Logor Krndija
1945 – 1946
By Vladimir Geiger
ISBN 978-953-6324-67-5 And 978-953-6659-40-1
Translated
By Rosina T. Schmidt
Summary
Up to the end of WWII most of the Croatian
ethnic German population (Danube Swabians) fled their homes and homeland due to
the raging of the war mostly to Austria and Germany but also to Czechoslovakia,
Poland, Hungary and Italy where they waited for the war to end. Only those Danube
Swabians stayed in their homelands back that were not directly exposed to the
dangers of the war.
The expulsion by the Partisans and the newly
established ‘peoples government’ of the rest of the Danube Swabians in Yugoslavia
and Croatia started towards the end of 1944 and the beginning of 1945. The
decision to ascribe the collective guilt on ethnic German minority was influenced
and implemented by the ’ Presidium of the anti-fascist Council of the People’s
Liberation of Yugoslavia’ (Antifašističko vijeće Narodnog Oslobodjenja
Jugoslavije - AVNOJ) on 21st of November 1944. Those Yugoslavian
ethnic Germans who did not seek refugee outside of the country were exposed to the
despotism of the victors towards the end and after the war.
After the Second World War the communist
authorities deprived the ethnic German minority of their national and civic
rights. Only those Yugoslavian ethnic German people were exempt of the collective
revenge, which could prove that they actively participated in the guerilla
movement.
The communist Yugoslavian government no longer
regarded its ethnic German population as citizen of Yugoslavia no matter if they
fled or were expulsed. Those authorities prohibited the return of the ethnic
German refugees to their homeland and had the intention to throw out the remaining
members of the ethnic German minority. Through the expulsion and the confiscation
of the ethnic German property the Yugoslavian communist authorities had a simple
way to radically change the ownership situation and the ethnicity picture in the
country.
After the takeover of the power the ethnic Germans were arrested in certain
localities and thrown into camps, by the order of ‘Department for the Protection
of the People’ (Odjeljenje za saštitu naroda – OZN-a) and by the ‘corps of
the Yugoslavian People’s Defense’ (Narodne obrane corpus Jugoslavije – KNOJ)
where from they were to be expelled from Yugoslavia. One part of the Yugoslavian
ethnic Germans, and of course the Croatian, was expelled to Austria immediately.
Since the Yugoslavian-Austrian,
Yugoslavian-Italian and Yugoslavian-Hungarian borders were closed in mid-July 1945
by the Allied occupation forces, the expulsion of the ethnic German minority from
Yugoslavia was no longer possible, and the only options for the most of the
Yugoslavian ethnic Germans remained the concentration camps and forced labor
camps.
Between late 1944 and early 1948 about 170,000
Yugoslavian ethnic Germans were interned into the camps from about 195,000 still
living in the country. Documents confirm that whole ethnic German families were
sent to camps, including elderly people, women with children irrespective of their
age.
The internees were at first used as workers
outside of the camps, for example working on road construction and for some
seasonal agriculture work. Soon however they were used systematically in an
organized way on the large agricultural estates and at diverse manufacturing
companies. Farmers from the neighboring villages ‘borrowed’ the internees from the
camps to work in a variety of agricultural labour; therefore in effect they were
‘rented out’ by the camp’s administration as long as they received the money for
it.
Considering the living conditions in the
camps, the work outside of the camp in most cases improved the survival of the
internees. According to the statements or recollections of the internees, many of
the farmers, Croats, Serbs and other nationalities had a great deal of sympathy
for the internees and provided them assistance in clothing and food. The living
conditions in the camps were more than inadequate, especially concerning hygiene
and food supplies. Countless internees became ill and died. Especially during the
fall and winter of 1945 the typhoid epidemic raged throughout all the
Croatian/Yugoslavian concentration camps on a frightening scale.
