The Holocaust in Hungary | |
---|---|
Location | Hungary |
Date |
|
Perpetrators | Kingdom of Hungary, Nazi Germany, Adolf Eichmann, László Ferenczy, Arrow Cross Party |
Camp | Auschwitz concentration camp |
Ghetto | Budapest ghetto |
Victims |
|
Memorials | Shoes on the Danube Bank |
The Holocaust in Hungary was the dispossession, deportation, and systematic murder of more than half of the Hungarian Jews, primarily after the German occupation of Hungary in March 1944.
At the time of the German invasion, Hungary had a Jewish population of 825,000,[1] the largest remaining in Europe,[2] further swollen by Jews escaping from elsewhere to the relative safety of that country. The Hungarian Prime Minister Miklós Kállay had been reluctant to deport them.[3] Fearing Hungary was trying to pursue peace with the Allies (which the diplomat László Veress secretly did in the September of 1943[4]), Adolf Hitler ordered the invasion.[5] New restrictions against Jews were imposed soon after Germany occupied Hungary on 19 March 1944. The invading troops included a Sonderkommando which was led by SS officer Adolf Eichmann, who arrived in Budapest in order to supervise the deportation of the country's Jews to the Auschwitz concentration camp in occupied Poland. Between 15 May and 9 July 1944, over 434,000 Jews were deported on 147 trains,[6] most of them to Auschwitz, where about 80 percent were gassed on arrival.[7] The quick progress of the deportations was enabled by close cooperation between the Hungarian and German authorities.[8]
Diplomatic pressure and the Allied bombing of Budapest persuaded Miklós Horthy, the Regent of Hungary, to order a halt to the deportations on 6 July.[9] By the time they had stopped three days later, almost the entire community of Jews in the Hungarian countryside had gone.[a]
The mass deportation of Hungarian Jews was the largest Holocaust killing after 1942.[11] It took place as World War II appeared to be drawing to a close — and world leaders had known for some time that Jews were being murdered in gas chambers.[12] The expropriation of Jewish property was useful to achieve Hungarian economic goals and sending the Jews as forced laborers avoided the need to send non-Jewish Hungarians.[13] Those who survived the selection were forced to provide construction and manufacturing labor as part of a last-ditch effort to increase the production of fighter aircraft.[14]
Also see Braham, Randolph L. (2016b). The Politics of Genocide: The Holocaust in Hungary. Vol. 2. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 938–990. ISBN 978-0880337113.
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