6: Hungary welcomes the Nazis

Oscar Sladek

In 1943, the winds of war are changing. The German army has been forced to retreat after the bitter, months-long siege of Stalingrad ended in a stinging defeat in February. Now the Soviet Red Army is advancing westward. In September, Italy surrenders to the Allies, who occupy the southern part of the Italian peninsula.

Despite the successes of the Allies, fear begins to creep into Oscar’s world in Kassa, just as it had in Slovakia. On the radio, Oscar and the Zingers hear reports of mass killings of Jews that have taken place in Poland—and these reports make it sound like the Nazis are winning the war in Europe. Still, the Zingers assure the eight-year-old Oscar that the Hungarian government under Miklós Horthy will not surrender Jewish Hungarians to the Nazis. Despite the discriminatory, anti-Jewish laws enacted by his government, Horthy had refused Nazi deportation orders and many Hungarian Jews felt confident that he would continue to protect them.

Despite their outward optimism, Oscar overhears his aunt, uncle, and older cousins express uncertainty. One day, his uncle takes him to the building’s basement and instructs him to stand guard as he buries papers and valuables. Whatever his relatives might say, Oscar is skeptical that Hungary will remain a safe haven.

The day after his ninth birthday, on March 19, 1944, Oscar hears on the radio that the local government in Kassa will be hosting a military delegation from Germany. He is determined to see these Germans.

Article in The Rocky Mountain News (Daily) 85, no. 83 (March 23, 1944), from the Associated Press, covering the Nazi occupation of Hungary in March 1944.

Colorado Historic Newspapers Collection

Transcript

Oscar: It was a very scary day for me. Because I was at school. Third grade, Hungarian school. And in the morning before I left on the radio there was an announcement that today was going to be a big day for us, for Hungary, because the German military is coming into our country. And it was March 19, 1944, one day after my birthday. And so, being very curious as a kid, and not only a kid, but a kid who was already cautious and familiar with what was going on…

Interviewer: Aware of what it meant to have Germans arrive.

Oscar: Right. So I told the teacher, I don’t feel well, I have to get out of here. So she says to me, go home, and come back tomorrow. So I went straight to that plaza where they used to have parades. And I was just sitting on the sidewalk and looking between people’s, you know adults’ legs, and I was watching the, first of all the Hungarian officers on their Lipizzaner horses, and all of a sudden, cars, German Mercedes cars, and I was so scared at that moment because I’ve never seen before actually German military, of that sort. And when I saw those commanders, the officers, stepping out of those beautiful long Mercedes cars, it gave me chill. That was the beginning of a real, fearful life that I lived.

"When I saw those commanders, the officers, stepping out of those beautiful long Mercedes cars, it gave me chill. That was the beginning of a real, fearful life that I lived."

Interview with Oscar Sladek by Ryan Warner, Colorado Public Radio (January 27, 2023)

Interview excerpt: “He survived the Holocaust, then flourished on Colorado’s folk music scene”

Oscar: It was a very scary day for me. Because I was at school. Third grade, Hungarian school. And in the morning before I left on the radio there was an announcement that today was going to be a big day for us, for Hungary, because the German military is coming into our country. And it was March 19, 1944, one day after my birthday. And so, being very curious as a kid, and not only a kid, but a kid who was already cautious and familiar with what was going on…

Ryan Warner: Aware of what it meant to have Germans arrive.

Oscar: Right. So I told the teacher, I don’t feel well, I have to get out of here. So she says to me, go home, and come back tomorrow. So I went straight to that plaza where they used to have parades. And I was just sitting on the sidewalk and looking between people’s, you know adults’ legs, and I was watching the, first of all the Hungarian officers on their Lipizzaner horses, and all of a sudden, cars, German Mercedes cars, and I was so scared at that moment because I’ve never seen before actually German military, of that sort. And when I saw those commanders, the officers, stepping out of those beautiful long Mercedes cars, it gave me chill. That was the beginning of a real, fearful life that I lived.

