War crimes
Monument in Novi Sad dedicated to killed Jewish and Serb civilians in the 1942 raid.
Monument of the 1942 raid victims near Žabalj
During the four years of occupation, the Axis forces committed numerous war crimes against civilian population: about 50,000 people in Vojvodina were murdered and about 280,000 were arrested, raped or tortured. 1 The victims belonged to all ethnic groups that lived in Vojvodina, but the largest number of the victims was of Serb, Jewish, and Roma ethnicity. The total number of the people killed by the occupants between 1941 and 1944 in the entire Vojvodina was 55,285, including:2
Victims in BačkaThe total number of the killed people in Bačka was 19,573, including:2
Of the total number of the victims (excluding the killed members of the resistance movement), 11,521 were men, 3,768 were women, 1,283 were old people, and 1,327 were children. Victims in BanatThe total number of the killed people in Banat was 7,513, including:2
Of the total number of the victims (excluding the killed members of the resistance movement), 4,010 were men, 631 were women, 243 were old people, and 271 were children. Victims in SyrmiaThe total number of the killed people in Syrmia was 28,199, including:2
Of the total number of the victims (excluding the killed members of the resistance movement), 14,484 were men, 3,662 were women, 1,279 were old people, and 2,172 were children. 1942 raidThe most notable war crime was the mass murder of the civilians, mostly of Serb and Jewish ethnicity, performed by the Hungarian Axis troops in 1942 raid in southern Bačka. Total number of civilians killed in the raid was 3,808, while places that were affected by the raid include Novi Sad, Bečej, Vilovo, Gardinovci, Gospođinci, Đurđevo, Žabalj, Lok, Mošorin, Srbobran, Temerin, Titel, Čurug, and Šajkaš. 3 The victims included 2,578 ethnic Serbs, 1,068 Jews, 64 Roma, 31 Rusyns, 21 Hungarians, and 15 Russians. In January 1942, by the order of officers lieutenant-general Ferenc Feketehalmy-Czeidner, major-general József Grassy, colonel László Deák and gendarmarie-captain Márton Zöldy numerous Serbian and Jewish civilians were murdered in the Bačka region of Vojvodina. Serbian nationalist historian Zvonimir Golubović in his book about the raid claimed that Horthy himself was aware of the raid and approved its being carried out4, despite this was denied half a century ago, immediately after WWII5678 9. When Horthy later ordered an investigation about the raid, the officers who had ordered the raid fled to Nazi Germany and returned only after the German Nazi regime occupied Hungary in 1944. They were executed after the war. In 1943, the Hungarian leaders attempted to revive relations with western Allies, thus as part of such aims, Hungary organized a trial to several officers that were among those responsible for the raid. 8 9 However, the officers were allowed to escape to Germany before their sentences were pronounced, and no matter that court proved their guilt, their sentences were not delivered since they were no longer in the country. 10 After the war, some of the individuals responsible for the raid were tried again by the new Communist government of Hungary (which sentenced them to death or to life in prison) and again in Yugoslavia, where they were sentenced to death again, and executed. László Deák and Miklos Horthy, who were also among those responsible for the raid, were never convicted. Liberation struggleThe resistance movement against Axis occupation was started in summer of 1941 by the communists. However, the resistance in Banat and Bačka was soon defeated, while resistance in Syrmia had more success. Syrmian resistance movement was pulped into a mass people's uprising and a large liberated territory (that included about 40 villages) was created in Syrmia. On liberated territory, a partisan authority was organized, which included mass anti-fascist organizations, publishing activity, and education. Experiences of the resistance movement in Syrmia were in summer of 1944 transferred to Banat and Bačka, therefore before Soviet Red Army arrived in October 1944, Vojvodina already had its new institutions of people's administration. 15,000 fighters of the resistance movement were killed during the liberation struggle. The liberation movement was organized into 18 Vojvodinian brigades divided into 3 squadrons. References
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