THE CHRONICLE OF THESSALONIKI PERSECUTION





28.10.1940. Italy declares war on Greece.
1.12.1940. One out of four Jews in Thessaloniki is officially characterized as destitute by state agencies.
6.4.1941. Germany declares war on Greece.
9.4.1941. German army enters Thessaloniki. Jewish store owners do not open their shops and stay locked indoors.
11.4.1941. Jewish Press banned.
12.4.1941. Commandeering of Hirsch Hospital, Jewish homes and schools.
15.4.1941. Members of the Community Board and senior personnel of the Jewish Community in Thessaloniki are arrested.
17.4.1941. The Gestapo searches the offices of the Community and community organizations. Files are confiscated.
18.4.1941. More eminent Jews of Thessaloniki are arrested.
20.4.1941. Blatantly anti-Semitic article in the collaborating newspaper “Nea Evropi”, the first in a long line of vulgar, anti-Jewish propaganda.
21.4.1941. Gestapo searches the Synagogues. Signs posted in restaurants and cafes sayingJews are unwelcome” in Greek and German.
24.4.1941. A group of Sondercommando Rosenberg in Griechenland comes to Thessaloniki; it is headed by librarians Hans Arnold and Willy Pfeiffer; a huge number of rare books and heirlooms are recorded and confiscated from Thessaloniki Synagogues.
28.4.1941. Confiscation of radios and pianos owned by Jews.
1.5.1941. The German command orders that all Jewish shops that remained closed are to open, under threat of confiscation of any that remained closed.
4.5.1941. Confiscation of Jewish-owned bookshops and imprisonment of their owners.
12.5.1941. The order to confiscate radios is repeated.
17.5.1941. Head Rabbi Koretz in Athens is arrested and displaced to Vienna.
22.5.1941. Search of the Synagogue in 151 District and removal of valuable heirloom.
June 1941. Germans appoint Director of JCT offices Sabbie Saltiel as Head of all Jewry in Greece. Members of the disbanded Board are released. Partial return of confiscated community files.
29.6.1941. Commandeering of all homes in the major Jewish neighbourhoods of Miaouli and Misrachi Streets.
2.7.1941. Execution of (the first) Jew charged with fighting with a German soldier.
12.7.1941. Mass arrests of Jews at dawn; they had been turned in as traitors by German collaborators.
December 1941. Three Jews are executed without trial, one of whom (David Tiano) was a US Consulate clerk.
October 1941. Appointed President Sabbie Saltiel is sent by the Germans to Athens to be the leader of the Jews there as well. Italian authorities do not facilitate his moving there and the Jews of Athens do not recognize him.
15.11.1941. Sondercommando Rosenberg in Griechenland completes its mission.
December 1941- March 1942. The Jewish population records a much higher mortality rate due to starvation and malaria as compared to the Christian population.
January 1942. Matanoth is founded once again to replace abolished Jewish foundations; it sees to it that children and other groups facing imminent risk of death due to starvation are fed. The task is overseen by a Coordination Committee for Social Welfare Projects, which was formed by eminent Jews for this reason.
January 1942. Release of Head Rabbi Koretz; he returned to his religious duties in Thessaloniki.
April 1942. The appointed by the Germans Prime Minister G. Tsolakoglou visits Thessaloniki. The Head Rabbi and Sabbie Saltiel visit him and thank him for his older statements that there is no Jewish question in Greece” and that Jews, who had shown their patriotism during the Greek-Italian war, would have equal treatment with all other Greek citizens.
11.7.1942. A document by the German Ministry of Security reveals that the German Plenipotentiary in Athens had already sounded his Italian counterpart on whether his country would accept a special sign for the Jews to be instituted in Greece. Italy had refused.
11.7.1942. All Jewish males aged 18-45 are called to be present at Eleftherias Square at 8 a.m. A total of 9000 men gathered and remained under the scorching sun until the afternoon; they were subjected to degrading and humiliating treatment. Those gathered were registered so that they could be sent to forced labour camps (roadworks, ore mining, etc.) for the German technical companies Muller and Todd.