The desperate fate of the internees were
influenced not only through unfavorable living accommodation but also by very poor
nutrition, inadequate sanitation, lack of medication and medical assistance, as
well as from various diseases and exhausting forced labour, to which the internees
were not accustomed. Only by the end of March or April of 1946 was the typhoid
fever in the internment camps controlled, after the appropriate measures have been
undertaken. Even if the living conditions in the camps were somewhat normalized,
the life in the camps was hardly bearable. Most of the death causes in the camps
were typhoid fever and dysentery, old age weakness, fatigue, coldness and hunger.
Extermination was not undertaken on the grand scale or was numerous, but there
have been too much ill treatments as well as killings. From all the information
provided around 50,000 to 60,000 ethnic Germans were killed in the Yugoslavian
concentration camps.
In the postwar period the communist
Yugoslavian authorities made no age or gender differences when it came to the
ethnic German population. The fate and the situation of the ethnic German people
depended in some cases on their age, physical strength and health, but also on the
good or bad mood of those who had the power over them and over their destiny.
At least some 10,000 to 18,000 of about 20,000 Croatian ethnic German people
remained in the summer of 1945 in the internment camps after the
Yugoslavian-Austrian border was sealed off and none of the displaced persons from
Yugoslavia were admitted to Austria. At that time a significant number of Croatian
ethnic Germans, who did not consider themselves ethnic German or declared
themselves as such, were interned in the Croatian camps because of their ethnicity
and their last names. The largest internment camps for the members of ethnic
German minority in Croatia between May 1945 and January 1947, according to all
sources, were Josipovac near Osijek, Valpovo, Velika Pisanica near Bjelovar,
Krndija at Đakovo, Šipovac at Našice, Pusta Podunavlje in the Baranya and Tenja/Tenjska
Mitnica near Osijek.
In May of 1945 the first major
collection/concentration camps were established in Josipovac near Osijek and
Valpovo, for the ethnic Germans from Slavonia, Syrmien and Baranya particularly,
but also for the ethnic Germans from Bosanska Posavina (Bosnia). The first
groups of ethnic German people were first interned in Jisipovac. More than 3,000
people were interned in May of 1945 in this camp mostly elderly, women and
children.
The transports with the ethnic German people
were sent to Austria from Slavonia and from Bosanska Posavina at the beginning of
July 1945 as well as from the Josipovac and Valpovo camps. In the overcrowded
train cattle cars there was not enough food and water so that most of the
transported ethnic Germans became sick and some did not survive the trip of a few
days at all. On 8th of July 1945 a train transport with 3,000 internees
was sent out of the Josipovac concentration camp and none of the transported knew
its destination. After the long, exhausting journey the interned ethnic German
people were kept in Leibnitz in Austria for two days in sealed cattle cars, and
eventually their armed escort expelled them from the wagons and just left them
there. Two days later, on the 10th of July 1945 the Josipovac
collection camp was dissolved and the small number of internees still there was
moved to the nearby Valpovo labour camp.
On 22nd of July 1945 about 1,800
ethnic German people were transported from Valpovo concentration camp in train
cattle cars to Austria. Since the British occupation authorities in Austria did
not want to absorb hose internees this shipment was sent back from the
Yugoslavian-Austrian boarder, and moved aimlessly for a few days until the journey
ended at the concentration camp of Velika Pisanica next to Bjelovar. The same fate
suffered in July of 1945 another two shipments of the ethnic German people who
were sent to the Austrian boarder.
As per confirmed estimation in these rejected
transports were about 5,000 to 6,000 people, mostly elderly, women and children.
After a short stay in Velika Pisanica the ethnic German internees were transported
as of beginning of August until 10th of August 1945 to other internment
camps in the eastern part of Croatia (Valpovo and Krndija concentration camps). It
prolonged the suffering of the ethnic German people from Slavonia, Syrmien, from
Baranya and Bosanska Posavina, who were part of these transports.
