During World War II in Yugoslavia, when the village of Gornja Rijeka, Croatia was part of the Independent State of Croatia, it was the site of a concentration camp. A number of women, some of them with children, were interned there between November 1941 and the spring of 1942; the camp's population was estimated as between 200 and 400 at any given time. In February 1942, Diana Budisavljević's group acted through the government and the Red Cross to save 11 children from there, and in March a group of 147 Serbian women and children were moved from Gornja Rijeka to Loborgrad concentration camp and then on to Zagreb and Zemun, and in turn to camps in Germany and Serbia. In April, the remaining Serbian women were moved to Loborgrad, and then released. This left 73 Jewish women and 7 Catholic wo
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| - KZ Gornja Rijeka (de)
- Camp de concentration de Gorjna Rijeka (fr)
- Gornja Rijeka concentration camp (en)
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| - Das KZ Gornja Rijeka war während des Zweiten Weltkriegs ein Konzentrationslager der kroatischen Ustascha in bei Krizevci im kurz zuvor gegründeten faschistischen Unabhängigen Staat Kroatien (NDH). Es war 1942 als spezielles KZ für Kinder bis 16 Jahre konzipiert, besonders für serbische, aber auch jüdische Kinder, und wurde erst durch den Einmarsch deutscher und italienischer Truppen in Jugoslawien 1941 ermöglicht. Zum Teil waren jedoch auch Serbinnen interniert. (de)
- During World War II in Yugoslavia, when the village of Gornja Rijeka, Croatia was part of the Independent State of Croatia, it was the site of a concentration camp. A number of women, some of them with children, were interned there between November 1941 and the spring of 1942; the camp's population was estimated as between 200 and 400 at any given time. In February 1942, Diana Budisavljević's group acted through the government and the Red Cross to save 11 children from there, and in March a group of 147 Serbian women and children were moved from Gornja Rijeka to Loborgrad concentration camp and then on to Zagreb and Zemun, and in turn to camps in Germany and Serbia. In April, the remaining Serbian women were moved to Loborgrad, and then released. This left 73 Jewish women and 7 Catholic wo (en)
- Le camp de concentration de Gorjna Rijeka (KZ Gornja Rijeka) était un camp de concentration dirigé par les croates pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale à Križevci en Croatie. Le camp est en activité de novembre 1941 à août 1942 et pouvait contenir de 200 à 400 places. Les internés étaient principalement des enfants serbes et juifs tout comme dans les camps oustachis de Jastrebarsko et de Sisak.Un nombre inconnu de femmes, certaines avec des enfants, sont internées dans le camp. (fr)
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| - Das KZ Gornja Rijeka war während des Zweiten Weltkriegs ein Konzentrationslager der kroatischen Ustascha in bei Krizevci im kurz zuvor gegründeten faschistischen Unabhängigen Staat Kroatien (NDH). Es war 1942 als spezielles KZ für Kinder bis 16 Jahre konzipiert, besonders für serbische, aber auch jüdische Kinder, und wurde erst durch den Einmarsch deutscher und italienischer Truppen in Jugoslawien 1941 ermöglicht. Zum Teil waren jedoch auch Serbinnen interniert. (de)
- During World War II in Yugoslavia, when the village of Gornja Rijeka, Croatia was part of the Independent State of Croatia, it was the site of a concentration camp. A number of women, some of them with children, were interned there between November 1941 and the spring of 1942; the camp's population was estimated as between 200 and 400 at any given time. In February 1942, Diana Budisavljević's group acted through the government and the Red Cross to save 11 children from there, and in March a group of 147 Serbian women and children were moved from Gornja Rijeka to Loborgrad concentration camp and then on to Zagreb and Zemun, and in turn to camps in Germany and Serbia. In April, the remaining Serbian women were moved to Loborgrad, and then released. This left 73 Jewish women and 7 Catholic women in Gornja Rijeka. The latter, apprehended for "Communist propaganda", were soon moved to Stara Gradiška concentration camp, while the former were moved to Loborgrad in May 1942, emptying the Gornja Rijeka site. On 24 June 1942, around 100 boys from one of the Jasenovac concentration camp sites were transferred to the site, run by Ustaša Youth members, and then on 4 July another 200 boys and girls arrived from the Stara Gradiška concentration camp. From June 1942, the camp housed approximately 400 orphans left behind from the Kozara Offensive. After an outbreak of typhoid fever that caused around 140 deaths among the children, the camp guards abandoned the site in August 1942, and the Croatian Red Cross activists and doctors evacuated around 200 surviving children on 14 August 1942 to Zagreb hospitals and the Jastrebarsko children's camp. (en)
- Le camp de concentration de Gorjna Rijeka (KZ Gornja Rijeka) était un camp de concentration dirigé par les croates pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale à Križevci en Croatie. Le camp est en activité de novembre 1941 à août 1942 et pouvait contenir de 200 à 400 places. Les internés étaient principalement des enfants serbes et juifs tout comme dans les camps oustachis de Jastrebarsko et de Sisak.Un nombre inconnu de femmes, certaines avec des enfants, sont internées dans le camp. À partir de juin 1942, le camp compte 400 orphelins abandonnés après l'opération Bosnie-Ouest. Environ 140 enfants sont morts dans le camp, des mauvaises conditions de détentions et du typhus. (fr)
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