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Sajmište concentration camp

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The Sajmište concentration camp was the German concentration camp in Independent State of Croatia, and in the beginning was almost exclusive for Serbian Jews. Most of the inmates were Serbian opponents of the ocupation and Serbian Roma. The number of inmates is estimated at 100.000. At least 40,000 Serbian and 8,000 Jewish victims perished in it. The camp was formed in December 1941. and shut down in September 1944.

The Sajmište Camp

The majority of Serbian Jews were killed in the Sajmište camp. There is no precise information and documentation is almost non-existent, yet it is estimated that the number of Jewish victims comes to at least 8,000. The camp was formed on the left bank of the Sava by the railway bridge at the entrance into Belgrade where the pre-war trade fair was located. This is where the name Sajmište originated. This territory which was, at that time, deserted, uninhabited and marshy, was several kilometers from Zemun and formed a part of NDH (Independent State of Croatia) territory, so the Germans asked for it to be given to them.

The commander, Androfer, his assistant and guards were SS-men. Supplies were provided by the "Department of Social Care and Social Institutions of Belgrade’s Municipal Authorities". At the beginning of December 1941, German authorities called upon Jews in Belgrade to report to the Special Police and to hand over their house keys. From December 8th until 12th, Germans took them to Sajmiste. Conditions in the camp were extremely difficult - the damp and the cold, hunger and epidemics. A Jewish source says:

"The food was appalling and often not even the minimal amount of food was supplied. In Nedić’s units there were people who were no better than the Germans themselves."

As camp inmates starved and froze to death, Jewish men (the number is unknown) were led away to be shot by German firing squads in Belgrade. They were killed in the same manner, in the same place and by the same people as were the Banjica prisoners. After all men were shot, 6,280 women and children were killed in a special gas truck on their way to Belgrade and buried in Jajinci. A company "Obnova" purchased the clothes of those. Some were led away to camps in other countries (numbers and destination are unknown). When the number of imprisoned Jews began to decrease, Serbian prisoners and others began to arrive.

All Jews in that camp were liquidated before August 1942, and the Germans declared Belgrade "Judenrein".

Another surviving Serbian camp inmate, wrote in his book of memoirs:

"Several thousand Jews passed through the Sajmište camp... Long lines of sad histories were written on the walls of the pavilions and in many places artistic portraits were completed. For days we returned to these final traces of thousands of people. There were surviving Serbians who told us various details about the life of the Jews in Sajmište and who had allowed the Jews to write their final parting thoughts and vows."

Aftermath

As of 2006 Sajmište is still not a memorial center. On February 11, 1993, the European parliament adopted the Resolution on European and International Protection of Concentration Camps as Historical Monuments. But it seems this does not pertain to camp Sajmište. Sajmište, the largest Jewish execution camp in Serbia, is not even listed among the names of the 22 largest camps for Jews in Europe in the Memorial Center Jad Vashem in the Hall of Memoirs in Jerusalem. Of all the camps in the former Yugoslavia, Jasenovac is the only name listed. Initiative to create a memorial center was initiated in April 2006.

Before the war there were 10,400 Jews in Belgrade and roughly 16,000 in the whole of Serbia. Around 90% were killed in the Holocaust.

In 1944, Sajmište was hit by U.S. bombers in raids, which killed 80 people at the camp and injured 170. The bombers' intended target was the nearby railway station.

References

  • Encyclopaedia Judaica edited by Cecil Roth, Geoffrey Wigoder, Raphaël Posner, Louis I. Rabinowitz Keter Publishing House 1978
  • The Second World War: A Complete History by Sir Martin Gilbert Owl Books 2004
  • The Crimes of the Fascist Occupants and Their Collaborators Against Jews in Yugoslavia by Savez jevrejskih opština Jugoslavije, Zdenko Löwenthal 1957 Federation of Jewish Communities of the Federative People's Republic of Yugoslavia 1957
  • Briha: Flight to the Homeland by Efrayim Dekkel Herzl Press 1973
  • The Encyclopedia of Jewish Life Before and During the Holocaust by Shmuel Spector, Geoffrey Wigoder Contributor Elie Wiesel NYU Press 2001

Footnotes

  1. The Holocaust: The Fate of European Jewry, 1932-1945 by Yahil, Leny translated by Ina R . Friedman, Haya Galai Oxford University Press US 1990
  2. National Socialist Extermination Policies: Contemporary German Perspectives and Controversies by Ulrich C. Herbert Berghahn Books 2000 page 178
    Even as the murder of male Jews was underway in the fall 1941, the military administration chief, SS-Gruppenfuehrer Harald Turner, enacted the first measures for interning Jewish women and children in the Sajmiste concentration camp near Belgrade: "Preliminary work for Jewish ghetto in Belgrade completed. Following the liquidation of the remaining male Jews, already ordered by the commander in Serbia, the ghetto will contain approximately 10,000 Jewish women and children".
  3. War Of Extermination: The German Military In World War II by Hannes Heer, Klaus Naumann Berghahn Books 2004 page 49
    And yet Wermacht had justified even the interning of women and children with absurd military pretext. Counterintelligence (IC/AO) in Saloniki - which Kurt Waldheim would joing a few months later - justified dragging women and children into the Sajmište concentartion camp by insisting: "All Jews and Gypsies are being transferred to a concentration camp near Semlin... They are clearly informants for the rebels"
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