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Stopping the Trains to Auschwitz, 2020
Despite Hitler’s and Eichmann’s secret machinery for the deportation of Jews from the Hungarian provinces, dramatic events finally interrupted the progress of their unprecedented crimes. How this unfolded is the focus of this book. Although many thousands had already perished, a rescue effort saved the Jewish population of Budapest. The initiative resulted from the courageous actions of networks within Hungary and Switzerland. The Auschwitz Report, the detailed revelations of two Slovak escapees, revealed to them the truth about the deportations. They took dangerous risks by aggressively challenging the power of the Nazi extermination program.
July 1944: Deportation of the Jews of Budapest Foiled, 2017
Chapter in Edited Volume (Jeszensky, Geza. 2017. July 1944.) Excerpted from: Deborah S. Cornelius. Hungary in World War II: Caught in the Cauldron. Fordham University Press (2011) Chapter on Horthy and the deportation of the Jews in Budapest, 1944.
Hungarian Cultural Studies, 2019
This book is a compilation of essays by authors who were previously published elsewhere. Its main focus is on Ferenc Koszorús, a wartime colonel of the Hungarian army fighting as an ally of Germany who ostensibly was responsible for saving the Jews of Budapest with the so-called Koszorús Action during the German occupation of Hungary. Some of the articles also examine the roles of Regent Miklós Horthy and the Hungarian government in the destruction of close to one half million of its Jewish citizens, mostly in German death camps. The reviewer marshals facts, documentation, and works by prominent historians to demonstrate that Koszorús had little to do with the survival of the Budapest Jews in July 1944. The myth of Koszorús as a wartime champion of the Jews was invented by the colonel himself in his postwar memoirs. In the volume, the editor Géza Jeszenszky points out that most non-Jewish Hungarians were either active supporters of the deportations or were passive bystanders. It may...
Genocide Studies and Prevention, 2017
2015
Thirteen witnesses of Hungarian origin testifi ed during the trial. Pinhas (previously Fülöp) Freudiger, who had been the head of the Orthodox Jewish community in Budapest from 1939. After the German invasion, he was appointed to the Jewish Council of Budapest. He and his family escaped to Romania in August, 1944 and settled in Israel after the war. Dr. Alexander (previously Sándor) Bródy, a writer who was assigned to labor service during the war and served as the director of the Joint-funded National Hungarian Jewish Aid Action (Országos Magyar Zsidó Segítő Akció, O.M.ZS.A.) from 1944. He left Hungary in 1949 and settled in Brazil. Mrs. Elisheva (Erzsébet) Szenes, a Slovakian-born journalist who escaped to Budapest but was then captured by the SS and sent to Auschwitz. She survived and settled in Israel after the war. Margit Reich whose husband perished in Auschwitz. She lived in Givatayim, Israel at the time of the trial but her children remained in Hungary. Dr. Martin Földi, a lawyer who was taken to Auschwitz. He moved to Israel after the war. Ze'ev Sapir, who was born in the village of Dobradovo, near the town of Munkács.
2021
77 years ago, between May 14, 1944 and July 9, 1944 (and July 20, 1944), most rural Hungarian Jewry was deported during 57 days according to a planned schedule. The people were first robbed and imprisoned in closed ghettos and then transported under cruel and inhuman conditions to the German run death camps in occupied Poland by cattle wagons of the Hungarian State Railway (MÁV) (147 transports). Nearly 430,000 Hungarian Jewish women, men and children were thus taken to the death camps, robbed again and most murdered upon arrival.
International Journal of Computer Science and Mobile Computing (IJCSMC), 2023
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