13-15.7.1942. Registration of those to be sent to forced labour camps continues. Those registered are transported to various locations in Macedonia. Due to squalid conditions and extremely inadequate nutrition, there was a very high morbidity and mortality rate among workers.
20.8.1942. The contractor Muller proposes to the JCT that they take over recruiting and medical care of the workers.
29.8.1942. A protocol is signed between the German Military Command and the JCT, which provided for the creation of a liaison bureau to regulate the recruiting of workers and the possible buyout of forced labour.
12.10.1942. The German Military Command of Thessaloniki – the Aegean requests the list of the 144 families registered as Spanish citizens from the Municipality of Thessaloniki.
13.10.1942. The representative of the German Military Command, M. Merten, proposes to the Social Welfare Works Coordination Committee that they buy out the forced labour for an exorbitant amount (ransom).
 15.10.1942. M. Merten announces to the Social Welfare Works Coordination Committee that the Jewish cemeteries are to be rendered useless and used for military purposes. He proposes that the ransom could be used in exchange for the cemeteries.
17.10.1942. A protocol is signed for buying out the forced labour at a cost of 2 billion drachmas, which was to be collected through obligatory contributions.
18.10.1942. The German Military Command of the Aegean issued an order to abolish and move the old Jewish cemetery.
29.10.1942. The first ransom payment is made.
3.11.1942. At the orders of the German Military Command of Thessaloniki-the Aegean, a committee of high ranking civil servants is formed to examine the issue of Thessaloniki's cemeteries.
3.11.1942. The Municipal Council of Thessaloniki decides to pay wages to Municipal clerks who had been summoned for forced labour.
5.11.1942. Confiscation of goods of Jewish owned stationer's and printing offices starts.
11.11.1942. The German Propaganda Service commandeers Jewish owned popular cinemas and delivers them to third parties that the Service trusts.
12.11.1942. Following a demand by the Occupation Authorities, the Municipal Council decides to change the names of streets with Jewish names.
26.11.1942. The second ransom payment is made.
28.11.1942. The German Military Command of Thessaloniki- theAegean issues an additional order to abolish the Jewish cemetery.
2.12.1942. A meeting is held between technicians, representatives of the General Administration/Command of Macedonia, the Municipality of Thessaloniki and the Jewish Community, in order to determine the technical details regarding the immediate application of the “transfer” order for the Jewish cemetery.
5.12.1943. The third payment of the ransom is made.
6.12.1943. A “meeting” at the Jewish cemetery, headed by M. Merten, with senior civil servants and Head Rabbi Koretz. According to eye witnesses, Merten “decides” to expropriate part of the cemetery, while the rest will remain intact. However, the destruction of the cemetery was to be complete.
11.12.1943. An official, representative of the SD service, Dr. Calmes, charges Head Rabbi Koretz with “the duties of the President of the Jewish Community of Thessaloniki, from today until things settle” and appoints a six member Administrative Board.
11.12.1942. With a document from the same service, Sabbie Saltiel is relieved of his presidential duties and returns to his clerical duties.
23.12.1943. The Municipal Council is called to ratify the decision of a meeting headed by Merten, based on which the Israeli cemetery is abolished and demolished and replaced by two new, much smaller cemeteries, one in Stavroupolis and the other in Ano Toumba. An area of 10 km2 was to remain temporarily intact due to recent burials.
24.12.1943. Exhumation of the dead begins with the care of their relatives and the general coordination of the Jewish Community.
15.1.1943. The fourth and final payment of the ransom is made.
Mid-January 1943. Eichmann's assistant, SS Major Rolf Günther, is sent to Greece to help coordinate services in order to implement the plan for the displacement of the Jews in the German occupied zone to death camps.
29.1.1943. Act by the Ministry of National Education and Religions for the appointment of Koretz as President of the Community.
2.2.1943. The factory and branches of the major Alvo Company are commandeered.
2.2.1943. SS Captains Dieter Wisliceny and Alois Brunner arrive in Thessaloniki in order to implement the mass displacement plan.
