From the book:
“Voelkermord
der Tito-Partisanen 1944-1948: Dokumentation”
By
Oesterreichische Historiker-Arbeitsgemeinschaft
fuer Kaernten und Steiermark, Graz 1990
Translated by Henry Fischer
Chapter
Three
Genocide in the Banat 1944
- 1948
“This is where innocent blood flowed like a river”
Following the German invasion of Yugoslavia in 1941, the Banat
was always under occupation by German troops.
The Banat state administration supported the regime of the
Serbian General Nedic in Belgrade.
When local Danube Swabians in the Banat made application to or
approached the state administration on issues of concern to them it was
done so in the name of Serbian government in Belgrade and would only
affect areas of the Banat in which they resided.
There was apprehension on their part with regard to some of the
measures taken by the German occupation forces and their commanders that
had adverse effects on their Serbian neighbors and the Danube Swabians
sought to eliminate or weaken the consequences of them if at all
possible. Often they were
unsuccessful and this created negative feelings among the Serbian
population that became a Partisan recruitment area.
The Partisans
introduced a systematic extermination program to the extent that only a small
fraction of the Danube Swabian population would survive.
But what characterized it most were the gruesome and bloodthirsty methods
that were used in carrying it out. The
use of the division of the region into the former areas of administration
enabled this well planned operation to be put into effect here as elsewhere.
(Translator’s note: A sentence consisting of the next six lines in the text follows for
which I offer a simple précis as follows).
With the benefit of hindsight this systematic liquidation program was
modeled on the one that was operational in the Batschka as previously cited.
How is it possible that one can speak of this one area, the Banat in
comparison to others in Yugoslavia, as the one where rivers of innocent blood
flowed? We need to reiterate that
in a single day in all of the communities in a district the liquidation squads
appeared at the same time with the request of the local administrations for the
arrest and mass execution of Danube Swabian men and women.
This was carried out even though in many communities the local Serbian
officials and population protested against it and as a result saved the lives of
many, but these genocide squads seldom listened to any attempts at intervention
and proceeded in spite of local opposition and liquidated every Danube Swabian
man, woman and child.
Pardanj
Individual stories and the experiences of whole families best
describes what took place here in the words of Appollonia Schütz one of
the residents:
“We were
driven out of Pardanj on April 18, 1945. My
husband was kept in Pardanj, while the children and I along with the elderly and
those unable to work along with other mothers and their children were taken to
Stefansfeld. We were four hundred
and fifty in number. My sister and
her daughter along with her two children who were eighteen months old and two
and half years old were taken to Stefansfeld with me. My niece got typhus in August.
When we were sent to Molidorf on September 28th we had to
leave her behind. In Molidorf we
never heard from our family members again, neither my husband nor my niece.
(She describes the kind of food ration they received much like what has
been described elsewhere previously) Of
the one hundred and twenty-six persons brought to Molidorf who were
originally from Pardanj, on September 28th in 1945, by August
of 1946 only nine women and one man had survived.
My
sister did not want to let her grandchildren die of hunger. She sneaked out of the camp and traded her clothes in
neighboring villages for food. One
day she went along with five other women and three children who were from
Stefansfeld and went to Tova. The
camp commander became aware of this forbidden activity and surrounded Molidorf
with sentries who awaited the return of the women at night in order to take them
prisoner and put them in the camp jail. The
women left on the evening of August 6th and returned at midnight on
August 8th. The food
they had traded was immediately taken from them and they led them away to be
shot. They had only walked about a meter along the street, when a
shot rang out, that hit my sister. She
fell to the ground. Uttering curses
the Partisan who shot her stepped closer to her and shot her in the stomach with
a dum-dum bullet so that her intestines burst and became visible.
He left her just lying there and took the other women to the commander.
My sister just lay there and lived until 4:00am.
Then she died. While she was
still alive and whimpered with pain, a fourteen-year-old Partisan stepped up to
her, scolded her, took a rock and hit her on the head with it.
Everyone was afraid to approach the dieing woman.
I only found out what happened at 6:00am that morning.
I immediately went to her. Even
now the young Partisan who had hit her with the rock still stood there with his
hands on his hips, glaring down on her and now at me.
He struck me and battered me with his rifle.
Then he led me to the camp commander.
My sister would be left to lie in the hot sun all day, but the commander
allowed me to cover her with a blanket.
My
brother-in-law had earlier been taken to Cernje along with one hundred others
from Stefansfeld, where he was shot along with sixty-eight of those from
Stefansfeld. In Cernje, on another
occasion eighty-five persons from Pardanj were also shot. Among them was another one of my brothers-in-law.
My daughter who had become ill at Stefansfeld was later sent to
Rudolfsgnad as well as my husband. Both
would die of starvation there. My
second sister remained in Stefansfeld. Her
husband was also shot. While
attempting to cross the Romanian frontier one of my brother’s sons was shot by
border guards. In turn, his own son and my other brother were also killed. Of my
sister’s family only the two small grandchildren survived and I took them with
me when I later escaped into Hungary and made my way with them to Austria.”
The Northern Banat
“Where the
lust for murder raged”
Sanad
The far northern portion of the Banat had a very small Danube
Swabian population. The
liquidation of these Swabians happened in their own home communities or
in the district towns of Neu Kanischa and Kikinda.
The mixed language village of Sanad was far to the north. On October 20, 1944 all of the Danube Swabian men were
arrested and taken to Neu Kanischa and imprisoned there. For several days they were brutally beaten by the Partisans.
On October 25th all of them were shot.
Only one of the men was able to escape and make his way to
Hungary. Now it was the
turn of the Swabian women.
The first group of Swabian women was also taken to Neu Kanischa
and shot. The other women
and children were driven out of their homes on December 9th
of 1944. Most of them ended up in the concentration camp at Kikinda.
On December 17th, late in the evening sixty-four women
were shot. Among them were
thirty-two women from Sanad. Only five of the women from Sanad remained alive in the camp
at Kikinda. In March of
1945 the new authorities in Sanad discovered that four Swabian women had
hidden in one of the homes in Sanad: a mother, her two daughters and an
old woman. They were
apprehended and taken to Neu Kanischa to be shot.
The Partisans decided to be lenient and not shoot one of the
girls. She said she did not want to live if the others were to be
shot. All four were
executed.
Kikinda
The northern Yugoslavian Banat is the site of Kikinda (Gross
Kikinda). There were twenty
thousand inhabitants in the city, of whom about one third were Danube
Swabians. The rest of the
population was Hungarian and Serbian.
In the vicinity of the city there were numerous communities with
Danube Swabian inhabitants. Very
close to the city was Nakovo an entirely Danube Swabian village with a
population of five thousand. To
the east were the Swabian villages of Heufeld and Mastort.
In the northeast were the so-called “Welsh Villages”: St.
Hubert, Scharlevil (Charlesville) and Soltur.
Their ancestors had been French.
They originated in Alsace and Lorraine and had emigrated to the
Banat about two hundred years before in the time of Maria Theresia along
with the German settlers to resettle the former Turkish and now
depopulated Banat. They lived in harmony with their Swabian neighbors
and over the years they assimilated with them and became German
speaking. At the beginning
of October 1944 after the Russians marched into the Banat from Romania
they handed over the control of the Banat to the Partisans and
Communists and all of what these “French Swabians” had was also
taken away from them. They were driven from their homes and property and in long
columns were dragged to Kikinda and from there to various concentration
camps where they were exterminated.
Rose
Mularczyk from Heufeld reports:
“On October 20th at mid-night we were taken from our
beds by Serbian Partisans. There
were eighty-two men and twenty-two women.
We were imprisoned in the community center overnight.
The next day we were forced to walk to St. Hubert.
The men in the group were beaten along the way.
The night of that same day we left St. Hubert for Kikinda.
We were imprisoned there in the courthouse and all of the women
were placed in one small cell. On
the 22nd of October we were led to the Milk Hall.
All night long we were threatened and abused by two Russians. For five days we received hardly any food.
On November 2nd the Partisans brought in another group
of men and women, about one hundred in all from our village of Heufeld.
On November 3rd I was an eyewitness of the first
slaughter of a large group of men.
In the past individuals had been killed individually.
This group of twenty-two men was brutally murdered and two of
them were from our neighboring village of Mastort.
The men were first stripped naked, forced to lie down and their
hands were tied behind their backs.
Then all of them were thrashed with ox-hide whips.
After this torture, they cut pieces of flesh from their backs,
and others had their noses, tongues, ears and male parts cut off.
Their eyes were poked out and all through this they were whipped
and thrashed at the same time. They
were also hit with pipes. At
this time I was with another prisoner in the ground floor cell of the
Milk House and I could witness all of this.
The prisoners screamed and writhed in pain.
This lasted for about an hour.
The screaming died down until there was only silence.
The next day when we crossed the courtyard it was bathed in blood
and tongues, ears, eyes and male parts lay everywhere.
The following day all of the married and single young women were
force to do labor. At the
train station we cleaned the bricks and loaded heavy stones.
Around November 10th the Partisans and Russians
brought in a transport of two hundred and eighty prisoners of war.
All of them were Germans, except for six Italians and two
Hungarians. These soldiers
could no longer walk. They
were in rags and many were ill. I
heard one of the Russian guards who had accompanied the prisoners tell
one of the Partisans that the prisoners had had no food or water for six
days. If anyone bent to drink water in a puddle he was immediately
shot on the spot. In
Kikinda they did not receive any food or water, but were packed into the
cellar. The prisoners were
left there for three days, with no food or water and were abused and
mistreated in all kinds of ways I do not want to relate.
Then they were taken out of the cellar and led away.
Most of them were unable to walk and like animal carcasses they
were tossed on wagons and driven away.
The column set out in the direction of Schindanger and from there
we later heard the shooting. Later
we learned that they had all been shot at Schindanger and were buried
there in a mass grave.
I along with the other women and young girls were given the task
of house cleaning and we were somewhat freer than the others and I
always tried to locate any of the Heufeld prisoners who might be there
and did find some of my relatives and bring them water.
But one could only do very little to ease their pain, through the
constant mistreatment they became apathetic and depressed and most had
been beaten beyond recognition. One
man went around on all fours and bellowed like a dog.
About eight days after the prisoners of war were shot, it was on
a Friday, they began to murder Swabian men.
The Partisans announced that all those men who were sick were to
report to the so-called camp “hospital” and be looked after.
After the sick men reported in they had to stand behind the Milk
Hall in the courtyard, forced to strip from their clothes and were
slaughtered on the spot. We
could hear the screams of the victims from inside of the Milk Hall where
we were working. The women
received some food but the men got nothing.
Later, additional women were brought to the Milk Hall from
Kikinda and neighboring villages. Civilians
were not allowed to enter the Milk Hall and any who dared to approach
the barbed wire fence were shot down.
On Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays there were always large numbers
of men and women who were slaughtered.
When one passed through the courtyard there was nothing but
blood, eyes, ears, tongues, noses, etc.
It was horrible. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday were used to refill
the camp with prisoners, people who were driven to Kikinda from the
surrounding countryside. On
Fridays the slaughter began again.
Later, I could not see the “actions” but I could hear them.
The screams of the victims and the mirth and frivolity of the
Partisans who thought it was all in good fun.
Often men were forced to kneel together in threes, and were shot
in the nape of the neck and fell in a pile.
A Swabian woman who was from Mokrin was married to a Russian but
still imprisoned with us. One
time she was able to swipe a potato and a Partisan saw her and thrashed
her and all of the rest of us had to watch.
The woman was then placed in the cellar with the men.
She was bound together with several men and they were forced to
lie on the floor. The
Partisans stomped all over them. Then
each person had their hands tied to their feet and they had to rise and
sit down in exercise fashion.
Most of them just lay there.
They simply could not go on.
Later, all of them were taken away including the woman in the
direction of Schindanger and then again we heard the shooting.
Until the end of November I worked in the Partisan’s kitchen,
and then along with nineteen other women we were sent to work in the
city. Six of us, including
myself were taken to work in a store.
We had to sort clothes. The
other women had to go washing clothes, and most of them had belonged to
the murdered Swabian men. Four
days later we had to go to the store again and were no longer allowed
back into the camp at night, and so we slept in work place.
On one night, an automobile came and brought clothing.
The clothes were bloodied and there were bullet holes in all of
them. The cassock of a
priest (Father Adam of St. Hubert) was among them.
In the evening we had to pile up clothes in one of the rooms, and
then we could see that the rest of the rooms were piled ceiling high in
clothes. The next day we
had to take the clothing again to the cellar for sorting.
We also found clothing of acquaintances from our villages who had
disappeared and of whom there was no trace.
I found the clothing of our schoolmaster.
His clothes were pierced like a sieve and bloody, a sign that he
had been whipped and tortured. The
next day we had to wash and iron the clothes and some of the women found
items belonging to their husbands and relatives.
In the camp at Kikinda there was a young girl from Charleville. She was assigned to work in the office and had to record the
names of all the men brought to the camp who were murdered or had died
otherwise. Eventually she
was sent into the camp because she did not want to marry one of the
Serbian Partisans. He
denounced her and she was to be shot.
She had to write her own death sentence.
She was imprisoned in the cellar and the door was nailed shut.
That was always the case for those who had been sentenced to
death. Because of all she
had seen and heard she lost her nerve and she became hysterical.
The political commissar of Kikinda of whom the girl was quite
fond spoke against the action taken by the other Partisan and the girl
was released from solitary confinement.
She was then deported to slave labor in Russia with many others.
On December 26th we convinced the Partisans to let us
go home to get some more clothes for the winter.
On the 27th of December at 3:00 am we were loaded on
cattle cars and sent to Russia to forced labor.
For many of us it was a release from an intolerable
situation…”
The largest extermination camp in the region was in the city of
Kikinda located in the east end of the community, centered in the
buildings associated with the Milk Hall.
Countless numbers of Swabians, both men and women perished or
were killed here. The first to be driven into the camp by the Partisans were
the Swabian men, women and children of Kikinda who were thrown out of
their homes. They took
everything from them while others took up residence in their homes and
shared their possessions with one another.
The Swabians were killed one after the other at the camp.
Whenever they were in the mood the Partisans would select one
hundred Swabians and take them out of the camp and kill them.
Very often the Partisans tortured and abused their selected
victims, then beat them to death, or used knives and butchered them like
pigs, or shot large groups of them.
The first mass shooting took place here on October 8th,
1944 when twenty-eight were killed that day.
Shootings followed day after day.
The first to be liquidated were the “leading” Swabians in the
region. The parish priest
Michael Rotten of Kikinda was among them.
He had been shot in the early days of Partisan rule.
Nakovo
Because so many Danube Swabians from Kikinda had been liquidated
the empty spaces in the camp were filled by Swabians from the
neighboring communities forced there by the Partisans.
One evening in October 1944, sixty-eight Swabian men were brought
in chains from Nakovo. For
three days they were locked up. During
this time they were brutally tortured by a large group of Partisans.
The Partisans were free to do whatever they wanted to these
defenseless men. They used
their rifle buts on their backs to injure the men’s kidneys, threw
them to the ground, jumped and stomped on their stomachs, knocked in
their teeth, broke their ribs and mistreated them in every way
imaginable. This torture
lasted for three days and nights. Then
they dragged them out of town.
It was a Sunday just before sunrise.
Close to the cemetery, but outside of its walls a large pit was
dug. The men from Nakovo
and three men from Kikinda who had been taken with them, now numbering
seventy-one persons had to strip naked by the cemetery wall.
Later, the Partisans traded the victims’ shoes and clothing. They were tied to one another with wire, and with thrashings
and blows of their rifles the men were driven to the edge of the pit.
In the gray dawn these men were butchered with knives and thrown
into their grave. One man
was able to free himself and escape in the early morning mist, naked as
a jaybird. He was
fortunate. They shot after
him but they missed. He
fled across the Romanian border. But
the new city authorities of Kikinda posted notices that there were now
seventy-one fewer Danube Swabians to deal with in the Banat.
The first Danube Swabian liquidated in Nakovo was Franz Hess who
was beaten to death by Partisans at the beginning of October 1944.
Another man, Josef Kemper was shot as he drove his wagon home
from work. Partisans shot
Johann Kuechel in front of the community center on May 13th. Nikolaus Hubert was shot when he was found hiding in a
haystack. Johann Junker was
shot for no reason at all.
On December 22, 1944 all of the men from sixteen to sixty were
taken to the camp in Kikinda and on March 18, 1945 they took all of the
men over sixty years. These
eighty men were taken to do heavy forestry and lumbering work at
Mramorak. All of them died
there including the former long standing mayor, Johann Blassmann.
St.
Hubert-Scharlevil-Soltur
A large armed Partisan unit set a blockade around the three
“Welsh French” Danube Swabian communities on October 31, 1944.
On the same day, three hundred Swabian men were driven into the
concentration camp at Kikinda. For
eight days they went without food, but the Partisans drove them out of
the camp to do heavy labor. When
they returned to the camp at night they had to report for roll call.
Then the Partisans got the toll of those shot, beaten to death,
or tortured to death the night before.
On November 3rd of 1944 all of the farmers who had
large landholdings were shot. On
the evening of November 4th after arriving back at the camp
after a day of hard labor forty of the men in the camp were sought out.
They had to strip naked and were shot next to the camp.
Their bodies were buried next to the railway tracks behind the
Milk Hall.
On November 5th all of the inmates of the camp had to
sit on the ground in one place all day long.
At evening they selected one hundred and twenty men.
Almost all of them were from the “Welsh” villages.
Father Adam, the Roman Catholic priest from St. Hubert was among
them. A heavily armed woman
in Partisan uniform dragged him out of the line by his black cassock and
beat him ruthlessly, supported and assisted by other Partisans, simply
because he was a priest. The
Partisans whipped him with an ox-hide belt so that his gown was torn off
of his back. She boxed his
ears, hit him with the back of her pistol and kicked him in the groin.
But he had to stand up on his own and offer no resistance.
She screamed that priests were not needed in the new Yugoslavia
and therefore he would be shot. Like a martyr he accepted what was happening to him. Then all
one hundred and twenty men plus a few others chosen by the Partisans
were forced to strip naked beginning with the priest.
They were bound to one another with wire and had to crawl under a
barbed wire fence and from behind and above they received blows from the
rifle stocks on their backs. When they reached the area behind the camp
they were machine gunned to death.
Johann Tout of Soltur was among the one hundred and twenty
victims, but he was only grazed at the temple and was unconscious.
For a long while he lay under the corpses which were only buried
in the morning. During the
night he came to and escaped to his native village of Soltur.
He was stark naked. He
hid out for ten days. Women
who still remained in the village tended his wounds.
But
soon the authorities became aware of his presence.
They arrested him and he was dragged off to Cernje where he was
shot.
A week later a gruesome massacre occurred in the Kikinda camp. One morning all of the Danube Swabian war invalids in the
district, some of them veterans of the First World War and other elderly
men unable to work were slaughtered.
They were kept locked up in a cellar of the concentration camp. They were shackled and beaten and led to an area behind the
camp. They had to undress
and give their clothes and shoes to the Partisans.
They let them wait for a long time in the cold, so that one of
the old veterans from the First World War who was an invalid became
impatient and called to the Partisans, that they were far too old to be
tortured like this any longer and they should shoot them quickly and get
it over with. After awhile
the Partisans ordered them to lie down in the bottom of the pit.
Whoever would not go, was shoved in.
So they lay there on the earth, one beside the other, and because
the pit was too small, some were on top of one another. The Partisans who stood above them began to shoot into the
grave. They were buried
immediately and no one checked to see if they were alive or dead. The next day another one hundred Swabian civilians were
killed. Sixty of them were
from Baschaid and forty more from Kikinda.
