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How Ustaše Nazis Paid for 820 Victims: Prebilovci 1941 JJ

6 April 1941. The skies above Yugoslavia   thunder as German aircraft bomb Belgrade  and cities across the kingdom. Under the   codename Operation Strafgericht meaning Operation  Retribution, Nazi Germany launches its invasion,   determined to secure the Balkans before turning  east toward the Soviet Union.

 Within days,   Yugoslav resistance collapses, and the country  is dismembered by occupation and collaboration.  In the months that follow, terror becomes a  tool of rule as Axis authorities and local   allies answer resistance with collective  punishment, branding entire communities as   enemies. Villages are destroyed not for what  they have done, but for where they exist. 

In southern Yugoslavia, in  the region of Herzegovina,   the Serbian village of Prebilovci struggles to  survive amid growing violence. Its inhabitants,   isolated and defenceless, include  families, women, children, and the elderly.   In the summer of 1941, persecution reaches  the village itself when armed units of the   Ustaša regime descend on Prebilovci, moving  through the village house by house.

 Civilians   are dragged from their homes, beaten, and  herded together as panic spreads. Women and   children are torn from their families and driven  toward nearby pits, where they are murdered.  In the end, more than 820 civilians lie  dead, and the village is effectively   erased.

 However, this atrocity, which will  become known as the Prebilovci massacre,   will not remain unpunished, and the perpetrators  will pay for their crimes with their own lives. The Second World War started on 1 September  1939 when Nazi Germany invaded Poland.  When Germany’s ally Italy failed to conquer  Greece in the late autumn and winter of 1940–1941,   Germany became increasingly concerned about  securing its southeastern flank in the Balkans.  

Greece’s success in repelling Italian forces  allowed its ally, Great Britain, to establish   a foothold on the European continent. To conquer  Greece and drive the British off the mainland,   Nazi Germany sought to bring Yugoslavia  and Bulgaria into the Axis alliance,   which was the military coalition  led by Germany, Italy, and Japan. 

On 25 March 1941, Yugoslavia joined the Axis and  agreed to permit German troops to transit through   its territory en route to Greece. The announcement  of the agreement was extremely unpopular in many   parts of the country, particularly in Serbia and  Montenegro.

 The Yugoslav government soon declared   that it would not honour its obligations  under the pact. Adolf Hitler was furious.   Although Prime Minister General Dušan Simović  attempted to retract the statement within days,   Hitler ordered the invasion of  Yugoslavia on the evening of 27 March. In the wake of Yugoslavia’s collapse, the  Independent State of Croatia was established   under Axis patronage and placed under the rule  of the Ustaša, a radical fascist movement led by   Ante Pavelić. At the center of the regime’s  system of terror stood Vjekoslav Luburić,  

who headed the network of concentration camps in  the Independent State of Croatia and personally   oversaw—and actively drove—the genocidal  campaigns against Serbs, Jews, and Roma people.  The regime pursued an openly genocidal  policy toward the Serbian population,   viewing mass violence as a tool of  state-building.

 Across the Independent   State of Croatia, Ustaša units carried  out deportations and systematic killings,   operating with near total impunity, particularly  in rural regions of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Civilians were targeted not for  resistance, but for their identity,   and entire villages were marked for destruction  as part of this campaign.

 In the summer of 1941,   this policy reached the village of Prebilovci. On 4 August 1941, hundreds of Ustaša fighters  attacked Prebilovci from three directions.   The village was inhabited mostly by women,  children, and the elderly. Most adult men,   fearing arrest or execution, had avoided  sleeping in their homes, believing their   absence might spare their families.

 As Ustaša units entered Prebilovci,   they moved through the village, searching houses  one by one. Civilians were dragged outside,   beaten, and herded together by force.  Property was looted, livestock seized,   and food taken. Women and girls were brutally  raped, often in front of their families. The   violence was open and deliberate, carried  out without any attempt at concealment.

The villagers were then assembled in the  centre of Prebilovci and driven into the   primary school building. Inside, Ustaša  fighters, many of them sexual deviants,   subjected their victims to prolonged brutality.  Their orgies of sadism and bestiality targeted   mainly defenceless women and girls, particularly  those between the ages of 12 and 15. 

