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Chapter 5
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Triumph of terrorism
By Avro Manhattan
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To complement the wholesale manhandling, torturing,
and legalized killing of the Ustashi, another terrible instrument,
perhaps the most execrable of all, struck with fears an already
terrorized population: the "punitive expeditions" carried out by
Pavelic's own special militia, the Ustashi, who in no time acquired such
an infamous notoriety as to equal the most abominable human monsters of
the past. These expeditions destroyed houses and villages, arrested,
tortured, plundered, and often massacred their inhabitants, usually
without even bothering about any excuse or appearance of legality. Whole
districts, such as Bosanska Krajina, Lika, Kordun, Banija, Gorski Kotar,
Srem, and regions of Slavonia, were completely laid waste by them.
Numerous small towns, such as Vojnic, Slunj, Korenica, Udbina, and Vrgin-Most,
were entirely destroyed, while wholesale massacres took place at a
number of places, such as Rakov Potok, Maksimir (near Zagreb), the
Vojnovic plateau at Bjelovar, the Osijek town park, and Jadovno in Lika.
At the last named place victims were wired together in groups of twenty,
taken to the edge of a 1000 feet cliff, where the Ustashi killed the
first persons only, so that they dragged the others down alive with
them.
Pavelic participated personally even against Croat
villages—e.g. on December 1, 1941, when Cerje, Pasnik, and Jesenje were
razed, on which occasion seven women, four children, and nine old men
were killed and thrown into a burning house; or in 1945, when the
village of Jakovlje was razed, after most of its inhabitants had been
murdered.
In April, 1941, in the village of Gudovac, 200 Serb
peasants were killed by Ustashi, followed by larger groups in the
villages of Stari Petrovac, in the district of Nova Gradiska, and in
Glina. There, in the early days of May, 1941, Ustashi from Karlovac,
Sisak, and Petrinja gathered together all males over fifteen years of
age, drove them in trucks outside the town, and executed them all.
Often the executions were committed in the homes of
the victims, with the most primitive weapons. Some Ustashi specialized
in disposing of their charges by crushing their skulls with hatchets, or
even with hammers. Incredible but authenticated atrocities were
committed wherever the Ustashi appeared. At Dubrovnik, Dalmatia, for
instance, Italian soldiers took pictures of an Ustashi wearing two
"necklaces." One was a string of cut-out eyes, the other of torn tongues
of murdered Serbs.[1]
Mass deportations and mass executions, mainly in
isolated small towns and villages, were well-planned operations. As a
rule, the procedure was a simple one. Ustashi authorities summoned
groups of Serbs under the pretext of recruitment for military service or
public works. Once rounded up, they were surrounded by detachments of
armed Ustashi, taken outside the village, and executed. In the
mountainous regions of Upper Dalmatia, like Bosnia and Herzegovina,
women and children were taken to remote spots and massacred. In Brcko,
the home town of Dzafer Kulenovic, Ustashi Deputy Prime Minister, the
prisoners were executed on bridges and then thrown into the river.
At the beginning of May, 1941, the Ustashi besieged
Glina, and, having gathered all Orthodox males over fifteen years of age
from Karlovac, Sisak, and Petrinja, drove them outside the town and
killed all 600 of them with guns, knives, and sledge-hammers. The
following day all the other Serbs were also murdered. The center of the
massacre was in the village of Bosanski Grabovac.
On August 3, 1941, over 3,000 Serbs were Likewise
massacred in Vrgin-Most. On July 29, 1941, Bozidar Cerovski, chief of
the Ustashi police in Zagreb, arrived in the locality of Vojnic; having
rounded up more than 3,000 Serbs from Krnjak, Krstinje, Siroka Reka,
Slunj, Rakovica, and other villages, he led them to Pavkovitch, where he
had them all massacred near a village mill. In the villages of Baska,
Perna, and Podgomolje, Bosanska Krupa district, in the summer of 1941,
540 women and children were locked in houses, which were then set on
fire.
