Execution of Hungarian Nazi prime minister who killed 330,000 men, women & children at Auschwitz JJ

March 1944, Hungary. As the tide of the Second  World War shifts decisively against Nazi Germany, Hungarian Regent Miklós Horthy finds himself  under growing pressure, both domestically and from Berlin, to determine where Hungary  truly stands. Behind the scenes, the Hungarian Prime Minister Miklós Kállay, increasingly  convinced that Germany’s defeat is inevitable, has been discreetly reaching out to the Western  Allies in hopes of securing a separate peace and avoiding Soviet occupation. These secret efforts,  however, do not go unnoticed by the Germans.

On 19 March 1944, under the codename Operation  Margarethe, German troops enter Hungary and swiftly occupy the country without firing  a single shot. In the days that follow, Horthy is confronted with a stark ultimatum  from Hitler: either appoint a pro-German prime minister who will fully cooperate with the  Nazi leadership or accept total occupation, a move that would effectively strip  Hungary of all remaining sovereignty. Faced with this dilemma, and fearing the  fate that had already befallen countries

like Poland and France, Horthy reluctantly  agrees to replace Kállay. While Germans strongly recommend Béla Imrédy, a former prime  minister known for his fanatical pro-German stance and his implementation of antisemitic  policies, Horthy—deeply uneasy about Imrédy’s extremism—instead proposes a seemingly more  moderate figure. He will choose a man who will help Germans to kill hundreds of thousands of  Hungarian citizens. His name is Döme Sztójay. Döme Sztójay was born as Dimitrije Stojaković  on 5 January 1883 in the city of Versec,

then part of Austria-Hungary. He came from a  Serbian family and pursued a military career, studying at the cadet school in Pécs  and later at the Military Academy in Vienna. During the First World War, which  started on 28 July 1914, Sztójay served in the Austro-Hungarian Army and led the Balkan  group of the military intelligence service. Hungary had been on the losing side of World  War I, which ended on 11 November 1918. On 4 June 1920 Hungary signed the Treaty of  Trianon which reduced the country’s territory

by 72%. In addition, Hungary lost its sea  access, half of its 10 biggest cities and all of its precious metal mines. The post-1920  Hungary had a population of 7.6 million, 36% compared to the pre-war kingdom’s population  of 20.9 million, and 3,425,000 ethnic Hungarians found themselves separated from their motherland. In June 1919, Admiral Miklós Horthy, who had been an officer in the Austro-Hungarian  navy, came to power as the head of a conservative-nationalist coalition. Horthy presided for the next 24 years

over an authoritarian, almost feudal system  of aristocratic rule, which nevertheless had a functioning parliament and  permitted political opposition. After Horthy became Regent of Hungary, Sztójay  was promoted to general and served as a military attaché in Berlin from 1927 to 1933. He  Magyarized his name to Sztójay in 1927, and from 1933 to 1935, he served in the Ministry of  Defence. In 1935, he became Hungary’s ambassador to Nazi Germany — a position he held for the next  nine years. As ambassador, Sztójay formed strong

ties with the Third Reich and often voiced support  for German policies to his superiors in Hungary. In the late 1930s, as Germany began redrawing  national boundaries across Europe, Hungary — with support from Germany and Italy — was able to  reclaim lost territory. Before the Second World War began on 1 September 1939, this included  southern Slovakia, annexed from Czechoslovakia in 1938, and Subcarpathian Rus, acquired from  the dismembered Czechoslovak state in 1939. After the war started, the regained  territory included northern Transylvania

from Romania in 1940 and the Bačka  region from dismembered Yugoslavia, which was attacked in April 1941. In November  1940, Hungary joined the Axis alliance which was a military coalition that initiated World War  II and fought against the Allies. In June 1941 Hungarian troops participated alongside German  troops in the invasion of the Soviet Union. Hungary fell increasingly under the influence  of Germany and many Hungarian politicians called for more radical steps to be taken  in solving the so called Jewish Question.

According to a 1941 census, Hungary,  including the recently annexed territories, had a Jewish population of 825,000, less  than 6 percent of the total population. The Hungarian racial laws were modelled  on Germany’s Nuremberg Laws. These defined “Jews” in so-called racial terms, forbade  intermarriage between Jews and non-Jews, and excluded Jews from full participation  in various professions. The laws also barred employment of Jews in the civil service and  restricted their opportunities in economic life.

It was in the summer of 1941 when Hungarian  authorities deported some 20,000 Jews, most of whom resided in Subcarpathian Rus and none of whom  had been able to obtain Hungarian citizenship. These Jews were deported to the city of  Kamenets-Podolski in German-occupied Ukraine, where they were shot by detachments of  Einsatzgruppe, which were Nazi mobile death squads. In January 1942, Hungarian military  units murdered 3,000 Jews and Serbs in Novi Sad, the major city in the part of  Yugoslavia annexed by Hungary.