They were killed in the same way as the group the day before.
The large number of remaining older Danube Swabian women bothered
the Partisan command now that most of the men had been liquidated.
On December 17, 1944 the first group of older and elderly Swabian
women was shot. That
evening for no reason at all another sixty-four women were selected.
Most of these women were simply too old to work.
Thirty-two of them were from Sanad.
They were all shot the next day in an area behind the camp.
For several weeks now with the mass shootings and executions the
thousands of Danube Swabians who once lived in the district were reduced
to those who were in the Kikinda camp.
Some one thousand victims were buried in the fields behind the
Milk Hall. Months later the
earth sank where the mass graves were located.
Pigs that came to scrounge for food and dogs often pulled up
bones and body parts of human beings. When this became known throughout the city, the authorities
had the land leveled and sowed oats over it, to hide and cover up the
genocide that had been perpetrated there.
The extermination camp at Kikinda earned a reputation for its
gruesome atrocities. In the
summer of 1946 a young man was successful in escaping.
Because of that all of the remaining inmates were brutally
punished. All of them had to stand in one spot for three days in the
camp courtyard in the hot July sun.
During these three days they received nothing to eat.
Whoever wavered in any way had to stand on their toes.
The Partisans then placed a board with a nail driven through it
just under the heel of the victim so that if he sought to rest on his
foot he would impale himself on the nail.
Just another example of what the Partisans were prepared to do to
exterminate the Danube Swabian population as painfully as possible.
Heufeld
Heufeld was a Danube Swabian community in the northern Banat
almost on the Romanian border. In
the early days of October in 1944 the Partisans took control of the area
after the Russian Army had moved through and the leading Swabian men in
the Heufeld and Mastort, seventeen in all were taken from their homes
and after gruesome torture in neighboring Kikinda were put to death.
On November 2, 1944 the Partisans arrested all of the Swabian men
and eighty-six of them were brought to the town hall.
They also wanted to take Adam Steigerwald, a seventy-five year
old retired Roman Catholic priest who had returned to the village where
he had been born. He
protested and refused to the leave rectory.
The Partisans beat him with their rifles and forced him out of
the rectory yard. The Partisans continued to brutally assault the old man in
one of the rooms in the town hall.
The other Swabian men who were standing in the courtyard of the
town hall both saw and heard how the old priest was being manhandled.
The Partisans knocked him down and jumped on his stomach breaking
countless ribs in the process. Because
of his internal injuries he was unable to rise from the floor.
They tossed him down the stairs so that he landed at the feet of
the men in the courtyard. Not even now was he able to raise himself.
The Partisans shot him from the stairs in disgust.
This was the morning of November 2, 1944.
In the afternoon the priest’s body still lay there.
Finally, the Partisans called the Gypsies to take the body for
burial. They stripped him
of his clothes and buried him naked along with some dead animals.
On the same day the remaining Swabian men in Heufeld were driven
on foot to Kikinda where after brutal torture by the Partisans most of
them were killed. Only
three men from Heufeld survived.
Anna Klein
of Heufeld remembers:
“My father was reported missing in action from the German army
in 1944, and then in the same year at Christmas, the Russians dragged
off our mother to go to forced labor.
With hefty sobs we cried after her, “Momma stay with us!
Don’t leave us!” It
was only years later that we discovered she had been taken to Ukraine
where she along with many other Swabian women was working on
construction projects.
I remained behind with my older sister and younger brother.
We lived with our great Aunt until the spring of 1945 when all of
us Swabians were forced to report at the town hall in the neighboring
village. She got us already
to go and sent the three of us on our own, because she felt it was her
duty to remain behind with her mother who was unable to walk.
My sister, who was nine years old at the time, took us two
younger siblings by the hand and we followed close behind the rest of
the people from Heufeld.
A huge crowd of people had already assembled at the front of town
hall by the time we arrived there.
Because we were terrified and we were beyond crying we witnessed
what was happening all around us. How
fortunate we were, to be able to find our grandmother in the midst of
all the weeping and fearful people who immediately grasped us into her
arms as we clutched her body in every way we could.
We were taken to the internment camp in Molidorf where hunger,
poverty, fear and need became greater and greater every day.
We lay on straw with many other people all packed together.
Many people began to die because of hunger, exhaustion and
mistreatment and abuse. As
children we watched many people around us starve and die.
One day our grandmother was to be among the victims.
In the early morning she slept longer than usual, and we did not
want to waken her, but she never woke up, she lay dead there beside us
on the straw. She was
wrapped up in a blanket, and a wagon that came by every morning to pick
up all of the dead, arrived and took her along.
We were not allowed to go with her and we watched from a distance
and saw the place where she was buried in a mass grave.
We now faced everything alone among strangers.
After two years the Communists took the surviving children who
had escaped death into their State Homes.
This included the three of us who they considered to be orphans
and put us in the Children’s Home in Debeljaca.
Here we found ourselves treated like human beings again, we could
even sleep in beds. But
what was most important to us was the fact that we could eat to our
heart’s content.
During this early period away from the camp I lived in constant
fear of the future and what it might hold for me and my brother and
sister. Because of
everything we had gone through I was mistrustful and kept everything to
myself and distant. Shortly
after we had been able to be rehabilitated physically we were all sent
to different State Homes. We
had all been Swabian children in the first home but now we were placed
among Serbian orphans. At
the age of nine I entered the Serbian public school.
We had already had a working knowledge of the Serbian language
but now we were forbidden to speak German and I could only speak a few
words to my sister in German secretly in the hiding places we found.
If we had been discovered doing so we would be severely punished
and have our eating privilege suspended for a day or we received a
beating.
Slowly but surely I began to lose my ability to speak in German
or even remember it, until I could only speak Serbian.
But now we were well treated.
They took a special interest in the state of our health and
children who were still weak were sent to special rehabilitation.
As a result I spent some time with a Serbian farm family and on
one occasion I was taken to the Adriatic coast to Split.
The first letter we received was from my uncle and for the first
time we had news of our mother and this filled us with a rising sense of
hope. After years, there
was hope and joy once more after our abandonment.
After what seemed like forever for us children who held on to our
hope on October 12th in 1950 I arrived in Germany to meet my
mother for the first time after six long years.
Ruskodorf
There were one hundred and twenty Danube Swabian families who
lived in Ruskodorf. The
remainder of the population was Hungarian.
They were all poor people; most of them did not own land and
hired themselves out as day farm laborers on the large estates, and the
two nationalities lived in harmony with one another.
After the annexation of this portion of the Banat to the new
state of Yugoslavia after the First World War many Slavic colonists were
brought from the south and settled here by the Yugoslavian government.
The estates of the Hungarian nobles who had left the county were
divided up among these new colonists and the Hungarian and Danube
Swabian population were not eligible to buy any of it.
After the Partisans came to power in the fall of 1944 these
colonists wanted to confiscate the homes and property of the Swabians
and see to their physical extermination.
During the first days of October, there were twenty leading
Swabians in the community who were taken by force to nearby Cernje,
including four women. Here
they were imprisoned in a cellar along with many other Swabians from the
area and were brutally abused for several days.
On October 27th most of them were shot in the meadows
just outside of Cernje where they executed one hundred and seventy-four
of them.
Fourteen Swabian men from Ruskodorf were taken to the camp at
Kikinda and seven of them were brutally killed shortly after they
arrived. Another group of
men were taken to the camp at Julia Major where many of them perished.
But in Ruskodorf itself there were large portions of the Danube
Swabians who were being gruesomely liquidated by the Partisans.
On November 5th, 1944 two men and one woman were
horrendously slaughtered, the fifty-six year old machinist Matthias
Frauenhofer, the forty-three year old landowner Johann Martin and
thirty-two year old Maria Rottenbach.
After the Partisans inflicted all kinds of cuts to their bodies
with knives, they then chopped off of their arms and legs while they
were still alive with axes. The
walls of the room where these brutal atrocities were committed were
splattered with blood. Swabian women were given the task of cleaning up the mess.
The limbless bodies were tossed in a basket, loaded on a wagon
and taken and buried in the animal cemetery.
There were ten young women both married and unmarried who were
tortured, violated, raped and liquidated by an extermination squad of
Partisans made up of eight young Slavic colonists who lived in Ruskodorf
who were rabid beasts who committed the atrocity in the presence of
other terrified Swabian women in a room of the castle residence of the
former Hungarian noble landowner. The
five married women, Katharina Kartje, Fanni Hass, Elisabeth Martin,
Margarete Frauenhofer and Anna Reff had all of their finger nails torn
off by a pair of pliers and then their hands and feet were chopped off
with axes and they were raped and tormented until they died.
All ten women were buried in the animal cemetery.
After this bloodletting the ceiling of the room remained
splattered with blood.
The Danube Swabians who remained were in a local camp in
Ruskodorf that was set up for that purpose.
On April 18, 1945 they were driven on foot out of the village to
the camp in Molidorf. A
great portion of them died of hunger there.
Today you will find the Slavic colonists living in the homes of
the Danube Swabians.
Beodra
There were seventy-one Danube Swabian families that lived in
Beodra. At the beginning of
October 1944 the Partisans brought twenty-eight Danube Swabian men,
mostly from other communities to Beodra.
They were imprisoned in the stable of the police station and
during the night they were hacked and chopped to death.
In
addition, ten of Beodra’s Swabian men and two women were taken from
their homes and imprisoned in the jail and were abused and tortured for
sixteen days and early in the evening of October 18th, 1944
they were shot at the community manure pile.
The corpses were later buried.
Other Swabians died as a result of individual acts of terror by
the Partisans. The rest of the Swabian community was sent to the
extermination camps at Kikinda, Betscherek and Rudolfsgnad.
Molidorf
In Molidorf a community in which a thousand Danube Swabians once
lived, the Partisans established a large concentration camp in 1945. It was one of the largest in the Banat. Approximately nine thousand Danube Swabians, mostly women and
children from various other communities in the Banat were brought here.
In the year 1946 there were four thousand deaths.
They were simply left to starve.
Many of them were abused and shot.
In 1947 Swabians inmates were still being put to death.
In January of 1947 two children aged twelve and fourteen were
shot. In May of 1947 the camp authorities killed two women from
Soltur, one of whom had three children and the other four. At the end of May in 1947 this camp was closed down.
The surviving inmates were divided up among other camps.
But even now in the resettlement of the survivors from Molidorf,
the Partisans along the way to the new camps beat the women.
The old and sick people who were unable to travel were simply
left behind to die because there was no one to care for them.
The
North Eastern Banat
“The Hunt
for Danube Swabians”
Cernje
Cernje is located in the northeastern Banat in Yugoslavia.
About three thousand Danube Swabians lived there.
In addition there were approximately ten thousand more Danube
Swabians who lived in the vicinity in the villages of Molidorf,
Tschesterek, Heufeld, Hetin, Ruskodorf and others.
During the first days of the month of October in 1944 the
Partisans took power from the Russian military.
Their rule was bloody and gruesome.
The most atrocious acts were carried out by the Gypsies who lived
in a settlement in close proximity to Cernje.
The Gypsies had always been work-shy and intensely jealous of the
prosperity of the hard working and thrifty Danube Swabians.
The Gypsies joined the communists and Partisans who were Serbians
and attempted to share power with them.
They let the Danube Swabians know that they had power in no
uncertain way and they were prepared to use that power ruthlessly.
As the new powers that be, everything that took their fancy they
simply took from the Swabians including young girls and women to satisfy
their lust.
The first Swabian killed in Cernje was the Roman Catholic priest,
Franz Brunet. He was taken
from the rectory by Partisans on October 3rd, 1944 and shot
for no apparent reason. Immediately
after that most of the Swabian men were taken from their homes and
divided into groups. At the
same time many Swabians from the vicinity of Cernje were dragged here in
chains and fetters. Many
Swabian women from outside of the village of Cernje were also brought
here. Mostly they were
women from prosperous families and the “intelligentsia” among the
men who were the first to be tortured and killed.
As these large groups arrived they were locked in two large
cellars and were imprisoned there for weeks.
During the evenings groups of Swabians were taken out of the
cellars and for hours on end the Partisans abused, tortured and
mistreated them in as many ways as possible. Each Partisan was now at liberty to let Swabian blood flow
and break arms, legs and ribs, knock in a man’s teeth or simply kill
them any way they pleased. A
great number of those taken out of the cellar never returned.
Their bodies ended up in shallow graves in the meadows.
As the numbers of Swabians in the cellar declined, they continued
to bring in a new supply of men and women to endure the same fate.
The treatment of the women was especially horrendous.
It was brutal, gruesome and bestial.
One evening the Partisans took a rather beautiful woman out of
the cellar. She had to
endure a long period of excruciating torture.
They stripped her of her clothes and because she resisted the
Partisans and Gypsies used a hot household iron and “ironed” her
whole naked body. With deep festering burns all over her body the Partisans
threw her down the cellar steps. For
the next two days she suffered in the presence of the other prisoners
before she finally died of her burns.
On October 8th, 1944 a bunch of drunken boisterous
Partisans broke into one of the cellars.
Among them was a drunken officer who carried a machine pistol in
his hand. All of the
Swabian prisoners were forced to stand and huddle against the wall in
one corner. The drunk
officer simply shot at the tightly packed group of prisoners in the
corner at point blank range in every direction, resulting in bloodying
and killing many of them. The
numbers killed and wounded was enormous.
The landowning farmers Kampf, Anton and Maier, Josef from Cernje
lived for a few days one of them wounded in his lungs and the other in
his knee but received no medical help or bandages.
Finally on October 12th both of them were taken out of
the cellar by the Partisans and shot up against the wall at the entrance
way. In the meanwhile the
surviving prisoners were tortured and individually liquidated night
after night with new methods devised by the Partisans.
On October 22, 1944 on what was a Sunday, all of the surviving
Swabians in Cernje who had not been imprisoned in the cellars were
forced to dig a pit for a mass grave.
It was twenty-five meters long, six meters wide and 3 meters
deep. On October 24th,
which was Tuesday the new governing officials had drums beaten in all of
the streets of Cernje to publicly announce to the entire population that
all of the Danube Swabians were to be put to death.
The Serbian population and the Gypsies were invited to come and
watch the massacre. Later
that day at 2:00pm, one hundred and twenty-four Swabian men and fifty
women were led in fetters from the cellars where they had been
imprisoned for weeks. They
were bound with wire to one another and were beaten and thrashed all
along the way to the place of execution and screamed at by the Partisans
and the Gypsies who had gathered to watch.
They were beaten so badly that they were unrecognizable.
When they arrived at the place of execution all of them were
stripped of their clothes and were shot by a huge mob of Serbians and
Gypsies. The Swabians were
bound together in groups and driven to the mass grave by some Partisans
and shot by them and then tossed into the pit.
The clothes of the dead were put on a wagon and led back to town
by the new “officials”. The
clothes were sorted and divided up among the Serbians and Gypsies.
The very next day they walked around town wearing the clothes of
the dead men and women with great pride.
Hardly was the massacre over when the new “officials” had
street announcements made everywhere in Cernje that wherever Danube
Swabians were still living they would be slaughtered that evening.
Armed Gypsies went from house to house and informed the young
girls and women that they, the Gypsies, had been given the right, the
power and the order by the authorities to rape and slaughter them if
they wished. In fear and
trembling of what awaited them, not less than seventy-five married and
single young women and their families took heir own lives on the evening
of October 24, 1944. Some
whole family groups chose to die together.
Mothers threw their little children into the well and then jumped
in after them. Other
mothers hung their children and did the same to themselves beside them. It just went on and on in a night of horrors as the Gypsies
went on a rampage of lust, rape and murder.
The aged former mayor Peter Stein and his wife Susanne chose
suicide. Johann Goldscheck was one of the men who had died in the
massacre earlier that day. Gypsies
raped his wife and daughter-in-law in front of the two children in the
house. When the Gypsies
left all four of them took their own lives.
Eva the wife of Kaspar Rottenbach, Maria the wife of John his
son, and their two daughters aged twenty and twenty-two were raped by a
group of Gypsies in front of the two men.
All six of them then committed suicide.
They hung themselves in the attic of their house all in a row.
These are only a few examples.
This is the gruesome way in which the new People’s Democratic
Republic of Yugoslavia of the Communists and Gypsies was introduced into
this region of the Banat.
On October 25, 1944 it was time to liquidate those still
imprisoned in the cellars plus the continuing oncoming victims being
brought in from the surrounding region who fed the insatiable massacre
machine. On that day there
were still four hundred and eighty living Danube Swabians, including
thirty women. They were
bound to one another with ropes and wire and were led by heavily armed
Partisans and pushed, abused and mistreated all the way to an estate
called “Julia Major”. From
here they were to be taken to various hard labor camps.
But there were numerous situations in which individuals or groups
were slaughtered in the most gruesome manner.
On November 15 and 16, 1944 there were one hundred Swabian men
shot at one time and included sixty-seven farmers from Stefansfeld and
thirty-three Swabians from Pardanj.
This massacre was at the insistence of a Serbian woman Partisan.
Her husband had attacked German troops during the occupation and
had been shot by them by return fire.
She now wanted to see the blood of hundreds of unarmed Danube
Swabian civilians flow in revenge and she had her heart’s desire.
Among the imprisoned Danube Swabian civilians in the cellars
there were also Danube Swabian refugees from Romania and one German Army
officer prisoner of war, Hans Konrad from Hatzfeld.
He was badly crippled from the torture he endured at the hands of
the Partisans and was unable to work.
These were the grounds for the Partisans for his liquidation.
His wife was also in the camp.
As he was being led out to his execution, his wife left her labor
group and ran towards him. She
reached him just as they were about to shoot him.
She wrapped her arms around his neck and refused to leave him.
They were shot together, even though neither one of them was a
Yugoslavian citizen. This
occurred on November 9, 1944. On
that same day another eleven persons were liquidated.
Most of them were sick or due to the treatment and torture they
had endured that they were unable to work.
The camp commander who ordered these shootings came from Ban.
Karadjordjevo. He had
already been responsible for the deaths of countless others in Kikinda
and later in Julija Major” where he boasted of that.
In the bitter cold of New Year’s Eve of 1944/1945 all of the
inmates in the camp were driven out of their quarters at midnight.
They had to stand and wait in the cold and the snow and then on
the orders of the Partisans they had to do sit-ups in the snow for about
an hour. But whoever got up
and down too fast was beaten terribly.
The women had to endure the same thing.
A pregnant woman who was a Danube Swabian from Romania was not
spared either. As a result
of this “exercise” she give birth to a child that died shortly
afterwards. This operation
was carried out in reprisal because of a speech given by a Nazi official
that was heard over the radio. The
operation lasted as long as the speech. On April 18, 1945 the very last of the Swabians in Cernje who
were still alive were driven out of their homes and taken to
concentration camps. But on
April 19th, twenty-two elderly people among them were unable
to walk were driven out of the camp at night and were shot.
Often in the following days both men and women were taken out at
night to be shot for no apparent reason at all.
And many young women were taken out at night and disappeared
forever. Most of them were
buried in one of the mass graves.
Karoline
Bockmueller of Cernje writes:
“On October 4, 1944 at 8:30am the Russian troops passed through
Cernje and headed west. In
the afternoon of the same day they were followed by groups of Russians
who had been prisoners of war in Romania.
Only some of them were armed and remained in Cernje for a few
days. Towards evening of
the day when they arrived they went from house to house to rob and
plunder under the direction of some local Serbian Partisans. During the night countless women and young girls were raped
by the Russians, Partisans and Gypsies.
One of their victims was a nine-year-old girl (Eva B.)
She was badly injured having been barbarically raped by nine men.
She became unconscious and her legs could no longer bend. On the following day her mother hung her and herself.
This was true of many of the other women and girls.
