Stevo Karoli

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Stevo Karoli
  • Version 1.0
  • Publication date 24 August 2025

Stevo Karoli, also spelled Caroli, was born on 26 August 1925 in Metz, France, to the Norwegian couple Joseph Karoli (1890–unknown) and Elisabeth Warsha (1895–1944). He earned his living as a basket weaver and horse dealer in Belgium and northern France.

Registration 

On 21 August 1941, the Belgian aliens police ordered Stevo Karoli to report to a state prison to be photographed and fingerprinted. At the time, this police practice was reserved for the identification and registration of criminals, but also applied to Gypsies, who were collectively equated with criminals or spies. In addition, Karoli was ordered to leave Belgium, as the Belgian coastal areas were generally closed to itinerants. Stevo Karoli defied this order and regularly evaded checks by the authorities.

On 1 July 1942, the Belgian gendarmerie discovered that Stevo Karoli had attempted to obtain goods vouchers both in Damprémy (Hainaut, Belgium) and in Jodoigne (Walloon Brabant, Belgium). As a result, his Gypsy card [‘Zigeunerkaart’], which also served as a ration card, was confiscated. This was not an isolated case. The restrictions on freedom of movement deprived many of those affected of their livelihood, and the rationing of food, the distribution of which was tied to a fixed place of residence, also made daily survival difficult. Although the Belgian authorities regularly arrested people for ration stamp fraud, these cases were rarely prosecuted. Stevo Karoli, for example, received a new ‘Gypsy card’ on 10 July 1942 without any further consequences.

Arrest and Deportation 

In mid-January 1944, 19 of Stevo Karoli’s relatives were deported to the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration and extermination camp on Transport Z. He himself was arrested in Brussels a few weeks later, on 3 March, with a forged identity card issued in the name of Eduard Cogai. The German criminal police (Kripo), Department V of the security police (SIPO-SD), suspected him of ‘anti-German activities’. On the same day, the young man was sent to the German section of Saint-Gilles prison. The criminal police concluded its investigation on 26 April 1944: Eduard Cogai and Stevo Caroli were one and the same person who was ‘100% of the Gypsy race’.

On 10 May 1944, the commandant of the Saint-Gilles military prison in Brussels ordered that his deportation be carried out as quickly as possible. On 15 May, he was taken to the ‘SS transit camp’ in the Dossin barracks in Mechelen, and four days later he was deported on ‘Transport XXV’ together with 508 Jews. He was registered as a ‘Gypsy’ on a separate sheet that bore only his name.

After his arrival in Auschwitz-Birkenau, Stevo Caroli was sent to camp section BIIe, where he met his brother Zolo Karoli (1921–1945) again. Together with other Roma and Sinti classified as ‘fit for work’, both were transferred to Buchenwald concentration camp, where they arrived on 3 August 1944. The camp was overcrowded and the new arrivals were crammed into tents. Because of his poor state of health, Zolo Karoli remained in Buchenwald, where he died in April 1945, two days before the arrival of the American troops.

Survival

Stevo Karoli survived Mittelbau-Dora concentration camp, the Ellrich-Juliushütte satellite camp and Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. After being liberated by British troops at the beginning of April 1945, he returned to Belgium on a lorry on 27 April.

On 19 May 1945, he collected his new ‘Gypsy card’ from the Belgian authorities, who immediately checked his fingerprints. In June 1945, Stevo Karoli applied for recognition as a political deportee and for compensation. However, the aliens police stated that they ‘cannot confirm when, how or where the nomad Karoli, Stevo, born on 26 August 1925 in Metz, was arrested by the Germans’.1Archives générales du Royaume (AGR), Police des Étrangers, Dossier n° 7.400.971—Caroli Steven, 26/08/1925, Metz, doc. n° 22, Note du 3e bureau, Bruxelles, 6 juin 1945. They stated that as someone persecuted on racial grounds he was not entitled to compensation, especially as the authorities were unable to establish his nationality. The criteria of the committees that authorised recognition of political deportees stipulated that the arrest must have resulted from ‘selfless patriotic activity’. Arrest on racial or religious grounds was not taken into account in the law of 26 February 1947.

After the war, Stevo Karoli settled in Belgium. Nevertheless, the authorities continued to be suspicious of him. The Belgian police repeatedly forced him to report for photography and fingerprinting. There were also constant problems when crossing the border, as Stevo Karoli’s nationality remained unclear. It is not known when and where Stevo Karoli died. His file with the aliens police was closed in 1948.