In the village of Crevarevac about 600 people were
burned in their houses. In the district of Cazin, at Mlinici Smiljanic,
more than sixty women and children were burned to death. Five hundred
people were massacred at Bugojno. At Slavonska Pozega, 500 peasants,
brought from Bosnia, were
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Ustashi cutting the throat of one of their
Serbian Orthodox victims. Notice how a Ustashi is holding a
vessel to collect the first spurt of blood and thus prevent
their uniforms from being blood stained. The brutal
crime—one of many—look place near Cajaice in 1943. This type of execution was not
exceptional. Some Ustashi specialized in dispatching their
Orthodox prisoners in this manner. Catholic priests, friars,
and, indeed, even some of their pupils, followed
their example. The case of |
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Peter Brzica is undoubtedly one of the most incredible in
this category. Brzica was a law student and an ardent member
of the foremast Catholic organization called the Catholic
Crusaders. During the day and night of 29th August 1942,
Brzica cut the throats of 1300 prisoners in the
Concentration Camp of Jasenovac. He was rewarded with a gold
watch and proclaimed King of Cutthroats. Dr. Nikola Kilolic,
a Croat and a Catholic, was an eyewitness to the deed. |
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From left to right: Djuro Vranjesh, the
author, and Slanko Djokie. Djuro Vranjesh, Orthodox Serb, was born at
Selo Cetina, Velika, Dalmatia. His uncle, Illija A. Vranjes,
one day in July 1941 was arrested by a detachment of
Ustashi, who without even bothering to give any legal excuse
tortured him to death, hacking him to pieces, while still
alive. This they did with such horrifying fiendishness that
once he was finally dead, |
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his nephew, Djuro Vranjesh, seen
above, had to use a blanket in which to collect the chopped
members of the body. |
On the 30 January 1942 the Ustashi
descended on the village of Bosanska Ribnica, where Stanko
Djokic (above, right) lived with his family. While he was up
in the woods the Ustashi dragged his wife and her five
children to the banks of the nearby little river of Ribaica,
and without even asking them if they wanted to become
Catholics, massacred the lot. Six months later, when Stanko
Djokic came back, he found the six corpses of his family
still lying there where they had been killed. He buried them
with his own hands. |
killed. In some districts of Stem, in the summer of
1942, over 6,000 Serbs were killed. At Bihac, within one single day in
June, 1941, 2,000 Serbs were killed; while during July and August of the
same year over 12,000 more were massacred. In the Bosanska Krupa
district, in the summer of 1941, a total of 15,000 people were killed.
Such mass murders were carried out in the most
systematic fashion, and were often planned directly from Zagreb. At
times they were semi-legalized by statutory orders. For instance, On
October 2, 1941, Pavelic issued a "statutory order" that in any case of
attack against the Ustashi, as a reprisal, without any court procedure,
ten persons to be chosen by the police were to be shot. On October 30,
1943, in another "statutory order" he ordered reprisals by shooting,
hanging, or sending to concentration camps hostages to be chosen by the
police, together with their parents, children, and spouses. On June 30,
1944, he appointed a special Deputy for pronouncing such measures of
reprisal. Under these orders a large number of citizens were shot,
hanged, or taken to concentration camps without any trial. At Ruma on
August 14, 1942, for instance, ninety hostages were shot; at Sremska
Mitrovica, on August 19, 1942, another ninety; and at Vukovar, on August
24, 1942, 140 hostages.
The worst atrocities, strange as it may seem, were
carried out by members of the intelligentsia. The case of Peter Brzica
is undoubtedly one of the most incredible in this category. Peter Brzica
had attended the Franciscan College at Siroki Brijeg, Herzegovina, was a
law student, and a member of the Catholic organization of the Crusaders
(Krizari). In the concentration camp at Jasenovac, on the night of
August 29, 1942, orders were issued for executions. Bets were made as to
who could liquidate the largest number of inmates. Peter Brzica cut the
throats of 1,360 prisoners with a specially sharp butcher's knife.
