Notes
1 Daniel Mendelsohn, The Lost: A Search for Six of Six Million (New York, 2008).
2 Délvidék is the Hungarian name for areas of the Vojvodina region of Serbia that Hungary took over early in World War II.
3 Randolph Braham, “The Kamenets Podolsk and Delvidek Massacres: Prelude to the Holocaust in Hungary,” Yad Vashem Studies, IX (1973), 133–156.
4 Kinga Frojimovics, I Have Been a Stranger in a Strange Land: The Hungarian Jewish State and Jewish Refugees in Hungary, 1933–1945 (Jerusalem, 2007); Raz Segal, Genocide in the Carpathians, War Social Breakdown, and Mass Violence 1914–1945 (Stanford, 2016).
5 László Karsai, Holokauszt (Budapest, 2001); Tamás Majsai, A Kőrösmezei Zsidódeportálás 1941-Ban (Budapest, 1986); and Iratok a Kőrösmezei Zsidódeportálás Történetéhez 1941 (Budapest, 2014).
6 Robert Rozett, Conscripted Slaves: Hungarian Jewish Forced Laborers on the Eastern Front during the Second World War (Jerusalem, 2013), p. 206.
7 Yad Vashem Archives, O15E/2067.