- History of the Jews in Croatia
The
Jew ish community ofCroatia dates back to at least the third century AD, although little is known of the community until the tenth and fifteenth centuries. The community, over 20,000 strong on the eve ofWorld War II , was almost entirely destroyed in theHolocaust , and numbers some 2,500 today. [ [http://www.eurojewcong.org/ejc/news.php?id_article=67 European Jewish Congress -Croatia] ] That number is an estimate and it is believed that the number of Croatian Jews is larger because more than 80 percent of the 1,500 members of Zagreb's Jewish community were either born in mixed marriages or are married to a non-Jew.Many grandchildren ofHolocaust survivors have just one Jewish grandparent. [ [http://www.jewishsf.com/content/2-0-/module/displaystory/story_id/15640/edition_id/305/format/html/displaystory.html Croatia's census forces Jews to confront identity crisis] ]History of the community
Ancient community
Jews first arrived in what is now northern
Croatia in the first centuries of theCommon Era , when Roman law allowed free movement throughout theRoman Empire [ [http://www.centropa.org/reports.asp?rep=HR&ID=5970&TypeID=36658 Excerpts from Jews in Yugoslavia - Part III] ] . The Jews arrived as traders and merchants [ [http://www.bh.org.il/swj/country.php?country=2&places=18 Synagogues Without Jews - Serbia and Croatia] ] . Archaeological excavations inOsijek show asynagogue dating from the3rd century AD, and while there are occasional references to Jews, little is known of the Jewish communities ofCroatia until the13th century [ [http://www.centropa.org/reports.asp?rep=HR&ID=5970&TypeID=36658 Excerpts from Jews in Yugoslavia - Part III (Osijek)] ] .Late Middle Ages
The Jewish communities of
Croatia flourished in the 13th and 14th centuries, with the communities enjoying prosperity and peaceful relations with their Croatian neighbors [ [http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vjw/Croatia.html Jewish Virtual Library (Croatia)] ] .This ended in
1456 , when Jews, along with most non-Catholic Croats, were forced out. There followed 200 years where there are no records of Jews inCroatia [ [http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vjw/Croatia.html Jewish Virtual Library (Croatia)] ] .Arrival of the Spanish Refugees
The
15th century saw increasing persecution of Jews in areas ofSpain retaken in theReconquista . From1492 onward, Jewish refugees fleeing the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisitions arrived in Ottoman territories, including the Balkan provinces of Macedonia and Bosnia. Some of these refugees found their way toCroatia , in particular toSplit andDubrovnik , on the Dalmatian coast [ [http://www.bh.org.il/swj/country.php?country=2&places=18 Synagogues Without Jews - Serbia and Croatia] ] .Hapsburg rule
In the
17th century , Jews were still not permitted to settle in northernCroatia . Jews traveled toCroatia as travelling merchants, mostly from neighboringHungary . They were generally permitted to stay only a few days [ [http://www.centropa.org/reports.asp?rep=HR&ID=5970&TypeID=36658 Excerpts from Jews in Yugoslavia - Part III] ] . In the early part of the century, the Sabor (parliament) confirmed its ban on permanent settlement when a Jewish family attempted to settle inDurdevac . [ [http://www.centropa.org/reports.asp?rep=HR&ID=5970&TypeID=36658 Excerpts from Jews in Yugoslavia - Part III] ]In
1753 , although still officially banned, Jews were allowed to settle inBjelovar ,Koprivnica andVarazdin , by the military commander of the Varazdin region,General Beck . In order to streamline the treatment of Jews inCroatia , CountFranjo Patacic , by order of the Royal Office inVarazdin , wrote a comprehensive report advocating Jewish permanent residence in Croatia on the basis that "most of them are merchants, and trade makes towns flourish" [ [http://www.centropa.org/reports.asp?rep=HR&ID=5970&TypeID=36658 Excerpts from Jews in Yugoslavia - Part III] ] .The prohibition against Jewish settlement in northern
