Testimony of Nada Dzhurashevich, born in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, 1930, regarding her experiences in Yugoslavia under Hungarian and German occupation
Testimony of Nada Dzhurashevich, born in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, 1930, regarding her experiences in Yugoslavia under Hungarian and German occupation
Mixed marriage of a Jewish mother and Serbian father; move from city to city due to her father's work with the railroad; move to Belgrade, 1939.
German shellings, April 1941; escape to a village; life as refugees; miserliness of the farmers; return to Belgrade, under German occupation; anti-Jewish legislation, June 1941; escape to Kanjiza in Vojvodina, under Hungarian occupation; attends a Catholic convent school; displays of antisemitism by children in school and on the streets; hostile attitude of the Hungarian population; deportation order to the Jews, 1942; escape to Belgrade with her mother; her mother is informed on by her father to the Gestapo; receives the yellow badge; ban against leaving Belgrade; Allied shellings, 1944; liberation by the Red Army, October 1944.
Aliya to Israel, 1993.
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3561934
Nada
Dzhurashevich
1930
Belgrad, Yugoslavia
Testimony
7655
Serbian-Croatian
O.3 - Testimonies Department of the Yad Vashem Archives