Oscar is struck by the difference in appearance between the Germans and the Hungarians. The Hungarian uniform, which he had so admired before, now looks like a theater costume and overly elaborate next to the German’s sleek, formal uniforms. The sight of the Germans frightens Oscar, and that evening he confronts his relatives the Zingers. He insists they are not safe and that all of them must make plans to leave. Even if they do not want to go, Oscar demands that he be sent back to his parents in Prešov. But they do not seem to take him seriously.

The increasingly fearful Oscar begins to act out in uncharacteristically angry and destructive ways. After many days of conflict with the Zingers, a man with a patch over one eye and a long scar across his cheek appears at the door. He is another smuggler. Somehow, Oscar’s Aunt Ella had gotten word back to her sister, and Irene had arranged for Oscar’s return.

Oscar’s intuition that the arrival of the Nazis in Hungary foreshadowed danger was well founded. Oscar leaves Kassa with this new smuggler in April 1944. Shortly thereafter, between May and July, approximately 437,000 Jews will be deported from Hungary to concentration camps: including the entire Zinger family. In Kassa and throughout Hungary, Jews are required to register, surrender their valuables, and wear yellow stars. The Jewish population is concentrated into a newly established ghetto, and beginning in May 1944, marched to the train station and deported. Before 1944, Kassa’s Jewish population had been over 10,000. By 1948, it would be only 3,578. This rapid and deadly intensification of violence against Jews under Nazi occupation is possible only with the cooperation of Hungarian authorities, who facilitate the process of identifying and relocating Jews, confiscating their possessions and redistributing their assets after their deportation.

Oscar's aunt and uncle, Ella and Moric Zinger, with their granddaughter Eva Lysy (c. 1949)

Courtesy of Oscar Sladek

Excerpt from Escape to the Tatras

The smuggler told me I was going to be hidden within the pile of hay for about an hour until we crossed the border into Slovakia. The very idea terrified me, but I had no choice. [. . .]

I pushed the hay away from the front of my face so I could breathe and lay flat on the hard, wooden floor of the wagon with some loose hay under me to buffer the bumps in the road. I could feel the weight of the thick hay mound on my back. The peasant sealed the hole but left a small opening for me to get air and some light. Suddenly, I panicked. What if they find me? What if I suffocate? What if I have to pee? I had never felt so helpless or vulnerable in my life.

Within a short time, I became very hot and began to cry. Once again, I felt trapped. I turned to God and recited the Hear O’Israel, Lord of the Universe… please help me! I want to live! I sobbed quietly.

Thinking of being with my Anyu and Apu [father and mother] again calmed me down. I began to doze off due to the rocking motion of the wagon, a gentle lull. I was awakened by a loud, ‘Whoa, whoa!' Of the coachman. The wagon stopped with a jolt. After a short silence, I picked up a conversation taking place nearby. Several men were speaking to each other. First, I could not hear them very well, but then I detected German words coming closer and closer. A feeling like terror gripped me. I felt dizzy and could hardly breathe. Could it be the border security patrol helping the Slovaks? Were they going to unload the hay and find a little Jewish boy being smuggled across the border? Please God, don’t let them find me!

I expected the hay to be removed from the wagon, but instead, I could hear and feel something poking into the hay above my head, behind me, and in front of me. A pitchfork possibly, or a bayonet at the end of a Nazi rifle? I was petrified. I froze. I pretended I didn’t exist. Was I imagining all of this or was it really happening? Finally, the voices and the rough German chatter, stopped. I heard the sound of boots walking away. Then I heard a loud 'Dio! Dio!' The crack of a whip and the wagon wheels began to turn again. I took a deep breath at last.

Thank you Pán Božko [my dear God], I love you. I tried to relax as the hay wagon kept rolling. I moved my legs, I moved my arms. I could feel my body, hear myself breathing. I definitely needed to piss. I better hold it in until I get out of this hole. Fear turned to anticipation. Just a little longer, I consoled myself, and we will be in Prešov.

Once in Slovakia, Oscar can finally leave the haycart, and then he and the smuggler make their way to the train station to travel to Prešov. When the train pulls into the station, they wait until everyone else has left their compartments, and then the smuggler gives Oscar his instructions. When they leave the train, he must walk toward his home alone. The smuggler will follow him at a distance for a time to make sure he is safe. Oscar obeys, and as he draws close to his home, a policeman approaches him, asking him why he is out alone. Oscar pretends not to hear and runs home.