Croatia lasted until1783 , when effect was given to the1782 Edict of Tolerance issued by the Habsburg Monarch Emperor Joseph II. Jews were allowed to settle inCroatia , but were not allowed to own land or engage in any trade protected by a guild, and were not allowed to work in agriculture [ [http://www.centropa.org/reports.asp?rep=HR&ID=5970&TypeID=36658 Excerpts from Jews in Yugoslavia - Part III] ] . Despite these measures, Jews settled inZagreb andVarazdin .In
1840 the Sabor (parliament) voted to "gradually" allow full equality for the Jews, and over the next 33 years there was gradual progress.In
1873 ,Ivan Mažuranić signed the decree allowing for the full legal equality of Jews and, as with other faiths, state funds were made available for community institutions [ [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=893&letter=C&search=croatia Jewish Encyclopedia - Croatia] ] .By
1880 , there were 13,488 Jews inCroatia , rising to 20,032 in1900 . At the beginning of the20th century , there were 21 Jewish communities inCroatia , the largest being inZagreb (3,000 people) andOsijek (3,000 people). The Jewish community ofCroatia became highly successful and integrated. By1900 , 54% ofZagreb Jews and 35% of all Croatian Jews spoke Croatian as their mother tongue. Despite their small numbers, Jews were disproportionately represented in industrial and wholesale business inCroatia , and in the timber and food industries. Several Jewish families were amongstCroatia 's wealthiest families. Despite the apparent wealth, most Jews were middle class, and many second generation Croatian Jews were attracted to the fields of law and medicine.World War I
World War I brought about the collapse of theAustro-Hungarian Empire , and upheaval for the Jewish communities of the region. After the war,Croatia joined withSlovenia ,Serbia (which includedVardar Macedonia andMontenegro ), andBosnia and Herzegovina to form theKingdom of Yugoslavia .Prior to
World War II , the Croatian, and especially theZagreb Jewish community, was the pre-eminent community of Yugoslavia. In1940 there were about 11,000 Jews living inZagreb : about 76% Ashkenaz, 5% Sephardi, 17% unaffiliated and the remainder being Religious [ [http://www.centropa.org/reports.asp?rep=HR&ID=5970&TypeID=36658 Excerpts from Jews in Yugoslavia - Part III] ] .The Holocaust
At the outbreak of
World War II , 23,000 Jews lived inCroatia [ [http://www.bh.org.il/swj/country.php?country=2&places=18 Jews Without Synagogues - Serbia and Croatia] ] .On
March 25 ,1941 , Prince Paul signed Yugoslavia's alliance with theAxis Powers under theTripartite Pact . The decision was unpopular among serbian population, and massive demonstrations took place in the Yugoslav capital,Belgrade . Prince Paul was overthrown, and a new anti-German government under Peter II andDušan Simović took power. The new government withdrew its support for the Axis, but did not repudiate theTripartite Pact . Nevertheless, Axis forces, led by Nazi Germans, invaded Yugoslavia in April1941 .The Nazi invasion was the doom of Croatian Jewry.
Under the Germans, Croatian ultra-nationalists, the Croatian Ustaše movement came to power.Croatian fascists established a state called the
Independent State of Croatia . The Ustaše were notoriously anti-SemiticFact|date=May 2008, and wasted little time in instituting anti-Jewish legislation and persecuting the Jews under their control. Indeed, the then NDH Croatian Interior Minister Andrija Artuković, a member of the Ustaše, said "The Government of NDH Croatia shall solve the Jewish question in the same way as the German Government did" [Jews of Yugoslavia 1941-1945 Victims of Genocide and Freedom Fighters, Jasa Romano] .The Ustaše set up
concentration camps atKerestinac ,Jadovna ,Metajna andSlana, Croatia . The most notorious, where heinous crimes and cruel torture was perpetrated againstJew ish and Serbian prisoners, were atPag and Jasenovac. At Jasenovac alone, tens of thousands of people were murdered (mostlySerbs ), including 20,000 Jews [Jews of Yugoslavia 1941-1945 Victims of Genocide and Freedom Fighters, Jasa Romano, p7] .The first genocide against Croatian (and Yugoslav) Jews began in July
1941 . The Ustaše and German Nazis murdered tens of thousands ofSerbs , approximately 20,000 Roma (Gypsies) and 32,000Jew s (including 20,000 of the 23,000-25,000 Croatian Jews [ [http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vjw/Croatia.html Jewish Virtual Library - Croatia] ] ) in the territories they controlled [Ustashe ] .The Croatian Jewish community was all but destroyed in the