6.2.1943. The German Military Command of Thessaloniki-the Aegean is issued on the compulsory use of the yellow star by every Jew with Greek citizenship.
10.2.1943. Jewish owned hardware stores are commandeered.
12.2.1943. An order is issued by the German “Foreign Service of the Security Police” determining the size of the yellow star and the compulsory use of number Ids (signed by Wisliceny)
12.2.1943. Another order from the same service determines the signs to be put up at Jewish shops and residences.
13.2.1943. After an order from the German Military Command of Thessaloniki-the Aegean, Koretz's responsibilities extend to all Jews in the jurisdiction of the authority in question (signed M. Merten).
13.2.1943. An order from the same service forbids the Jewish population from: moving their residence, using public transport, being out after sunset and using the telephone. The order is read at the Beth-Saul synagogue by Koretz, the Head Rabbi and President.
14.2.1943. Hundreds of young Jewish volunteers undertake the task of making a thorough census of all Jews, at Koretzorders.
25.2.1943. The deadline placing the Jewish population in ghettos ends. Order is kept by the militia, consisting of Jews, either refugees from Central Europe or reserves from the Greek army.
25.2.1943. After an order from the German Military Command of Thessaloniki-the Aegean (signed by Merten) all vocational organizations are ordered to expel any Jewish members.
1.3.1943. All Jews are called to submit a detailed statement on their property and assets.  
3.3.1943. The Haim Benrubi firm is commandeered, after trading in glass and porcelain for 100 years.
4.3.1943. The Baron Hirsch district, next to the Railway Station, is fenced in with wooden boards and barbed wire. Its residents are forbidden to exit.
5.3.1943. The Jewish Community issues a reassuring announcement recommending that its members should remain calm and trust their leaders.
7.3.1943. An order is issued to appoint bailees at all Jewish businesses.
7.3.1943. The 104 “officials” of the Jewish Community, regardless of their citizenship, are summoned to be told they are hostages, as a guarantee for the application of anti-Jewish measures. However, they are not held, as Koretz volunteered himself as a guarantor. The announcement was possibly made by Bruner.
10.3.1943. Sale or purchase of any Jewish property assets is forbidden.
13.3.1943. Order issued by the Command of Thessaloniki-the Aegean for the Jewish Community to collect all the belongings of its members, except for those held in pledge.
14.3.1943. Head Rabbi Koretz announces to the residents of the Baron Hirsch district their imminent departure for Poland, where they will make a new life for themselves. They are all required to turn in their money and valuables, receiving in return cheques in Polish currency.
15.3.1943. The residents of the Baron Hirsch district are transported to the trains. The first train for Auschwitz-Birkenau departs. 80 people are packed into carriages designed to carry eight horses. Residents of the nearby ghettos are led to the empty rooms of the district.
17.3.1943. The second train departs, carrying residents of the Station Chico district. The Baron Hirsch district was to be used as a transit station where Thessaloniki ghetto residents were to be kept before being packed onto the trains. 
17.3.1943. At a meeting at Monasteriotes Synagogue (the ghetto of the city centre), Koretz advises for patience and fortitude.
18.3.1943. Logothetopoulos, the appointed by the Germans prime minister, asks the German Plenipotentiary in Athens to stop displacements.
19.3.1943. Third train to Auschwitz-Birkenau carrying residents of Agia Paraskevi district.  
22.3.1943. Logothetopoulos repeats his request and asks that displacements should at least take place within Greek territory.
23.3.1943. Fourth train to Auschwitz-Birkenau carrying residents of Rezi Vardar district.
24.3. 1943. Round-up operations at 151 District; Numerous men arrested and led to forced labour construction sites.  
27.3.1943. Fifth train to Auschwitz-Birkenau carrying the rest of the residents of Rezi Vardar district.
29.3.1943. After the evacuation of the western and central ghettos, comes the turn of the eastern districts. The first to be evacuated was the Jewish 151 District, with a population of 7,500 people.