He arrives out of breath and shakes the gate—it is locked! He picks up a small stone and throws it at the window of the little house, and then another, without response. Then suddenly, his mother appears in the window, “a big smile on her face. Then I heard her shout, 'Frici! Hurry up! Open the gate, Osika is here!'” His father rushes to let him in. Oscar is reunited with his parents and grandparents.

He is welcomed by even more family members who have moved into the small house: Irene’s brother Teodor, sister Ružena, and her infant son Turko. They are all overjoyed to have Oscar back. But their time together and their time in the little house won’t last for long. Shortly after Oscar returns, his grandparents leave Prešov to go to a home in a remote mountain town, Nove Mesto nad Vahom, where the Slovakian government has promised to protect the elderly from deportation. Oscar's uncle Teodor, aunt Ružena, and cousin Turko also leave for other parts of Slovakia. Soon it becomes clear that Oscar and his parents must depart Prešov as well.

Oscar Sladek's Timeline

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Events Related to Current Page
  • Czechoslovakia formed

    Czechoslovakia is founded after the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire at the end of World War I. The country comprises the Czech provinces of Bohemia and Moravia, Slovakia, Subcarpathian Rus [today part of Ukraine known as Transcarpathia] and parts of the Austrian region of Silesia, and is home to a variety of ethnic groups including Czechs, Germans, Hungarians, and Slovaks.

  • Oscar Sladek is born in Prešov, Czechoslovakia

    Frici and Irene Štaub welcome their first son, Oskar. Later, the family will change their last name to Sladek, and Oskar will change the spelling of his name to Oscar. Oscar is born in the Slovak part of Czechoslovakia and belongs to a Slovak Jewish population that numbers over 136,000 in 1930.

  • Hungary passes three ‘Jewish Laws’

    The first of three Jewish Laws establishes quotas restricting the number of Jews permitted to work in certain white-collar professions and business sectors. The second, passed a year later on May 5, 1939 defines Jews racially based on their ancestry, restricts their voting rights, and further reduces the professional quotas established under the First Jewish Law in 1938. A third Jewish Law is enacted on August 8, 1941, banning marriages and sexual relations between Jews and non-Jews in Hungary.

  • Munich Agreement authorizes German annexation of Sudetenland

    Great Britain, France, Germany and Italy conclude an agreement that allows Germany to annex the Sudetenland, a largely German-speaking region then part of Czechoslovakia, in exchange for a peace pledge. British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain hails the Munich Agreement as an achievement of "peace in our time" but he is criticized for a policy of appeasement. Nazi troops occupy Sudetenland on October 1, and the democratically-elected Czechoslovakian government, which was not party to the negotiation, resigns.

  • Hlinka Guard established

    The paramilitary unit of the pro-Nazi Slovak People’s Party (HSLS), named after Slovak nationalist Andrej Hlinka. The group supported the right-wing party’s goal of achieving Slovakian independence and, after the establishment of the Slovak Republic in 1939, the consolidation of authoritarian power in the new regime and the persecution and vilification of Jews, Czechs, and political opponents.

  • First Vienna Award redraws Czechoslovakian borders

    In the wake of the Munich Agreement ceding the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia to Germany, the First Vienna Award provided for further territorial claims against Czechoslovakia. With support from Germany and Italy, Hungary is awarded territories along the southeastern border of Czechoslovakia that had been under Hungarian control prior to World War I.

  • Formation of Slovakia

    Following the partition of Czechoslovakia, the independent Slovak Republic is established. Essentially a client state of Nazi Germany, the new Slovakian regime under Prime Minister Jozef Tiso immediately curtails democratic freedoms and pursues a decidedly anti-Jewish agenda.

  • Nazi occupation of Czech lands and partition of Czechoslovakia

    In violation of the Munich Agreement, Nazi troops invade and occupy Czech territory, establishing the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. Hungary annexes territory along the former southern border of Czechoslovakia, as well as Subcarpathian-Ruthenia [today Transcarpathia, part of Ukraine]; the Tesin District of Czech Silesia is annexed by Poland. Slovakia becomes an independent state.

