Banski Grabovac massacre

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Banski Grabovac massacre
Part of World War II in Yugoslavia
LocationBanski Grabovac, Independent State of Croatia
Date24-25 July 1941
TargetSerbs
Attack type
Summary executions
Deaths1,100–1,200[1][2]
PerpetratorsUstaše

The Banski Grabovac massacre was the mass killing of 1,100-1,200 Serb civilians by the Croatian fascist Ustaše movement on 24-25 July 1941, during World War II.

After the Axis

Jewish and Roma population within the borders of the state.[4]

The massacre occurred after acts of resistance against the NDH by armed Serbian peasants.[5] The first major clash between the Ustaše and anti-fascists in the territory of Croatia took place in the village of Banski Grabovac on July 23-24 when 42 rebels charged a municipal building and train station, seizing more than 50 rifles.[6] On July 24-25, the Ustaše captured the village and arrested more than 1,200 Serbs from surrounding villages.[6][1] Approximately 800 people were shot and killed on the spot while others were taken to the Jadovno concentration camp and killed there.[5] Nearly the entire village's Serb population was annihilated.[1] Those killed on location were buried in mass graves near the village's station.[5]

References