
Hlinka Guard flag
'Hlinka Guard' (in
Slovak ''Hlinkova garda'') (HG) was the
militia maintained by the
Slovak People's Party in the period from
1938 to
1945; it was named after
Andrej Hlinka.
The Hlinka Guard was preceded by the
Rodobrana (Home Defense/Nation's Defense) organization, which existed from
1923 to
1927, when the
Czechoslovak authorities ordered its dissolution. During the crisis caused by
Hitler's demand for the
Sudetenland (in the summer of 1938), the Hlinka Guard emerged spontaneously, and on October 8 of that year, a week after Hitler's demand had been accepted at the
Munich conference, the guard was officially set up, with
Karol Sidor (
1901 -
1953) as its first commander.
Duties
The guard was the Hlinka party's military arm for internal security, and it continued in that role under the autonomous government of
Slovakia in federated Czecho-Slovakia. The Hlinka Guard were Slovakia's state police and most willingly helped Hitler with his plans. It operated against
Jews,
Czechs,
Hungarians, the Left, and the opposition. By a
decree issued on October 29, 1938, the Hlinka guard was designated as the only body authorized to give its members
paramilitary training, and it was this decree that established its formal status in the country. Hlinka guardsmen wore black uniforms and a cap shaped like a boat, with a woolen pompom on top, and they used the raised-arm salute. The official salute was "Na stráž!" ("On guard!").
Membership
Until
March 14,
1939, when Slovakia declared its independence, the Hlinka Guard attracted recruits from all walks of life. On the following day, March 15,
Alexander Mach became its commander, retaining the post up to the collapse of the pro-
Nazi regime in Slovakia in 1945. Its functions were laid down in a series of government decrees: it was to be a paramilitary organization attached to the party, fostering love of country, providing paramilitary training, and safeguarding internal security. By assuming these tasks, the guard was meant to counterbalance the army and the police. In
1941 Hlinka Guard
shock troops were trained in
SS camps in
Germany, and the SS attached an adviser to the guard. At this point many of the guardsmen who were of middle-class origin quit, and thenceforth the organization consisted of
peasants and unskilled
laborers, together with various doubtful elements. A social message was an integral part of the radical
nationalism that it sought to impart.
Deportation of the Jews
In
1942, the Hlinka Guard headed deportations of
Slovak Jews to concentration camp
Auschwitz in suburbs of the city of
Oswiecim,
Poland. The Guard would regularly make round ups for Jews in the spring and summer months. Deportation of the
Jews by Hlinka Guards lead to confiscation of the Jew estates (in
Slovak " Arizácia majetku") while distributing those estates to individual members of the Hlinka Guards. Over the course of time, the guardsmen prospered financially but their zeal for stolen wealth never abated.
Political competition
A small group called Náš Boj (Our Struggle), which operated under SS auspices, was the most radical element in the guard. Throughout its years of existence, the Hlinka Guard competed with the Hlinka party for primacy in ruling the country. After the anti-Nazi
Slovak National Uprising in August
1944, the SS took over and shaped the Hlinka Guard to suit its own purposes. Special units of the guard (Pohotovostné oddiely Hlinkovej gardy - POHG) were employed against partisans and Jews.
References in Literature
The Hlinka Guards are a pivotal antagonist group in the 2006 novel by
Colum McCann, ''Zoli''.