Holocaust , with only 5,000 Croatian Jews surviving the war, most as either soldiers in Croat Tito's National Liberation Army (Yugoslav Partisans) or as exiles in the Italian-occupied zone. AfterItaly capitulated to theAxis Powers , the surviving Jews lived in free Partisan territory. [ [http://www.centropa.org/reports.asp?rep=HR&ID=5968&TypeID=36658 Excerpts from Jews in Yugoslavia - Part III] ]When Yugoslavia was liberated in
1945 ,Croatia became part of the new Yugoslav federation, which eventually became theSocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia .Post-War community
After
1945 , atheism was the official policy of Yugoslavia andCroatia : there was norabbi inCroatia until the mid-1990s . Most Croatian Jews identified as Yugoslav, or asSerbs orCroats [ [http://www.jewishsf.com/content/2-0-/module/displaystory/story_id/15640/edition_id/305/format/html/displaystory.html Croatia's census forces Jews to confront identity crisis, Vlasta Kovac] ] .When Yugoslavia dissolved and Croatia became independent in
1991 , Croatian Jews expressed their loyalty to the newly independent Croatian stateFact|date=February 2007. Some Croatian Jews have become the high-ranking officials and influential members of Croatian governments (some of are known as Croatian conservatives some as "hardliners"Andrija Hebrang ,Mladen Schwartz ,Jakov Sedlar ).The post-war Jewish community of
Croatia was highly assimilated, with 80% ofZagreb 's 1,500 Jews either born into mixed marriages, or married to a non-Jew. In1991 there were approximately 2,000 Jews inCroatia .Today
Today there are approximately 2,500 Jews in
Croatia .The
2001 Croatiancensus listed only 495 Jews, with 323 inZagreb . Approximately 20 Jews each live inPrimorje-Gorski Kotar county ,Osijek andDubrovnik [ [http://www.dzs.hr/Eng/censuses/Census2001/Popis/E01_02_04/E01_02_04.html Population by Religion, by Towns/Municipalities, Census 2001] ] . The census is, however, unreliable, as most Jews do not disclose their identity.Regional communities
Dalmatia
The Jewish communities of the Croatian coast of
Dalmatia date back to the14th century AD. A letter from1326 refers to a Jewish doctor inDubrovnik . The community remained small throughout the years (100-330 members), although the community distinguished itself in trade and medicine. The community was augmented from1421 by refugees fleeing increasing persecution inSpain , and then from1492 as Jews fled the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisitions. [ [http://www.centropa.org/reports.asp?rep=HR&ID=5960&TypeID=36658 Excerpts from Jews in Yugoslavia - Part I] ]Anti-Semitism , based on the attitudes of theCatholic Church and on Venetian law (which applied at the time), was a constant issue for the community, which lived in ghettos inDubrovnik andSplit . WhenDalmatia was occupied by Napoleonic forces, the Jews attained legal equality for the first time [ [http://www.centropa.org/reports.asp?rep=HR&ID=5960&TypeID=36658 Excerpts from Jews in Yugoslavia - Part I] ] . In1814 , when theAustrian Empire annexedDalmatia , legal equality was again withdrawn. Jews were granted legal equality under Croatian law in the mid19th century [ [http://www.centropa.org/reports.asp?rep=HR&ID=5970&TypeID=36658 Excerpts from Jews in Yugoslavia - Part III] ] .External links
* [http://www.zoz.hr/home.php?content=naslovna&setlang=en Jewish Community of Zagreb]
* [http://www.bet-israel.com/ Jewish Community Bet Israel of Croatia]
* [http://www.croatian-jewish-network.com/?q=en/node/22 Croatian Jewish Network - Chronology (Croatian only)]
* [http://www.lifejacketadventures.com/stories/pdfs/Split_Jews.pdf History of Split´s Jewish Community]Notes and references
* "Excerpts from Jews in Yugoslavia - Part III", Centropa Reports [http://www.centropa.org/reports.asp?rep=HR&ID=5970&TypeID=36658]
* "The Virtual Jewish History Tour - Croatia", Stephanie Persin, Jewish Virtual Library [http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vjw/Croatia.html]
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