In recent years, the history of the Karoli family has received some attention in Norway, and a start has been made on analysing the history of the 66 deported Norwegian Roma.

Einzelnachweise

  • 1
    Archives générales du Royaume (AGR), Police des Étrangers, Dossier n° 7.400.971—Caroli Steven, 26/08/1925, Metz, doc. n° 22, Note du 3e bureau, Bruxelles, 6 juin 1945.

Zitierweise

Laurence Schram: Stevo Karoli, in: Enzyklopädie des NS-Völkermordes an den Sinti und Roma in Europa. Hg. von Karola Fings, Forschungsstelle Antiziganismus an der Universität Heidelberg, Heidelberg 24. August 2025.-

1940
6. April 1940Die Regierung in Frankreich ordnet den „Hausarrest“ für „Nomades“ auf dem gesamten französischen Staatsgebiet an. Damit wird die Freizügigkeit für Sinti:ze und Rom:nja per Dekret abgeschafft.
10. Mai 1940Deutschland erweitert den Krieg auf den Westen Europas; die Wehrmacht marschiert in Belgien, Frankreich, Luxemburg und den Niederlanden ein.
1942
21. Januar 1942Im deutsch besetzten Belgien werden auf Veranlassung der belgischen Fremdenpolizei Sonderausweise für Sinti:ze und Rom:nja eingeführt. Zur Ausgabe der Sonderausweise dürfen Sinti:ze und Rom:nja in der Zeit vom 5. bis 20. Januar ihren Wohnort nicht verlassen.
1943
29. März 1943Das Reichssicherheitshauptamt ordnet die Deportation von Rom:nja und Sinti:ze aus deutsch besetzten Gebieten und Ländern (Belgien, Bezirk Bialystok, Elsass, Lothringen, Luxemburg, Niederlande und Nordfrankreich) in das Konzentrations- und Vernichtungslager Auschwitz-Birkenau an.
23. November 1943In Tournai, deutsch besetztes Belgien, werden 19 Mitglieder der Familie Karoli von der Feldgendarmerie verhaftet.
1944
15. Januar 1944Aus dem „SS-Sammellager“ Mechelen, deutsch besetztes Belgien, werden 352 Männer, Frauen und Kinder mit dem ‚Transport Z‘ bezeichneten Zug in das Konzentrations- und Vernichtungslager Auschwitz-Birkenau deportiert, wo sie zwei Tage später eintreffen. Die einjährige Georgette Hédouin stirbt während des Transportes.
19. Mai 1944In den deutsch besetzten Niederlanden werden 245 Sinti:ze und Rom:nja sowie 208 Juden:Jüdinnen vom Durchgangslager Westerbork in das Konzentrations- und Vernichtungslager Auschwitz-Birkenau deportiert. In Assen, deutsch besetzte Niederlande, werden zwölf Sinti:ze und Rom:nja in diesen Zug verladen. Dank der Hilfe eines Polizisten kann Zoni Weisz mit Tante und Cousins dieser Deportation entkommen. Ein Deportationszug aus Mechelen (Dossin-Kaserne), deutsch besetztes Belgien, wird unterwegs an den Zug aus Westerbork gekoppelt; in diesem Zug befindet sich Stevo Karoli. Die Registrierung der Deportierten findet am 21. Mai statt.
2. – 3. August 1944Im Konzentrations- und Vernichtungslager Auschwitz-Birkenau werden in der Nacht vom 2. auf den 3. August die etwa 4 200 bis 4 300 im Lagerabschnitt BIIe verbliebenen Sinti:ze und Rom:nja in den Gaskammern ermordet.
1945
15. April 1945Britische Soldaten befreien das Konzentrationslager Bergen-Belsen, Deutschland. Etwa ein Viertel aller Häftlinge, die die Befreiung erleben, stirbt in den nächsten Wochen an den Folgen der Haft.
1947
26. Februar 1947In Belgien wird nur dann eine Entschädigung gewährt, wenn die Verhaftung während der deutschen Besatzungszeit durch eine „selbstlose patriotische Aktivität“ verursacht worden war. Da rassistische Gründe nicht berücksichtigt werden, werden Sinti:ze und Rom:nja, die das Konzentrations- und Vernichtungslager Auschwitz-Birkenau überlebt haben, nicht entschädigt.