Posted on 10/23/2016 1:35:44 PM PDT by Ravnagora
70 YEARS SINCE
THE KRAGUJEVAC MASSACRE of October 1941:
A Legacy of 'Never Forget'
German soldiers escorting Serbian civilians from Kragujevac and its surrounding area to be executed in October 1941. Photo: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
The policy was the Nazi response to the first successful organized uprising in occupied Europe. The Serbian resistance forces under the command of Serbias General Draza Mihailovich not only threatened Germanys southern flank in Europe and her occupation of Serbia after Yugoslavia fell to Hitler in April of 1941, but critically delayed Hitlers planned attack on the Soviet Union that summer. The Germans retaliated, but it wasnt in the usual way - man to man, soldier to soldier. The method of Nazi retaliation initiated against the Serbs was unprecedented, and the target was the civilian population. Hitlers aim was to suppress the Serbian insurgency against the Nazis and to do so by the most brutal means. He intended to literally terrorize the Serbs into submission by going after their most vulnerable citizens, and he decreed his intention via the new law in Serbia that took effect in the late summer of 1941.
Although there are so many documented atrocities that were committed against civilians during the course of World War Two throughout Europe, there are still those atrocities that stand out as singular examples of mans capacity for inhumanity against man. The Kragujevac Massacre of October 1941 is one of those singular examples, and it would have a profound effect on the way that General Mihailovich and his Chetnik forces would conduct their military operations against the enemy German forces ever afterward.
On September 6, 1941, after a series of successful Chetnik attacks against German forces in western Serbia, Adolph Hitler issued the unprecedented reprisal decree that for every German killed, 100 Serbian hostages would be executed. For every German wounded, 50 Serbs would be shot. This decree was posted throughout Belgrade, Serbia on September 13, 1941.
General Boehme, the German Commanding General of the occupation forces in Serbia from September 16 to December 2 of 1941, issued three orders to supplement Hitlers decree. These orders were dated September 25, October 14, and November 10th of 1941. Order to the German Army in Serbia was the first of Boehmes orders, and it was unequivocal in its lack of mercy:
As a result of the Serbian rebellion, hundreds of German soldiers have been killed. Our losses will be enormous unless we crush the rebellion without mercy.
"Your task always is to be in total control of every village in this country in which German blood was shed also in 1914.
"The heavy hand of our retribution must be felt by the entire population of Serbia. Those who show them pity, thereby deny pity to their own. Any such person will be court-martialed, whoever he may be.
[Danau Zeitung, German newspaper]
October of that same year, 1941, would prove just how unequivocal the lack of German mercy against their chosen victims would turn out to be. At the end of September, continued Serbian successes against the advancing Wehrmacht forces in a Chetnik anti-Axis action that took place between Gornji Milanovac and Kragujevac in Serbia resulted in 10 Germans killed and 26 Germans wounded. The German forces that were deployed at that time in the Serbian city of Kragujevac were under the command of Major Paul Koenig. In response to the German casualties, Koenig ordered a comprehensive reprisal to be carried out against the Serbian civilians living in Kragujevac, even though no attacks had been made in that city against the Wehrmacht!
The reprisals began on October 19th as Germany military forces burned several villages and several hundred Serbian civilians were executed in the Groznice area. But, that did not satisfy the Nazis. On October 20th, 2,300 men and young boys were rounded up, all between the ages of 16 and 60. In this group were included civil servants from city offices that the Germans raided, who were not engaged in any military actions. But the crowning atrocity was the inclusion of 300 innocent children from the high school and 18 teachers who were ripped from their classrooms. On October 21, 1941, those lives were mercilessly ended. All in all, the estimated number of civilians who were executed in Kragujevac and the surrounding areas in those couple of days in October of 1941 is 2,800.
The Nazi execution of Serbian civilians at Kragujevac in October 1941. Photo: Wikimedia Commons
The reprisal quota was indeed fulfilled and more so. When an inquiry was made as to why civilians in Kragujevac had been chosen for execution when there had been no German casualties in that city, the answer was simply that not enough hostages to fulfill the quota had been found elsewhere.
In memory of the innocent Serbian children who were executed that October 21st day in 1941 in Kragujevac, poet Desanka Maksimovic wrote the following tribute:
The Bloody Fairytale
It was in a land of peasants
in the mountainous Balkans,
that a company of schoolchildren
died a martyrs death
in one day.
They were all born
in the same year,
their school days passed the same,
taken together to the same festivities,
vaccinated against the same diseases,
and all died on the same day.
It was in a land of peasants
in the mountainous Balkans,
that a company of schoolchildren
died a martyrs death
in one day.
And fifty-five minutes
before the moment of death
the company of small ones
sat at its desk
and the same difficult assignments
they solved: how far can a
traveler go if he is on foot
and so on.
Their thoughts were full
of the same numbers
and throughout their notebooks in school bags
lay an infinite number
of senseless As and Fs.
A pile of the same dreams
and the same secrets,
patriotic and romantic,
they clenched in the depths of their pockets.
And it seemed to everyone
that they would run
for a long time beneath the blue arch
until all the assignments in the world
were completed.
It was in a land of peasants
in the mountainous Balkans,
that a company of small ones
died a martyrs death
in one day.
Whole rows of boys
took each other by the hand
and from their last class
went peacefully to slaughter
as if death was nothing.
Whole lines of friends
ascended at the same moment
to their eternal residence.