As the violence escalated, it spread  to the youngest and most vulnerable.   Around fifty babies were taken from  their cradles, swung by their legs,   and dashed against the school wall,  as their mothers were forced to watch. Yet what happened inside the  school was only the beginning.  On 6 August 1941, the horror escalated  dramatically as several hundred Ustaša under   Ivan Jovanović, now joined by reinforcements from  the nearby town of Čapljina, began the next and   far more brutal phase of the operation. Prisoners were forced into cattle cars  

and transported to a remote unloading  point near the Golubinka pit, one of   many near-vertical karst caves in the region. From there, the captives were taken in small   groups toward the pit. Victims were brought to the  edge family by family and pushed inside. The pit   had an initial vertical drop of about twenty-seven  meters, followed by a steep descent of roughly   one hundred meters to the bottom. Small children  were thrown into the air before being cast down.  

One woman gave birth as she fell and the newborn  died with her beneath the crush of bodies.  The scale of the killings was later described  by Alojzije Mišić, the Catholic Bishop of the   city of Mostar, in a letter dated 7 November  1941. He wrote of the horrific scale of the   killings across Herzegovina, describing  atrocities in nearby towns.

 He stated: “People were captured like animals, slaughtered  and thrown alive into the abyss. Women,   mothers with children, adult girls, and  entire families were cast into the pits.” Before the war, the village of Prebilovci had  more than one thousand inhabitants. More than 820   were killed by the Ustaša in the summer of 1941.

  Of those thrown into the pits, 45 survived the   fall and later escaped to tell of the disaster.  300 children and infants were murdered that day   alone. After the last victims were thrown inside,  the Ustaša sat nearby drinking and celebrating. One month after the massacre, Ustaša  authorities resettled between sixty   and seventy Croatian families from the  districts of Ljubuški and Čapljina into   the emptied village. Prebilovci was renamed  Novo Selo, meaning New Village.

 When Italian   forces later occupied Herzegovina, the Ustaša  garrison and settlers abandoned the village.  News of what had happened in Prebilovci  soon reached Italian military authorities   stationed in Herzegovina. Italian General  Alessandro Luzano compiled a detailed   report and sent it to Benito Mussolini  – the Italian Dictator.

 In his letter,   he described mass murder and systematic sexual  violence carried out by Ustaša units and also   expressed horror at learning that a Roman  Catholic priest had taken part in the crimes. The Second World War in Europe ended  on 8 May 1945 and the full extent of   what had taken place in Prebilovci  became known only after the war.

In July 1946, investigators of a Yugoslav  state war crimes commission recorded survivor   testimonies that documented the massacre in  detail. The most important testimony came from   Mara Bulut, the only woman to survive the killings  in the village school. Her testimony, and others,   described sexual violence carried out deliberately  as a form of terror and humiliation.

 She testified   that the Ustaša, many of them sexual deviants,  forced a 22-year-old man, Maksim Bulut, to rape   his cousin, which he refused, and as a result he  was subjected to brutal torture by the Ustaša.   On a different occasion, an Ustaša member, Nikola  Merđan, first raped a teacher named Stana Arnaut   and then handed her over to her own students,  who were forced under threat to gang-rape her   for a week. After the teacher went insane,  she was murdered and buried in the schoolyard. 

During her testimony, Mara Bulut confirmed that  the violence was systematically ritualized.   The girls who resisted being raped  were stripped naked and then executed. In the years after the war, justice did  eventually catch up with some of the perpetrators.  One of the main perpetrators, Ivan Jovanović,  fled after the war and in May 1945 joined Tito’s   Partisans. He later hid near the town  of Subotica but did not escape justice.  

He was arrested in 1956 and two years later,  he was executed. Five more participants were   sentenced to death and executed as well. Vjekoslav Luburić, who personally oversaw   and spearheaded the contemporaneous  genocides of Serbs, Jews and Roma   people in the Independent State of Croatia, was  murdered in his home in Spain in April 1969.

The Golubinka pit, in which victims of  the Prebilovci massacre lost their lives,   remained sealed for decades. It was opened  only in 1990, when Serbian Orthodox priests   led by Patriarch Pavle descended into the pit  and held a memorial service over the remains   of the victims. From the depths, the remains  of approximately 1,550 people were recovered. 

In 1991, on the fiftieth anniversary of the  massacre, the remains of nearly 4,000 victims,   taken from the Golubinka pit and from fifteen  surrounding pits, were laid to rest in the   crypt of the Church of the Synaxis of Serbian  Saints and Martyrs of Prebilovci. One year later,   in June 1992, during the civil war that  followed the breakup of Yugoslavia,   the village of Prebilovci was burned.

  The destruction was carried out by units   of the Army of the Republic of Croatia, who  demolished the church and destroyed its crypt. It is estimated that during the Second  World War, around 1.2 million people   were killed in Yugoslavia, of whom  approximately 581,000 were civilians. Thanks for watching the World History  Channel.

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