The sisters Maria and Susanne Rottenbach were raped as well as
Sophie B. who later had a child as a result.
Therese Hoenig was raped by six men and was injured so badly that
she was unable to walk and could only crawl on the floor.
The following were also raped:
Katharina and Gertraud Goldscheck.
Therese Hoenig and her mother as well as the Goldscheck and
Rottenbach sisters all hung themselves the next day in their attics.
The only raped woman who went on living was Sophie B.
On October 5th groups of Gypsies from the area went
from house to house and yelled to the Swabians inside that they were to
come to the commons where they would be shot.
Gypsies and Partisans also entered some houses and took a number
of men and some women whose husbands were in the German army and locked
them in the cellar at the town hall.
On hearing this news, fifty-four persons, men, women and children
hung themselves, took poison or jumped in a well and drowned.
On October 7th, 1944 the Partisans took our priest
Franz Brunet to the town hall. He
was so badly whipped and beaten along with four other men, so that none
was able to walk. The Partisans propositioned the priest that if he wanted to
run away all he had to do was to jump over the wall and they would let
him live. The priest used
all of his strength to jump over the wall.
As he reached the top of the wall the Partisans shot him. The other men who had been abused with the priest were beaten
to death. The priest’s
housekeeper Frau Klementine was brought to the town hall and she had to
wash the blood away. Other
women who came to do the cleaning at the town hall daily had to bury the
dead priest and the other men at the garbage dump.
In the cellars of the town hall in addition to the Danube Swabian
men from Cernje there was a larger number of men imprisoned with them
from the surrounding area: Stefansfeld, Heufeld, Mastort and others.
On October 8th or 9th in 1944, Franz
Hoffmann begged a Partisan guarding the cellar to shoot him because he
could not stand the torture and pain he had to endure.
The Partisan shot him on the spot and soon other inmates begged
for the same fate. One Partisan shot at them with his machine pistol and hit
three of them: Peter Weissmann, Nikolaus Tabar and Josef Mayer.
None of them was dead but all were badly wounded.
But all four were buried alive in the grave at the garbage dump.
Men and women were taken out of the cellar at night and were
whipped and tortured, while others were abused in the cellars.
There were fifteen year olds among them. All of them were hardly recognizable because of the terrible
tortures their bodies had endured, and as they were led two by two bound
to one another by the Partisans to be shot at the dump we could only
identify them by their voices or their clothes, which were often just
rags that clung to their bodies.
The mass shootings lasted from October 12th to
November 7th, 1944. Every
day several Swabians were executed.
The last shooting was on November 11th, 1944, and on
that day the mass grave was covered over.
There were always public announcements that the shootings were
taking place and everyone in Cernje was free to come and watch.
The victims were forced to undress naked at the dump, and step
towards the mass open grave where a Partisan shot them in the back of
the neck and the victim would fall forward into the pit.
Some of those who were shot were not dead immediately but
whimpered for most of the day and some long into the night until death
finally released them. Our schoolmaster Franz Kremer and Hans Goldscheck and
Katharina Schillinger were dragged by the hair from the cellar by the
Partisans and Gypsies and screamed in pain on their way to execution.
The woman was not killed instantly as a result of the shooting
and she whimpered and groaned until the next day and crawled around
among the decomposing corpses in the mass grave.
The Gypsies were given permission to kill her with shovels and
spades, which they then followed through on.
From Cernje alone, as far as I can remember, the following men
and women were shot and buried in the mass grave at the dump (she names
fifty-two victims). I
cannot remember all of them anymore.
On November 27, 1944 all men and women who were able to work were
ordered to report. There
were three groups formed. One
group of men and women went to the hemp factory, the second had to work
on the farms, the third group, mostly older people had to empty, pack
furnishings and possessions in the houses of the Swabians.
Regardless of where they worked they were guarded, beaten and
threatened with death by Partisans if they did not work hard enough or
fast enough. My own
seventy-year-old grandmother, Katharina Bockmueller had to load
furniture. Once when she
was unable to lift a chest she was beaten by Partisans and Gypsies until
she was unconscious.
At noon on December 27, 1944 the drum beats in the streets of
Cernje announced that all young women, both married and single, from
eighteen to thirty years of age and men from eighteen to forty-five were
to report to the town hall next morning at 4:00am.
They were to bring food for fourteen days and a change of
clothes. These people were
loaded in cattle cars at the railway station.
The windows and doors were locked and the transport of eighty
young women and thirty-five men were deported to slave labor in the
Soviet Union. Eyewitnesses
told me of the heart-rending scene at the railway station.
Parents were not allowed to say goodbye to their children and had
no idea of where they were going. I
was sick in bed at that time.
Towards the end of February 1945 we younger women who were still
in Cernje had to dig up the corpses of those who had hung themselves or
took poison when the Partisans had arrived and started the pogroms.
These were often buried in their own gardens because we were not
allowed on the streets at that time.
We had to unearth them and put them in the mass grave close to
the cemetery. The Partisans
wanted us to dig up the bodies with our bare hands but the local
Serbians hindered that from happening.
On March 18, 1945, along with four
other women from Cernje I came to Luise Puszta by Etschka.
There was a slave labor camp here with around one hundred women
and fifty men from various communities in the Banat who had been dragged
here like we had. With
nineteen other women I shared a small room.
We had to sleep on the floor with some hay and straw beneath us,
and it was an earthen not a wooden floor.
There was no way to heat the room and it was over run with
rodents and insects, cockroaches and lice.
In order to wash or clean ourselves we had to go to a nearby
creek, but there was no soap. We worked in the fields from sun-up to sundown.
And of course we received very little food and what we received
provided little nutrition. We were thrashed and beaten on our way to work and on our way
home.
In September 1945, along with twenty other women I was sent to
Elisenheim to care for cattle there.
We were all accommodated in one house and slept on straw on the
floor. The commander here
was good to us. With his
own money he bought extra food rations to help us survive since we had
to work so hard.
While I was here in Elisenheim I decided I had to try to escape
in order to find out where my daughter was, but a Croatian woman
betrayed me and as punishment I was sent to work at the fish pond in
Etschka.
On May 10, 1946 along with another inmate I escaped and we headed
for Rudolfsgnad because I was told that is where my seventeen-year-old
daughter was and that she had given birth to a boy.
When I got to Rudolfsgnad I found out that my daughter Maria and
her twelve-month-old child had both died of hunger on April 8, 1946.
I had to report to the camp commander at Rudolfsgnad and I was
interned in a room with about twenty adults and ten children. Here we slept on straw that lay strewn on the floor.
Some of the inmates suffered from dropsy and were all bloated and
swollen. They died shortly
afterwards. Food was almost
nonexistent. Those who
worked got a bit more.
As a result I reported for work and I was sent to work in the
forest to cut wood and reeds for the camp bakery.
On May 8, 1947 since my child had died, there was nothing keeping
me in Rudolfsgnad so I escaped from the camp and made my way to Molidorf
to search for my mother. There
I was to learn that both she and her sister had died of hunger.
From among my extended family, fifty-six of them either starved
to death or were victims of the mass shootings.
Upon my arrival in the camp at Molidorf all of the camp inmates
were sick. They sat in the
yard under the trees or lay in the yard.
They whimpered from hunger and pain.
They were a fearful sight. But
even these poor dieing people were beaten and kicked by the Partisans
whenever they passed by them. On
August 20, 1947 I escaped from the camp at Molidorf because life was
becoming more and more impossible there for me.
I fled to Romania. Here
I found my uncle and aunt with whom I traveled across Hungary to Austria
and from there to Germany where I now live.”
Stefansfeld
Jakob Bohn provides this declaration with regard to the fate and
destiny of the inhabitants of his home village Stefansfeld:
“Close to the evening of September 30, 1944 the Red Army
crossed over from Modasch in Romania and marched into my home village of
Stefansfeld. Serbian Partisans took over all authority and ruled according
to their will. Along with
the confiscation of the land owned by the Danube Swabian population
there was wholesale robbery and many cruelties were inflicted upon the
people. According to my own accounting of the two thousand eight
hundred and eight inhabitants of my home village from September 30, 1944
until the closing of the camp in 1948, seven hundred and fifty-two
persons were liquidated. Six
hundred and forty-six died in various camps, large numbers of who
starved to death. Six
persons chose suicide, sixty-nine were shot and twenty-three persons
were and are still missing. In
addition eight persons from among the one hundred and thirty-five
persons deported to Russia to forced labor in the coal mines did not
survive. That is the
balance sheet for my home village.
I was among those deported to Russia.
(He digresses with regard to the leadership of the Swabian German
Cultural Association and its leadership and the fate of some of them.)
Betscherk
Grossbetscherek was the capital of the Yugoslavian Banat.
It had a population of thirty-five thousand. The Danube Swabians made up about one third of the
inhabitants. The rest of
the population consisted of Serbians, Hungarians, Slovaks, Romanians and
Bulgarians. The most
prosperous landowners were the Danube Swabians.
They were also the most industrious and had purchased the most
and the best land.
A local Serbian government was constituted here on the day the
Russian Army arrived on October 2, 1944.
It was discarded only ten days later.
Communist Partisan bands arrived from Syrmien and took over
control. On the first day
of their coming to power, it was a Tuesday, October 10th the
new authorities closed off the western sector of the city early in the
morning, effectively cutting off the Danube Swabian population that
lived in this section of the city.
Armed groups of Partisans, including uniformed women, went from
house to house. They
checked the credentials of all of the population in this sector of the
city, and any man or male youth who was believed to be “German” was
driven out of their houses.
“Are you German?” was the only question that they asked.
If the man was, the command that followed consisted of three
words. “Chain and shoot!
All of those Danube Swabians thus apprehended were subjected to
cruel abuse, butted with rifles and dragged off to the Serbian part of
the city. They arrested
about three hundred men in this way.
They were assembled on Takovska Street.
In the yard of one of the houses they were forced to take off
their clothes. In groups of
ten they were driven out into the streets.
There was a long brick wall on one side of the street and the men
had to kneel in front of the wall and were shot in the nape of the neck.
The Partisans brought wagons and dumped the bodies into them.
They had had a great pit dug on the site of the shooting range of
the former Hungarian military installation from the First World War
located in the east end of the city.
All three hundred dead were dumped there. Among the victims was one fourteen-year-old boy.
A few days later, his father and brother-in-law were also shot.
A few days later and following, most of the Danube Swabians were
driven out of their homes. They
were taken to various camps. One
of them was a former old mill in the north end of the city.
But thousands of Danube Swabians from the vicinity were also
forced into the “mill” camp.
There
were also sixty German prisoners of war, and hundreds of Danube Swabian
men, women and children from the Romanian Banat who had fled westward
from the advancing Russian Army, but were unable to continue on their
trek from here and were imprisoned with the Swabians of Betscherek.
At the entrance into the mill there was a small room.
The Partisans set it up as a torture chamber. Every night, whenever the Partisans felt the urge to shed
Swabian blood they would round up individuals or groups and take them to
this room. In the first
night alone they slaughtered twenty-five men, one after another. At first they knocked out their teeth, used their rifle butts
on their backs around their kidneys, smashed and shattered their shins
with logs, threw them to the ground, jumped with all their might on
their stomachs, broke their ribs and let them die slowly.
If they were still alive they bashed in their heads with their
rifles or pieces of lumber. The
louder the victims screamed the Partisans sang louder and played their
harmonicas and accordions to drown out the noise of their pain afflicted
victims.
The sixty German prisoners of war imprisoned with the Danube
Swabians were also subject to the same fate, and except for twenty-six
men were killed by the Partisans. In
addition most of the men among the Danube Swabian refugees from Romania
met their deaths at the hands of the Partisans including a very young
boy from Detta, in the full knowledge of the fact that they were not
Yugoslavian citizens. The
murder of the child Minges Walter was orchestrated by the Partisans in
the courtyard that was set up like a circus ring and all of the inmates
of the camp, especially the women, some four hundred persons in all had
to witness and watch how Swabian children were liquidated.
Very often there were mass shootings in this camp consisting of
groups of up to one hundred fifty men and women, and sometimes even
more. Those who were chosen
for execution were often the owners of the homes and possessions taken
over by the Partisans. The
victims were always handpicked. In
the camp courtyard, once chosen they had to step forward and were then
bound to one another by wire and then were brutally beaten by the
Partisans. They were driven
on foot to the shooting range and were forced to dig a huge hole.
On other occasions other inmates had dug the grave a few days
earlier. They had to
undress and ten to twenty naked persons had to walk to the edge of the
pit, or down into the grave and were then shot.
Anyone who resisted was beaten or stabbed to death with a
bayonet. The graves
afterwards were covered with only a bit of earth to hide them from
sight. The Partisans took
the clothes away in a wagon and traded them in the city or wore them
themselves with great pride all around town.
The first official shootings took place on October 12, 1944 when
seventy-five Danube Swabian civilians were taken out of the camp and
were killed. On October 14th
another shooting took place with as many victims.
It went on like this every other day.
On October 20th a group of seventy men from
Grossbetscherek were shot. On
October 29th in two separate actions the Partisans shot one
hundred and fifty-four more men.
On another day all of the camp inmates had to report for roll
call. All of these who had gone once to high school were to step
forward. They were promised
lighter work. Those who
reported had no idea that anything bad could come of it.
The sixty men were bound with wire, whipped, beaten, stripped
naked and shot.
In the face of all of the torture he had to endured one young
Swabian who was terrified of what more was to come decided on suicide.
On the way home from doing forced labor all day he jumped off the
bridge across the Bega River and drowned right away.
It was in the middle of winter.
The Partisans used this to good effect.
As soon as the slave laborers entered the camp, they chose thirty
of the men to be shot as punishment for the suicide.
On November 17th, 1944 the Partisans carried out a
gruesome atrocity involving the killing of sixty ill people.
On that day all those who were sick or unable to work were to
report to the “hospital” as quickly as possible.
Those unable to walk were separated from the others and locked in
a room. In the night they were ordered to take off their clothes and
in groups of ten they were driven out into the camp courtyard.
There they were awaited by a large group of Partisans in the
darkness who slugged them on their heads with their shovels.
Italian prisoners of war had to take the beaten dead bodies and
toss them into a wagon and take the wagon out of the camp and bury them.
The next day the courtyard was still splattered with blood.
The killing of the sick became a regular feature of the life in
the camp. But these actions
were always in groups. November
25, 1944 there were fifty-four who were killed.
Another time it was seventy, while another time there were only
thirty-five and so on.
But a large number of inmates in the camp met death individually. On the night of November 29, 1944 there was one such case
because the man was eighty-five and could not do heavy work and was
taken from his quarters out into the courtyard and murdered by the
Partisans. He was buried in
the courtyard in a grave the old man had to dig himself.
Victims like him were not always dead but badly wounded when the
Partisans got through with them and were buried alive even when the
victim begged them to be shot. On
one occasion a Swabian man had been part of a mass shooting and was only
wounded but thrown into the grave with the dead.
During the night he came back to consciousness and crawled out of
the shallow covered grave and made his way to the edge of the mass
grave. He was stark naked.
He called out to a passerby to help him.
The man in turn informed the camp commander instead.
He immediately sent a squad of Partisans who brutally murdered
the badly wounded man.
Large groups of inmates from the Grossbetscherek camp were sent
to do forced labor outside of the camp.
Even in these situations there were many of them who were beaten
or shot to death by the Partisans while on these labor details.
On May 20, 1945 seventy-five men for example were sent to the
rock quarries in Beotschin in Syrmien who were accompanied by a large
number of heavily armed Partisans.
The march was accompanied by constant beatings and abuse.
On turning over their prisoners to the officials at the Beotschin
quarry where they were to work, they reported that twenty of them were
totally incapable of work due to the injuries suffered by them on the
march. All of them soon
died after their arrival.
If Partisans in other villages had the desire to murder some
Swabians they could order some from the camp in Grossbetscherek or have
them delivered to them. They
were gladly sent on the part of the camp officials.
On October 25, 1944 the Partisans in the Serbian villages of
Melentzi and Baschaid were holding a special celebration.
The high point of the festival was to be the public massacre of
some Danube Swabians. For
that purpose thirty Danube Swabians from the Grossbetscherek camp were
sent to the festival. There they were programmatically shot and beaten to death at
the festival.
On December 27, 1944 the commander of the Grossbetscherek camp
sent thirty-nine sick persons, thirty-five men and four women by wagon
to Ernsthausen. They were
all slaughtered in gruesome ways as the high point of a Partisan
celebration.
An escapee
from the camp in Betscherek reports:
“I was familiar with the internal operations of the camp.
I had to inform the commander of the camp of the number of
inmates every evening. Because
of that I can realistically estimate that in the winter of 1944/1945
more than four thousand people simply “disappeared” who were listed
in the camp log as having died of typhus.
In truth, like the gravediggers reported to me, the dead were
beaten or shot to death. I
saw the entries myself. The
old school teacher Koller from Elemir was thrashed three times in our
room one night for no apparent reason.
I counted two hundred and eighty-five gashes.
The old man did not make a sound.
In the morning he was dead.
One of the favorite methods of abuse by the women Partisans was
to pull away at people’s tongues. Our own women who were kept in another building had all of
their hair shaven off, even in terms of their private parts.
Our own barbers had to do it.
Many women were raped, including my own daughter…
Life in the Betscherek camp was worse than death could possibly
be.
Wake-up call was at 3:00 am.
The camp was divided into numerous groups.
After being awakened the thrashings and ridicule began.
The men had to go out into the camp courtyard with their upper
torso naked while it was still dark to do “free sport activities”.
There was a well in the yard with a wooden trough attached to it.
Water collected from the frequent rain, and the water had not
been run off and because the yard was packed with so many people it was
usually a sea of mud. With
curses and swearing the early morning “sport” began with the
Partisan guards using rubber hoses and clubs on the men.
These half starved men had the wind knocked out of them and then
had to walk around in the cold dampness of late autumn for half to a
full hour in the dark, then forced to kneel, lie down and then crawl in
the mud. Only when the
“free sport” was ended did they allow the mud encrusted
people—there were seventeen thousand men, women and children—to use
the wash trough. But because there were so many people most could not even get
close to it to make themselves wet.
There was no such thing as soap.
On some occasions when the inmates were sprawled in the mud the
Partisans would begin to “dance” on their bodies.
A band of musicians would accompany them to drown out the
screams. During the dance
they used clubs and whips on the people as well as wearing heavy boots
with cleats. This usually
lasted for half an hour. Five
to ten people would be left dead in the mud.
After the “dance of death” everyone was driven back into
their quarters, but because it was not yet dawn the Partisans had to
fill in their time, so that the inmates were thrashed and tortured by
the guards until 5:30 am.
Then came breakfast: a thin watery soup and fifty grams of bread.
After breakfast the groups were sent out to work.
There were various work groups.
The work at the railway stations and boat yards was hard labor,
as was the task to empty and load goods at the warehouses.
They worked without stop from 6:00am to 6:00pm.
Often there was no food at noon.
At 6:00pm they were marched back to the camp and often some of
them just simply could not go on. These
victims would be forced to rise and continue with beatings, whippings
and kicks to vulnerable parts of their bodies.
If they could not get up, others would have to drag them, when
they themselves could hardly go on as it was.
As they entered the camp the guards and sentries who had rested
all day for this, now once again got into the act and welcomed them with
beatings and all kinds of physical abuse.
The inmates were given their rations of their way to their
quarters, watery soup and fifty grams of bread.
After supper there was no further official work.
They cowered in their so-called beds, only a very few managed to
sleep, because the guards entered the barracks, and called the names of
various prisoners and in front of all of the other prisoners they beat
and abused them. Very often
they thrashed those who were asleep for no reason and with no warning.
