Slovak Republic (1939-1945)

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Slovenská republika¹
Slovak Republic

Client state of Nazi Germany


1939 — 1945
Flag Coat of arms
Flag Coat of arms
Anthem: Hej, Slováci
Location of Slovakia
Capital Bratislava
Language(s) Slovak
Government Republic
Prime Minister Jozef Tiso
Historical era World War II
 - Secession March 141939
 - Disestablished April 41945
Area
 - 1940 38,055 km2
14,693 sq mi
Population
 - 1940 est. 2,653,053 
     Density 69.7 /km² 
180.6 /sq mi
Currency Slovak koruna
¹ Slovenský štát (semi-official; until July 21, 1939)

The Slovak Republic (Slovak: Slovenská republika) was an independent national Slovak state and puppet ally of National Socialist (Nazi) Germany during World War II on the territory of present-day Slovakia (with the exception of the southern and eastern parts of present-day Slovakia.) It bordered Germany, Poland and Hungary.

While widely internationally recognized at the time, for example by Germany, Italy, Japan, Soviet Union, Spain, Manchukuo, Croatia, Lithuania, Estonia, Switzerland, the Chinese government at Nanking, the Vichy regime, and El Salvador, its legal existence has been retroactively nullified by World War II victorious parties as a result of the nullification of the Munich Agreement and all its consequences.

It is also called the First Slovak Republic (Slovak: prvá Slovenská republika) or Slovak State (Slovak: slovenský štát or Slovenský štát) to distinguish it from the contemporary (Second) Slovak Republic, which is not considered its legal successor state. The name "Slovak state" was the form used by almost all history texts during the time of Communist Czechoslovakia (1948-1989).

Contents

[edit] Creation

After the Munich Agreement, Slovakia gained autonomy inside Czecho-Slovakia (as the former Czechoslovakia has been renamed) and lost its southern territories to Hungary under the Vienna Award. As Adolf Hitler was preparing an invasion to the Czech lands and creation of Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, he had various plans with Slovakia (German officials were initially misinformed by Hungarians that the Slovaks wanted to join Hungary). Finally it was decided to make it a separate state under strong influence of Germany and a potential strategic base for German attacks on Poland and other regions.

On 13 March 1939, Hitler invited Monsignor Jozef Tiso (the Slovak ex-prime minister who had been deposed by Czech troops several days earlier) to Berlin and urged him to immediately proclaim an independent Slovak Republic, otherwise Slovakia's territory would be divided between Hungary and Poland, which has been "confirmed" by Joachim von Ribbentrop by means of a (false) report saying that Hungarian troops were approaching Slovak borders. Tiso refused to make such a decision himself, after which he was allowed by Hitler to organize a meeting of the Slovak parliament ("Diet of the Slovak Country"), which would approve Slovakia's independence. On March 14, the Slovak parliament convened, heard Tiso's report on his discussion with Hitler, and unanimously declared Slovak independence (some sources say that Tiso was firmly against). Jozef Tiso was appointed the first Prime Minister of the new republic.

[edit] War with Hungary

On March 23, Hungary, having already occupied Carpathian Ruthenia, attacked from there, and the newly established Slovak republic was forced to cede 1697 km² of territory with about 70000 people to Hungary. See Slovak-Hungarian War for more information.

[edit] International relations

Slovak Republic in 1941
Enlarge
Slovak Republic in 1941

From the beginning, the Slovak Republic was strongly dependent on Nazi Germany. The so-called "Protection treaty" (Treaty on the protective relationship between the German Empire and the Slovak State) subordinated its foreign, military and economic policy to Germany (formally at least) signed on March 23 1939. This contract logically resulted in Slovakia joining the Axis Powers and fighting against Poland, the Soviet Union and even declaring war on Great Britain and the United States of America. However, except for a strip of land at the border with Germany, Slovakia was not occupied by German troops.

The most difficult foreign policy problem of the state were the relations with Hungary, which, after all, had annexed one third of Slovakia's territory by the First Vienna Award and had tried to occupy the remaining territory. Slovakia tried to achieve a revision of the Vienna Award, but Germany did not allow that. There were also constant quarrels concerning Hungary's treatment of Slovaks living in Hungary (see First Vienna Award).

[edit] Characteristics

85% of the inhabitants were Slovaks, the remaining 15% were made up of Germans, Hungarians, Jews and Roma. 50% of the populations were employed in agriculture. The state was divided in 6 counties ("župy"), 61 districts ("okresy") and 2659 municipalities. The capital Bratislava had over 120,000 inhabitants.

The state continued the legal system of Czechoslovakia, which was modified only gradually. According to the Constitution of 1939, the "President" (Jozef Tiso) was the head of the state, the "Assembly/Diet of the Slovak Republic" elected for 5 years was the highest legislative body (no general elections took place, however), and the "State Council" performed the duties of a senate. The government with 8 ministries was the executive body.