  • Hungary, Romania, and Slovakia join the Axis alliance

    Hungary, Romania, and Slovakia join with Nazi-allied forces: the Axis.

  • “The Jewish Codex” adopted in Slovak Republic

    The Slovak government adopts “The Jewish Codex,” a comprehensive packet of anti-Jewish laws among the strictest such measures to be found in any European country. The 270 paragraphs of the Codex include measures to define the term “Jew” based on strictly racial criteria, ban Jews from membership in organizations of any kind, require the wearing of a Jewish badge, curtail Jewish citizens’ ability to own businesses, property, or bank accounts. The combined effect of the Jewish Codex is the complete exclusion of Jews from public life in Slovakia.

  • First deportation of Slovak Jews

    The first transport of Slovak Jews—consisting of 1000 women and girls—is deported to concentration camps in German-occupied Poland. The Slovak government has agreed to pay Nazi Germany a fee of 500 Reichsmarks for every Jew deported from Slovakia, ostensibly to cover the cost of resettlement and retraining. Some 57,000 Slovak Jews are gathered into labor camps within Slovakia and, over the next seven months, deported to concentration camps in German-occupied Poland.

  • Oscar Sladek is sent to Kassa, Hungary

    The Štaubs have been able to avoid the deportations of 1942 by hiding during roundups. Now, after a brief reprieve during which deportations were halted, the government is threatening to resume the transports. Irene has a sister living in Kassa, Hungary, just 20 miles away from Prešov. The situation seems much safer on the Hungarian side, so Irene and Frici Štaub hire a smuggler to take Oscar across the border to live with Irene's sister's family.

  • Deportation transports from Slovakia halted

    Since March 25, 1942, Slovakia has deported more than 57,000 Jews, delivering them into German custody in Nazi-occupied Poland. As reports that deported Jews are being murdered by the Nazis reach the Slovakian government, President Jozef Tiso, who is an ordained Catholic priest, comes under pressure from the Vatican and other Church officials. Tiso orders deportations of Slovak Jews to camps in German-occupied Poland to cease.

  • Jewish population of Slovakia is estimated to be c. 20,000

    The number of Jews living in Slovakia, estimated to have been c. 89,000 in 1940, has been reduced to around 20,000 at the beginning of 1943. More than 57,000 Slovak Jews were deported between May-October 1942; most of them have perished. Of those remaining in Slovakia, some 2,500 are interned in the three major labor camps: Sered, Nováky, and Vyhne. Some 6,000 more have fled to Hungary, the only country under Nazi influence not yet deporting Jews. Many others are in hiding or living under false identities.

  • Report to US State Department confirms systematic murder of Jews

    A report from the American Legation in Switzerland to the US State Department with the title “Confirming Reports of Mass Executions of Jews in Poland” describes the systematic deprivation and murder of Jews across Europe and specifically in ghettos and Nazi concentration camps in Poland, adding to growing evidence of Nazi atrocities against the Jewish populations of occupied Europe.

  • Nazi surrender at Stalingrad

    After months of bitter fighting, the Soviet army is finally able to surround and trap German forces besieging the city. Of the nearly 250,000 troops that attacked the city in August 1942, some 90,000 surrender to the Soviets. The German defeat in the Battle of Stalingrad marks a turning point in the war; Soviet forces will now advance and push the Axis to retreat.

  • Italy surrenders to Allies

    Following the Allied invasion of Italy and the defeat of Italian operations in North Africa, Mussolini is replaced as prime minister by Marschall Pietro Badoglio, who formally surrenders to the Allies in early September. Northern Italy is quickly occupied by Germany.

  • Nazis occupy Hungary

    Hungary, part of the Axis powers since 1940, wavers in its support of Hitler after Soviet successes on the battlefield. Concerned that Hungary is preparing to leave the Axis powers and join the Allies, Hitler orders Hungary’s occupation. Hungarian Regent Miklós Horthy is sidelined and a pro-Nazi government is appointed. Up to this point, Hungary has refused to deport its Jewish population.

  • Oscar Sladek returns to Prešov

    Unable to convince his relatives in Hungary of the danger to Jews under Nazi occupation, Oscar demands to be sent back to his parents in Prešov. He travels with a smuggler organized by his parents.