During these evening hours the sentries were usually drunk and
carried out two or three roll calls.
All of the prisoners had to stand.
The roll call consisted of a smack to the head or face or a jab
against the chest of every tenth prisoner.
Often some prisoners were taken into the punishment cell and were
beaten and tortured for hours. The
local Serbian civilian population was also given a free hand and could
have access to the camp to beat and punish the Swabian inmates.
Near the end of 1945 the surviving children and the elderly
Swabians from Betscherek and the surrounding vicinity were taken to the
larger concentration camp at Rudolfsgnad on the Tisza River.
The concentration camp at Betscherek was closed and dismantled on
May 22, 1947 when only a small number of prisoners had survived and were
still able to work. These
survivors were first taken to St. Georgen and from there they were sent
as slave laborers to the Serbian coalmines and to work on collective
farms. But in Betscherek
not a single Danube Swabian lived in any of their former homes.
Slavic colonists and the families of the locally stationed
Partisan units now occupied their houses.
Dr. Wilhelm Neuner who had once been a member of parliament in
Belgrade reports:
“These Communist Partisans carried out mass shootings from the
very first days of their Military dictatorship and ruled throughout the
whole country. In the capital city of Grossbetscherek, in which twelve
thousand Danube Swabians lived, the western sector of the city was cut
off from the rest of the city and this is where the vast majority of the
Swabian inhabitants who were mostly farmers lived.
They broke into every home and liquidated all of the men they
could find. Only a small
portion of the men was left unmolested.
I myself was led away to be executed.
But only by a fortunate set of circumstances I was able to get
away. But my
father-in-law and five other relatives all of whom were farmers were
taken and shot with countless others.
In the whole of the Banat, during these first days of Partisan
rule the total number of Danube Swabian civilian victims who were killed
in mass shootings and liquidations numbered close to ten thousand
persons, including both men and women.”
Hans
Diewald from Betscherek writes:
“On October 10th the so-called German quarter of the
city was blockaded by armed Partisans where the majority of the Swabians
lived. The Partisans went
through the German quarter with a fine toothcomb and dragged off all of
the Swabian men from their homes. They
were bound to one another in groups under heavy guard and led to the
former Honved (Hungarian National Army) barracks. Other Partisan units began to arrest Hungarians and Swabian
women as well and brought them to the barracks.
The women and the Hungarians were later released after several
hours of imprisonment. Some
two hundred and fifty Swabian men were shot that day including
youngsters from thirteen to seventeen years of age.
On October 12th the German Quarter was once again
blockaded only this time the Partisans arrived at 5:00am because during
the first blockade at 8:00 am on the 10th many of the men
were not at home, but had been in the city on various errands or were
out working in their fields or had gone to a nearby village for some
purpose. During this second
blockade they captured almost all of the Swabian men including myself.
All of us were taken to the so-called concentration camp a former
jail, which had originally been a mill and were locked up in there.
In the following days newly arrested Swabian men arrived each day
at the camp. The men were
caught in groups, had been taken off of the streets or taken from their
homes. Day after day Swabians were delivered to the camp.
By November all of the Swabian men were in the camp.
The women of the city, especially the Danube Swabians were the
victims of rape and sexual violation by the Russian troops.
The number of rape victims increased daily.
The Serbs sent the Russian soldiers to the Swabian houses where
there were women. A friend
of mine, sixteen-year-old Otto Tarillion told me that he was forced to
watch while his mother was being raped repeatedly, while one soldier
held a loaded gun aimed at him.
On October 12th the Swabians from the surrounding
vicinity were brought to the camp in Betscherek from Rudolfsgnad, Perles,
Sartscha, Modosch and Stefansfeld.
At the end of the week, on Friday or Saturday, the mass shootings
began. The first mass
shooting took place on October 10th.
At that time two hundred and fifty men were shot.
The second shooting to place on October 20th and about
two hundred persons were shot at that time.
The third shootings took place on October 23rd with
thirty victims and the fourth on October 18th involving one
hundred and fifty-two persons.
Before the shooting took place on October 23rd it was
announced that all lawyers and professors were to report.
Because only a few did so, the Partisans threatened to shoot
every tenth man. As a
result twenty-three men reported including merchants and officials that
also included thirteen to seventeen year old high school students.
On October 19th at 7:00am several of my friends and I
were taken to the execution place in the forest.
We were ordered to dig a mass grave.
As we did our work we were all convinced that we would be shot.
But as it turned out it was meant for the two hundred who were
executed on October 20th.
In the camp we were awakened at 2:00 or 2:30am in the morning.
We had to perform “free sports”.
We were driven on foot through the camp and every time we passed
a Partisan sentry we were beaten or thrashed, but that was also true
while we ate or worked as well. We
worked on bridge construction and erecting silos.
We also had to load food stuffs and provisions to be sent to the
Russian troops. The
Partisans who were our guards were seventeen to twenty years of age.
These were the ones who carried out the mass shootings.
There were also women Partisans (often teenage girls) who
participated in the execution squads.
Italian prisoners were often called upon to bury the victims of
the shootings. An Italian
told me that often people who were badly wounded were thrown into the
mass grave. He often heard
their groans as he had to throw earth upon them and buried them alive.
Each day in the camp we were fed twice.
In the morning there was clear soup and in the evening pea soup. We received a small piece of bread in the morning and
evening. In November of
1944 all of the Swabians in the Banat were confined in camps.
There were forced labor camps in Lazarfeld, Kathreinfeld, Klek
and Ernsthausen. Before the
entry of the Russian troops Betscherek had approximately fifteen
thousand Danube Swabian inhabitants, but some eight thousand of them had
fled with the retreating German army.
I was in the camp to the end of February or the beginning of
March 1945. Then I was sent
to the camp hospital to work. It
went much better for me there. I
had better rations, but I had to work under constant guard.
At the end of May I was back in the camp and from there I went to
work at the silos. While
working there I escaped. It
was on September 7, 1945. I
first fled over the border into Romania.
I worked there for some farmers.
On December 27th I returned to Betscherek by way of
Johannisfeld an der Bega. I
hid out at my uncle’s who was a Serb.
At the end of November 1944 there were forty-nine sick inmates in
the Betscherek camp who were promised they were going to rehabilitation
but were taken to Ernsthausen instead.
They were marched off early in the morning under heavy guard and
remained under guard on their arrival in Ernsthausen.
The commander of the camp there was a Serb from St. Georgen.
He recognized the young nineteen-year-old Georg Saal from St.
Georgen. On the order of
the commander young Saal was tied to a stake in the dung pile that was
set on fire and Saal was burned to death.
The remaining forty-eight others from Betscherek were beaten with
clubs, whips, pipes and stabbed with knives and butchered by the
Partisans. Later one could
see the results of their work along the street.
Brains were splattered on walls, and streams of blood filled the
street. A young girl from
Ernsthausen witnessed this and told me about it.
Her family name was Kramer I had met her in Johannisfeld in
Romania.
On January
1, 1946 I left Betscherk and returned to Romania again. I left there on January 10th for Hungary.
I arrived in Vienna on January 17th.”
Michael
Kristof a high school student recalls:
“The Russians moved into Betscherek on Monday, the 2nd
of October, 1944 and with them came the Tito Partisans.
The behavior of the Russians was in some measure bearable.
They took what they wanted and occupied themselves with raping
women. In the city of
Betscherek the first Danube Swabians were arrested and imprisoned in a
camp on October 5th. At
first it was the Swabians from Betscherek who were on the agenda of the
Partisans, but there were also groups of Danube Swabians from the
surrounding communities who were also brought here.
The numbers of prisoners who were brought to Betscherek were at
the behest of the local Serb and Partisan leaders.
As an example, the commander at Betscherek requested sixty men
from Lazarfeld.
The local commander there, a local Serb, had the courage, to send
only half of the men he was ordered to send for which the commander in
Betscherek was more than satisfied.
Of these thirty who were sent, fourteen of them were shot.
Those Swabians who were not delivered to the camps remained in
their community, and then another group was taken to the camp.
A portion of them being sent to Betscherek at Christmas were sent
to Russia instead. All of
the rest came to the camp in April 1945 as the total Swabian population
was imprisoned in the camp.
It was at night when it was worst in the camp, with the hearings
and selections and the shootings. Those
selected for the shootings at first were those who were well dressed,
were physically strong or who through sickness were too weak to do any
work. There were not real rules or a pattern to the selections, it
was a matter of filling the quota that had been set. Those who were chosen were taken to a separate room, where
they had to undress and were then tied to one another with wire in
groups of four and taken to the old military firing range on the
outskirts of Betscherek to be shot.
None of the Partisans had any measure of education and were
determined to exterminate the “intelligentsia” of the Danube
Swabians. They would ask,
who happens to be a doctor? A
physician? Druggist?
Merchant? Teacher?
And so on. People
who had these professions were to report for lighter work because they
were not suited for hard heavy work.
This trick often worked and many men fell victim to it.
Records were kept at the camp but the shootings in the protocols
were simply identified as “died” after the person’s name along
with the date. This was a
function of the camp administration office and carried out by Swabian
inmates and they made the entries in the book of protocols under the
direction of the Partisans. I
was assigned to the office for one week in mid-February 1945, but then
the political commissar a woman Partisan had me removed. But during that week I leafed through this book of protocols
because I wanted to find out what had happened to my friends and family
members, where they were, if they were still alive or if they had been
sent to another camp, or had been shot or had died.
My own number in this book of protocols was 3214.
Through this glimpse in the book of protocols I learned that
those I had been searching for who were well known to me and those of
whom I had heard had all been shot and had simply “died” according
to the recorder.
From this glimpse into the book of protocols it was obvious that
very many people who were listed as having died had in fact been
executed and shot. For instance, on October 28, 1944 one hundred and fifty
inmates had been shot, but in the protocol each one was listed as having
simply died. This was also
true on other days in terms of smaller groups such as the thirty who
were shot previously to that. The
shootings were always justified as reprisals.
Each day we had to assemble, sometimes more often and stand in
the yard in the three columns. We
never knew the reason beforehand. Sometimes
it dealt with sending some of us to another community to work or some
kind of detail the Partisans had in mind for us.
At such assemblies there were individuals chosen for the next
shooting, and we would be told it was done “in reprisal”.
Through
discussion with others in other camps I learned later that these shootings also
took place at that time for the same reason, which indicates that the central
leadership of the Partisans had set it in motion everywhere.
On Tuesday October 10th 1944 the Partisans surrounded
the German quarter of Betscherek. Groups
of Partisans went from house to house, searched them and asked each
person for their Legitimation (an official document of identity).
These documents were in both German and Serbian, that everyone
had to have in which the nationality of the individual was stipulated
which had been filled out during the German occupation.
All
of the Swabian men, who were not yet in the camp and were found at home
were led together in one of the side streets of the Market Place and
mowed down by machine gun fire. An eye witness shared this with me, who had been saved from
the massacre by a Serb whom he had befriended for years and indicated
that the victims had to undress their upper torsos, kneel down and where
then shot.
The treatment the inmates received in the camp were as follows:
Reception into the camp was mostly by hefty kicks, boxing their
ears and body punches. Few
were able to escape this. Then
the man was robbed of everything and anything of value and usually all
he had left was the clothes he wore.
If he had good footwear of clothing it was either taken from him
or it became a reason for him to be selected for a shooting.
It was assumed the man was rich and capitalist who needed to be
liquidated. With reception
completed the inmate was then led to his quarters.
The central camp at Betscherek was a burned down mill, two
stories high. A second camp
was erected in November to accommodate the greater portion of the
civilian population as women now were also imprisoned and interned.
In the three large rooms filled with machine parts the inmates
were packed together in two story high bunks.
In each room there were about three hundred men accommodated, so
that in all there were up to two thousand in the camp at all times.
In the smaller rooms in the mill were the women and children and
the so-called ambulance, kitchen, storage area and office, and one room
for the privileged inmates who worked in the kitchen and office or in
other places in the camp.
No one was allowed outside of the room at night.
Because so many of them had dysentery, in each of the machine
rooms there were two large barrels, and two people had to watch out that
no spills took place. On
one occasion, all of the inmates had dysentery and the barrels
overflowed and the two people who were called upon to make sure this did
not happen were forced to lick it up in the morning for allowing it to
happen.
At night when the people were exhausted and tired coming from
work began the uncertainty whether one would live through the night or
not in the face of the interrogations, tortures, beatings that always
occurred at night. For that reason the inmates in spite of their bodily weakness
went to work in the morning with a sense of relief just to get out of
the “nut house” in which they lived.
But with feelings of despair they returned once again in the
evening to face it all over again.
On entering or leaving the camp there were always Partisans on
the stockade around the courtyard standing on the stairs with ox hide
belts with which they lit into in the inmates passing by them.
The inmates called this their normal dues.
Shootings occurred for all kinds unreasonable things.
The following is an example.
A tradesman from Betscherek who had to work privately in the
city, usually came home later from his workplace by the time his
comrades were all asleep. Not
wanting to awaken them from sleep, he lit a match in order to find his
spot on the upper bunk. A
Partisan on the street outside noticed this light and came up to the
room and asked, who had lit a match.
The tradesman acknowledged that he had and was made to come down
off of his bunk and lie down on his stomach on the floor and the
Partisan shot him in the nape of his neck right there in the room.
I witnessed this myself because I was in that room.”
The report
of a friend of Michael Kristof who wishes to remain anonymous:
“I come from Grossbetscherek, Banat, Yugoslavia and on
04.10.1944 I was placed in the central camp in Grossbetscherek.
At that time we were only a few men in the camp.
I was placed in room number three.
In the afternoons I had to gather the horse manure in my hands
and clean up the horse and stall. In
the night of October 4/5 I was awakened and called out to the yard and
was forced to press my face up against the wall and was beaten and my
head was banged against the wall, so that the bones in my nose were
broken.
Some time later they brought two of my comrades, Anton Hufnagel
and I do not want to disclose the name of the other for good reasons.
Anton Hufnagel had been informed he had to go down into the
courtyard. He was so badly
beaten that he was in a mental fog and he repeated all of the rude names
that Partisans flung at him, and as a result they kept hitting him with
their rifle butts. After we
were beaten and abused so badly we were led to the police in the city in
a farmer’s wagon. There
we met other Swabian men from the city that we knew.
Anton
Hufnagel was immediately taken into a room where his torture and
mistreatment would continue, while a radio blared, harmonicas were
playing along with violins so that his cries and screams could not be
heard outside. After a
short period of time I was brought into the room.
I found Hufnagel lying on the floor totally motionless.
Now I had to completely undress.
Me feet were tied together and my hands were tied behind my back. In this way I had to stand on a stool. The Partisans whipped
me with ox hide belts until I fainted.
My flesh hung like pieces of rags from my body. They poured cold
water from a pail all over me. As
I came to I had to stand on the stool again.
At first I knelt on the stool and then I tried to stand up as my
feet were still tied to one another.
The thrashing went into motion once more until I fainted and
collapsed once again. Cold
water was poured all over me once again and then they rubbed salt into
my wounds and I just lay there in my pain.
Now our third comrade came into the room he was put through the
same torture I had endured. During his torture, the hairs on my chest and between my legs
were burned off by the apply a burning kerosene soaked rag that they
threw at me. In my
unconsciousness I felt the burning searing pain and saw the burning rags
on me and turned on my side, so that the burning rag fell off of my
chest onto my arm and burned my left arm.
In the meanwhile Anton Hufnagel was beaten to death with their
rifle butts. Later worms
infested my wounds that I healed through rubbing my own urine into my
wounds for months, and also in Russia I did the same, because I was
determined not to report sick because that would have meant that I would
be shot. This torment
lasted two to three hours. Afterwards
our hands and feet were freed and we had to get dressed, and then our
hands and feet were bound again, but in such a way that our hands were
behind our backs tied to our feet with a rope.
We were trussed up like that for around eighteen hours until
midnight with our open wounds that had been rubbed with salt, without
being able to move to alleviate the terrible pain.
Around midnight our feet were untied and the three of us without
Anton Hufnagel who was now dead were lead out of the room and had to
climb on board a wagon with our hands still bound and were taken to the
courtyard and headquarters of the Secret Police and handed over to them.
On arriving inside the three of us were tossed into a cell
together. Every night we
were interrogated and beaten for several weeks.
For food we received two pieces of bread daily and some water.
Once a week we were shaved but it was hardly a pleasant
experience. After about
three weeks all three of us were taken back to the central camp because
they could not prove we had done anything wrong that was worthy of
further punishment.
At the Secret Police headquarters we were witnesses of the abuse
of a woman named Zita by the Partisans and saw what happened to her
through the window of our cell. We
saw how she had to dance naked on a table and then lie down on the table
and part her legs for the Partisans who stuck the barrel of a revolver
into her vagina and made her stand up and keep it inside of her.
She was then shot. Through
the window we also saw a young man of about twenty-eight years, whom
none of us knew, whose penis they cut off while he was still alive and
stuffed it into his mouth. What
happened to him after that we have no idea.
On being returned to central camp we were once again interrogated
and beaten and tortured and we were constantly threatened with shooting.
I was put in a single cell in which three men lay unconscious. The commander with his revolver knocked in my teeth and I was
forced to swallow them, and the injuries I sustained killed the nerves.
One night we were locked into a very small cell for twelve hours
so that none of us could find rest or move about and it became harder
and harder for us to breathe and we were afraid of suffocation and we
could not attempt to even fall down to find release because we were
packed so tightly against each other.
After this night we were divided up in various cells.
After six days we were locked into a room with about thirty men,
given a piece of bread and water and were not allowed to leave the room.
We had to relieve ourselves in a barrel.
After eight days we were driven on foot to do labor.
We had to get up at 4:00am. Then we received some warm soup and
now a larger piece of bread and when we returned from work in the
evening we received another piece of bread and warm soup.
During the three weeks that my companions and I had been in the
Secret Police prison and later imprisoned in the various cells in the
central camp many men had been shot.
On December 28th 1944 I was taken along in the large
transport of about one thousand eight hundred persons of which the vast
majority were young women both married and single and sent to Russia.
There were no more than three hundred men among them.
In Russia I worked mostly in the coal mines until my release in
1949.
Ernsthausen
As in countless other communities in Yugoslavia during the fall
of 1944 the Partisans established their Military Government in this
former Danube Swabian community of some three thousand persons known as
Ernsthausen and established a concentration camp here.
This camp received mostly Danube Swabians from the administrative
district of Betscherek. Several
thousands of them ended up here. The
majority of them were women with small children.
Many of them died here as a result of the poor conditions under
which they attempted to survive. But
even greater numbers died as a result of being beaten to death, shot,
slaughtered and tortured in gruesome ways.
Especially bloody was the massacre that took place on a December
night. On December 28th the high point of a Partisan
celebration there was the massacre of thirty-eight innocent Danube
Swabian men and women. Two
days before the festival on December 27th 1944 thirty-nine
Swabian men and women from the concentration camp in Betscherek were
brought to Ernsthausen in wagons. They
were elderly and sick persons. When
they arrived the camp commander ordered them to be imprisoned apart from
the other Swabians and not allow them to come into contact with anyone.
As a result they were placed in a room of the Guesthouse once
operated by George Schlitter. One
of these men, the former merchant Schag, Ladislaus of Ernsthausen who
was the father of a young daughter who had been working for the
commander for some time was released from the group as a result of her
pleas on his behalf. He was
taken from the Guesthouse and imprisoned with the other Swabians in the
camp. The remaining others
were locked in the room for two days without any food or water.
On the afternoon of December 29th, one of the Swabian
men who was housed in barracks close by the Guesthouse was ordered to
bring sharp axes and hatchets to the place where the others were being
held. In a large hall the
Partisans set up a large table on which they set the axes and hatchets.