Having been proclaimed the prize-winner of the competition, he was
elected King of the Cut-throats. A gold watch, a silver service, and a
roasted sucking pig and wine were his other rewards. A doctor, Dr.
Nikola Kilolic, himself a Croat, was an eyewitness in the camp when the
event took place, and subsequently testified to the authenticity of this
astonishing deed.[2]
Mass murders were supplemented by the massacre of
individuals and of small numbers, as part of the well-calculated policy
of the Government, which had them carried out uninterruptedly in rural
districts, with a view to terrorizing the populations. Cases of the
utmost ferocity which occurred all over Croatia would be unbelievable
were they not authenticated. In September, 1942, the Ustashi carried out
a raid on the village of Dukovsko, and killed anyone on sight. Among
other deeds they threw eight men into a pit. One of these saved himself
by getting hold of a protruding rock. The Ustashi, noticing this, amused
themselves by hurling heavy stones at him until he dropped to the bottom
and died. Others—mostly people who were related, or members of the same
family—were tied together and similarly thrown into a pit. In July,
1941, a youth of sixteen, Slavko Popovic, was taken by the Ustashi to a
field, ordered to dig a grave, killed while doing so, and buried in it.
On September 20, 1942, a group of escaping people were caught by the
Ustashi. All of them—fifty-four men and women—were massacred, their
bodies heaped up and set on fire. In June, 1943, the Ustashi, passing
through the village of Zijimet, rounded up those who had not had time to
escape—seventy-four old men, women, and children—put them into a shed,
which they set on fire. All were burned alive. Among them were the aunt
and her two children of Vojislav Zivanic, who lost twenty-five members
of his large family, including his father and brother, massacred by the
Ustashi during these raids.[3]
These were not isolated instances. The Ustashi more
often than not massacred all the inhabitants of Serb villages, callously
torturing and killing even children, and then setting the villages on
fire. In the village of Susnjari, for instance, the Ustashi, after
having killed most of the inhabitants, led away about twenty surviving
children, whom they tied to the threshold of a big barn, which was then
set on fire. Most of the children, of an average age of about ten, were
burned alive. The few who survived, horribly scorched, were eventually
killed.
[4]
Eye-witnesses testified to similar occurrences:
In the village of Gorevac, on September 13, 194i,
children of about 3 years of age were impaled. In some places
mothers threw themselves down with children in their arms, and one
stake perforated mother and child. Some young girls had their
breasts tied or cut, others had their hands made to pass through
them. Men had their ears and noses sawn away, and eyes had been
uprooted from their sockets."[5]
On April 28, 1941, Ustashi encircled the villages of
(Judovac, Tuke, Brezovac, Klokocevac, and Bolac, in the district of
Bjelovar,
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Orthodox worshippers, when not dispatched
to concentration camps, suffered the same fate us their
clergy. Congregations, unless willing to change their
religion, were not only persecuted, hunted down and
arrested; but, at times, besides being massacred by the
Ustashi bayonets or machine guns, they were killed within
their own churches. There were instances even when they were
burned |
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alive within them. To terrorize the population into becoming
Catholic, the Ustashi very often hanged lay Orthodox Leaders
and their Orthodox parish priests during mass executions
under the very eyes of the faithful. This was one of the
most tangible methods of "persuasion" whenever the Orthodox
proved obdurate. |
Those who escaped with their lives were
sent to concentration camps, while about 700 that is, one
quarter of the total number of Orthodox priests—were
murdered by the Ustashi in this manner.