  • Registration of Hungary's Jews

    Nazi and Hungarian authorities begin to register the country's Jews, force them to wear an identification badge, confiscate propery and businesses, and soon isolate them in ghettos.

  • Deportations of Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz-Birkenau begin

    Beginning 15 May, Nazi forces and Hungarian collaborators systematically round-up and deport c. 440,000 Jews within two months. Most are murdered on arrival in Auschwitz-Birkenau; some 110,000 are assigned to forced labor.

  • Oscar Sladek and his family leave Prešov for Mikuláš

    Supplied with false papers by their friend the judge, the Štaubs have been living under assumed Christian identity in Prešov. Fearing they will be recognized as Jews, they decide to leave Prešov for a new location: Mikuláš [Liptovský Mikuláš] is located in the mountainous region of northern Slovakia.

  • Russia advances westward in Subcarpathian Rus

    During the summer of 1944, Russian forces move up through Subcarpathian Rus towards Slovakia’s eastern border. The Russian advance is an important factor precipitating the Slovak uprising in August, leading to Germany's subsequent occupation of Slovakia.

  • Einsatzgruppe H active in Slovakia

    Einsatzgruppe H is a special task force of the SS with the express purpose of implementing the Final Solution in Slovakia and suppressing resistance to Nazi occupation. With the occupation of Slovakia, the Nazis prioritize the elimination of the Jewish population. Working with local collaborators such as the Hlinka Guard, Einsatzgruppe H systematically hunt down Jews and partisans, as well as anyone suspected of aiding either. Those found are either killed on the spot or deported.

  • Germany occupies Slovakia

    In response to a partisan uprising, Germany enters and occupies Slovakia. Encouraged by the Allied invasion of Normandy and news that Soviet troops are advancing towards Slovakia, the underground Slovak resistance movement revolts against the Tiso regime and the influence of the Nazis. As many as 80,000 fighters from the Slovak military, partisan groups, and foreign volunteers join forces in the Slovak National Uprising. After the organized rebellion is quashed by Nazi occupying forces in late October, partisan fighters retreat but continue resistance using guerilla tactics.

  • The Štaubs leave Mikuláš for Bobrovček

    Nazi forces advance into Slovakia and begin to encircle Mikulas. Partisan forces in the city retreat, and Oscar and his family move to the village of Bobrovček, where the partisans have established a base.

  • Deportation of Slovak Jews under Nazi occupation

    Under German occupation the deportation of Slovak Jews resumes. Between September and December 1944, approximately 12,600 Jews are transported to concentration camps, bringing the total of deported Slovak Jews to c. 70,000.

  • Soviet Army enters Slovakia

    From early September 1944, the Soviets and Germans are fighting along the Polish-Slovak border in the Carpathian Mountains. The Soviets gain control of Slovak territory near Svidnik in early October. Simultaneously, the Soviets were pushing upward through Hungary along the southeastern border of Slovakia. By November, eastern Slovakia is under Soviet control.

  • Oscar Sladek and his family flee into the Tatras

    As the Nazis are about to take control of the village of Bobrovcek, the Štaubs flee on foot into the Tatra mountains, along with other Jews, partisans, and others. They take shelter in a primitive cabin they must share with 12 other people.

  • Publication of Auschwitz Report

    The War Refugee Board publishes the 40-page report “German Extermination CampsAuschwitz and Birkenau,” based on first-person testimony from four Slovakian Jewish men who had escaped from Auschwitz in spring 1944. Known as the 'Auschwitz Report,' the document contains for the first time estimates of the numbers of Jews being murdered in the camp as well as details of camp operations, including the gas chambers. One of the eyewitness accounts reported is from Irene Štaub’s second cousin, Arnost Rozin.

  • German and Soviet forces battle for control of Liptovský Mikuláš, Slovakia

    In early February, Soviet forces take control of villages to the east and south of the strategically important town. Mikuláš itself is the site of prolonged fighting between the advancing Soviet army and German forces ordered to hold the position. The Germans begin pulling out of the town in March, and by March 27 Mikuláš is under Soviet control. During this time, Oscar Sladek and his family are in hiding in the nearby Tatra mountains.

