Laitse (Juvenile Correctional Facility)

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Laitse (Juvenile Correctional Facility)
  • Version 1.0
  • Publication date 5 March 2024

Laitse Juvenile Correctional Facility in Harju province, German occupied Estonia, appears on a list of 18 prisons and camps operated by the Estonian Security Police. Subsequently designated a ‘labour education camp for young offenders’, Laitse served as a detention centre for Roma teenagers from March 1942 to early spring 1944. Few of them, if any, survived.

Laitse Juvenile Correctional Facility came into existence in 1938 as a consequence of the reorganisation of Harku Prison Camp, which had until then fulfilled that function. The colony for boys called ‘Laitse Manor Home’ was ca. 40 km southwest of Tallinn and a relatively short distance from Harku. The police forcibly separated Roma teenagers from their parents, who were deported to Harku prison camp from Pärnu Prison and Tallinn Central Prison, among other places, in the spring and summer of 1942. Not all of them, however, ended up at Laitse. As of July 1942, there were 189 Roma children in Harku, and at least fifteen of the Roma murdered there on 27 October 1942 were teenagers between the ages of 13 and 17.

Conversant in both Estonian and Russian, Roma boys quickly found a common language with the rest of the colony inmates. The youngest among the twelve- to 17-year-olds attended school, while the rest carried out forced labour. In his testimony to a Soviet war crimes trial, the director of the colony, Andrei Kurol, painted a rosy picture of his institution, mentioning the existence of a ‘Gypsy’ choir, among other things. The Estonian Security Police reported 58 Roma children at Laitse as of 15 October 1942, but only 16 as of 1 March 1943. In all likelihood, the majority of Roma teenagers were murdered along with the adults at Harku, on 27 October 1942. Head of the German Security Police (Sipo) in Estonia, Dr Martin Sandberger (1911–2010), meanwhile ordered that the remaining Roma children at Laitse be divided into groups according to their ability to work.

Fourteen Roma teenagers were still at Laitse as of 3 December 1943. Sometime in early spring 1944, the director of the colony received the order from the German Sipo to hand over the remaining Roma inmates. He was allegedly told that the children were to meet their parents and would return within a week. According to the information he received, they were murdered at Kalevi-Liiva.

At present, Laitse Manor can be booked for corporate events and weddings. The website offers an account of the architectural history of the building and the story of the Baltic German aristocratic family who built it, with no reference to its past as a juvenile correctional institution.

Citation

Anton Weiss-Wendt: Laitse (Juvenile Correctional Facility), in: Encyclopaedia of the Nazi Genocide of the Sinti and Roma in Europe. Ed. by Karola Fings, Research Centre on Antigypsyism at Heidelberg University, Heidelberg 5 March 2024. -

1942
1 March 1942Between March 1942 and early spring 1944 the ‘juvenile correctional facility’ in Laitse, German-occupied Estonia, serves as a detention centre for Roma teenagers. Few of them, if any, survive.
15 October 1942The Estonian Security Police reports 58 Roma children at Laitse Juvenile Correctional Facility in Harju province (German-occupied Estonia).
27 October 1942Murder of 243 Roma in Harku (German-occupied Estonia), among them Karl Siimann, Leontine Siimann and Richard Siimann.
1943
1 March 1943The Estonian Security Police reports sixteen Roma children at Laitse juvenile correctional facility in Harju province (German occupied Estonia).
3 December 1943The Estonian Security Police reports fourteen Roma teenagers at Laitse juvenile correctional facility in Harju province (German occupied Estonia).
1944
Spring 1944In early spring 1944, the director of Laitse Juvenile Correctional Facility in German-occupied Estonia receives the order from the German Security Police to hand over the remaining Roma children. They are murdered at Kalevi-Liiva.