The Serbian film "Dara from Jasenovac" tells the story of a little girl, Dara, who was sent to the Jasenovac concentration camp. , survived. The man-made traces of the director's intention are obvious, the plot is relatively simple, the characters are more facial, and the depth that can stimulate the audience's reflection is lacking, and there is some national hostility, but it really reflects the cruelty of the establishment of concentration camps in Germany at that time. The bloody history of the slaughter of Jews that most of us have never heard of. The executioners, butchers, and villains who committed crimes in the film are also ordinary people, but under indoctrination and instigation, human nature has been distorted and turned ugly, and their evil deeds are all in the name of the people and in the name of the motherland. The banner is carried out, and this is what should be carefully reflected. I have seen the movie "Aida, Where Are You Going" before, which reflects the killing of Muslims by the Serbs; the movie "Dara from Jasenovac" reflects the slaughter of the Orthodox Church by the Catholic Croats Serbian. After watching the movie, I made up for the Balkan powder keg about the dusty history of Ustasha, Croatia during World War II. The following is excerpted from the network
Ustasha was founded in Sofia, Bulgaria in 1929 with the goal of giving Croatia independence from Yugoslavia, and its leader has close ties to Italian Prime Minister Mussolini's fascist party. In 1941, when Nazi Germany and the Kingdom of Italy and their allies attacked Yugoslavia, the army of Ustasha declared Croatia's independence at this time, established the independent state of Croatia, and joined the Axis camp, the Ustasha regime and Mussolini. The signing of the treaty made Croatia a protectorate of Italy. The Ustasha organization is also supported by the Catholic Church. In 1945, Ustasha was defeated by the People's Army led by Tito, and Croatia was once again incorporated into Yugoslavia.
The Ustaša regime established more than 30 concentration camps throughout Croatia to imprison and massacre Serbs, Jews, Gypsies and other Croats involved in the anti-fascist struggle. It was the third largest concentration camp of the Axis powers during World War II. According to statistics, during World War II, Ustasha established more than ten concentration camps in the areas under his control, and a conservative estimate killed 93,000 people. It is also estimated that at least 500,000 Serbs, Jews, and Gypsies were brutalized. kill. The Yugoslav Fatherland Army (also known as Chetnik), a resistance organization dominated by Serbs, also retaliated against many Croats for this, which has become one of the historical reasons for the further deterioration of Yugoslav ethnic problems.
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