Serbia – Forgotten Fairgrounds Recall Belgrade’s Nazi-era Suffering

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    This is the Sept. 2007 file photo of Chabad Rabbi Motti Seligson, and Chabad Rabbi Saadya Notik, left, from New York visit the World War II Nazi concentration camp Sajmiste in Belgrade, SerbiaConceived as a symbol of modernity, Belgrade’s fairgrounds were used by the Nazis as an execution site. New accusations against a former Nazi guard have brought up the atrocious history of Belgrade’s killing fields.

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    A boy on a bicycle, followed by a pack of dogs, passes an abandoned tower near the Sava River in central Belgrade, unaware that the structure was part of a Nazi death camp during World War II.

    The site, known as Staro Sajmiste or Old Fairgrounds, usually gives no pause to Belgrade residents who pass it daily on one of the capital’s busiest bridges. But accusations against a former Nazi living in the United States have brought its history into focus.

    Serbia plans to ask the US to extradite Peter Egner, 86, who has admitted serving as a guard and interpreter in the special police unit blamed for the killing of 17,000 people at the camp — mainly Yugoslav Jews, Serbs and Roma. Most of Belgrade’s 8,000 Jews died there.

    Staro Sajmiste was not the only Nazi prison in German-occupied Belgrade, but it was the most hated. It was located so close to the city that, according to witnesses, one could hear prisoners’ screams wafting over the river.

    “It was worst at night when children, hungry and cold, cried and asked their mothers to cover them and give them food. It lasted all night, and many of us couldn’t sleep, feeling sorry for those innocent children,” survivor Sarlota Cosic was quoted as saying in a post-war book on Nazi crimes against Jews in Yugoslavia.

    Egner, now a retiree living in a retirement home near Seattle, Washington, was part of one of several mobile killing units that roamed eastern Europe and the Soviet Union as part of the Nazis’ “final solution” to exterminate the Jews.

    In Belgrade, more than 6,000 victims were asphyxiated with exhaust fumes pumped into a sealed van. The Nazis used similar mobile gas chambers farther east, reportedly because SS chief Heinrich Himmler worried that mass shootings were putting mental strain on the Nazi executioners.

    The Staro Sajmiste complex was built in 1937, four years before Nazi Germany invaded and occupied then-Yugoslavia. It marked the moment when Belgrade spread to the left bank of the Sava and began building a modern extension known as New Belgrade.

    Sajmiste was designed as an exhibition complex of several pavilions centered around the tower, a little white town surrounded by lush green vegetation.
    This is the Sept. 2007 file photo of Chabad Rabbi Motti Seligson, and Chabad Rabbi Saadya Notik, right, from New York look at a monument in the World War II Nazi concentration camp Sajmiste in Belgrade
    In 1941, with the Nazi occupation, the exhibition center became a place of torture and death before the eyes of Belgrade. Almost the entire Jewish population of the city vanished in the camp or was sent to other camps in Belgrade or elsewhere.

    Holocaust memorial at Staro Sajmiste in BelgradeBildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: A monument at Staro Sajmiste recalls the thousands who died there

    Egner, who was born in the former Yugoslavia, denies wrongdoing. US authorities plan to revoke his passport because he concealed his Sajmiste past when he applied for citizenship in the 1960s.

    “I’ve never hurt anyone in my Belgrade,” Egner told Belgrade media. “You have my word.”

    Some 6,400 Jews and 600 Roma were brought to the fairgrounds camp starting in December 1941. Most died in the vans, which gassed about 50 prisoners at a time while transporting them to a mass execution and burial site near Belgrade.

    “I worked for two months digging holes for the bodies,” survivor Vladimir Milutinovic said in the book on Nazi crimes. “We dug 81 or 82 holes and each could take at least a 100 people.”

    From May 1942 until July 1944, the camp was also a roundup center for thousands of prisoners who were sent to other camps. In total, 32,000 people were taken to Sajmiste.
    Serbia – After World War II, Yugoslav authorities turned over the site to local artists for use as studios. Today, several Roma families and descendants of the artists live in shacks and trailers, while some companies have their offices on the premises.

    Only the tower and the central pavilion survived the Allied bombing of Belgrade in 1944 and the later neglect. British rock group Kosheen planned to hold a concert last winter in the pavilion, but backed off after a public uproar.

    Various groups have tried for decades to raise money to turn the site into a memorial with an exhibition on its World War II past. But the project has always stalled — in part because Sajmiste’s residents don’t want to move out.


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    4 Comments
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    bigwheeel
    bigwheeel
    15 years ago

    It, like hundreds of other sites in Eastern Europe that were used as killing/burial grounds [mostly] for the Jewish population and other ethnic minorities and political prisoners were covered up with the tacit approval of the communist regimes [in the various] (can’t write Respective) countries, who, [really] wanted to have it both ways! On the one hand, they wanted to appear as victims of the nazi regime {all the while collaborating with them) and on the other hand, trying to eradicate any memories of nazi atrocities!!!

    Yosi
    Yosi
    15 years ago

    The Serbs were friends of the Jews, and suffered under the Nazi’s and the Nazi Bosnian Muslims and the Nazi Croats.

    bigwheeel
    bigwheeel
    15 years ago

    You can’t generalize. (about the ethnic origin of the leaders), whether they were good or bad [to the Jews]. Tito, for example was a Croat by birth. Even though the Croat population by and large were pro-nazi, he was an exception. Not only did he fight the nazis heroically, during WWII, he fought that other world class murderer Josef Stalin, while introducing his own brand of communism. He also had a Jewish deputy commander [in WWII). Also, he kept all the regional and ethnic conflicts at bay during his lifetime. Soon after he died, it all collapsed!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    Croatian embrace of Nazism was so complete that most Croatian Jews were exterminated.

    Serbs fought aganst the Nazis in WWII many suffering the fate of Jews.

    You can generalize if an entire population participates in the destruction of a people.

    Perhaps you can call the historical center at YIVO in Manhattan and learn the statistics and history of the Croations before you make comments “you can’t generalize” – in effect white washing the role of the Croations in the extermination of its Jewish population in WWII.