Gáti Csilla (szerk.): A Janus Pannonius Múzeum Évkönyve 54., 2016-2017 (Pécs, 2017)
NEMZETKÖZI KUTATÁSOK - Walterné Müller Judit: „Oroszföldön meggyötörve – Aranyló hagymakupolák vigaszában”. Elhurcolt magyarországi fiatalok szovjet kényszermunkán 1944–1949
A Janus Pannonius Múzeum Évkönyve ( 2017 ) 574 Csehszlovákia és Jugoszlávia területén és munkavégzésre a Szovjetunióba küldésükről http://olvasmanyaid.blogspot.hu/2015/03/az-atlanti-charta-1941augusztus-12.html (letöltés ideje: 2017.05.25.) – Az atlanti charta (1941. augusztus 12.) “Tortured in Russia – Consolation by Gilded Onion Domes “ Young people deported from Hungary to Soviet forced labour 1944–1949 Judit Walterné Müller By Stalin’s military command, the military police forces of the forwarding Red Army gathered around 200,000 civilians between November 1944 and April 1945 from the territory of Hungary and deported them to forced labour to the Soviet Union. If the almost 600,000 soldiers captured as war prisoners are added to this number, it can be considered as a historical fact that some 800,000 people of Hungarian and German nationalities were held captive in the Soviet Union between 1944 and 1955, in decreasing numbers. One third of them did not survive the bad living conditions, the inhumane workload. Of the nationalities living in Hungary, the largest is the German. ?e darkest, long-concealed period of the history of this ethnic group was the postWorld War II period characterized with forced evictions, confiscations of assets and forced labour, or else, “malenki robot”. Today, only the last witnesses and sufferers of this period are alive. Ethnic cleansing was a common practise in Transylvania, Transcarpathia, Upper Hungary, and Vojvodina either: civilians of Hungarian or German origin, including young girls and women, were deported for several years to labour camps in the Soviet Union: to Donetsk Basin, or the Ural Mountains, or even to areas beyond them. To commemorate the 70th anniversary of deportation, the Decree (I20) of 1009/2015 of the Hungarian Government declared the period between 25 February 2015 to 2017 a memorial year of political prisoners and forced labourers in the Soviet Union. Janus Pannonius Museum has been treating the above topic as a prominent theme of research: they have been involved in several exhibitions and conferences related to “malenki robot” as co-organizers, presenters, or researchers. ?e target group to reach is wide-ranging since the aim is to provide more information about events that have been kept quiet as taboos until the transition into the new political regime.