Robert Mitrovski

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Robert Mitrovski
  • Version 1.0
  • Publication date 5 March 2024

Robert Mitrovski, born on 1 May 1921 (place of birth unknown), was one of the victims of the first documented massacre of Roma in German-occupied Estonia. According to the census carried out on 1 December 1941, Pärnu province had 59 Romani residents. By that time, all but nine of them had been incarcerated in Pärnu prison. The German Security Police (Sipo) had arrested them in accordance with the order issued on 18 September 1941 by Head of the Army Group North Rear Areas, Franz von Roques (1877–1967). The police labelled them ‘Gypsies’ and ‘work-shy’ but provided no specific reason for their arrest and no statement of the duration of their detention. This was effectively extrajudicial sentencing, or preventive police custody, as provided for in 1937 by the German Ministry of the Interior.

Among the prisoners were friends, Karl (born 1924 or 1925–unknown) and Juhan Koslovski (1922–1942), Richard Eamets (1926–unknown), and brothers Karl-Alfred (1919–1942) and Robert Mitrovski. At around eight o’clock on 20 January 1942, they staged an escape from prison. The guards instantly captured all but Karl Koslovski and Richard Eamets. Robert Mitrovski and Juhan Koslovski were illiterate. Robert Mitrovski was a manual labourer from Kõpu parish with a previous conviction for theft. Juhan Koslovski, too, earned his living with manual labour. He and his friend Karl Koslovski both came from Tsirgulinna in Valga province. Robert Mitrovski was in Tori parish and Juhan Koslovski in the city of Pärnu at the time of their arrest. They explained that they had decided to flee because of the poor food and cold in the jail as well the uncertainty about their prison term. As Robert Mitrovski put it: ‘We Roma did not know for how long we are going to be detained.’ They claimed ignorance as to the whereabouts of Karl Koslovski and Robert Eamets whose relatives had been in custody.

A whole month had passed, but the two fugitives were still on the run. The Estonian Criminal Police in Pärnu subsequently launched a countrywide search. Meanwhile, in late March all the Roma were transferred from Pärnu to Harku prison. The inquiry sent to Harku yielded no result: Koslovski and Eamets were not on the inmate list. On 27 October 1942, the rest of the Roma from Pärnu province faced a firing squad. Among the dead were Karl-Alfred Mitrovski, Juhan Koslovski, Robert Mitrovski, Richard Eamets’s father, Jaan (1907–1942), and the Mitrovskis’ father, Ernst (1893–1942). Many more of their relatives died by bullet.

Citation

Anton Weiss-Wendt: Robert Mitrovski, 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.-

1937
14 December 1937The ‘Decree on the Preventive Fight Against Crime’ is issued in Germany. On this basis, the criminal police can deport Sinti and Roma to concentration camps at any time.
1941
18 September 1941The Wehrmacht orders the arrest of all Roma in German-occupied Estonia.
1942
20 January 1942Five Roma youths stage an escape from Pärnu Prison in German-occupied Estonia. Prison guards rapidly apprehend three of them, Juhan Koslovski, Robert Mitrovski, and Karl-Alfred Mitrovski. Richard Eamets and Karl Koslovski manage to flee.
27 October 1942Murder of 243 Roma in Harku (German-occupied Estonia), among them Karl Siimann, Leontine Siimann and Richard Siimann.