  • Oscar Sladek and his family reach Soviet lines and freedom

    With the help of partisan fighters, the Štaubs and the other families with whom they have been sharing their hideout in the Tatras make their way down the mountain to Soviet lines. In the town of Žiar, they are provided with warm food and shelter for the first time in months.

  • Soviet forces capture Bratislava

    With the liberation of the Slovak capitol Nazi control of Slovakia is ended and Tiso’s collaborationist regime is toppled. German forces withdraw into Austria rather than defend the city, which becomes a gateway for the Soviet advance into Austria and southern Germany.

  • Provisional Czechoslovak government formed in Košice

    Under Soviet control since January, the city of Košice becomes the seat of a provisional Czechoslovak government. The Košice Government Program restores the state of Czechoslovakia, aligning it politically and economically with the Soviet Union. Territory ceded to Hungary is restored, so that Košice becomes, once again, part of Czechoslovakia.

  • Unconditional surrender of Nazi Germany

    Nazi Germany's High Command unconditionally surrenders on 7 May to the Allies and 9 May to the Soviets. May 8 is proclaimed "Victory in Europe Day."

  • Communists seize power in Czechoslovakia

    Under the Soviet sphere of influence since its liberation in 1945, post-war Czechoslovakia initially operated as a democracy, but gradually, key government ministries came under communist control, culminating in a communist takeover of the government in early 1948. Among other reforms, the new communist regime collectivizes businesses and initiates a campaign against all organized religion—part of a larger plan to limit basic civil, labor, and personal liberties.

  • Oscar Sladek celebrates his bar mitzvah

    Just days before his thirteenth birthday, Oscar celebrates his bar mitzvah in Košice. Many of his relatives are missing, having perished during the war.

  • State of Israel established

    Per the United Nations resolution of November 1947 for the partition of Mandate Palestine, the British mandate comes to an end on May 14, 1948. In Tel Aviv, Jewish leader David Ben-Gurion proclaims the State of Israel, which will be a haven for those Jews made homeless by the Holocaust.

  • Oscar Sladek’s sister Miriam is born

    Frici and Irene welcome their long-awaited second child, a daughter and a younger sister to Oscar.

  • Oscar Sladek and his family arrive in Israel

    The Sladeks arrive in the harbor of Haifa on Israeli Independence Day—exactly one year after the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948.

  • Suez Crisis

    Also known as the Second Arab-Israeli War. After Egypt nationalizes the British- and French-owned Suez Canal Company, Great Britain and France respond to the threat to their economic interests with a joint attack on Egypt in coordination with Israel. Israel seeks to regain access to the waterway lost due to an Egyptian blockade since the First Arab-Israeli War. A UN resolution on November 6 brings about a ceasefire. Egypt is able to maintain control of the Canal and Israel secures its shipping rights, but the crisis marks the end of Britain and French influence in the Middle East.

  • Oscar Sladek immigrates to Venezuela

    Following his military service in Israel, Oscar moves to Caracas, Venezuela to pursue a musical career. One year later, a coup in Venezuela forces him to leave the country.

  • Oscar Sladek moves from Caracas to Los Angeles

    Civil unrest in the wake of the collapse of the Venezuelan government in November 1958 forces Oscar to leave Caracas. He decides to pursue his career as a musician and entertainer in the United States, settling in Los Angeles.

  • Oscar and Selma Sladek settle in Denver

    Oscar meets his wife Selma in Los Angeles. Following their marriage, the couple decide to settle in Selma’s hometown of Denver.

  • Oscar Sladek's Contributions Recognized

    Honoring Oscar’s work as an educator and speaker on the Holocaust, this award recognizing his “commitment to inspire understanding, moral courage and social responsibility” is presented to him by Colorado Governor Jared Polis at the Mizel Institute Annual Dinner.

  • Slovakia issues apology

    On the 80th anniversary of the adoption of the 1941 Jewish Codex, Slovakia issues a formal apology for the persecution of Slovak Jews through anti-Jewish laws and its role in the murder of Slovak Jews during World War II.

  • Oscar is inducted into the Colorado Authors Hall of Fame

    Following the publication of his memoir, "Escape to the Tatras," Oscar’s accomplishments are recognized with his induction into the Colorado Authors Hall of Fame.

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