Introduction:
(For those readers who first heard the story of Tiszalók in the first posting on
this site (Tiszalok_Labour_Camp) we now
offer what we believe is the last act of the sufferings and destruction of the
Danube Swabian communities following the Second World War.
In this Second Act we present a summary of the information
provided in the 1994 edition of the Hauskalendar of the Ungarn Deustche.
The term “Germans of Hungary” is used because ethnic German populations in
Hungary other than the Danube Swabians were also involved in this injustice
perpetrated against all of them.)
Tiszalók: Act Two
The
ethnic Germans of Hungary who were interned at Tiszalók were made up of two groups
of men; those who volunteered to join the SS and German Wehrmacht on the basis of
the Accord signed by the Royal Hungarian Government and the Third Reich which took
place February 24, 1942 and May 22, 1943 and the vast majority of them who were
forcibly conscripted into the Waffen-SS in April 14, 1944 to serve for the
duration of the war in the Reich forces through a special accord signed by the
Regent of Hungary, Admiral Nicolas Horthy. This conscription involved those
seventeen years of age and older and was compulsory throughout Hungary.
Following their registration and mustering the first men were called up to report
for duty in early July. These men recruited in 1944 by and large remained in
Hungary for a few weeks of training, were poorly armed and equipped and sent to
the front with many of them serving in the defence of Budapest which was totally
surrounded by the Red Army. Casualty rates were inordinately high among them on
the Eastern Front in the last months of the war and those who survived were
subjected to long foot marches into captivity.
They
suffered from hunger and cold in the lumber camps in the forests of Karilaa, the
mines of Siberia, in the forests and swamps of the Caucasus, the coal mines of the
Donets Basin, the reconstruction of Stalingrad or slave labour in Kazakhstan. At
times these men were “counted” as Germans and at other times as Hungarians. While
other prisoners of war received parcels from home, they received none and did not
know where their families were or what had happened to them. They also received
no mail.
In 1948
the vast majority of the Hungarian prisoners of war in Russia were released. The
ethnic Germans among them were made to remain behind. As the German prisoners of
war were being returned in 1949 some of the ethnic Germans from Hungary were sent
to special camps where Hungarian officers, police and others unfriendly to the new
regime in power in Hungary were imprisoned. The trainloads of German prisoners of
war returning home to Germany were searched on their arrival in Frankfurt-on-Oder
for any ethnic Germans from Hungary who might have been among them and they were
sent back to Russia to this Hungarian prisoner of war camp.
In
December 1950 all of the inmates were placed in the custody of Hungarian
government officials by the Russians and sent to Hungary. Instead of sending them
to their families they were interned with political undesirables and were
forbidden to have any contact with the outside world. From February to March
1951, over 1,200 of them were sent to Tiszalók to construct a dam on the Tisza
River for a hydro project and provide irrigation for the Hartobagy puszta.
In
quickly erected barracks of tarpaper they were put to hard labour with very little
in the way of provisions or heat. About 400 of them were transferred to
Kazinzbarcika to work with 500 Hungarian prisoners in the construction of a
chemical works. The men were subjected to long interrogations and hearings for
which they were forced to stand and were beaten and tortured. It was all part of
their workday. Things were even worse for those punished for minor infractions of
camp rules who were placed in the notorious “dungeon.”
Families, most of which had been expelled to Germany, were informed of their
return to Hungary and they looked forward to a reunion at Christmas. When nothing
happened the families began a letter writing campaign to all official agencies
dealing with prisoners of war. Dr. Ludwig Leber a member of parliament from
Württemberg appealed to the government in Stuttgart, the Bonn government, the US
High Commissioner and the International Red Cross in Geneva for their assistance
and help. Dr. Konrad Adenauer would also become supportive of Dr. Leber’s
efforts.
On March
7, 1952 word was received that 43 of the men had been released and sent to
Bishopswerde in what was now known as East Germany, the DDR. Lutheran World
Relief workers learned about the secret camp at Tiszalók and Kazincbarcika and the
slave labour of the inmates from these men. Their release of this information was
the first public acknowledgment of their situation. The President of the DDR said
the men in question were war criminals and the Hungarian Prime Minister Rakosi
kept quiet.
With the
death of Stalin on March 5, 1953 new hope emerged. The release of another 240 men
to rejoin their families in the DDR in mid June 1953 encouraged even more hope for
the others. The new Hungarian Prime Minister Nagy set a new course and sought to
close the internment camp.
Dr.
Leber spoke to Nagy personally by telephone in response to a mother’s urging in
August 1953 and plans were made for action by the end of October 1953.
