Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at dinko.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Dinko.
Examples
-
A former prisoner of the camp recalled the capture of an American bomber crew and described it to Chris Hedges of the Times: Suddeny we saw three white parachutes and so did the camp commander, Dinko ÅakiÄ.
G. Roger Denson: Holocaust and Redemption in the Photography of Susan Silas G. Roger Denson 2011
-
The day's news item inscribed between the photos: 2 May 1998 - Dinko Šakić, commander of the Jasenovac concentration camp in Croatia in the fall of 1944 and now 76 years old, was recently interviewed on Argentine television.
G. Roger Denson: Holocaust and Redemption in the Photography of Susan Silas G. Roger Denson 2011
-
A former prisoner of the camp recalled the capture of an American bomber crew and described it to Chris Hedges of the Times: Suddeny we saw three white parachutes and so did the camp commander, Dinko Šakić.
G. Roger Denson: Holocaust and Redemption in the Photography of Susan Silas G. Roger Denson 2011
-
The day's news item inscribed between the photos: 2 May 1998 - Dinko ÅakiÄ, commander of the Jasenovac concentration camp in Croatia in the fall of 1944 and now 76 years old, was recently interviewed on Argentine television.
G. Roger Denson: Holocaust and Redemption in the Photography of Susan Silas G. Roger Denson 2011
-
A former prisoner of the camp recalled the capture of an American bomber crew and described it to Chris Hedges of the Times: Suddeny we saw three white parachutes and so did the camp commander, Dinko Šakić.
G. Roger Denson: Holocaust and Redemption in the Photography of Susan Silas G. Roger Denson 2011
-
The day's news item inscribed between the photos: 2 May 1998 - Dinko Šakić, commander of the Jasenovac concentration camp in Croatia in the fall of 1944 and now 76 years old, was recently interviewed on Argentine television.
G. Roger Denson: Holocaust and Redemption in the Photography of Susan Silas G. Roger Denson 2011
-
The commander of the camp was a man named Dinko ŠakiÄ ‡, who managed to flee Europe to hide in Argentina once the Ustaša regime fell in 1945.
Croatians React to Concentration Camp Commander's Death 2008
-
For most people outside the Balkans, the name, Dinko ŠakiÄ ‡, the location of Jasenovac, and the group named Ustaša will have little meaning.
Croatians React to Concentration Camp Commander's Death 2008
-
Vice-President of the Jewish Community Jasminka Domas claimed “the disgraceful events that occurred at the funeral of Dinko ŠakiÄ ‡ in Zagreb insult the memory of all the victims of the Ustasha regime, and besmirch the Republic of Croatia's good name.”
Croatians React to Concentration Camp Commander's Death 2008
-
Dinko ŠakiÄ ‡ in uniform at Jasenovac (Photo from Wikipedia)
Croatians React to Concentration Camp Commander's Death 2008
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.