During the evening there was a party involving Partisans and some
Yugoslavian military personnel in the Guesthouse.
They made music, drank and laughed next to the room where the
unwary waiting imprisoned Swabians were who could hear them.
Now that the Partisans were ready they brought in the thirty-four
men and four women and led them into the room that had been prepared for
their slaughter. Long
knives, hatchets and axes were on the table along with other instruments
of torture. With these
tools of their trade they slaughtered one Swabian after another, both
men and women as if they were swine in the presence and in the sight of
many people. Before
slaughtering them they made fun of them and played hoaxes on them. Some of them were offered a glass of wine to drink and as
they took the glass to their lips their throat was slit with a long
sharp knife. They cut off
parts of the bodies of some of the men and women with their knives and
axes, chopped off their hands or fingers, chopped off their heads or
massacred them in some other way. The
bodies of the Swabians were dreadfully dismembered.
Those who were not able to die on their own had their heads
smashed in with axes. Meanwhile
the music was playing. This
celebration lasted until morning by which time the thirty-eight Swabian
men and women had been liquidated.
Among the victims were many leading and well-educated Swabians.
When the party was over, the hired hand of a neighboring farmer
was ordered to come to the Guesthouse with a wagon and men from the
concentration camp were called upon to assist him.
They had to shovel the dismembered corpses and internal organs on
to the wagon and throw the other larger body parts on board and then
drove the wagon under Partisan guard to the cemetery.
In other cases, liquidated Swabians were never buried in
cemeteries, but in undisclosed places and mass graves.
The Partisans wanted these massacred victims buried nearby.
It was very cold at the time and the ground was frozen and it
became obvious that digging a pit nearby was out of the question and the
only alternative was the local cemetery.
There was large crypt in the cemetery built by the Solowich
family before the war and by command of the Partisans it was opened.
The inmates from the camp were forced to throw in the corpses and
body parts of their massacred fellow Swabians into the crypt. The crypt was only partially closed, and later in the spring
as it became warmer the whole area of the cemetery was rich with the
foul odor and smell of the decomposing bodies.
This was not acceptable to the new Yugoslavian authorities.
They brought Swabian men from the concentration camp, and under
the leadership of Johann Merschbacher of Betscherek who was a contractor
by trade sealed the crypt. But
all of the Swabians who had been involved in hiding the evidence of
these deaths were threatened with death by the Yugoslavian authorities
if any of them brought this into the public light.
On the way to the cemetery some of the body parts fell off of the
wagon so that a hand, or an eye or ear, a foot or something else was
found. In the hall of the
Guesthouse there were large bloodstains and many small body parts were
left behind. These and the
others that had fallen out of the wagon were swept into a pile as
daylight arrived. In the
yard of Wilhelm Till’s house a huge fire was made and the assembled
human flesh was burned. The
massacre had lasted until four in the morning, because at about that
time the blood smeared butchers and murders went to one of the house
next door to the Guesthouse and demanded warm water and washed the blood
from their hands and faces and their boots.
Then they demanded a hearty breakfast and later went home to
their own houses and families.
In the Ernsthausen concentration camp there were numerous other
actions ordered by the Yugoslavian officials that resulted in the deaths
of countless other Swabian women and men, many of them leaders in the
Swabian community and well educated who also met similar gruesome deaths
as individuals or in groups. Some
had their throats slit. The
Partisans tortured others until they were dead.
Kirchner, Elisabeth who was a very beautiful young girl was taken
by the Partisans to their barracks one night after she had returned from
doing forced labor and nothing further was ever heard from her again.
The Partisans beside the school garden later buried her body.
St.
Georgen
In November of 1944 drumbeats were heard throughout the streets
of the village with the announcement that within half an hour all Danube
Swabians were to report at the school.
One woman who was there reports:
“I went with my there children.
Elfrieda was five months old.
When I arrived at the school and its yard it was filled with
people. The rooms in the
school were divided in such a way that you had no idea of what was going
on in the other. Because of
what we had heard about what had been going on throughout the
surrounding area, each of us prepared ourselves for death.
We were locked in the school for seven days.
During this time our houses were plundered.
We learned later that this was also happening in other Danube
Swabian communities. But
matters for them were worse than for us.
The people were driven on foot from Tschesterek to Hatzfeld and
then back again to Selesch. There
they remained for nine days. Then
they were allowed to return home to their plundered houses.
About two weeks after Christmas the men were taken to the camp at
Betscherek. Eventually, it
was my turn. I was
thrashed, beaten and imprisoned for some time and then released.
In March of 1945 I was imprisoned for nine days at the military
barracks in Betscherek. I
was thrashed with whips so badly that the blood ran down my legs.
Then they separated and tore me away from my three little
children and to be taken to
Cernje to the “political” camp there.
There I was imprisoned with countless other men and women until
my escape in the fall of 1945.”
From among the Swabians from St. Georgen:
thirty-two were sent to the labor camp in Semlin, one hundred and
eighty were deported to Russia, sixty were sent to Betscherek,
fifty-three were imprisoned at Elisenheim and fourteen were sent to
Cernje.
On April 17, 1945 all of the remaining Swabians in St. Georgen
were placed in local housing that served as a camp.
Many of the young married and unmarried women were sent to
Mitrowitz where very many of them perished
Kathreinfeld
From the
diary of a nurse:
“Kathreinfeld used to be a completely Danube Swabian community
in the Banat whose prosperity and beauty was due to the industriousness
and expertise of its inhabitants.
The German troops left our village at 9:00am on October 3, 1944.
We were told to quickly evacuate to ensure our safety.
But we hesitated, because of the arrival of the Russian troops in
neighboring villages. Old
men and teenage boys were formed into a local defense formation, whose
purpose was only known to us later.
They were to make a stand against the Russians at neighboring
village to cover the German retreat.
Many of the young boys lost their lives there.
Since we had done nothing to merit any kind of retribution we did
not think we had anything to fear.
My daughter and her three small children lived in a neighboring
village. My husband and I
agreed that he would join our daughter and I would remain at home with
our seventy-eight year old mother.
We thought it would be better this way, with my husband providing
some protection to our daughter in such perilous times.
He left and I remained alone with my mother.
On that same night the first advance guard scouts of the Russian
army reached our village. They
began to shoot indiscriminately, even though the streets were empty and
everyone was hiding in the back of their houses.
I myself had climbed up into the loft of the pigsty with my aged
mother. They banged at the
doors and windows, and if the house was not opened to them, they broke
in and took whatever they wanted. In this first night, countless girls
and women were raped.
The next day the radios and all motors had to be turned in.
Those who did not comply would be shot.
The troops roamed about the village in groups confiscating
proscribed items and raping women and girls for the next five days.
On the sixth day some Serbs from the Banat arrived to bring in a
civilian government of sorts. These young Partisan thugs who were heavily armed, wildly
shot up and down the village outdoing the Russians by far. At night they broke into our homes and whoever objected in
any way was knocked down and beaten.
If anyone came to their aid they had worse to contend with.
At night I made my way through the gardens into the houses to
provide first aid, to those with wounds and those almost beaten to
death. For those who needed
more help than I could provide, I told the doctor who like myself
provided medical help even though it was forbidden for him to do so.
When night came, no one knew if they would live to see the next
day. To a great extent most
the people did not sleep in their own homes, but rather in the smaller
and poorer homes. Usually
twenty persons assembled in such a home to spend the night together and
not risk being alone in their own homes.
One night twenty-five women and girls assembled in the house next
door to us, to sleep there overnight.
They became aware that one of the women was breathing heavily as
if she were dieing. They
put the light on. One of
the women saw that she had slashed her wrists and was bloody all over.
She wanted to die because they would be killed anyway. “They will drag off my daughter.
I would rather not live to see that…”
The nightly visits of the Partisans continued to no end.
The cruelties they inflicted on our people are hard to describe.
Of the satanic thinking and actions of the Partisans and the
sufferings of their victims through torture and killings I will record
in only as a few examples of what we had to endure.
Our village Richter (local community leader) Josef Topka was
called out of his home into his yard at night.
His wife had to remain in bed.
For half of an hour they thrashed and beat him into
unconsciousness and then tossed him into the room where his wife was
forced to remain in bed. When
they left, she put on a light and he was still able to say the words,
“And now I must die.” Then
he died. His whole body was
a mass of lash and whip marks and his neck bore deep cuts from wire. They had choked him with the wire to prevent him from
screaming. In the same
night, two other houses had visitors like that.
In one home they beat a man to death, at another they threw the
man to the earth and knelt on top of him and hit him until he was dead. Then they also brought out his wife. Tore off all of her clothes and whipped her with ox hide
whips and bashed her with their rifle butts.
When her back was black and blue they turned her around and
proceeded to do the same to the front of her body.
Among all of the concentration camps in Yugoslavia, the camp in
Kathreinfeld would be among the most notorious.
At first the camp was for the sick, elderly and others who were
unable to work and prisoners of war who were in the same condition.
Several thousand Danube Swabians mostly from the area around
Betscherek were brought here. They
were treated very badly here, and those who were able to work were sent
to forced labor. In a very
short time over six hundred Swabian inmates died.
Many, many others died as a result of gruesome beatings, torture
and shootings and all kinds of other cruel deaths after much suffering
by their victims.
In November 1944 the Partisans brought one thousand two hundred
of the elderly and the children from Betscherek to Kathreinfeld.
They had to come on foot and were driven like cattle by the
guards using whips on them. Those
unable to keep on moving were beaten and thrown in a ditch.
They were locked up in the school and after two days they were
quartered in the houses of the village and were fed and looked after by
the people of Kathreinfeld until April 18th in 1945. They were elderly and sickly people who could no longer take
the rigors of slave labor. Kathreinfeld
was now an internment camp for those unable to work. But later some of those who had regained their health
somewhat were reclassified and sent off to forced labor elsewhere.
Mothers who had still managed to be with their children, as well
as younger grandmothers were taken away and torn from their children and
they had to leave them behind to find their own destiny.
Those chosen to do labor had to work out in the fields all
winter. All of their good
clothing had been taken from them and they were now clothed in rags.
They wrapped their feet in these rags as well.
In the evenings they walked home in their wet or frozen rags and
spent the night in unheated rooms or cellars.
Those who were sick in other camps were also brought to
Kathreinfeld. As a further
result Kathreinfeld became an Internment Camp for the sick.
There was only one doctor in the village but he was strictly
forbidden to provide care for them in any way.
Most of the sick came from the camps in Betscherek and the
airport camp in Etschka. They
were filled with lice and their bodies were emaciated from dysentery.
Many of them had frozen fingers and toes, while others had
suffered frozen limbs. Their
skin just hung from their bones. Among
the sick there were countless men and women who were simply suffering
from the after effects of the brutal treatment they had received.
Nikolaus Schneider from Pardanj had escaped from his camp because
he had been gruesomely tortured and headed back to his home village.
There he was captured again and sent to Kathreinfeld. They had tied his hands and feet behind his back and left him
on a wagon for the whole trip and would not let him down to stretch but
often hit him with lead pipes and canes.
When they arrived with him in Kathreinfeld, he was beyond
recognition. The upper part
of his head was terribly swollen with blood streaming down his cheeks,
his eyes were swollen shut and black and blue like the rest of his face.
His hands and feet were the same as well as all of the bruises on
his body.
On December 26th an order was issued at 10:00pm.
Orders always came at night.
All women from the ages of eighteen to thirty-five years and all
men up to the age of forty-five were ordered to report in two hours at
the community center. They
were then deported to Russia. As
a result only the elderly and the children remained in the village.
Many of the children including the very young were left alone.
Many small children no longer had a grandmother to rely on
either. Those men, who were
not taken to Russia because they were too old, were now driven into the
camp.
The Partisans under the leadership of their political commissars
were unbelievably bestial as the year 1945 began.
Long after the war had ended in our area a group of old and sick
Swabian men were brought to Kathreinfeld from the camp in Cernje because
they were no longer of any use as slave labor.
They were not in as bad shape as were others who had arrived
here. They could still sit
upright in the wagons. The military commander of Kathreinfeld had been
informed of their coming and their arrival.
He then immediately made arrangements so that these new inmates
would not have any contact with the other prisoners.
He had them locked up in one of the rooms in the school. It was soon clear to everyone in the camp that this group of
people would be part of some kind of Partisan experiment.
A group of Partisans headed up to the school where the prisoners
awaited an unknown fate. The
political commissar of the Partisans hurried away to get a concertina.
As he returned with his musical instrument the Partisans roamed
around the room where the Swabian men were imprisoned.
The political commissar began to play the concertina and his
Partisan cohorts began to beat the men, and a lesson in murdering human
beings began. The men
screamed terribly in great pain and the commissar simply played louder
on the concertina so that they could not be heard.
The political commissar wanted to give his men the opportunity to
once and for all get their bloody lust out of their system and satisfied
by killing these poor defenseless human beings.
Experiments were made on how to kill a person without a knife or
gun for instance. Each of
the Swabian men in turn was thrown to the floor so that their face and
stomach was on the floor and their backs faced upwards.
Then the Partisans took their rifles and used the butt to smash
the men in their backs around their kidneys in order to injure them.
Those who became unconscious were picked up by the head and feet
and were tossed into the air and then crashed to the floor.
Then they jumped on them in their heavy boots. For this purpose they dragged in a table.
They climbed up on it and then jumped down on the bodies of the
men in their heavy work boots with the object of breaking their ribs.
Some of the men had their genitals torn off.
This torture lasted for several hours.
A few of them who still showed signs of life were smashed in the
head with rifle butts or pieces of timber.
But during it all, the commissar played the concertina and egged
the Partisans on. When none
of the Swabians were alive and the Partisans had become weary, they
finally left. But they left
the bodies of the Swabians in the school.
However, not all of them were dead, Nikolaus Schirado was only
unconscious. He had broken
ribs, a fractured skull and severe internal injuries.
Close to evening he regained consciousness and was able to
escape.
In the same night the Partisans also beat and abused women in
various houses. They also
tore off the genitals of Georg Bisching.
He still had enough strength to drag himself to the attic and
hang himself to end his pain and suffering.
His wife was beaten with steel rods and whips and was unable to
walk. Another woman in the
neighborhood who heard the screams opened a window to look out on the
street. Unfortunately for
her the Partisans noticed and they proceeded to beat her unmercifully,
so that she never walked again. Her husband was still in their house and lay dieing.
He was tortured terribly and his genitals were trampled upon.
He was unconscious and died three days later.
In this way and manner under the leadership of the political
commissars countless Swabian men and women met a gruesome end.
But the above examples demonstrate and describe their favorite
methods.
But many Swabian women were murdered and put to death in the
camp. These too met their deaths in the above manner having their
stomachs trampled upon, their ribs broken and rifle butt blows to their
kidneys. Exceptionally
gruesome were the tortures inflicted on Magdalena Lisching and her
death. The teacher from the
neighboring village of Ernsthausen, Anna Dinjer was dragged off with
several other women and thirty-four Swabian men to the Guesthouse of
Georg Schlitter where they were all slaughtered and butchered with axes
and hatchets by the Partisans at one of their celebrations.
The remaining population of Kathreinfeld was driven into the camp
on April 18th 1945. Up
until this time, for the past six months, the elderly, children and the
sick and those who were unable to work were brought from other camps to
Kathreinfeld, but most of us villagers were still in our own homes.
Now it was our turn. At
6:00am on April 18th the drumbeats were heard throughout our
village and all of us were ordered to meet in the churchyard.
Later in the afternoon all of us were brought to the school. The benches were gone and the rooms were empty.
In each of the classrooms they stuffed up to one hundred and
fifty persons for an overnight stay. The children were terrified and screamed all night.
We received watery soup as our only nourishment.
Our houses were being emptied and all of our possessions were
being piled up and sorted. As
a group of homes was emptied the former occupants returned along with
countless others designated by the Partisans.
Straw was scattered on the floors to serve as a sleeping place.
All of those who were able to work were sent to slave labor or to
a forced labor camp in the vicinity.
Mothers and grandmothers were separated from the children once
again leaving the poor children to their own devices.
Later, “settlers” from Serbia arrived in our village and took
over our homes and chose whatever furnishings happened to take their
fancy.
On October 30, 1945 all of the elderly, sick, children and those
unable to work were driven to the school late at night and the next
morning were taken to the railway station and packed into cattle cars.
At noon the train left the station with none of the passengers
having any idea of where they were going.
That night the train came to a halt at Knicanin (Rudolfsgnad).
Here everyone had to detrain and were housed in various houses of
the community. In former
days the local population was three thousand.
The houses had now stood empty for a whole year and were in
disrepair. Every day new
transports of Danube Swabians arrived, so that eventually there were
twenty-four thousand people in the camp.
The houses were packed with people and straw covered the floors
where they slept. From among all of those who were brought to Kathreinfeld
until it was closed and the surviving inmates sent to Rudlofsgnad seven
hundred and seventy in all had perished.
The
South Eastern Banat
“Crimes of
Horror”
Werschetz
In the famous wine producing city of Werschetz in the Banat until
the end of the last war there were twelve thousand Serbian inhabitants
and large numbers of Hungarians and Romanians alongside of sixteen
thousand Danube Swabians. After
the Partisans took over power at the end of 1944 after the Russian
military left they liquidated individuals and groups of Danube Swabians
by shootings, beatings, deportations and other measures estimated to
number six thousand victims. In addition to this, countless Swabians from the surrounding
numerous Danube Swabian settlements in the vicinity of the city were
brought to Werschetz to be exterminated.
Beginning on October 3, 1944 the new police authorities carried
out mass arrests of Danube Swabian men in Werschetz.
About four hundred of these men simply disappeared without trace.
Every night an always-increasing number of people were taken out
of the jail and taken to a cellar or another place by the police and
were beaten, shot or put to death in some other manner.
Among these victims were also Swabian refugees from Romania who
were in flight of the advancing Russian army, but had been unable to
leave Werschetz before the Russian troops arrived and were taken
prisoners by the Yugoslavian Partisans.
The corpses of the victims were buried in a variety of places in
the city, including the yards of some of the victims.
On October 10th, 1944 there were one hundred and
thirty-five Swabians, including a teenage boy and one woman that were
forcibly assembled by the Partisans on one of the main streets of the
city and shot in public in broad daylight.
They had to kneel down in rows and received a shot in the back of
their heads. Whoever
refused to kneel was thrashed and brutalized, stabbed, had their teeth
knocked in, shot several times and only after suffering for some time
were finally killed. The
woman, Viktoria Geringer was the mother of the teenage boy who was also
put to death. The others
were vineyard owners and workers on their way home from work after
gathering in the harvest, with grapes piled high in their wagons when
the Partisans simply took them and killed them.
When all of them were dead the Partisans brought other wagons and
loaded the corpses on them and took them to the dump.
But the body of the woman had a rope tied around her neck and
they dragged her body behind the wagon through the city.
On top of the bodies of the dead Swabians sat jubilant Partisans
and Gypsies. They did gross
things to the bodies as the wagon moved along, made music with an
accordion and sang Partisan songs.
On October 23rd the leading Swabian citizens of the
city, some thirty-five of them, were taken from their homes and put in
the city jail. They were
gruesomely tortured there for the next two days.
Some of them were already killed by then.
On October 25th early in the morning they were tossed
on a truck and driven out of the city.
They disappeared forever. The
well-known teacher, Nikolaus Arnold and the lawyer Dr. Julius Kehrer
were among them.
They also imprisoned two hundred and fifty German prisoners of
war in the city jail at that time.
They were taken away in groups at night around 10:00pm after
being brutally abused before they were led away with their hands bound
to the open fields around the dump.
Each time a huge ditch had been prepared.