However, in 1942 when the German government began  to pressure the Hungarians to deliver Jews who were Hungarian citizens into German custody,  Horthy’s prime minister, Miklós Kállay, despite significant pressure from the domestic radical  right, refused to deport the Hungarian Jews. After the German defeat at Stalingrad in February  1943, Hungarian Admiral Miklós Horthy and Prime Minister Miklós Kállay recognized that Germany  would likely lose the war. With Horthy’s tacit approval, Kállay tried to negotiate a separate  armistice for Hungary with the Western Allies.

To prevent these efforts, Adolf Hitler ordered  Operation Margarethe—the German occupation of Hungary and on 19 March 1944, German troops  entered the country without resistance. By this time, about 63,000 Jews living in Hungary  died or were killed. During the German occupation, Horthy was permitted to remain as Regent  but Kallay was dismissed. In his place, the Germans installed Döme Sztójay  as Prime Minister who immediately aligned Hungarian policy with Nazi interests. Sztójay quickly legalized Ferenc Szálasi’s  Arrow Cross Party — a radically antisemitic,

Nazi-inspired fascist movement that had  previously been banned under Horthy’s leadership. He committed Hungary fully to the Nazi war effort,  increasing Hungarian troop deployments on the Eastern Front and cracking down on political  opposition. Labor unions were dissolved, left-wing politicians were jailed, and civil  liberties were severely restricted. Most notably, Sztójay oversaw dramatic escalation  in the persecution of Hungarian Jews. On 31 March 1944, a decree required all Jews over  the age of six to wear a yellow six-pointed star

on their clothing, starting 5 April. In April  1944, Hungarian authorities ordered Hungarian Jews living outside Budapest – roughly  500,000 – to concentrate in certain cities, usually regional government seats. When Horthy  learned about the deportations, he called them “inhuman, stupid and unworthy of the Hungarian  character with which the present “Hungarian”, government has sullied the Hungarian name in  the eyes of the world”. Horthy wrote to his prime minister the following: “Dear Sztójay:  I was aware that the Government in the given

forced situation has to take many steps that I  do not consider correct, and for which I cannot take responsibility. Among these matters is the  handling of the Jewish question in a manner that does not correspond to the Hungarian mentality,  Hungarian conditions, and, for that matter, Hungarian interests. It is clear to everyone that  what among these were done by Germans or by the insistence of the Germans was not in my power to  prevent, so in these matters, I was forced into passivity. As such, I was not informed in advance,  or I am not fully informed now, however, I have

heard recently that in many cases in inhumaneness  and brutality we exceeded the Germans.” However, Sztójay ignored this and  he even ramped up the pace of forced deportations of Hungarian Jews. Just before the deportations began, two Slovak Jewish prisoners, Rudolf Vrba  and Alfréd Wetzler, escaped from Auschwitz and passed details of what was happening  inside the camp to officials in Slovakia. This document, known as the Vrba-Wetzler Report,  was quickly translated into German and passed among Jewish groups and then to Allied officials.  In late June 1944, world leaders, including Pope

Pius XII and American President Roosevelt, pleaded  with Horthy to use his influence to stop the deportations. Roosevelt specifically threatened  military retaliation if the transports were not ceased. On 2 July 1944, Horthy issued the order  halting deportations on 7 July. Nevertheless, deportations to Auschwitz from cities  around Budapest continued for two more days. During 8 weeks from the 15th of May to 9 July  1944, Hungarian gendarmerie officials whose members were closely linked to the antisemitic  Arrow Cross, under the guidance of German SS

officials, deported nearly 440,000 Jews  from Hungary in more than 145 trains. Most were deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau. About  100,000 Jews from Hungary were selected for forced labor and the remainder—approximately 330,000  Jews (about 75 percent)—were murdered in the gas chambers upon arrival. This was the deadliest  period at Auschwitz-Birkenau. Rudolf Höss, the commandant of the Auschwitz camp complex,  begged the Hungarian authorities not to send more than one transport per day, as the camp  crematoria did not have the sheer capacity

to cope with the amount of bodies arriving  from the gas chambers. To solve this problem, Otto Moll, director of all crematoria at  Auschwitz, ordered fire pits to be dug. There, the excess people – Hungarian men, women and  children – were shot in the back of their head and dropped into fire. It sometimes happened that  some prisoners put up a fight or children cried. As punishment, the Nazi personnel would  throw them into the burning pits alive. By the end of July 1944, the only Jewish community  left in Hungary was that of Budapest, the capital.

Horthy became appalled by Sztójay’s actions  and demanded his removal as prime minister. However, Hitler sternly refused to do so. Eventually, in August 1944, the Germans yielded and allowed Sztójay to be replaced by General Géza  Lakatos. When Horthy himself was overthrown by the Nazis in October, Sztójay was not reinstated due  to poor health. He fled Hungary as the Red Army advanced, but was later captured by American  forces, extradited, and sentenced to death for war crimes by a Hungarian People’s Tribunal. Döme Sztójay was 63 years old when, on 22 August

1946, he was executed firing squad in Budapest. There were no tears shed for Döme Sztójay. Thanks for watching the World History Channel be sure to like and subscribe and click  the bell notification icon so you don’t miss our next episodes we thank you and  we’ll see you next time on the channel.

 

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