Above, Orthodox priests and Serbs, hanged
together for defying the policy of the Ustashi and of the
Catholic clergy. |
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The ordinary Orthodox clergy became the
target of Ustashi Catholic ferocity. Priests were
imprisoned, hunted down, or simply massacred. Orthodox priests, before being executed or
hanged, very often were horribly tortured, e.g. Father
Branko Dobrosavlievich, from Velinn, who had to read the
obituary of his own son, whom the Ustashi killed in his
presence after horribly mutilating him. On April 20, 1941,
in the |
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village of Svinjica, the Ustashi arrested the Orthodox priest, Father
Babic, and after knifing him all over buried him, still
alive, in an upright position. |
Within a few weeks the Ustashi, encouraged
by Catholic Padres, murdered 135 Orthodox priests, of whom
eight-five came from one single Orthodox diocese.
Hundreds of Orthodox clergy perished thus
only because they were priests of a religion which refused
to join "the true Church."
In this photograph: two Orthodox priests
hanged in public, without trial, by the Catholic Ustashi. |
arresting 250 Orthodox peasants, among whom was Stevan
Ivankovitch and the Orthodox priest, Bozin. Having led them all to a
field, the Ustashi ordered them to dig their own graves; after which
their hands were tied behind their backs and they were pushed alive
into their graves. This feat created a commotion even among the
Nazis, who set up a Committee charged with the specific task of exhuming
the bodies and taking photographs as evidence. The "oral process" was
incorporated in an official document of Nazi Germany, under the title of
Ustachenwerk bet Bjelovar. In a memorandum drafted by an officer sent to
protect the Orthodox population of Eastern Bosnia during the terrible
massacre of August, 1941, there was, among other things, the following:
During our journey towards the hill of Javor, near
Srebrenica and Ozren, all the Serbian villages which we came across
were wholly deserted. But inside the houses very often we find whole
families massacred. We even came across some barrels filled with
blood. In the villages between Vlasenica and Kladanj we discovered
children who had been impaled upon stakes, their small members still
distorted by pain, resembling insects stuck upon pins."
[6]
In the town of Sisak the Ustashi arrested an Orthodox
Serb industrialist, Milos Teslitch, well known for his kindness, and
burned him alive. One of those most responsible for this crime was
Catholic Ustashi Faget.[7]
To crown all these horrors, some Ustashi did not
hesitate to crucify their victims. To mention only two: Luke
Avramovitch, former member of Parliament, and his son, who were both
crucified and then burnt in their own home in Mliniste, in the district
of Glamoc.[8]
Such atrocities occurred with a frequency that shocked
even the Ustashi's ideological allies: the Italian Fascists and the
German Nazis. This to such an extent that on more than one occasion both
the Italian and German authorities not only deprived the Ustashi of the
command of whole regions, but actually ousted them altogether, replacing
them with Italian or German troops, to prevent a repetition of the
terrible individual and mass murders committed by Pavelic's Catholic
units. It will suffice for us to mention two typical cases which led to
such a replacement. On August 2, 1941, the Ustashi authorities of
Vrgin-Most and of Cemernica announced that all Serbs who did not wish to
be molested had better assemble on the following day at 3 a.m. in
Vrgin-Most,
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Mass executions, with the Ustashi, took
sundry forms. Often they assembled the members of the
village outside, and then shot the lot. Or they shut a whole
congregation inside their church and then set fire to it.