Desanka Maksimovic
*****
It is almost indescribable how deeply this tragedy impacted on the people of Serbia. The impact on General Mihailovich was particularly profound. Though he had participated in several wars, beginning with the Balkan Wars of 1912 and 1913, followed by World War One and now World War Two, he now realized that to continue to attack German occupational forces indiscriminately would mean national suicide for his beloved Serbian people, as the October tragedy proved. Mihailovic, who as a participant in the First World War had witnessed his beloved Serbian nation losing one third of its population and her army suffering enormous casualties, with 450,000 active soldiers at the beginning of the war declining to 60,000 by the time of the Salonica Front breakthrough of September 1918, would adjust his resistance policy to consider the benefit and effectiveness of each action against the German enemy in proportion to the human cost in Serbian civilian lives. General Draza Mihailovich genuinely cared about human cost and would conduct himself for the rest of the war accordingly.
Such wartime decisions are testament to just how completely dedicated to his nation and the welfare of her people General Mihailovich was and remained. Those to whom the tragedy of October 1941 in Kragujevac never meant anything, later attacked Mihailovic for not killing enough Germans. The people that rendered these charges against General Mihailovich would later prove to be of inferior character, while Mihailovich would emerge as a man of true character, not only as a military commander, but as a truly good human being in the badness that is war. Even as he was being charged falsely by the Allies for not being active enough against the enemy, he would save hundreds of Allied lives from sure death at the hands of the enemy when he could have walked away and left them to the wolves.
Though the legacy of Kragujevac remains a tragic reminder of the inhumane nature of war, so, too, the legacy of General Mihailovich and his thoughtful response to such a tragedy transcends such brutality and reminds us that even in war there is humanity.
Aleksandra Rebic
October 2016
Monument to the Serbian victims of the Kragujevac Massacre by the Nazis in October of 1941. Photo courtesy of Wikipedia Commons.
Ping.
And Clinton bombed this WWII allied member to get his BJ story off the front page...
There were few corners of Europe the Nazis didn’t stain with the blood of innocents. It must never be allowed to happen again.
Ravnagora, it’s too painful to read the whole story. I have heard it in detail from the granddaughter of a Serb farmer turned fighter who actually survived the Concentration Camp. Grandmother and other villagers survived destruction of village by hiding in forests. Such strong and simple people in one lifetime endured Nazism, Communism, Fascism and today “South American” style corruption that caused the granddaughter to leave her beloved home/family to seek her fortune in America.
And Germans wonder why so many people are still pi$$ed at them
Memory Eternal!
Vyechnaya Pamyat!
And now the muslims run wild over Europe our leaders sit on their nuts watching the world burn with the rise of the Islamonazis!!
Yep, and this is exactly why the Russians have no reason to trust us today. Bill Clinton is responsible.
I had an elderly neighbor years ago who emigrated to the USA from Serbia after WW2. She told me that without any explanation, the NAZIs came into her village one morning and took her husband with all the other men and teenage boys and marched them out of the village. None of them were ever seen again. I never pressed her for more info because even at 87 years of age I could tell it was still a very painful memory for her. I have occasionally wondered the reason why the Germans killed all those innocent men and boys, and guess this explains it.
Very sad and tragic.
Generally ignorant of Nazi over-running of Yugoslavia, I noticed the name Mihailovich on a old, finish-worn, 380 FN pistol I'd bought at a gun show.
F**king Kraut bastards. Every time I hear some idiot moaning about how horrible Dresden was I point them to The Holocaust and to lesser known stories like this. If The Allies had turned every German city into a Dresden in 1943 instead of 1945 the war in Europe would have been over a lot sooner.
I just finished teaching a class on Leningrad during the war. As bad as Hitler was, as evil as the Nazis were/are, Stalin and his commie buddies were worse by a lot. As was Mao.
OUTSTANDING post; thread. Thanks.
History ALERT/BUMP!
from a redit poster...
what do you know about history that most other people dont know? (self.history)
[]raptorhead 205 points 1 year ago
Most people are surprised to hear that the British, after WW2, shipped many allied Serbians who fought under British command off to be executed by the communists in Yugoslavia.
During WW2, the British commanded some Serbian partisans. My grandfather and many other men who I know served in those units. After the war, the British put the Serb units into a camp near Eboli in Italy. They were prisoners. The Brits were negotiating with the communists in Yugoslavia. They were shipping men primarily affiliated with the royalists back to be imprisoned or executed as part of the post-war dealings between the Allies and the communists. The UK government took men who fought against the Nazis and sent them to the communists to be killed.
My grandfather and others were able to escape by tunneling out of the camp, past the fences and the tanks that were positioned inward. It’s a little known betrayal on the part of the Brits against men who suffered horrific tragedies at the hands of the Nazis.
My grandfather lived in Kragujevic. Before he joined the fighting, other partisans in the hills had attacked some Nazi soldiers. They slaughtered the Germans... cut their genitals off and stuffed them in their mouths. Hitler was furious and ordered a massacre. 2,000 people were made to dig their graves and were machine-gunned. My grandfather wasn’t hit and survived by hiding under bodies. Drenched in blood, he escaped into the woods when it was clear. He found a partisan unit under British command. Luckily, he was able to survive both the massacre, the fighting, the British betrayal and eventually make it to America.
I grew up hearing these stories from the men who lived them. There wasn’t any lingering resentment against the British. War is hell. I’m just glad so many were able to escape and make it to America. Oddly enough, most of those men and their families eventually made it to the British sector in West Germany where they lived in refugee camps until they were able to move somewhere else. My mother was born in the camps. They came to the US in 1958.
I’m happy to answer any questions if anyone has some. My grandfather passed in 2013 at the age of 92. He worked full time as a shoe repair up until two weeks before he died.
https://www.reddit.com/r/history/comments/33e2gc/what_do_you_know_about_history_that_most_other/
PIng
Clinton killed thousands of noncombatant women and children to distract from his infidelity.
He should be tried in court for that.
Thank you for this excellent post.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.