The
prisoners knew nothing of what was transpiring. In August all of the remaining
men were assembled back in Tiszalók. On Sunday, October 4, 1953 the new camp
commander ordered an assembly of all of the camp inmates and informed them that
their labour would be increased. The prisoners however demanded to know when they
would be released. During that afternoon all of those who had dared to ask
questions were taken out of the camp and imprisoned elsewhere. In response to
that the other prisoners gathered in the camp courtyard and chanted louder and
louder for the release of their friends and threatened to go on a work and hunger
strike. Night began to fall but the prisoners continued with their chanting even
though the camp was now totally surrounded by armoured vehicles. The prisoners
were sprayed with fire hoses. A police officer shot his pistol in the air and
brought more troops inside of the camp that began firing into the crowd of
prisoners. Five men were killed and an unknown number of others were wounded.
Two
weeks later the first transport of prisoners to be released was assembled.
Between October 23rd and December 4th, 1953 six transports
with around 1,000 ethnic Germans from Hungary passed through the transit camp at
Pidding in Bavaria into the Federal Republic of Germany. John and Henry
Heiczerder of Ecsény in Somogy County were in the last transport.
Tiszalók: Act Three
Introduction
In this Third Act we provide a summary and translation of an article entitled:
Dokumentation Eines Leidensweg 1951-1953 by unknown author.
Following the Second World War those ethnic Germans from Hungary still in the
hands of the Soviet military had to pay the political debts of Germany’s National
Socialism. This was done through brutal reprisals, internment in camps,
deportation to forced labour in the Soviet Union or construction work in the
interior of Russia and suffered the loss of their citizenship and lived “outside
of the law,” and in ineligible for all due process. Old nationalist scores would
be settled in the name of ideological correctness.
What
follows deals with the sufferings of ethnic Germans from Hungary, prisoners of war
in Russia and later in Hungary from 1951-1953; while for some it would last until
1955.
During
the Second World War, Hungary was an ally of the Third Reich. The Hungarian
government and a majority of the population were opposed to the provisions of the
Treaty of Trianon in 1919 and its dismemberment of “Greater Hungary” into the
various successor states. The First Vienna Accords between the Third Reich and
Hungary in 1938 resulted in the return of the areas of Slovakia heavily populated
by Magyars, as well as the Carpatho-Ukraine and northern Transylvania. In April
1941 Hungary also absorbed the central and northern Batschka of former
Yugoslavia. As a result of this annexation of territory the Hungarian Army
participated in the invasion of the Soviet Union and the campaign that followed.
The
various ethnic German groups in Hungary were solicited and recruited to serve in
the German Wehrmacht and Waffen-SS. The pact between Hungary and Germany allowed
for the voluntary recruitment of the ethnic Germans in Hungary from 1942 to 1944.
After the German occupation of Hungary in March 1944 all ethnic German men living
in Hungary were called up to serve in German military units. They would become
the scapegoats behind the expulsion of the ethnic German populations of Hungary
after December 22,1945.
A
portion of the ethnic German population fled from Hungary in 1944 as a result of
the Red Army advance across its borders. Those who remained had to endure various
forms of reprisals. From 1946-1948 a large portion of the ethnic Germans were
expelled. Those who remained had their property confiscated and were oppressed at
every turn. They were forbidden to speak German and the younger generation was
encouraged to assimilate as a means of survival.
The
ethnic Germans of Hungary who had served in the German military were assigned to
reparations work as prisoners of war in the Soviet Union despite the Geneva
Conventions. When all of the Hungarian prisoners of war in Russia were released
in 1948 the ethnic Germans from Hungary were considered to simply be Germans and
were not released with them. In 1949 when the ethnic German prisoners of war were
released they were told that they were Hungarians because they had been born in
Hungry and as a result they were held back again. After five years of Russian
captivity the ethnic Germans from Hungary were taken out of the camps in 1950 and
assembled at a transit camp in Kiew: Voronezh. In December 1950 they were
transported by cattle-car to the Soviet/Hungarian border and handed over to the
Hungarian State Security forces. These 1,500 ethnic German prisoners of war were
transported to Budapest where they were incarcerated in a secret police
interrogation facility in Tolonc. They were placed under strict security measures
and slept on straw mattresses on the floor for the next few months. They faced
constant interrogations and beatings. They faced all of this after five years of
imprisonment, hunger and suffering of all kinds. The best years of their youth
had been lost to them forever.
On
arriving home in Hungary they were anxious for a swift re-union with their loved
ones and a new life of freedom. Instead they were imprisoned again and began a
new life of suffering with no end in sight. After repeated interrogations they
were sent to Vác, north of Budapest where they were crammed into an old factory
for four weeks.