The WWII Slovak Republic was an authoritarian state marked by elements of fascism. It is characterized by some as a clerical fascist state - this is the "definition" officially coined by the Communists. The leading political party was the "Hlinka's Slovak People's Party- Party of Slovak National Unity. All other political parties, with the exception of parties representing national minorities (Germans and Hungarians) had been forbidden (this happened before the creation of the state, however). The government issued a number of antisemitic laws, prohibiting the Jews to participate in public life, and later supported their deportations to German concentration camps. See also Jozef Tiso for some details. On the other hand, not a single execution occurred during the existence of the republic.[citation needed]

The existence of the republic had positive effects on Slovak economy, science, education and culture. The Slovak Academy of Sciences was founded in 1942, a number of new universities and high schools were established, Slovak literature and culture flourished.

[edit] The Slovak Republic and the Holocaust

Soon after independence, the Slovak Republic began a series of measures aimed against the 90,000 Jews in the country. The Hlinka Guard began to attack Jews, and the "Jewish Code" was passed in September 1941. Resembling the Nuremberg Laws, the Code required that Jews wear a yellow armband, and were banned from intermarriage and many jobs. By October 1941, 15,000 Jews were expelled from Bratislava; many were sent to labor camps.

The Slovak Republic was one of the countries to agree to deport its Jews as part of the Nazi Final Solution. Originally, the Slovak government tried to make a deal with Germany in October of 1941 to deport its Jews as a substitute for providing Slovak workers to help the war effort. After the Wannsee Conference, the Germans agreed to the Slovak proposal, and a deal was reached where the Slovak Republic would pay for each Jew deported, and, in return, Germany promised that the Jews would never return to the republic. The initial terms were for "20,000 young, strong Jews", but the Slovak government quickly agreed to a German proposal to deport the entire population for "evacuation to territories in the east".

The deportations of Jews from Slovakia started in March 1942, but halted in October 1942, when a group of Jewish citizens, led by Gisi Fleischmann, built a coalition of concerned officials from the Vatican and the government, and, through a mix of bribery and negotiation, was able to stop the process. By then, however, some 58,000 Jews (75% of Slovak Jewry) had already been deported, mostly to Auschwitz, as forced labourers for German armament factories, at least this was what Tiso and the Slovak government presumed it to be. Slovak government officials filed complaints against Germany, when it became clear, that many of the previously deported Slovakian Jews had been shot in mass executions.

Jewish deportations resumed in October 1944, when the Soviet army reached the Slovak border, and the Slovak National Uprising took place. As a result of these events, Nazi Germany decided to occupy all of Slovakia and the country lost its independence. During the German occupation, another 13,500 Jews were deported and 5,000 were imprisoned. In all, German and Slovak authorities deported about 70,000 Jews from Slovakia; about 65,000 of them were murdered or died in concentration camps.

[edit] Two wings of the ruling party

Since 1939, a conflict between two wings arose within the party. The conservative and moderate wing led by the Roman Catholic priest Msgr. Jozef Tiso, the president of Slovakia and chairman of the party, wanted to create a specific authoritarian and religious state of Estates. This wing controlled the leading posts of the country, party and the clerics.

The other wing were more radical persons, who were inspired by the German National Socialist model, were strong Anti-Semites, wanted to remove all Czechs and to create a radically fascist state (Slovak National Socialism) based on Blood and Soil principles and collectivization. Their main organization was the Hlinka Guard (Hlinkova garda), which was controlled by the HSLS-SSNJ. The main representatives were the Prime Minister Vojtech Tuka and the Minister of the Interior Alexander Mach.

The problem of the extremist-fascist wing was that the general population supported Tiso's moderate wing, because the fascist wing was visibly demagogic, the fascist ideology was not compatible with most of the Slovak largely Catholic population of peasants and small businessmen and that the country was still doing very well economically compared to the neighbouring countries (even compared to Nazi Germany itself). The Nazi and the moderately Catholic wings were mutually kept together however by their common aversion from and fear of Bolshevism.

Germany initially supported Tuka, but since 1942 when deportations of Jews started and a Germany-inspired act identifying Tiso and the HSLS-SSJN with the country itself (the "Führer"-principle) was forcibly adopted, Tiso's temperate wing had full support of Germany, whose only concern was the Jewish question and no problems whatsoever at German borders. This even enabled Tiso's wing to stop the deportations of Jews after some time of compromising with the German Nazis.

Slovakia Coat of Arms
Part of the series on
Slovak History
Samo's Empire
Principality of Nitra
Great Moravia
Kingdom of Hungary
Royal Hungary
History of Czechoslovakia
Slovaks in Czechoslovakia (1918-1938)
WWII Slovak Republic (1939-1945)
Slovak National Uprising (1944)
Slovaks in Czechoslovakia (1960-1990)
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[edit] The End

After the anti-Nazi Slovak National Uprising in August 1944, the upset Germans occupied the country (from September 1944), which thereby lost much of its independence. The German troops were gradually pushed out by the Red Army, by Romanian and by Czechoslovak troops coming from the east. The liberated territories became de-facto part of Czechoslovakia again.

The First Slovak Republic definitely ceased to exist de-facto on 4 April 1945 when the Red Army captured Bratislava and occupied all of Slovakia. De-iure it ceased to exist when the exiled Slovak government capitulated to General Walton Walker leading the XX Corps of the 3rd US Army on May 8, 1945 in the Austrian Kremsmünster.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links