The intended victims were placed in groups of twenty after being
stripped naked and were forced to walk to the edge of the pit and each
one was shot in the back of his neck.
The sounds of the shooting could be heard in the whole city.
On October 25th the former Swabian mayor Geza Frisch
and five other leading Swabian spokesmen were also shot at the dump.
These men had been imprisoned for several days in a room in the
mayor’s office and on the evening of the 15th they were
fettered and driven through the streets of the city.
The Partisans followed behind them on wagons.
The men had to shovel and dig their own graves and take off all
of their clothes and stand naked before their executioners.
Then each of them was shot in the nape of his neck.
The next day Partisans could be seen walking around in the city
wearing their clothes.
Particularly gruesome was the treatment of countless Swabian
women and young girls of Werschetz.
Hundreds of them were dragged away by Partisans and were never
heard from again.
On October 27, 1944 all of the remaining Swabian men in the city
were taken from their homes and brought into the recently designated
concentration camp for Danube Swabians.
They also brought in the Swabians from the district and packed
them together in the camp numbering about five thousand.
The camp consisted of five barracks, which could not at first
accommodate all of the people. But
soon the camp was empty. In
the evenings trucks arrived day after day.
Groups of one hundred men who had been previously chosen were
loaded on the trucks and driven away into he night.
All of these people disappeared.
The routine of first undressing and then being shot was carried
out, and all night long the shooting could be heard in the city.
As a result the numbers in the camp gradually declined.
By December of 1944 there were only three hundred and fifty men
left of the thousands who had been brought there.
These survivors were sent to forced labor at Guduritz doing
forestry work and later were sent to heavy labor in Semlin where the
majority of them perished.
Many of the Swabians also died inside the camp as a result of
abuse, starvation, torture and individual executions.
This treatment was especially designated for the well to do and
educated Swabians. Hundreds
of them were buried close to the camp.
These actions were carried out on official orders from the
highest authority that were well aware of the atrocities taking place.
On November 18, 1944 after most of the men had been liquidated,
the Swabian women and children of Werschetz were imprisoned in the
almost empty camp. From
here thousands were sent to other camps where the women had to do heavy
labor in winter and many of them perished.
Large groups were sent to Mitrowitz, Schuschara and other camps.
There were also large groups of men from Weisskirchen in these
labor units. The majority
of those who lived to the end of 1945 were brought to the large
concentration camp in Rudolfsgnad.
Most of the people from Werschetz died of hunger here in the
winter of 1945 and 1946. There
were only a few individual survivors.
Karlsdorf
Three thousand Danube Swabians lived in Karlsdorf.
It was occupied by Russian troops on October 2, 1944. The Partisans appeared right afterwards and set up their
Military Government. By
October 5th they were already arresting large numbers of
Swabian men and women. Every
night people were arrested and taken away.
The nights during this period of time were especially dangerous
for young women and girls. Russian
troops were always on the prowl in search of women to rape.
One seventy-three year old woman was the victim of three Russian
soldiers. Both men and
women were soon considering suicide.
On October 9th there were twenty-eight men who were
locked up in a tiny room. On
November 6th their torment began as they were abused, beaten
and tortured. The most horrible torture included knocking in a man’s
teeth, plucking out an eyeball, cutting off their penises, breaking ribs
and other bones. As a
result many of them died and were shot later.
On the 4th and 8th of November thirty-eight
Swabians including six women, one of whom was in the final stages of her
pregnancy were dragged off to Uljima.
On November 9th four of them who had been brutally
tortured returned home. As for the others, there was never any word at that time.
Later it was learned that they had been shot in Weisskirchen on
the night of November 9th and 10th.
On November 12th all of the men from the age of
sixteen to sixty had to report and were imprisoned in the deserted
German air force barracks. It was surrounded by barbed wire and now served as a slave
labor camp. But here
mistreatment and torture continued.
One of the most feared of the Partisans was Livius Gutschu, a man
who had murdered his own father, but who boasted of it until he himself
was arrested and disappeared.
On November 18th the Swabian women and children and
all of the others who were unable to work from Alibunar were brought to
Karlsdorf. They were
quartered in the Swabian houses. Some
two hundred men were taken out of the camp a few days later.
They had to chop wood at Roschiana some twenty kilometers distant
until the spring. They
lived there in earth dugouts. One
of the men from Uljma fell out of favor with the commander who had him
so badly beaten and tortured that he collapsed. He was forced to take off his trousers and they tied a brick
to his genitals and with thrashings and whippings they encouraged him to
dance. In December these
brutalities intensified and many died as a result of them.
At year’s end, two hundred and eighty persons from Karlsdorf
were deported to Russia. When
the wood felling brigade returned in the spring, two hundred men were
again immediately sent to Semlin. Most
of the group came from Karlsdorf (one hundred and thirty-two),
Weisskirchen (twenty-seven), Schuschara (fifteen), Alibunar (ten), Uljma
(six) Ilandscha (four) Jasenova (three) Seleusch (one) and some from
other communities.
On February 12th six hundred men from the camp in
Semlin (including ninety from Karlsdorf) were sent to Mitrowitz, where
they joined four hundred men from Apatin and its vicinity.
When the group was brought back to Semlin on May 25th,
there were one hundred and twelve fewer men who had died building the
railroad or as a result of being shot to death.
Of the ninety men from Karlsdorf, twenty-one of them had died
there. In May of 1947 of
the one hundred and thirty-two Karlsdorf men in camps, only sixty-six
survived. When the camp in
Semlin was dismantled in September and the surviving inmates were sent
to Mitrowitz there were still seventeen men from Karlsdorf who were
still alive. Next March
there were only four.
On April 27, 1945 all of the remaining Swabians in Karlsdorf were
driven into the camp. They
remained there for four weeks while their homes were being emptied of
their possessions. After a period of four weeks the Swabians were quartered in
homes in one section of the village.
During the summer all of the able bodied had to work.
All of those not able to work at Karlsdorf were sent to
Rudolfsgnad at the same time as the inmates from the Kathreinfeld camp.
Some four hundred and fifty persons arrived in Rudolfsgnad on
October 30th, including two hundred and sixty-four persons
from Karlsdorf. By April
half of them had starved to death.
In March of 1948 only eighty persons from Karlsdorf were still
alive. In the summer of
1946 more and more people attempted to escape to Romania and then headed
for Austria through Hungary. Many
of the people from Karlsdorf were successful, but many others were
apprehended, captured, robbed and often tortured and shot by the
Partisan heroes who received medals for liquidating the “German
criminals”.
In mid April of 1946 and later over a period of time larger
groups of inmates were sent to Guduritz and Werschetz.
In Guduritz escape and flight into Romania was unofficially
tolerated so that those who were there were able to save their lives.
Later, that is, in the spring and summer of 1947 there were large
groups organized at Gakowa that crossed the border into Hungary.
There the planned escapes were also unofficially tolerated
because of the money payments involved.
Today Karlsdorf is known as Rankovicevo named after the commander
of OZNA (Secret Police) and became the last station on the road of
suffering of the Yugoslavian Danube Swabians who ended up at the camp
there which became known as the “old folks home” describing the
condition of the survivors of the holocaust who had nowhere else to turn
or go when it was finally over.
Alibunar
The center for the extermination of the Swabians in the vicinity
of Alibunar was the town itself. In
November 1944 the mass shootings of men had taken place.
The victims always had to take their clothes off first. Later the Swabian women in the camp in Alibunar had to wash
the clothes that had been distributed among the Partisans.
This is one of the ways that the Swabians knew who, when and how
many of the men had been killed.
On November 18, 1944 all of the women and children, and all
others unable to work were taken from Alibunar to the Karlsdorf camp.
The able bodied were sent to various slave labor camps in the
area. Whoever could not
keep up with the pace of the marching column was shot and the bodies
were thrown into the roadside ditches.
Klara Knoll of Alibunar writes:
“Alibunar was a regional center with a mixed population, mostly
Romanian and Serbian. Of
the five thousand inhabitants there were two hundred and twenty Danube
Swabians. Most of the
Swabians were merchants, tradesmen, artisans and craftsmen.
On October 3rd, 1944 the Russian troops arrived in our
town. Only two days later
the Serbian Partisans put in their appearance and took over the local
government. The first
Swabian men and women were arrested around the 15th of
October. Prior to being
shot they were tortured, thrashed, beaten and abused.
Their toenails were torn off, the Partisans had poured gasoline
between their fingers and set the gasoline on fire.
Following the shooting some Swabian women found their toenails
wrapped up in the wash that the Partisans brought them to do. Some Hungarian women who had been responsible for bringing
them their food were the first who brought news of the victims and their
deaths to the Swabians. Wives were not allowed to bring anything to
their husbands or come near the building where they were imprisoned.
One of the Partisans known to me through a friend told me that
after the torture my husband was no longer recognizable.
On November 17, 1944 all of us who were still alive were taken to
Karlsdorf. Swabians from
other villages in the area who were a small minority were also taken
with us. Before we were
marched out of town the Partisans held a speech in which they said that
not all of us would be shot, but we would be their slaves for the rest
of our lives. The Partisans
who accompanied us were told to shoot anyone who was unable to keep up
with the marching column. Three
of the people from Alibunar were shot, including my own eighty-six year
old father, Edmund Bauer on the outskirts of Alibunar along with two
women.
We arrived in Karlsdorf that evening.
All of us had to stand up against a wall.
We thought that we would be shot.
The children began to cry. We
were divided up into groups of ten and quartered in various houses.
The owners of the houses, women whose husbands were interned or
doing slave labor, still lived in their own homes and were threatened
with shooting if any of us was missing the next day.
For that reason I did not leave the house where I was assigned
and I only became aware of my father’s death some three days later.
In Karlsdorf we had to work in the fields and do other heavy
labor, but we had warm houses to sleep in and we could dry our wet
clothes or borrow clothes from the Swabians of Karlsdorf.
After a week of being in Karlsdorf, on Saturday November 25, 1944
sixteen men and women from Alibunar were shot in our town, including my
forty-three year old husband Franz Knoll.
In addition to the men and women from Alibunar there were eighty
other persons from other villages in the area who were also shot and
most of them came from communities where the Danube Swabians were a
small minority. They were
shot and buried at the so-called cemetery dump. They had to dig their own graves and were bound together in
groups of ten and had to stand on a plank across the grave and then were
shot and fell directly into it. The
first to fall in dragged in all of the others and then they were shot
again for good measure as they lay in the grave.
All of the men and women were forced to undress completely and
were shot naked. Because
the women hesitated to undress gasoline was poured on them and their
clothes were set on fire and then they were shot.
On their way to execution the women had been told: “We are
taking you to your Hitler.” On
their way to the shooting place the women’s hair was shorn.
For several days no one was allowed to go near the mass grave.
The dead bodies were covered with only a thin layer of earth and
soon dogs unearthed some hands and feet.
As a result aged men from Alibunar who were unable to work in the
forest had to walk back home to Alibunar that was five kilometers away
and cover the grave with sufficient earth.
The
Southern Banat
“A
Bloodbath Without Borders"
Kovin
Hundreds of years previously Danube Swabian colonists had
established what began a major community on the north bank of the Danube
where formerly the Turkish fortress Semendria had stood in the midst of
a swamp. It was known as
Kovin and five thousand Danube Swabians lived here.
But in the region about Kovin there were other large Swabian
settlements at Ploschitz, Mramorak, Bavanischte, Homolitz, Startschevo
and others whose population numbered in the thousands.
The new People’s Democratic Yugoslavian government of Tito and
the Partisans systematically exterminated in excess of ten thousand
Danube Swabian men, women and children living in this region.
The able bodied men from fifteen years and older in these
communities were to a great extent shot or beaten to death.
Thousands of young Swabian women, both married and single were
dragged off from their families and young mothers from their children
and were taken to Russia as forced labor.
Not a single teenage girl or women returned home in good health.
The remaining Swabian population was relentlessly driven out of
their homes and lost all of their property.
Everything they had was taken away from them.
Even the shoes and clothes that they wore were demanded from them
and were handed over to the Partisans.
Now wearing only rags they were dragged off to concentration
camps in the region of Kovin. This
provided the setting later for the deaths of thousands of them, either
as individuals or in groups who were liquidated by the Partisans who
slaughtered, beat, shot, tortured or performed other gruesome deeds that
led to their deaths, while others were simply left to die of starvation.
Not a single Swabian was left to live in Kovin or the other
communities in this region.
On October 13, 1944 the leading Swabians of Kovin were taken from
their homes and were put to death in gruesome ways.
Among these first victims was Josef Fitschelka who operated a
soda factory. He had to
undress until he was naked in the yard of the former landowner Franz
Schneider and then he was brutally abused. The
Partisans took a two handed saw, held him down on his back and sawed
their way through his body across his chest and stomach from left to
right while he was still living. He screamed terribly. After
him similar gruesome methods were used in killing the other well-off
people. Among them was the
entire family of the estate owner Franz Schneider.
Immediately following this the Partisans began to arrest all of
the remaining Swabian men in Kovin.
They were all imprisoned and for days they were fearfully
tortured. Early in the
morning at 2:00am on October 19th two hundred and eighty of
these men were shot at the slaughtering range.
Four German prisoners of war were also executed with them.
Twenty other men who were shot later had been forced to dig the
mass grave at the execution site. When
the pit was dug they were ordered to move back fifty paces from it and
lie down sideways. The two
hundred and eighty selected victims and the four German prisoners of war
were fettered and led there and were forced to undress and in groups of
ten they were ordered to lie down in the pit.
Whoever disobeyed was fearfully abused.
Once the men were lying in the pit the Partisans shot them from
above. Then the next group
had to lie down on top of the dead and severely wounded naked men and
they were shot in the same manner.
This went on like this until all of the men had been liquidated.
The twenty men who were kept waiting, then shoveled earth over
the dead and badly wounded men until the mass grave was completely
covered over.
On October 20, 1944 another one hundred and five Swabians from
Kovin were shot in the same manner.
Now that most of the men from Kovin had been exterminated, the
Swabians from the vicinity now had the full attention of the Partisans.
Day after day, long columns of Swabians from the surrounding
district came by wagon and on foot.
They were fettered and badly beaten and bloodied.
They were put in the camp at Kovin and for days they were
terribly tortured before they too suffered the same fate as the Swabians
from Kovin.
Ploschitz
Before the war over one thousand three hundred Danube Swabians
lived in Ploschitz. When
the Partisans took power they arrested and imprisoned many of the
Swabians. On October 14th
the Partisans had a party at the local village pub with music and
dancing. It was Sunday.
Next to the inn, in various rooms in the community center the
Swabians were imprisoned. Around
midnight a pack of Partisans got their commander to allow them to get
some of the Swabians from over in the community center.
The first was Martin Repmann the prosperous butcher.
He was led to the office of the community center.
Without any reason at all, and pure bravado, a woman Partisan
hacked off the finger of his one hand with a sword in the presence of
the village authorities. Following
that another Partisan severed his hand up to his wrist.
Other Partisans drew out their knives and stabbed him while at
the same time they bashed in his head with their rifles.
Gypsies later dragged his body out to the dump and buried him
were dead animals were left to rot.
The second victim to be brought in was a married woman, Lina
Klein. The drunken Partisans, who dragged her out to the yard of the
community center, stripped her naked.
The Partisans crowded around her and stabbed her with a knife in
the area of her vagina, and hacked off a finger of her one hand.
They broke her other hand. They
were still not satisfied with their bloody handiwork.
They stabbed her numerous times around the throat.
She bled profusely, but was still not dead.
Only after a drunk Gypsy stabbed her in the back with a long
knife did she finally collapse. In
the presence of some two hundred witnesses, mostly Serbian Partisans and
Gypsies her body was dragged to the well where more Partisans used her
corpse for target practice with their pistols.
Their third victim that night was Ernst Schreiber the watchmaker. He was literally butchered by the Partisans with their
knives. Now that the
Partisans had quenched their lust for blood on their Swabian victims
they went on with their party at the pub.
On the following day the arrest of the other Swabians in
Ploschitz continued. These
prisoners were fearfully tortured and abused over the next several days
and then on October 19th they were force marched over to
Kovin. At that camp they
were badly mistreated and beaten and individually or in groups they were
killed.
On October 23 there were only forty-two Swabians still alive in
Ploschitz. On that day they
were shackled and driven on foot to the dump and shot there.
The method of their liquidation was a carbon copy of the
procedures used several days before in the shooting of the Kovin
Swabians. Among the victims from Ploschitz was the photographer Stefan
Luftikus. While they were
being forced to undress and be fettered, he called out to the Partisans,
“During the four year occupation by the Germans we protected and
defended you Serbs and nothing happened to a single one of you.
And now your thanks is to kills us?”
Right after speaking these words he was executed.
Mramorak
Mramorak was one of the two largest Lutheran Danube Swabian
communities in the Banat along with Franzfeld.
After the Partisans had taken the Swabians from Ploschitz to
Kovin large numbers were also taken in shackles from Mramorak.
These too had earlier been driven out of their homes by the
Partisans and imprisoned. After
horrendous abuse by the Partisans, hundreds of Swabians from Mramorak
were driven on foot to the Serbian village of Bavanischte where they
again were mistreated, beaten and tortured and on October 20th
they were shot en masse. After
that the surviving arrested Swabian men and women in Mramorak were taken
to Kovin. All day long they
were newly tortured in horrendous new ways and some among them were
murdered. On October 28th
thirty-seven women and teenage girls from Mramorak were shot.
Prior to their execution they were beaten and tortured
unmercifully in the jail at Kovin and stripped of all of their clothes
because the Partisans wanted them for their own wives and girlfriends.
They force-marched the naked women and girls, beating and
thrashing them along the way to the place of execution, the local dump
and animal burial ground. Others had been forced to shovel out a mass grave for them.
They, like the men, the day before them were driven to the mass
grave awaiting them. They
too had to lie down in the grave as the men had and then they were shot.
Any who resisted were shot on the spot and tossed down among the
other naked women and girls who had preceded them.
Among the young girls was Susi Harich one of the most popular
girls in Mramorak. At first she was simply shot and badly wounded to make her
suffer. She called up to
her executioners, “Shoot me in the head,” and a Partisan stepped
forward and killed her with one shot of his pistol.
Homolitz
In one day, October 22, 1944 the Partisans killed two hundred and
eighty-seven Danube Swabians including very many children in the village
of Homolitz. Thirteen-year-old
Knabe Moradolf was among them. They
were all taken from their homes, one at a time, imprisoned in the town
hall and mistreated and abused. The
next morning they were shackled and then driven on foot to the
brickyards at dawn. There
they had to strip themselves of all of their clothes and then in groups
they were driven to a large pit that had been used in the production of
bricks. There Partisans who
mowed them down with machine guns encircled them and their bodies were
thrown into the pit.
Startschevo
As the first of their extermination efforts in Startschevo the
Partisans proceeded much as they did at the same time in the entire
district around Kovin and arrested and killed ten of the leading
Swabians who lived there. A few days later, all men fifteen years of age and over were
driven together at the local Guesthouse at night, and were horribly
tortured and abused over a period of time as was true in all of the
other Swabian communities in the district.
At a later date, all of them had to strip naked and leave their
shoes and clothes in the Guesthouse.
The Partisans bound them to one another with wire and before dawn
the naked prisoners were force-marched to the place of execution to the
old brickyard with constant beatings and thrashings from whips along the
way. Near a large pit they
were forced to halt. Under
the pressure of the constant beatings by the Partisans with their rifle
butts, groups were forced to the edge of the pit and were shot before
sunrise. Not a single man
from the age of fifteen upwards was left alive in Startschevo.
Among the victims was one of the leading Swabians in the village,
whose family does not want his name to be mentioned and his two sons.
