Jump to content

Deportations of Hungarians to the Czech lands

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Deportations of Hungarians to the Czech lands were a series of mass deportations of Hungarian population from southern Slovakia to Czech lands by Czechoslovak authorities. Deportations took place during the period from 1945 to 1947.

Deportations

[edit]
Hungarians forcibly relocated from Gúta (Kolárovo) unpacking their belongings from train in Mladá Boleslav, Czechoslovakia, February, 1947

Presidential Decree No. 071/1945 Coll. ("concerning the work duty of persons that had lost Czechoslovak citizenship") and No. 88/1945 Coll. ("concerning universal work duty") authorized the Czechoslovak administration to draft people into paid labor service for the maximum period of one year in order to redress some of the war damages.[1] Under the disguise of "labor recruiting", the deportation of Hungarians from South Slovakia began to the recently vacated Czech borderlands.[1][2] Those who could not prove that they either remained loyal to Czechoslovakia during the war, or that they took part in liberation, or that they were subject to Nazi terror, also had their property confiscated under Presidential Decree No. 108/1945 Coll. ("concerning the confiscation of enemy property and on the Fund for National Restoration").[1] The transit trains were labelled as "voluntary agricultural workers".[1] In fact, the real goal was to alter the ethnic composition of South Slovakia.[1][2] These "labor recruitings" were named by Czech historian Karel Kaplan as "internal colonizations", and according to him their "political aim... was to transfer a part of the Hungarian minority away from the Hungarian border and to destroy it as a compact territorial unit. This colonization also had an immediate industrial goal – to provide the depopulated areas with a workforce".[1]

Between July and August 1946, under the slogan "Slovak agricultural labor assisting the Czech lands", more Hungarians were deported to Czech lands.[1] Eventually, 40,000[3][4]-45,000[5]-50,000[2] Hungarians were deported to Czech territories recently cleared of Sudeten Germans, but also to the other areas where labor force was required. While their properties in Slovakia were confiscated, they obtained the former Sudeten Germans' properties.[6] According to the Slovak National Archives, 41,666 Hungarians had been deported from southern Slovakia.[7] Hungarians who stayed in Slovakia became the targets of the Slovak assimilation efforts.[8]

Number of Hungarians deported to the Czech lands from South Slovakia[7]
District Number of Hungarians (1930)[note 1] Relocated Hungarian families Relocated Hungarian persons
Šamorín (now part of DSD) 27,030 767 3,951
Dunajská Streda District 39,070 698 3,551
Komárno 53,154 1,483 6,694
Galanta 41,474 874 3,972
Šaľa 28,431 694 2,931
Nové Zámky 19,625 313 1,391
Hurbanovo (now part of Komárno District) 36,940 966 3,960
Štúrovo (now part of Nové Zámky District) 39,483 1,008 3,956
Želiezovce (now part of Levice District) 24,164 864 3,282
Levice 12,190 198 675
Veľký Krtíš 11,023 97 437
Jesenské 25,195 547 2,156
Tornaľa (now part of Revúca District) 17,701 631 2,615
Rožňava 14,767 100 380
Spiš 16,737 83 390
Kráľovský Chlmec (now part of Trebišov District) 24,514 116 590
Totals 448,481 9,610 41,666

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ In 1930, according to the Czechoslovak census

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g Breuning, Lewis & Pritchard 2005, pp. 140–143
  2. ^ a b c Rieber 2000, p. 90
  3. ^ Kaplan 1987, p. 29
  4. ^ Mandelbaum 2000, p. 40
  5. ^ Kamusella 2009, p. 775
  6. ^ "Human Rights For Minorities In Central Europe: Ethnic Cleansing In Post World War II Czechoslovakia: The Presidential Decrees Of Edvard Beneš, 1945-1948". Archived from the original on 2009-04-23.
  7. ^ a b Slovenský národný archív, Bratislava (Slovak National Archives, Bratislava Access date:2010-01-11) - Povereníctvo pôdohospodárstva a pozemkovej reformy - sekcia B ( ) box 304. Štatistický prehľad náborom pracovných síl odsunutých na práce do Čiech.
  8. ^ Rieber 2000, p. 93

Bibliography

[edit]