When in a hurry, however, they became experts at individual
and mass hangings. Their expertise was a regular feature of
their barefaced terrorization. This was particularly so
during the last years of their regime. Here are a few
examples. |
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On August 7,
1944, they hanged ten persons: on August 26 at Jablanac,
near Zapresic, thirty-six people. On September 30th, between
the stations of Pusca, Bistra and Luka, ten persons. On
October 4, at St. Ivan, twenty-nine persons. On October 5,
again at Zapresic, five persons. On October 6th, Cucerje,
twenty persons. On October 9, at Velika Gorica, thirteen
persons. On the same at Svetaa Nedjelja, near Samobor,
eighteen persons. On December 28, at Krusljevo Selo, fifty
persons. |
Above, one of their last mass hangings, in
Sarajevo, prior to the collapse of Ustashi Croatia in 1945. |
where Catholic priests would be waiting to convert
them to Catholicism. About 5,000 people followed this advice. Instead of
Catholic priests, units of Ustashi, armed with machine guns, encircled
the assembled crowd, who were held prisoners until the following day,
when they were all massacred. Among them were thirty-seven children
under ten years of age.[9]
Not long afterwards, on August 20, 1941, another unit
of the Ustashi arrested all Serbs in the neighboring region of Lijevno,
took them to the woods of Koprivnica, between Bugojno and Kupres, and
killed them all. A few days later they arrested all the surviving
families, whom they also massacred on the same spot. Before the
massacre, women and even young girls were raped, after which most of
them had their breasts cut and arms and legs broken. Some old men,
before being executed, were blinded by way of having their eyes cut with
knives or torn from their sockets.
[10]
Five hundred women and children were hurled into pits
in the hills of Tusnica and Komasnica, while another eighty women and
children were massacred in the village school of Celebic. The Italian
Fascist authorities were so shocked by such incredible cruelty that, in
addition to dispatching their troops to protect the surviving population
and occupying the region of Lijevno and neighbouring places, they
dispersed the Ustashi and sent a protest to Zagreb.
Ustashi were committing no less abominable atrocities
in other parts of the country. In the town of Prijedor, for instance,
during the night of July 31-August l, 1941, they massacred 1,400 men,
women, and children, leaving their corpses to rot in the houses and in
the streets. The Nazis nearby, horrified at such wholesale butchery,
entered the town, compelling the Ustashi to leave. The Nazis had records
of massacres of their own second to none. Yet the horrors committed by
Pavelic's Ustashi troops proved to be of such bestiality as to shock
even them: a most crushing evidence that the Ustashi massacres had
surpassed anything experienced even by the Germany of Hitler. The
magnitude of the butchery can best be gauged by the fact that within the
first three months, from April to June, 1941, 120,000 people perished
thus. Proportionately to its duration and the smallness of the
territory, it had been the greatest massacre to take place anywhere in
the West prior to, during, or after that greatest of cataclysms, the
Second World War.
Footnotes
1. For further atrocities, see Memorandum on
Crimes of Genocide Committed against the Serbian People by the
Government of the Independent State of Croatia during World War 11,
dated October, 1950, sent to the President of the 5th General Assembly
of the United Nations by Adam Pribicevic, President of the Independent
Democratic Party of Yugoslavia; Dr. Vladimir Belajcic, former Justice of
the Supreme Court of Yugoslavia; and Dr. Branko Miljus, former Minister
of Yugoslavia.[Back]
2. This event is described in his book, The
Concentration Camp at Jasenovac, p. 282. See also above Memorandum.[Back]
3. The eyewitness, Bojislav Zivanic (father, Duko;
brother, Bogoljub) from Dukovsko, related these events under oath before
a group of Serbs and Croats, among them Dr. Sekulich, General Mirkovic,
and the author, at a meeting specially held on May 20, 1951 in London.[Back]
4. Martyrdom of the Serbs, p. 145, issued by
the Serbian Eastern Orthodox Diocese for the U.S.A. and Canada.[Back]
5. Eyewitness: Pritova, Bihac, Bosna.[Back]
6. See Dokamenti o Protunarodnom Radu i Zlocinima
Jednog, Dijela Katolickog Klera, Zagreb, 1946. Also above
Memorandum to UNO.[Back]
7. Assassins au Nom De Dieu, Herve Lauriere,
Paris, 1951.[Back]
8. See Dokumenti o Protunarodnom Radu i Zlocinima
Jednog Dijela Katolickog Klera, Zagreb, 1946. Also file of Yugoslav
State Commission for the Investigation of War Crimes.[Back]
9. Eyewitness: Stanko Sapitch, of Blakusa.[Back]
10. Evidence given by a survivor, Marija Bogunovitch.[Back]
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