While the father was wired together with his oldest son, his
younger son, not yet fifteen years old was bound to a very physically
large man. The method of
shooting used by the Partisans was simultaneous and directed at whole
groups and this large man was hit and fell headlong into the pit.
At the same time he pulled the young boy in after him who had not
been hit by the spray of bullets all around him.
Other naked dead men and badly wounded others fell on top of both
of them. After the shooting
ended, the Partisans and the Gypsies who had also beaten some of the
Swabians to death, left without filling in the mass grave.
The young boy made use of the blood running all over him from the
others to free himself from his shackles.
He crawled out of the grave and left quickly stark naked.
He found sanctuary with some relatives and a few weeks later he
left Startschevo and found safety and a hiding place in Pantschowa.
Bavanischte
From the village of Bavanischte there were also Danube Swabians
who had been fearfully tortured by the Partisans and taken to Kovin in
shackles in October of 1944. They
suffered the same fate as all of the other Swabians in the district of
Kovin and were treated brutally and shot.
Especially gruesome was the fate of Swabian women and young
teenage girls. On October
29, 1944 the Partisans put to death twelve young girls and women from
Bavanischte at the dump outside of Kovin. They had been imprisoned in the courthouse at Kovin from the
time of their arrival from Bavanischte and had been there for some time.
They had been molested and abused fearfully.
On the night of October 29th the Partisans took them
out of their place of imprisonment and stripped them of their clothes.
Most of the teenage girls were from among the prettiest in the
area and the married women were among the healthiest.
The Partisans wanted to rape the prettiest among them, Julianna
Dines who was eighteen years old. But
she resisted with all of her might and strength against the attempts the
Partisans and Gypsies made to rape her and she screamed frightfully.
In their fury because they were unable to achieve their goal, the
Partisans took a pair of pliers, held her down and tore out a piece of
flesh just above her vagina and she began to bleed profusely.
During that same night all of the women and young girls were
shackled, stripped naked and driven on foot to the place of execution
and shot. But Julianna was
first shot in the foot to make her suffer and left to lie there beside
the grave. The young
Swabian was brave to the end and called out to the Partisans who were
mostly Gypsies to shoot her in the head.
One of them finally did.
South
Western Banat
“Wholesale
Murder”
Pantschowa
The largest community in the southern Yugoslavian Banat is
located where the Tisza and Danube Rivers meet, the site of the city of
Pantschowa (Pancevo). It is
the oldest settlement in the Banat.
Along with the Danube Swabian inhabitants there were numerous
other nationalities: Serbians, Romanians, Slovaks and Hungarians that lived
together in peace and harmony for two hundred years.
Because of their almost inborn sense of the value of work and
industriousness the Danube Swabian population secured for themselves a
high standard of living, even though they lived under various forms of
government during that history with different attitudes toward them.
Up to the beginning of the Second World War the city of
Pantschowa had a population of twenty-five thousand, among whom the
Danube Swabians numbered twelve thousand persons. The Swabians were the mainstay of the local economy and
industry and several thousand other Danube Swabians lived in the
numerous villages that surrounded or were in the vicinity of the city.
The Russian army arrived in this region in the first days of the
month of October 1944. Under
their protection communist Partisans seized power and inaugurated a
gruesome reign of terror. All
of those who appeared to be opponents or a threat to communism were
meant for extermination. This meant not only the followers of General Nedic, but the
Royalist Serbians the Chetniks of Drascha Michailowitz not to mention
the Danube Swabians who were to be totally and systematically
liquidated. Of the
approximately forty thousand Danube Swabians in Pantoschowa and its
vicinity, only a few thousand had fled or been evacuated by the German
forces. The others remained
with a clear conscience and did so without fear.
They had absolutely no idea of what lay ahead for them.
They were all to be exterminated, simply because they were of
German origin, and today not a single Danube Swabian lives in this
region or has possession of his home and property there.
As soon as they came to power the Partisans began with the arrest
and liquidation of the leading and most esteemed Swabian men.
The first victims were the well to do whose property and
possessions the Partisans wanted for themselves.
All of these Swabians were imprisoned in the so-called “old
stockade” which was part of the district prison complex.
But in addition, thousands of Swabians from the surrounding
vicinity, both men and women of “standing” were brought here and
were tortured unmercifully for days.
Whenever the Partisans had a thirst for blood, desired sadistic
pleasure or were drunk they would call for victims from among the
innocent, defenseless, chained and fettered Swabians in order to kill
them and watch them die. They
would be dragged out of the packed cells of the prison as individuals or
in groups for no reason at all and be subjected to unimaginable
cruelties until the Partisans had their fill or grew tired of it.
Just as in other regions of the Banat, the victims were thrown to
the floor and the Partisans would use their rifle butts on their backs
always aiming for their kidneys, and turned them over and did the same
against their chest to break their ribs, bash in their teeth with their
revolvers and break their nose. Many,
many Swabians never recovered from this abuse.
Only after several days were the Partisans satisfied with their
efforts at torturing their victims and believed that this method of
liquidation would take too long, so they began to form the Swabians into
groups and shackle them and drive them on foot out of the prison to be
shot in groups. But
beforehand the victims had to give up all of their clothes and underwear
until they were naked. In
this way one thousand six hundred and sixty-six fettered Danube Swabians
were led away from this camp prison, usually at night and vanished
without a trace. Most of
them were led out on to the road that led the way to the village of
Jabuka or they were shot at the airport.
Nearby a factory close to the airport there were twelve huge
mounds still visible in 1946. They
are the mass graves of large groups of Danube Swabian victims who were
shot and buried here. All of these groups consisted of one hundred or more victims.
But many others also died in the prison camp itself.
One of the first victims of the bloody People’s Democratic
regime was a young schoolboy Franz Maierhoefer.
A Serbian woman wanted to revenge herself on the boy’s parents
who had offended her in some way. When
the Partisans came to power in Pantschowa she believed she could achieve
her goal. She did not ask for the death of the parents, but she
requested that the almighty Partisans kill their only innocent and
unwary child. The Partisans
immediately acted on her request and tore the child from his parent’s
arms and in a short time afterwards shot him.
The first of those who died as a result of ongoing brutal and
gruesome torture in the prison camp was the Lutheran pastor and Dean of
the Pantschowa Lutheran Church District Wilhelm Kund.
Following the martyrdom of the Lutheran bishop, Philipp Popp who
was hanged by the Partisans in Agram, Wilhelm Kund was the leading
Lutheran pastor in Yugoslavia. The
Partisans tortured him for two hours in the punishment cell in the
prison camp simply because he was a pastor.
He too endured punches and rifle butts in the area of his kidneys
on his back. They struck
him across the face with canes and steel rods and broke the bridge of
his nose. Then they threw
him to the floor. They took
turns jumping on his stomach with all of their might and broke three of
his ribs. Through this
abuse and torture he was a bloody mess and covered with blood everywhere
and had severe internal injuries when they were finished.
Later he died of his injuries.
The well-known lawyer, Dr. Hans Leitner from Kowatschitza was
also brought here to the prison camp and after enduring much torture he
later died as a result of it.
As time went on, the Partisans brought more and more Swabian men
as well as many leading Swabian women from the city of Pantschowa and
the numerous communities in the vicinity to the prison camp and after
most of them survived untold cruelties and abuse at the hands of the
Partisans, the mass shootings began.
The first mass shooting took place on October 16, 1944.
On that day, one hundred and eighty Swabian men were bound and
led from the camp and they were forced to undress and when they were
naked they were shot on the road to Jabuka.
During this action, the Partisans and Gypsies inaugurated new
versions of gruesomeness. The Swabians were pushed forward towards the
mass grave in groups by the Partisans or had to immediately lie down
naked in the pit and were then shot.
Whoever resisted was badly beaten or simply shot standing there.
Anton Geier, just after he had undressed was run through with one
of the spades used to dig the grave by a Gypsy and his entrails hung out
and he lay there in great pain until he was thrown into the grave while
still alive. The Partisans also killed the watchmaker Michael Eichart in
the most gruesome way. They
threw him to the ground and proceeded to cut out three of his ribs while
he was alive and then tossed him down into the grave with the other
Swabians and left him there to suffer for a long time.
Equally gruesome things were done on October 18th when
another one hundred and eighty Swabians who were driven out of the camp
with their hands bound were shot. This
was followed by three hundred more on October 20th among them
were some German prisoners of war.
On October 22nd they killed thirty men and one woman.
So it went on and on to mid November.
On November 9th the former Member of Parliament
and lawyer Dr. Simon Bartmann whom everyone knew was a convinced
Yugoslavian patriot and never a Nazi was shot along with eighty-three
other Swabians. Among these
victims were included eleven women and the dentist Dr. Hauber and the
lawyer Dr. Bartosch. The
others were members of the intelligentsia and prosperous people.
There was a procedure that was followed by the Partisans with
regard to the shootings. On
the day of the planned execution the Partisans went from cell to cell
with a list and called out the victim’s name.
The victim had to step forward out of the cell.
In this way the eighty-four Swabian men and women were assembled
in the yard. They were
immediately surrounded by Partisans and were beaten with rifles and
wooden stakes. Then they
were bound with rope or wire to one another and were driven out of the
camp and were thrashed and beaten on their way to execution.
These victims like the others before them were forced to the mass
grave after undressing and met their deaths either by shooting or some
other gruesome invention of individual Partisans.
On November 11, 1944 the Partisans drove out all of the Danube
Swabians still living in Pantschowa from their homes including the women
and children and brought them to the prison camp.
Everything that the Swabians possessed was to be left behind or
anything they still had was taken away from them.
Three thousand and twenty-four of them were then brought to the
camp at Brestowatz where there were already over seven thousand inmates.
There, in a very short period of time, four hundred of them died.
The Swabian women here were driven to do forced hard labor during
the winter. Here large
numbers of Swabians were put to death or terribly abused and tortured.
About one thousand of the younger women and teenage girls were
delivered to the Russians for slave labor in the Soviet Union with the
compliments of the Yugoslavian government at the end of 1944.
Not a single one of them was healthy when they returned home, if
they returned. The
Partisans also dragged off women and teenage girls from the camp in
Brestowatz and to this day no trace of any has ever been found.
The father of one of the abducted girls, Suchi Dominik demanded
to know what became of her. The
Partisans punished him gruesomely for his audacity.
They held a burning candle directly beneath his nostrils and
under his tongue that they pulled out and then crushed his genitals.
In the fall of 1945, three thousand seven hundred and eighty-four
Swabians, mostly women and children who had lived in Pantschowa who were
in the camp at Brestowatz were shipped to large concentration camp at
Rudolfsgnad. For the Swabians from Pantschowa this meant another mass
extermination. By the
summer of 1946 only one thousand eight hundred and eighty-four of them
had survived. More than
half of them, one thousand nine hundred starved to death that first
winter. But the Swabian men
and women from Pantschowa who were not sent to Brestowatz and
Rudolfsgnad, but had been kept back in the camp in Pantschowa continued
to be exterminated. They
were constantly undernourished and forced to do hard labor.
Those who became weak or sick or injured were shot by the
Partisans or bludgeoned to death. The sick, frail and those others unable to work were often
executed in large groups. On
December 11, 1944 sixty-eight sick Swabians along with invalid war
veterans from the entire district of whom thirty-two were from the
community of Brestowatz were shot.
They were liquidated because one could not expect any labor out
of their broken bodies nor were they then of any value.
The cheapest way to deal with the burden they posed was to shoot
them. The invalids also lie
buried on the road that still leads to Jabuka.
Many of the inmates at the camp in Pantschowa were taken to other
camps to do heavy labor and were liquidated there.
Many of them were sent to the camp in Semlin, the so-called show
place camp erected for the Danube Swabians.
Many thousands of Swabian men and women met their deaths there.
Brestowatz
Like Kathreinfeld so also Brestowatz was a community in which
Swabian men and women were brought who were sick and otherwise unable to
work from various other camps in the District.
The sick from Pantschowa were also brought here.
Not all such transports bearing the sick arrived in Brestowatz. One survivor of such a transport testified:
“I was in Pantschowa for only one day when a friend encouraged
me to report sick. I would
be sent to Brestowatz and would not be required to do any heavy work
like I would if I remained in Pantoschowa.
Because I had relatives in Brestowatz I followed my friend’s
advice. But I also had the
feeling that perhaps it would be better to stay in Pantoschowa in spite
of the hard work. I thought
that it was more probable that those unable to work had a greater chance
of extermination than the able bodied. But still, I reported in sick.
When the transport was assembled there was no place for me on the
wagon. Because of the lack
of space eighty-three others and I had to remain behind.
The evening of that day all of those who had not accompanied the
transport were told to report in. We
were told to reconsider going to Brestowatz.
Even if one was sick, but was still able to work it might be
better to stay in Pantschowa. I
joined those who decided to remain even though I wanted to go to
Brestowatz. Twenty of us remained in Pantschowa. The rest were then sent to Brestowatz. At least that is what was said.
They never arrived there. They
were taken to Alibunar and shot and buried there.”
The Brestowatz internment camp was later closed and its inmates
were sent to Rudolfsgnad. A
great portion of those inmates from Brestowatz who declared that they
were unable to work died there of hunger while others were put to death.
Glogau
In the earliest days of Partisan rule numerous Danube Swabian men
were arrested and taken away to Sefkerin or Kowatschitza.
Many of them were shot in a field along the way.
An eyewitness reports:
“In the second half of October (1944) I was taken to the town
hall along with a friend and we were imprisoned.
As we entered our cell, we found six other prisoners of whom some
were badly beaten. One of
them had his hand cut off. Among
these men there was Anton Gloeckner from St. Georgen and a man from
Ernsthausen by the name of Rotten.
I was released with two others but the others were sent to
Sefkerin on foot. Not far
from out of town the Partisan guard took them to a field and shot them
with his machine pistol. One
of the men went down before he was hit and feigned death.
When he noticed the guard was approaching his victims he saw that
he shot each man in the head and placed his own arm over his head and
when the Partisan shot him and moved on, the wound was lodged in his
protecting arm and had grazed his cheek and outer ear.
As the sentry left, the man stood up and tried to stop the
bleeding and thought of going to the village and go into hiding and let
his wound heal. As he came
to the end of the field a woman Partisan who was without any weapon came
along the path and asked what had happened to him.
He ignored her and rested under a tree and waited for the
Partisan to leave. When the
Partisan was out of sight he gathered together the last of his strength
and was able to reach a house at the outskirts of the village.
He was hidden in the house and a doctor came secretly.
A few days later he was arrested again and taken to the prison
camp operated by the Secret Police in Kowatschitza.”
On October 30th the Partisans arrested and apprehended
forty-six persons including the local priest, Knappe.
Their hands were bound and they were taken to a nearby hill close
to the village. There they
had to strip naked. At the
intervention of some of the local Serbs three of the Swabians were
allowed to return home, but the others and the priest were shot.
But before they were shot they had to dig their own graves.
Many of the men from Glogau worked at the airport in Opovo.
One of the liquidation commando brigades arrived on October 30th
in many of the Banat villages in the area to carry out mass
extermination actions against the Danube Swabian population.
They also put in an appearance at the airport. The men who came from various communities in the area were
asked individually who they were (what nationality), and any who
responded that they were Swabians were immediately set aside and shot. Because of knowing that, some of the Swabians who spoke good
Serbian or Romanian pretended not to be Swabians and got away with it.
In total there were one hundred and eighty-three men from Glogau
who were shot in the fall of 1944.
A man from Betscherek who had joined the evacuation and then
changed his mind reports the following:
“From the 4th to the 7th of October 1944
I hid out in Glogau which is close to Pantschowa and I was a civilian at
the time. While I was in
hiding I learned that the local officials indicated they would provide
documentation to anyone who was going back to their home community.
On October 7th I went to the town office in Glogau.
There without a word I was arrested and locked up.
In prison I found three other Swabians who had been arrested just
like me. In the afternoon
we were all brought to Sefkerin on foot where we met another twelve men
at the school. At our first
sight of the twelve men their appearance was almost grotesque from the
beatings they had obviously suffered.
They had been imprisoned here for several days and every local
revenge seeking Serbian civilian could work out their rage on the twelve
victims.
On October 8th 1944 the civilian population was
ordered to deliver up oats and grain.
The Serbian farmers brought wheat and maize and we had to unload
the wagons. We carried
sacks weighing sixty to seventy kilograms from early morning until late
at night and for that we received gruesome beatings rather than any
food. Every civilian and
even the night watchman could beat us as often and as long as they
wanted. Some of us still had good shoes, but these were now taken
away from us. On October 9th
1944 we had the same work assignment and received more beatings than the
day before. In these two
days we once received fifty grams of bread.
In the evening around 7:00pm three armed Partisans came and
ordered five of us to come with them.
We were led to the forest which is about two miles distant from
the village if Sekferin. We
were not forbidden to speak, and the Partisans watched us closely, so
that none of us could escape in the darkness.
We were never told but we knew what their goal was.
We were to be shot.
My friend Johann Schab from Lazarfeld and I spoke to one another
along the way and came to the decision that at the first opportunity we
saw we would escape. In the
woods before us an armed Partisan with a machine pistol indicated where
he wanted us to stand to be shot. We
were forced to walk up a path deep into the forest.
Two other armed Partisans with rifles supervised us.
Even though we were deathly afraid we asked for the reason for
our execution but were quickly silenced by blows to our heads and were
pushed around. Outside of
swearing and scolding there was no answer from them.
So we stood pressed close to one another preparing ourselves to
be shot. As the Partisan
with the machine pistol walked behind us to shoot us in the back, my
friend Schab pushed me aside with his left hand and both us made a run
for it, and then the others followed.
In the blinking of an eye there was the crack of the first salvo
of bullets. I saw another
escapee beside me to my left and then he sank to the ground and was
dead.
The Partisans shot, screamed and ran after us, but the darkness
and the density of the forest saved us.
I ran scared to death and under the power of the last of my
strength as best as I could. After
three or four hundred meters I simply collapsed, I had no idea of what
had become of my friend Schab, he had gone off in another direction into
the forest. The Partisans
were still shooting and screaming.
While I tried to move on in order to get away the shots and
curses of the Partisans faded away.
I found myself standing at the edge of the forest by the Temes
River. In order to save
myself from torture and death by the Partisans, I swam across the river
without even thinking about it beforehand, and then made my way to
Konigsdorf. I spent the
night out in the open because I was afraid to go near the houses because
the Partisans were everywhere.”
Kowatschitza
In Kowatschitza there was a prison operated by the OZNA (Secret
Police). Untold numbers of
Swabian men were brought to this prison from the whole area around
Kowatschitza. Every
Wednesday and Saturday mass shootings took place.
A former prisoner in this prison relates the following:
“Along with another man from Glogau I was brought to the prison
in Kowatschitza. When we
entered the cell, two men were lying there, who had been beaten
unmercifully and did not move and who obviously were no longer alive but
who would have died in one of the two weekly mass shootings that took
place there. The next day
we had to go to work. Every
Wednesday and Saturday in the evening the cell was opened whereby
several men from each of the cells were led out into the hallway and
were bound or shackled. We
never heard from them again or ever saw them, only later did we see
their clothes when we had to clear out the attic of the prison.
Each time the men were led away, we opened the windows of our
cells and heard the group leave in the direction of Debeljascha.
After not even half an hour, each time we heard a salvo of
machine pistols firing and then a large number of single shots.
These single shots we counted very carefully.
Because many inmates were taken away to work the next day, when
the opportunity lent itself, they spoke to one another, so that in the
evening we always knew who had been taken away the previous night.
The total that was estimated was usually close to the number of
single shots we had counted during the night.
The selected group of victims was first gunned down together by
numerous shooters and then each man was shot in the head to make sure he
was dead. The last mass
shooting took place three weeks before my release.
