Remembering Budapest’s Jews slaughtered on the banks of the Danube

Each April, at this time, Budapest confronts one of the darkest chapters in its history: the mass murder of Jews from the city’s ghetto in the final months of the Second World War. By late 1944, Hungary’s Jewish population had already endured ghettoisation, forced labour and the deportation of hundreds of thousands to Auschwitz. Racial…

Danube holocaust memorial Budapest
The Holocaust Memorial Monument on the banks of the Danube

Each April, at this time, Budapest confronts one of the darkest chapters in its history: the mass murder of Jews from the city’s ghetto in the final months of the Second World War.

By late 1944, Hungary’s Jewish population had already endured ghettoisation, forced labour and the deportation of hundreds of thousands to Auschwitz.

Racial enforcers

In Budapest, the remaining community was crammed into a sealed district along the Danube, controlled first by the German occupiers and then by the Arrow Cross, the Hungarian fascist movement that revelled in its role as an enforcer of Nazi racial policy.

Arrow Cross murders on the Danube
Jews murdered by the Arrow Cross on the banks of the Danube before their bodies were thrown into the river

As the Soviet Red Army closed in, Arrow Cross gunmen embarked on a campaign of terror inside the ghetto: beatings, starvation, abductions and mass shootings on the riverbank.

Thousands murdered

Through late 1944 and 1945, thousands were murdered in the streets or dragged to the water’s edge, where victims were tied together, shot and thrown or left to fall into the Danube, their bodies never recovered.

Before being killed they were ordered to give up their shoes, which could be sold. Hence the memorial, comprised of rows of shoes, along the banks of the Danube, laid on this day in 2005.

Danube holocaust memorial Budapest
The Holocaust Memorial Monument, Budapest

Never again.


Paul Holborow

Paul Holborow

In the campaign against the National Front, Searchlight provided a rich and utterly reliable basis for much ANL propaganda – particularly with reference to the two leading NF figures, John Tyndall and Martin Webster. The appearance of Tyndall in full nazi uniform, drawn from the archives of Searchlight, was a key part of ANL propaganda, coupled with deeply damaging nazi quotes from Webster.

Paul Holborow
Founding member of the ANL and National Organiser 1977-81

Professor Colin Holmes

Professor Colin Holmes
Everyone who wants to understand contemporary racism and its historical background needs to read Searchlight.
Professor Colin Holmes
University of Sheffield

Nick Davies

Nick Davies

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Nick Davies
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Paul Nowak

Paul Nowak

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Peter Hain

Peter Hain, founder of the ANL and friend of Searchlight

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Peter Hain
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Alf Dubs

Lord Alf Dubs

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Alf Dubs
Labour peer, former MP and Cabinet Minister, and Kindertransport child

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