#9 Hungary. Miklós Horthy and the Murder of the Hungarian Jews
After World War I, Hungary plunged into political chaos. When the former commander-in-chief of the Austro-Hungarian navy, Miklós Horthy, crushed a short-lived communist regime in 1920, his troops targeted not only political opponents but also the Jewish population of Budapest. In the years that followed, however, anti-Semitism was never as violent as in Germany. In 1939, Hungary, eager to regain territory lost after 1918, joined a formal alliance with Germany and participated in the invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941. Nevertheless, most of Hungary's Jews escaped the mass murder that took place in the surrounding countries until 1944. In March of that year, the Germans occupied the country and immediately began deporting Hungarian Jews. In just eight weeks, over 400,000 Jews were deported, most of whom were murdered upon arrival at Auschwitz-Birkenau. We spoke with Adam Kerpel-Fronius who works at the Memorial to the Murdered Jews in Berlin about this final phase of the Holocaust.
Shownotes
Adam Kerpel-Fronius, Ferenc Laczo, “8 Fakten über Milos Horthy” 2017.
VEJ-Band 15, “Ungarn 1944-1945" Berlin 2021.
Zoltán Vági, László Csősz and Gábor Kádár, “The Holocaust in Hungary. Evolution of a Genocide” Lanham 2013.
Randolph L. Braham and András Kovács (ed.), “The Holocaust in Hungary. Seventy Years Later” New York 2016.
Christoph Kreutzmüller, Tal Bruttmann, Stephan Hördler, "Die fotografische Inszenierung des Verbrechens. Ein Album aus Auschwitz" Darmstadt 2019.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum about Hungary.