Glogonj


Glogonj is a village in Serbia. It is situated in the Pančevo municipality, in the South Banat District, Vojvodina province. The village has a Serb ethnic majority and its population numbering 3,012 people. The place name means location of crataegus.

History

Topographic history

On 1 October 1944, about 2.500 prisoners from Bor had to take rest nearby floodplains on the route between Sefkerin and Opovo. Members of paramilitary Deutsche Mannschaft killed there 22 of them by hitting because they tried to get river water for drinking despite the command to walk on. An interviewed eyewitness indirectly named this event only. He did not mention the real place of action, moved the event to Hungary, gave a later date, but described this event with the word watermelons in his synopsis.
On 30 October 1944, 101 Germans were killed by shooting near the floodplains next to the road to Opovo by Special commands of Yugoslav Partisans. The number had a symbolic meaning. 100 persons were representative for national socialist German minority of Danube Swabians, 1 for an escaped First-rate official. A contemporary witness of Danube Swabian publication in Germany called that area airfield, and paraphrased the Germans way to heaven, mentioned nothing about the prisoners from Bor, but included them into the number of victims. According to that report, the parson of Glogonj was also shot and killed in the village. However, an old man was tortured and publicly hanged to the tower of Saint Anne Church on 5 October 1944. On the same day, four German women were found dead near the banks of the Tamiš River, repeatedly raped by First-rate members of the Soviet Red Army at the municipal office during the night from 4 to 5 October 1944.

Historical Population