, Jasenovac’s investigations were poorly 
carried out and shut down prematurely.

Throughout the years, the Jewish people have always been respected members of 
Serbian society, and they are open about their heritage and proud of their 
Serbian citizenship. One of the most beloved writers in Serbia was Oskar 
Davico, who proudly claimed that he was a Serb of Moses’s faith. 

Actor Predrag Ejdus and actress Jelisaveta ‘Seka’ Sablic are favourites among 
the Serbian public, and one of the most famous publishing houses was named 
after Jewish editor Getsa Kon. Serbia has returned property that has been 
confiscated during the Second World War to the Jewish people. Serbia is the 
first Balkan country that has been bestowed the honor of Righteous Among 
Nations, and takes pride in this recognition.

The Jews and the Serbs are two ethnicities that have suffered throughout 
history and supported each other, understanding the plights they suffered.

Let us now commemorate and mourn together the anniversary of Jasenovac, the 
lives that have been lost and the victims whose numbers have still not been 
recognised. May we never forget it.

The writer is a political researcher working for Dow Jones in Barcelona.

Help Provide Emergency Relief
Provide elderly widows and Holocaust survivors with food during the coronavirus 
pandemic 

Learn More  
<https://www.jpost.com/ifcj?utm_source=jpost&utm_medium=website&utm_campaign=ifcj&utm_content=homepage>
 >

 

 

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/045e01d621e9%24c5e93560%2451bba020%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to