During
this time barracks were hastily erected at Tiszalók in eastern Hungary to
accommodate them. At the end of January 1951 they were brought to partially
completed facilities close to their future labour station. The barracks had no
heat, few had doors and windows, the roof was made with tarpaper, the yard was
full of moss and mud in which men sank to their knees. It was also the case in
winter because of the water table level.
The
Tisza River takes a sharp turn between Tiszalók and Tiszadada and it was here
where the German-Hungarian prisoners of war were put to slave labour. Here at the
camp they were made aware that they were no longer prisoners of war but war
criminals. They no longer had a future “at home” and their free labour would
build the greatest dam in the Hungary.
At the
beginning of February 1951 the work began with picks, shovels and spades in cold
rainy weather. The earth was loaded on conveyances pulled by horses. In the
evening the prisoners who were soaked and wet were finally allowed to return to
the barracks. They awoke at 6:00 am and arrived a work at 7:00 am. Each day,
each man received a half litre of watery malt coffee, 600 grams of bread and 50
grams of marmalade. There were warm meals at lunch and supper, usually soup with
20 grams of horsemeat. This was not enough nutrition in terms of the hard labour
they had to perform and the energy they had to expend.
Contact
with civilian workers on the project was strenuously forbidden and made virtually
impossible. But with time such contacts were made anyway. In spite of the
authorities’ efforts to hide the fact that the inmates were prisoners of war from
Russia the civilian workers managed to figure it out.
The men
were interrogated regularly. Several of them were forced to sign confessions
under torture. Others were taken away and never heard from again.
During
their captivity in Hungary they were forbidden to write to their families. No one
was to know that they were under strict security in labour camps in Hungary.
On
October 4, 1953 the camp commander ordered an assembly of the camp inmates because
some men had protested against his refusal to allow them to send and receive
letters. They also wanted to know when they would be released. Many of them had
now spent nine years in captivity as prisoners of war. They received no answers
to their questions and were sent back to their barracks.
Eight to
ten of the prisoners who had acted as spokesmen for the others were shortly
afterwards apprehended one by one and locked up. As a result the other prisoners
reassembled in the camp yard and shouted for the release of their comrades. The
civilians at work nearby heard the shouts and the cries of the prisoners.
The
protesting prisoners were ordered to return to their barracks by the Hungarian
officials but the prisoners refused to move and continued to shout and chant for
the release of their friends. Armed security personnel surrounded the prisoners
on all sides. The commander ordered his armed men to take action. Water cannons
were used against the prisoners to force them to disperse. Some of the men
dragged out tables from their barracks for protection and stood their ground and
the firemen faded from view.
Shortly
afterwards a new group of fire fighters approached accompanied by armed soldiers.
The prisoners marched in their direction and the fire fighters panicked and
dropped their hoses and fled from the camp. The officer in charge of the security
of the camp known as the Boxer because of his brutality entered the camp yard and
shot one of the prisoners at point blank range. With that shot other soldiers who
formed a ring around the camp inmates opened fire and the men headed for cover
wherever possible.
Later
the camp officials claimed they resorted to shooting only because they were
attempting to prevent a mass breakout by the prisoners. Five men lay dead: Georg
Gazafy of Batsch aged 49 years; Matthias Geistlinger of Kaltenstein aged 36 years;
Josef Schutz of Budaörs aged 28 years; Hans Tangel of Bardhaus aged 32 years and
Josef Widlhofer from Ödenburg (Sopron) aged 29 years.
There
were also many wounded. It is a miracle that only five of them were killed.
Those with minor wounds did not report them for fear of being dragged off
somewhere. The badly wounded were transported away in trucks. None of them were
ever heard from again. Years later civilians who lived in the area reported that
they had been shot and buried in open fields.
After
the terrible evening of October 4, 1953 the camp and barracks were a mess, broken
windows, smashed bunks, bedding and clothes strewn about. Security guards armed
with machine pistols stood at the barrack doors.
The next
morning some military officers arrived from Budapest. They interrogated the camp
inmates for four days. Two of the prisoners were condemned to five or six years
in prison by a military court in Budapest and were blamed for the starting the
prisoner uprising. They were imprisoned in the same facility as Cardinal
Mindszenty, Count Esterházy and the Lutheran Bishop Lajos Ordas. In December 1955
the two men were finally released. This was not due to the grace of the Hungarian
government but as a result of the pressure of the Allied Powers. The Hungarian
government could no longer hide the fact of the fate of the ethnic German
Hungarian prisoners of war.
The
prisoners at Tiszalók were released shortly after the investigation ended. The
first of several transports of prisoners of war were transferred to West Germany.