The best example of the fate of the Croatian
ethnic German population is the village of Krndija in Slavonia, four kilometers
northwest of Punitovci (county of Đakovo area). The previously predominantly
ethnic German settlement, which since its inception in the year 1882/1883 expanded
rapidly, disappeared almost over night: at the end of October 1944 its population
moved out or fled ahead of the danger and the Krndija village was transformed by
the Yugoslavian communist administration into a internment camp in Croatia for the
ethnic German population after the Second World War. Between August 1945 and May
1946 the ethnic German village Krndija near Đakovo (Djakovo) was one of the
largest internment camps for the remainder of the ethnic German population in
Croatia and Yugoslavia.
At first a prisoner of war camp was
established in Krndija (German and Croat soldiers) and for Croatia’s political
prisoners. The internment camp Krndija was converted into an internment camp for
the ethnic German people, therefore for the remainder of the ethnic German
population from Slavonia and Syrmien, from western parts of Croatia and from
Bosanska Posavina only when on the 15th of August the interned ethnic
Germans from Velika Pisanica were transported to there. The internees were
supposed to fence the camp with barbed wire themselves. Other ethnic German
internees arrived into camp Krndija later also.
The first commander of the camp was Ivan
Tomljenović and later Milan Komlenović took over this function. The members of
KNOJ choose the camp administration leaders and camp commander, of whom four were
women, and according to the statements and recollections of the internees they
were more cruel than most. The internees were picked up by the farmers of the
neighboring villages and used as workers for a variety of fieldwork, respectively
they were ‘hired’ for a verity of jobs and the camp administration received
payment for it. According to the statements/recollections of the internees many
farmers showed understanding towards their plight and gave them assistance in food
and clothing. Similar as in other camps the hard lot of the internees was
influenced by the dismal accommodation conditions, but also by the very poor
nutrition, poor hygiene, lack of medication and medical assistance, and various
diseases and strenuous forced labour to which the internees were not accustomed.
Most of the internees died from disease,
especially typhoid fever, as well as from fatigue, hunger and cold. In winter
1945/1946, especially in January 1946, an epidemic of typhoid fever broke out in
the camp, which soon spread alarmingly. By the end of March or early April 1946
the typhoid fever was under control after correct measures were undertaken.
Outright killings and executions in Krndija camp were extremely rare, even though
there were some cases, which could not be overseen. The deceased internees were
buried at the village cemetery, many without any grave headstones or inscriptions.
As per the report of the Interior Ministry of
the People’s Government of Croatia in the camp of Krndija in October of 1945 were
some 3,500 internees kept, mostly elderly, women and children, who were used for
different forced labour work. It is estimated that in the Krndija camp
approximately 3,500 to 4,000 people were imprisoned during a its existence and
that about 500 to 1500 of them died in the camp, mostly from starvation, dysentery
and typhoid fever. Up to this date at least 337 persons who died in the camp
were identified from various historical sources and most of them were elderly,
women and children.
Krndija internment camp was dissolved in May
of 1946. Those internees, who were not released, were sent until the end of May
1946 to other camps (Podunalvje in Baranya, Tenja/Tenjska Mitnica near Osijek, to
Gakovo, Bačka and to Knićanin/Rudolfsgnad in the Banat. They were sent as
internees from those camps to others to forced labour. A significant number of
former internees continued to work in agriculture as well as in different
companies in Slavonia even after the dissolution of the Krndija concentration
camp.
Most of the Croatian ethnic German population,
but also those from other Yugoslavian republics, emigrated after their release
from the concentration camps as soon as the Yugoslavian borders were somewhat
opened, especially in the 50’s of the 20th Century to Austria and
Germany. They were forced to this step, because of their ethnicity they were
deprived of almost all of their rights.
Not until the 1st of November 1997
was the first commemoration performed in Krndija for the victims of the Krndija’s
concentration camp years 1945/1946. On the part of Krndija’s cemetery where the
internees from the camp were buried, a memorial to all the victims of the camp
from the years 1945/1946 was placed on 7th of October 1999 with the
incretion in the Croatian and German language:
"U počast i spomen Podunavskim Nijemcima žrtvama zatočeničkog
logora Krndija 1945/1946"
"In commemoration of the honorific Swabian victims in extermination
camps Krndija 1945 / 1946 "