Sneha Girap (Editor)

Andor Jaross

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Full Name
  
Andor Jaross

Name
  
Andor Jaross

Citizenship
  
Czechoslovak

Role
  
Politician

Nationality
  
Hungarian

Succeeded by
  
Miklos Bonczos

Occupation
  
Politician


Andor Jaross wwwholokausztmagyarorszagonhuimagesportraitsj

Preceded by
  
Ferenc Keresztes-Fischer

Born
  
May 23, 1896Komaromcsehi, Komarom County, Kingdom of Hungary (
1896-05-23
)

Died
  
April 11, 1946, Budapest, Hungary

Political party
  
Hungarian National Party, Arrow Cross Party

Similar
  
László Endre, Ferenc Szálasi, László Baky

Andor Jaross (May 23, 1896, Komáromcsehi, Komárom County – April 11, 1946) was an ethnic Hungarian politician from Slovakia and collaborator with the Nazis.

Born in Komáromcsehi (Slovak: Čechy), in the Komárom County of the Kingdom of Hungary (present-day Slovakia) he became general secretary of the United Hungarian Party, a group that sought to unite parts of Czechoslovakia with Hungary. As national chairman of the party he sought to forge a united Hungarian identity, claiming in his inaugural address that 'every member of the Hungarian minority should take a united stand on the issues of today and tomorrow'. Although effectively subordinate to János Esterházy in the party, Jaross became a well-known international figure, notably accepting an invitation to London from the Hungarian Committee of the House of Commons to present Hungarian grievances along with fellow United Hungarian Party MP Géza Szüllő.

Moving to Hungary in 1938 he joined the government of Béla Imrédy as Minister for Regained Territories and was one of the 18 deputies who formed the Party of Hungarian Renewal in 1940 (a far right dissident group of the governing party). After the Nazi regime invaded Hungary in March 1944 and raised Nazi sympathizer Döme Sztójay to the Prime Minister's post, Jaross was put in charge of the Interior Ministry. From that position, he took charge of the country's Jews and, with his deputies László Endre and László Baky, was responsible for circumventing Miklós Horthy's plans by arranging their deportation. During this time Andross, Endre and Baky ran the Interior Ministry as a personal fiefdom and used it to eliminate their enemies, whilst also keeping Sztójay at arm's length in favour of German influence. The ghettoes were inspected in August 1944 by Adolf Eichmann and Dieter Wisliceny and, although the Jewish Council sent appeals for better treatment direct to Jaross and Eichmann, the extermination proceeded. A growing figure in Hungarian public life, Jaross even became president of football club Ferencvárosi TC in 1944.

Removed from his position in August 1944 (after appropriating much Jewish property) he made a brief return in October 1944, after the Nazis deposed Horthy and installed the rabidly anti-Semitic Arrow Cross Party to head the government under Prime Minister Ferenc Szálasi.

After the war, Jaross was tried by the Hungarian authorities and executed by firing squad.

References

Andor Jaross Wikipedia