Franc Frakelj
Franc Frakelj (a.k.a. Peter Skalar) (19 January 1917–?)[1]:427 was a member of the collaborationist Slovenian Home Guard (after the Italian fascist capitulation in 1943) and a member of a secret murderous militia called Črna roka (Black Hand) who is accused of killing over 60[citation needed] people during the Second World War. He and his group used wooden sticks to massacre local people[citation needed] in the winter of 1943–44 in Kosler's Thicket in the marshes south of Ljubljana.[citation needed]
Frakelj was born in Dražgoše (a part of Železniki), a village in northwestern Slovenia, which was destroyed in 1942 by the German Army. Before the Battle of Turjak Castle (September 19, 1943) Frakelj was the commander of a stronghold of village guards in Tomišelj south of Ljubljana.[citation needed]
He died in Canada living under the name Peter Markis.[1]:430[2]
See also
- Collaboration during World War II
- Slovenian Home Guard
- Partisans (Yugoslavia)
- Yugoslavia during the Second World War
References
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- Articles with unsourced statements from June 2011
- Articles with unsourced statements from August 2011
- Articles with unsourced statements from November 2011
- People from the Municipality of Železniki
- Slovenian people of World War II
- Slovenian collaborators with Nazi Germany
- 1917 births
- Year of death missing
- Slovenian people stubs