,
Slovakia (with the grave of the rabbi
Chatam Sofer at the left). The Jewish cemetery in Bratislava was desecrated during the Holocaust. Some 5,000 Jews emigrated before the outbreak of
World War II and several thousands afterwards (mostly to the British Mandate of Palestine), but most were killed in the
Holocaust. After the
Slovak Republic proclaimed its independence in March 1939 under the protection of
Nazi Germany, the pro-Nazi regime of President
Jozef Tiso, a Catholic priest, began a series of measures aimed against the Jews in the country, first excluding them from the military and government positions. 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 1940, more than 6,000 Jews had emigrated. By October 1941, 15,000 Jews were expelled from Bratislava; many were sent to labor camps, including
Sereď. Originally, the Slovak government tried to make a deal with Germany in October 1941 to deport its Jews as a substitute for providing Slovak workers to help the war effort. The initial terms were for 20,000 young men aged 16 and older for forced labour, but the Slovak government was concerned that it would leave many aged, sick, or child Jews who would become a burden on the gentile population. A deal was reached where the Slovak Republic would pay 500 Reichsmark for each Jew deported, and in return, the Germans would deport entire families and promise that the Jews would never return. This was billed as a humanitarian measure that would keep Jewish families together; the Slovak fascist authorities claimed that they did not know that the Germans were systematically exterminating the Jews under its control. Some Jews were exempt from deportation, including those who had converted before 1939. The deportations of Jews from Slovakia started on March 25, 1942. Transports were halted on October 20, 1942. A group of Jewish activists known as the
Working Group tried to stop the process through a mix of bribery and negotiation. However, some 58,000 Jews had already been deported by October 1942, mostly to the
Operation Reinhard death camps in the
General Government in occupied Poland and to
Auschwitz. More than 99% of the Jews deported from Slovakia in 1942 were murdered in the concentration death camps. Jewish deportations resumed on September 30, 1944, after German troops occupied the Slovak territory to defeat the
Slovak National uprising. During the German occupation, up to 13,500 Slovak Jews were deported (mostly to Auschwitz where most of them were gassed upon arrival), principally through the Jewish transit camp in
Sereď under the command of
Alois Brunner, and about 2,000 were murdered in the Slovak territory by members of the
Einsatzgruppe H and the
Hlinka Guard Emergency Divisions. Deportations continued until March 31, 1945, when the last group of Jewish prisoners was taken from Sereď to the
Terezín ghetto. In all, German and Slovak authorities deported about 71,500 Jews from Slovakia; about 65,000 of them were murdered or died in concentration camps. The overall figures are inexact, partly because many Jews did not identify themselves, but one 2006 estimate is that approximately 105,000 Slovak Jews, or 77% of their prewar population, died during the war. ==After World War II==