3.4.1943. Sixth train to Auschwitz-Birkenau. Displacement of the (largest) district, i.e. 151, starts.
5.4.1943. Seventh train to Auschwitz-Birkenau.
6.4.1943.  Jewish district Six is evacuated; the land belonged to the Municipality of Thessaloniki. The distance to Baron Hirsch District, where the residents of Six are to be detained, is covered on foot.   
7.4.1943. Eighth train to Auschwitz-Birkenau. It carries residents of 151 District.
7.4.1943. Agia Triada Jewish quarters are evacuated; its residents are led on foot to Baron Hirsch district.  
9.4.1943. Rallis, the new appointed prime minister, visits Thessaloniki to meet with the High German Command (General Lohr) and discuss the terms under which he was going to undertake his post. Koretz visits him secretly and asks for his support.   
10.4.1943. Koretz is arrested for his action and is stopped from President. He and his family are led to the Baron Hirsch district.   
10.4.1943. Ninth train to Auschwitz-Birkenau, carrying residents of Six District.
11.4.1943.  The Military Command of Thessaloniki – the Aegean appoints Zach Albala as president of the Community to replace Koretz, who had been stopped.  
12.4.1943. The bricks and marble from the Jewish cemetery are divided among city agencies, following a request to this effect, by decision of the General Command.
13.4.1943. Tenth train to Auschwitz-Birkenau.
16.4.1943. Eleventh train to Auschwitz-Birkenau.
17.4.1943. The Municipality of Thessaloniki decides to demolish Six District for aesthetic reasons and auction its construction materials. More than 20 contractors bid at the auction. 
20.4.1943. Twelfth train to Auschwitz-Birkenau.
22.4.1943. Thirteenth train to Auschwitz-Birkenau.
28.4.1943. Fourteenth train to Auschwitz-Birkenau.
3.5.1943. Fifteenth train to Auschwitz-Birkenau.
10.5.1943. Sixteenth train to Auschwitz-Birkenau. Jews from the Evros region are added to Thessalonian Jews.  
31.5.1943. At the order of the Occupying authorities, the evacuated Rezi Vardar district, of the demolished Jewish hutmentsis flattened.
1.6.1943. Seventeenth train to Auschwitz-Birkenau. It carries members of the Community Board and community committees, teachers and Community clerks.   
15.6.1943. Order by the Military Command of Macedonia – the Aegean asking for the management of Jewish properties by bailees, under the supervision of the Jewish Property Management Agency and the Agricultural Bank.   
4.7.1943. ...regions of Greece under German occupation, i.e. the area in the jurisdiction of the General Command of Macedonia, along with the islands of the Aegean and the neutral Zone of the Evros River, due to their special military location and their economic interest for Germany, is partitioned from the rest of Greece and placed under German civil command. M. Merten is appointed as civil commander. Appointed Minister, V. Simonidis, Commander of Macedonia, becomes his advisor.
15.7.1943. The last 350 Jews of Italian nationality are transported to Athens by the Italian Consulate.  
28.7.1943. Conflicts between interested parties intensify over securing Jewish shops. Merten arbitrates and redistributes the properties. There is a queue outside his office. 
2.8.1943. Following numerous deferments the Municipal Council approves the expense for producing new signs for the streets that used to have Jewish names.
2.8.1943. A train to Bergen Belsen. It carries Koretz, his associates, civil guards, etc, as well as 367 Jews of Spanish nationality.
10.8.1943. Nineteenth train to Auschwitz-Birkenau. It carries labourers who had been transported to different locations and had survived. 
11.8.1943. Dieter Wisliceny and Alois Brunner completed their work and, having usurped Jewish valuables stolen they depart from Thessaloniki by plane.
8.9.1943. Italy signs a treaty. Germans close down the Italian Consulate in Thessaloniki.
20.9.1943. Conflicts to secure Jewish shops reach institutional agencies. Merten, as a civil commander now, appoints new Boards to the Chambers of the city and advises them to be united and work hard. The new Boards applaud him.  

Dr E.A.Hekimoglou
Jewish Museum of Thessaloniki

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