Alan H.
Google
Through 8 galleries this museum tells the story of what happened to the Jewish (and Roma) community in Budapest during their deportation by the Nazis primarily in April-May 1944 for those in the suburbs, and in October 1944, when the German-backed fascist Arrow Cross Party, led by Ferenc Szálasi, seized power in Hungary. This new regime instituted a reign of terror, and deportations of the remaining Budapest Jews resumed.
From May 15 to July 9, 1944, approximately 440,000 provincial Jews were deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau, with the enthusiastic assistance of the Hungarian gendarmerie.
In November 1944, tens of thousands of Jews from Budapest were concentrated in brickyards and forced on brutal death marches toward the Austrian border. Thousands died from starvation, exposure, or were shot by guards. The remaining Jews in the city were forced into a sealed ghetto in late November.
Between December 1944 and the liberation of Budapest by Soviet troops in February 1945, members of the Arrow Cross shot thousands of Jews along the banks of the Danube River.