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Kunmadaras pogrom

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Pogrom monument in Kunmadaras

TheKunmadaras pogrom was an anti-Semiticpogrom that took place shortly after the Second World War inKunmadaras,Hungary. The pogrom took place on 22 May 1946. According to theJewish Telegraphic Agency, three Jews were killed and up to 20 were injured.[1]

The riot began in the marketplace as a spontaneous protest against a suspectedprofiteer. Since the traditional occupation of the Jews in the area was trade, the image of a profiteer was conflated with that of a Jew.[citation needed] Thus, the riot grew into an anti-Jewish pogrom.

But profiteering was only the excuse, taken from the old book of antisemitism.[citation needed] The real reason was fear that returning Jews would reclaim their property.[citation needed] After they were taken away to concentration camps, their homes were looted, and their possessions stolen as they were not expected to return alive.[citation needed] The frenzy was further instigated by the rumors that the Jews were stealing Christian children.[citation needed]

The historian Péter Apor made a peculiar observation about the subsequent trial of the pogromists: "The People's Tribunal managed to produce a narrative of an anti-Semitic pogrom without involving the Jewish victims." The pogrom was portrayed as a resurgence offascism pitched against the nascentpeople's democracy.[2]

On 26 July 1946, ten rioters were convicted of having instigated and participated in the violence. Three were sentenced to death. Two others were sentenced to 15-years in prison with hard labor each. A police officer who was involved received a 6-year sentence, while four youths were sentenced to reform schools. Several other defendants were acquitted.[3][4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Report of Miskolc Outbreak Says Fascist Mob Utilized Workers Protest Against Profiteers".Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 5 August 1946.
  2. ^Apor, Péter (2013)."The Lost Deportations and the Lost People of Kunmadaras: A Pogrom in Hungary, 1946".Hungarian Historical Review.2 (3):566–604.
  3. ^Kamins, Toni (17 November 1946)."Nine Convicted of Participation in Kunmadaras Pogrom Appeal to Higher Court".Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Retrieved2020-01-06.
  4. ^"Three Sentenced to Death for Instigating Kunmadaras Pogrom; Three Others Get Life".Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 2015-03-20. Retrieved2023-11-26.

Further reading

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  • Braham, Randolph L; Chamberlin, Brewster S (2004).Holocaust in Hungary: Sixty Years Later. Rosenthal Institute for Holocaust Studies, Graduate Center of the City University of New York. pp. 167, 189.ISBN 0-88033-576-9.


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