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  2. The Holocaust in Hungary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Holocaust_in_Hungary

    The Holocaust in Hungary was the dispossession, deportation, and systematic murder of more than half of the Hungarian Jews, primarily after the German occupation of Hungary in March 1944. At the time of the German invasion, Hungary had a Jewish population of 825,000, [ 1 ] the largest remaining in Europe, [ 2 ] further swollen by Jews escaping ...

  3. László Csatáry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/László_Csatáry

    László Csizsik Csatáry (Hungarian: [ˈlaːsloː ˈt͡ʃɒtaːri]; 4 March 1915 – 10 August 2013) was a Hungarian citizen and was convicted and sentenced to death in absentia in 1948 by a Czechoslovak court as a Nazi war criminal. In 2012, his name was added to the Simon Wiesenthal Center's list of most wanted Nazi war criminals. [2]

  4. Pál Szalai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pál_Szalai

    Pál Szalai (September 3, 1915 – January 16, 1994) also spelled Pál Szalay and later anglicized as Paul Sterling was a high-ranking Hungarian police officer and disillusioned member of the Arrow Cross Party. In 1945, together with Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg, Szalai helped save hundreds of Hungarian Jews in the Budapest ghetto.

  5. Jewish councils in Hungary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_councils_in_Hungary

    Jewish councils or Judenräte (Hungarian: zsidó tanácsok) were administrative bodies in Hungary, which were established following the German invasion of Hungary on 19 March 1944. Similar to elsewhere in German-occupied Europe during World War II , these councils purported to represent local Jewish communities in dealings with the Nazi ...

  6. Sándor Képíró - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sándor_Képíró

    Hungarian military prosecutors stated that the verdicts were no longer valid and that a new investigation would need to be reopened, which might take years. On 14 September 2009, Képíró was taken in for questioning by the Hungarian police. However, the charges made against him were later abandoned, due to lack of evidence.

  7. Budapest Ghetto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budapest_Ghetto

    The Budapest Ghetto was a Nazi ghetto set up in Budapest, Hungary, where Jews were forced to relocate by a decree of the Government of National Unity led by the fascist Arrow Cross Party during the final stages of World War II. The ghetto existed from November 29, 1944, to January 17, 1945.

  8. Arrow Cross Party - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arrow_Cross_Party

    The Arrow Cross Party (Hungarian: Nyilaskeresztes Párt – Hungarista Mozgalom, lit. ' Arrow Cross Party – Hungarist Movement ', abbreviated NYKP) was a far-right Hungarian ultranationalist party led by Ferenc Szálasi, which formed a government in Hungary they named the Government of National Unity.

  9. Jewish Ghetto Police - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_Ghetto_Police

    The Polish-Jewish historian and Warsaw Ghetto archivist Emanuel Ringelblum has described the cruelty of the ghetto Jewish police as "at times greater than that of the Germans, the Ukrainians and the Latvians." [6] The Jewish ghetto police ultimately shared the same fate with all their fellow ghetto inmates. On the ghettos' liquidation (1942 ...