On that occasion twenty-nine men were taken from the cells and
twenty-eight of them were taken away by truck.
In the five weeks during which the regular Wednesday and Saturday
shootings took place about two hundred men met their deaths.
The man who had come with me was already among the dead eight
days after we had arrived.”
Jabuka
The Partisans arrested twenty-one of the leading Danube Swabian
men and women in early October of 1944, including Dr. Peter Weinz and
his wife. For quite some
time there was no trace of them. In
January a “commission” arrived in Jabuka in search of the graves of
fallen Partisans who had engaged the German occupation forces in battle
in the vicinity of the village. They
brought along thirty Swabian men from the prison camp in Pantschowa who
were forced to dig all over the place in search of such graves.
Left to the road that led to Pantschowa they stumbled on
twenty-one corpses with fresh evidence of each of them having been shot
in the nape of the neck. Among
the bodies was one that was a woman.
It became obvious that the corpses were those of the local
Swabians who had been arrested and had disappeared months before.
Especially recognizable were the bodies of the doctor and his
wife. The body of the woman
wore only underpants and there was still one earring in one ear.
One of the commission members noticed that and stepped down into
the grave and tore off the remaining earring and stuck it into his
pocket. Not only the camp
inmates who were involved but also the commission members were convinced
that the bodies had nothing to do with the Partisans they were searching
for because they would not have fallen in battle naked and tied to one
another. They then ordered a halt
further digging and ordered that the grave be covered again.
The
Western Banat
“The
Starvation Mill”
Rudolfsgnad
In 1945 the authorities of the new Yugoslavian state made the
former Danube Swabian community of Rudolfsgnad located on the left bank
of the Tisza River where it meets the Danube into a massive
concentration camp and renamed it Knicanin.
With the retreat of the German forces as the Russian Army
advanced into the Banat, the inhabitants of Rudolfsgnad by and large
were evacuated, but following that the village was severely
damaged during the battles that raged around it.
Twenty-three thousand Danube Swabians from the Banat, mostly
women and children were driven from their homes and out of their
villages by the Partisans in the fall of 1945 and were brought here and
housed in the ruined or damaged empty homes.
The first of them arrived on October 30, 1945.
They were the Swabian population from Kathreinfeld as well as
those who were unable to work who had been brought to Kathreinfeld from
labor camps in the surrounding area.
The area around Rudlofsgnad was cut off and isolated, because the
fate of the Swabian inmates there was not to come to the light of day or
made public in any way. No
one was allowed to send or receive mail.
No one was allowed to visit them.
The Swabians were liquidated here en masse.
They were simply left to starve.
In the first few months there were seven thousand deaths.
In the coldest months of winter they received no food at all.
In the years ahead no one could send or bring food to the
inmates. In December of
1945, months after the war was over the commander ordered that no food
of any kind be given to the prisoners from December 24th-27th
to prevent any Christmas celebrations.
In the month of January in 1946 the ration per person was seven
decagrams of salt and two hundred and twenty-three decagrams of corn
grouts. It was mostly shredded corncobs that would have been fed to
pigs. There were no fats of
any kind and no bread. There
were many days when there were no rations at all, and during that month
there were none for five consecutive days.
In the month of February there was even a reduction in the
personal ration that only heightened the level of starvation in the
camp. Even the smallest
children and nursing mothers received the same ration.
From November of 1945 to the beginning of July in 1946 there was
absolutely no bread during those eight months and no salt whatsoever.
With regard to this situation in Rudolfsgnad, one woman reports:
“Those who went out to work and were able to secure some food
or even a piece of bread and tried to smuggle it back into the camp were
beaten unmercifully and locked up.
Cellars served as prisons with the windows bricked up and a tin
roof. Whoever ended up
there was given no food or water. In
the summer time the hot tin roof created monstrous levels of heat within
and imprisonment there was most feared at that time of year.
The heat and lack of water left the inmates on the verge of
madness.
The first victims of our hunger were the dogs and cats in the
neighborhood. During the
winter of 1945/1946 as hunger raged among us the first thing to
disappear were the house pets. All
of the other animals had been taken into the possession of the
Partisans, so that the ten thousand starving inmates had no other
alternative then to capture these household animals and slaughter them
to quiet their hunger with that meat.
If a cat appeared anywhere it was immediately chased by a mob,
captured, butchered and eaten on the spot.
In this way a cat erred and strayed into the house where my
family and I were living. Because
we had so many mice in our house, I tied up the cat with a rope.
When I left the house for a few minutes, the cat managed to free
itself and disappeared. I
went in search of the cat in the houses of our neighbors.
Coming to the very first house, I was told that the cat had
already been butchered and skinned and was being cooked.
Snails and slugs were collected everywhere and clover wherever it
could be found was used as “greens” to eat.
Even though leaving the camp was punishable by death until the
beginning of 1948, mothers who were not prepared to watch their children
starve to death, slipped past the sentries at night and brought the
clothes of their dead relatives with them to trade for food in the
Serbian and Hungarian villages in the vicinity.
Many, many of these mothers were shot by the Partisan sentries on
their return to the camp and later their wounded bleeding bodies were
thrown in one grave or another.
In the spring of 1946 a camp kitchen was set up to cook for the
inmates. It was soup with
either oats or peas. There
were also a bit more shredded corncobs.
In the early summer there were also ripe mulberries.
The people had to do hard labor.
But most of them were so weak they could hardly lift their legs. When one met acquaintances after not seeing them for some
time at the feeding barrels, we had changed so much we did not recognize
each other. Our clothing
had turned to rags and our bodies were like skeletons.
By this time about eight thousand of us had perished, but there
were always new inmates being brought to Rudolfsgnad who had become sick
or unable to work in other camps, so that there were always two thousand
people imprisoned here at any given time.
In the times when nothing was cooked in the camp kitchen, many
sought to cook for themselves. But
to speak of cooking it is not to be confused with the real thing.
We had already heard that many of the children were so hungry
that they even ate sand to fill their empty stomachs.
It was the same in terms of cooking in the camp.
Weeds, grass and anything else you found.
Whenever an animal died, up to a thousand people would gather to
cut off a piece of flesh from the carcass of a horse or cow.
With their rusty knives or other utensils they cut around the
cadaver when it was their turn. On
one occasion a brood sow went into labor on the street as the swineherd
drove the herd to pasture. The
dead piglets hardly dropped to the street with the sow close by before
they had been carried away and were cooked or dismembered.
It was not unusual for those who ate such meat to became sick
afterwards and some of them died. The
Partisans would often eat in front of the children and then toss their
leftover melons in their direction and hundreds of children would fight
over the melon rind and stuff their bloated empty stomachs.
This kind of nourishment had no real value except it provided
some sense of satisfaction at first but often resulted in dysentery and
diarrhea.
What people endured because of diarrhea is indescribable.
Everyone was at one time or more often afflicted with this
sickness for longer and shorter periods.
It took away the last of people’s strength and those who did
not die of weakness were the victims of other diseases all around us.
Each day fifty or more persons died.
Once diarrhea struck there was seldom a return to health.
Some had it for a month, while others suffered with it for half a
year or longer. But by then
the person had no strength at all and their body was inert and death was
near.
For months on end the people received no cooked food, since there
was no firewood available to the Swabians.
We had to rely on ourselves as best as we could or perish.
But at the same time long columns of women and often children
under ten years of age were driven daily out of the camp to do slave
labor in the early hours of the morning.
They had to cut wood in the forest.
This wood was for the benefit of the leadership of the camp and
delivered to them. The camp
inmates themselves were strongly forbidden to gather any wood for
themselves and bring it back to the camp in order to make fires to cook.
Many of those who were apprehended with wood after working were
immediately shot.
The need for burning material and making fires is best
demonstrated by the people who lived nearby where the herd of cows
pastured. When a cow
unburdened itself, the people rushed out to gather the pile of manure
and made small balls out of it, and let it dry out for use as burning
material in the winter. There
was nothing available during the winter to provide heating and if the
people could not come up with something, they froze day and night in
their room. Every blade of
grass and weed was gathered in the summer, dried and used as burning
material in the winter.”
Death by starvation and typhus epidemics carried off many of the
people. As starvation
weakened the bodies of thousands of Swabian prisoners and their
resistance towards other diseases was low, typhus epidemics broke out.
Diphtheria also raged. Once
it took hold these fearful and dangerous diseases spread among the
children and women en masse. But
there were also other sicknesses that also affected countless numbers of
the helpless starving victims. All
kinds of skin diseases and infections were transmitted from one to
another.
Most of the victims were women and children as most of the men
had been shot earlier, and they died like flies from the beginning of
1946. Swollen feet always preceded the deaths of these poor
victims, and then their faces would puff up and a few days later they
died.
Along with starvation there was a plague of lice.
No one could keep clean. There
was no soap. In the winter
the laundry could not be washed because most people only possessed the
clothes they were wearing and their clothes could not dry fast enough in
the winter. In the summer
the wells went dry but no one was allowed to get water from the Bega or
Tisza River close by. How
satanic the Partisan regime was is perhaps best expressed in the cynical
reason given by them when the Swabians were forbidden to get water from
the river: “The ships
will not be able to sail on the river if so much water is carried off by
you.”
The bodies of the children were covered in rashes.
Since the adults were unable to keep clean to ward off the lice
plagued the children were even less likely to be free of their presence
on their bodies. Being
eaten by the lice and all kinds of other insects the children scratched
themselves in frenzy and left open wounds that would often not heal.
For the dead there was no burial.
There were men who would have buried the dead.
No priest was allowed to bless the body of the dead and no
relative was allowed to accompany the body.
At the beginning the loved ones of the dead were allowed to put a
small wooden cross with the corpse, which was then later put on the
grave, but later all of this was forbidden.
Then a piece of paper with the name of the deceased was put in a
small bottle that accompanied the body to the grave.
But soon there were no more bottles available.
There was no medical help. Each
week a Russian doctor came from the city, and in a few hours he
“looked after” one thousand to one thousand two hundred sick people.
With his pipe in his mouth he went from room to room where the
sick were lying. It was
only seldom that he spoke to the sick to ask what ailed them, while on
the other hand he never examined or helped anyone.
Above all the treatment in this camp was completely inhumane. The women forced to do slave labor daily, were weakened
through starvation and hard work and those who were unable to work any
longer were treated gruesomely and mercilessly mistreated.
The Roman Catholic priests who were in the camp were also
assigned to heavy slave labor and handled brutally.
As an example of the determination of the Partisan officials to
exterminate the Danube Swabians is the fact that on the hottest day in
1946 all of the twenty thousand inmates here were driven into the meadow
on the eastern side of the camp. For
the entire day they had to stand still in the sun all packed together.
The thousands of little children received no water all day and no
one was excused from their group to relieve themselves in terms of their
bodily functions. Everyone
had to remain silent and remain in one spot.
A massive detail of Partisan sentries who were heavily armed
circled the Swabians keeping watch and threatening to shoot anyone who
moved from their spot.
There were no worship services and prayer was forbidden.
In order to ridicule the religious sensitivities of the Swabian
inmates the Partisans took all of the religious statues out of the local
church at night and set them in the middle of the streets through the
camp in such a way as to suggest that the saints were taking a walk
through the camp. Thousands
of Swabian children in the camp were forced to look at them.
There was no school for them.
They were not to know about God and did not have any teachers and
many of them were separated from their own parents.
Many of the children had no idea where their parents were.
The parents of many of them had been shot or had starved death.
Hundreds of them no longer had grandparents either.
Family members or friends and former neighbors took them in.
One day, all of the children were taken away and quartered in the
old school buildings and the former Guesthouses.
That now served as the “Children’s Home”.
A barbed wire fence surrounded this complex of buildings.
The poor abandoned little children who no longer had anyone in
the world except perhaps an old grandmother or other adult who cared for
them stood at the wire fences all day long and cried.
With no grandmother or “aunt” to provide an extra crust of
bread for which they had risked their lives, the children were now
totally dependent on the camp ration they received.
Death would now reap a rich harvest in the “Children’s
Home”. With what they
were fed not even the adults could have survived much less the abandoned
children. They slept on the floor and only on rare occasions any straw
was provided for them at night. A
nurse at Rudolfsgnad reports:
“I once went by the Children’s Home.
I opened the door and I saw the poor, pitiful, skeletal looking
children just lying there. They
usually wore only shirts that in effect were actually rags.
Every day thirty of them died.
Every day a farmer’s wagon drove from the Children’s Home to
pick up the dead bodies. Their
skeletal bodies were piled on the wagon like wood and then they drove
off to be buried. They were thrown in with the other dead in the mass graves.
When you passed by such a wagon you didn’t know if you should
look at or look away. It
just broke your heart.”
It was not long afterwards that the Partisans drove up to the
Children’s Home complex with trucks and loaded all of the surviving
children on board. The
children themselves and all of the adults in the camp knew that the
children were being taken away and they screamed and cried after one
another. The children,
because in spite of leaving this place of suffering did not want to go
and leave a grandfather or friend behind who was their last connection
with their families and the life they had once known, and the others
because they knew only too well that the children faced a dark and
unknown future that would forever exclude those who loved them.
All of the crying, weeping, screaming and pleading had no effect.
As soon as a truck was filled with children it drove away.
In one day, seven hundred and fifty children were taken away and
vanished without a trace. The
inmates at Rudolfsgnad were convinced they were being taken to Russia.
Many an old grandfather or grandmother could not cope with losing
their grandchildren now after all they had gone through together in the
hope that their parents were still alive somewhere.
For them this was more than they could bear.
Some of them hung themselves or jumped into the Tisza River to
escape the horror that burdened their hearts that was beyond bearing.
The children had been their last reason for living.
Why go on with more suffering and starvation?
Later word came that the children were taken to Serbian villages
and placed in orphanages and raised as “Serbian communists”.
The dead Swabians could not be buried in the cemetery.
They were buried in the same place outside of the camp where
animals that had died had been interred.
Every day a farmer’s wagon drove through the village and picked
up the dead at each of the houses.
There were usually seven or eight of them that he drove out to a
mass grave that had been dug for them.
There was a mass grave dug for each day.
Anyone who came across the wagon would stand there with his heart
in his throat seeing the skeletal bodies heaped upon one another and
knowing that eventually one day the wagon would come for him and the
thousands of others who were still alive and take them to their own mass
grave. One day in the month
of January in 1946 there were one hundred and thirteen who were picked
up and buried like this. Mothers
were not allowed to accompany the bodies of their children, nor the
children their dead parents. No
one was allowed to know where the grave of a loved one was to be found.
After several thousand Swabian inmates were buried and there was
unused space new transports of thousands of women and children from
smaller camps scattered across the Banat were sent here and were
exterminated like those who had come before them and in the process
emptied the other camps that could then be closed.
This continued to the end of 1947.
In that same year four hundred persons from the Untersteiermark
were brought here who had been dragged off to a camp in Croatia in 1946
and had remained there for some time. Most of them were citizens of Austria. Instead of sending them across the nearby border of Austria
at the end of the war they were brought to the swamplands along the
Tisza River. Only
fifty-seven of them would survive.
With the exception of three men all the rest were women and
children. They had to
endure the same fate as the Danube Swabians in Yugoslavia until the
closure of the camps in 1948 when they were sent to a prisoner of war
camp in Neusatz. On March
29, 1948 they were repatriated to Austria and on that day they were
loaded on cattle cars and sent across the frontier.
Complaints brought against the inhuman treatment the Swabians
received brought no relief. In
fact it only became worse for the individuals who dared to raise them.
On one occasion in 1946 three Swabian women complained to the
camp commander that they had been raped most brutally by Partisan
guards. The camp commander
became furious because the three Swabian women were in no position to
raise charges of sexual abuse against Serbian Partisans who were
entitled to use them in any manner they desired and the commander turned
them over to the same Partisans who had molested them to do so again.
As additional punishment they were imprisoned for nine days and
were given no food during that time.
In the same way the brutalities continued against the Swabians
and the torture, abuse and shootings had no end.
There were few nights when Partisans did not carry out shootings
in various parts of the camp, while others sexually abused women.
The feeling of helplessness and despair drove many to suicide.
In order to end their sufferings some chose suicide.
There were grandmothers who could no longer watch their
grandchildren starve and took them in their arms and jumped into the
Tisza River.
Beginning in the spring of 1946 slave laborers from the camp
could be “rented” privately for fifty Dinar a day.
This regulation in effect reconstituted the slave trade of the
far distant past. And yet
because of it, countless persons were able to save their lives.
Many of the “buyers” who showed up for these public auctions
were Serbian friends of the Swabians who rescued them from their misery
for a time and assisted them in their physical recovery with rations and
food. Every Swabian was
grateful to be chosen, even if he would have to work hard and long, he
would at least finally be able to eat to his heart’s content.
To be sold as a slave was good fortune and in thousands of cases
it was simply a matter of saving their lives.
Now the general public was allowed to bring parcels to the camp. One house was separated from the rest of the camp and
surrounded with barbed wire and the parcels were delivered there.
Serbian and Hungarian neighbors and friends brought food and
clothing to the Swabians that they knew.
In this way, they too saved their lives.
In close proximity to the “parcel house”, groups of Swabian
inmates would gather hoping against hope to see if there was a parcel
for them. Partisan guards
would break up these groups with clubs and rifle butts.
No one was allowed to speak to those who brought parcels.
The next day the Partisans opened the parcels.
Most of them were half empty when they were given to the
recipient.
Soon after the first parcels arrived from America.
Countrymen living there had heard of the sufferings in
Rudolfsgnad and committed themselves to providing help.
Here and there some items in the parcel would be missing, but the
inmate received something. When
it came to clothes it would lead to a nightly clandestine escape from
the camp and the clothes would be sold for food and other provisions.
This help from America, often small that usually lasted for only
a day was the nicest thing that these human beings had experienced in
the years they had spent in the camps.
The Yugoslavian government officials were informed that at the
Yalta Conference involving the Big Three the forced emigration of the
Danube Swabian population from Yugoslavia at the end of the war would
not be acceptable. The
“new” Yugoslavia decided it had the right to do what it wanted with
its Danube Swabian population. They
were outside of the law, and they had much labor to provide and remain
in camps from which they would not be released except by death.
In the face of this uncertainty, the former member of parliament
Dr. Wilhelm Neuner who was an inmate at the camp in Rudolfsgand wrote an
official letter of complaint to the President of Yugoslavia and mailed
it from a nearby village in the summer of 1946, sending copies to the
accredited ambassadors of the Great Powers in Belgrade.
He requested that the ongoing murder of innocent Danube Swabian
civilians come to an end in this second year since the year of the war
who still remained and were without protection because they had lost
their right of citizenship. The camp commander was aware of his action.
On August 8, 1946 he was taken from his quarters and after a
short trial in the presence of the camp authorities he was condemned to
death for his false report. But
his death would not be by an execution squad.
He was to be locked in a cellar and not be given food and left to
starve to death. Carrying
out the full verdict of the court, Dr. Neuner was immediately locked up
in a dark cellar in which he could not stand up or lie down.
The cellar had a low ceiling and was damp.
After eleven days he was brought to the Secret Police prison in
Belgrade. All he had
accomplished by revealing the situation in the camps was that the
functionaries at Rudolfsgnad were transferred and new commander was sent
to take his place to oversee the liquidation program.
Eventually,
the inmates began to escape. But
often, the new Serbian colonists apprehended the escapees; either out in
the fields or on the roads and even at the border who promptly brought
them back to the camp. This
dampened the desire to flee on the part of others planning to do so.
But it did so for only for a short time. Those who were brought back were terribly abused and
mistreated and became physical wrecks and most of them could not
contemplate escape again.