Horelli and Arno Anthoni, the director of the Finnish State Police, were responsible for the deportation of German refugees that were handed over to the Nazis in November 1942. Eight of the deported were Jews who were killed by the Gestapo.[2]
Life
Early life
Horelli was born in the Western Finnish municipality of Kokemäki to the family of Johan Fredrik Mäki-Horelli (1844–1931) and Amanda Giers (1850–1922).[3] His father was an uneducated farmer who represented the estate of peasants in the Diet of Finland.[4]
In the early 1930s, Horelli supported the fascist Lapua Movement, although he was not an active member, neither did he join its political successor IKL but stayed loyal to the National Coalition Party. Horelli was elected to the parliament in the 1933 election.[1]
In November 1942, Horelli and Arno Anthoni deported a group of refugees who had fled Germany after the 1938 Anschluss. Approximately 350 refugees had entered Finland of which some 150 were Jews. As Finland joined the war in 1941, Germany was pressing the Finnish government to hand over the Jewish refugees. The matter was discussed on Heinrich Himmler's visit in the summer of 1942, and soon Horelli and Anthony secretly ordered the deportation of 27 refugees, including 8 Jews. On 8 November 1942, they were shipped to the Estonian capital Tallinn and handed over to Gestapo. According to the documents found in the Estonian state archives, the Jews were killed just two days later.[10] The intention was to deport all Jews, but the operation was revealed, and because of the intervention of the Social Democratic cabinet members Väinö Tanner and K.-A. Fagerholm the deportations were stopped.[11]
Horelli never faced a court trial.[13]Poland and the Western Allies wanted Horelli, Anthoni and the State Police officer Aarne Kauhanen to be included on the list of war criminals, but the Soviet Union never made a claim to the Finnish government. This was most likely because the Soviets focused on people who had committed war crimes against their own citizens.[14]
Horelli only appeared in the court as a witness when Anthoni was put on trial for misconduct.[15] Before the trial he was questioned by Otto Brusiin. Horelli refused to tell on whose initiative the Jews were deported, saying he would only answer the question in the State court.[16] According to Brusiin, Horelli was openly antisemitic using constantly the racial slur ″kike″ (Finnish: jutku).[17]
Horelli never admitted the deportation of the Jews was based on their ethnicity. Instead, Horelli claimed that all were convicted criminals calling them "saboteurs, spies and thieves".[18] However, among the deported were two children ages of 2 and 11, and only two of the Jewish adults had criminal record; one had a 10-month prison term for smuggling, and another had been fined for breaking the rationing laws. According to the Finnish immigration laws, these offenses were not a justification for deportation.[19]
Horelli worked as a bank director in Jyväskylä until his retirement in 1951. Horelli spent his last years in Tampere and died in June 1975 at the age of 86.[1] He is buried to a family grave in the Koomankangas Cemetery in Kokemäki.
Family
Horelli married Lempi Josefina Lehtonen (1889–1967) in 1917. The couple had two children.[3] His brothers were the professor Väinö Horelli (1882–1973) and the physician Edvard Johan Horelli (1871–1946) who was interested in eugenics.[20][21]
References
^ abcdefgUola, Mikko (5 December 2008). "Horelli, Toivo Johannes" (in Finnish). The National Coalition Party Archives. Retrieved 4 October 2018.
^Maude, George (2010). Aspects of the Governing of the Finns. New York, NY: Peter Lang. p. 165. ISBN978-143-31071-3-9.
^Hoppu, Tuomas (2011). Joki ja sen väki II : Kokemäen historia 1870–2010 (in Finnish). Kokemäki: The municipality and parish of Kokemäki. p. 32. ISBN978-952-99941-3-7.
^Silvennonen, Oula (2013). "Beyond ″Those Eight″ : Deportation of Jews from Finland 1941–1942". Finland's Holocaust: Silences of History. London: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN978-113-73026-4-9.
^"Jewish Refugees". Chabad Lubavitch of Finland. Retrieved 4 October 2018.
^Bergholm, Tapio (2014). "Wälläri, Niilo" (in Swedish). Biografiskt lexikon för Finland. Retrieved 4 October 2018.
^Sana, Elina (2004). Kuoleman laiva S/S Hohenhörn : juutalaispakolaisten kohtalo Suomessa (in Finnish). Helsinki: WSOY. pp. 169–170. ISBN951-02921-8-4.
^Laqueur, Walter (1998). The Terrible Secret : Suppression of the Truth About Hitler's Final Solution. New York, NY: Holt. p. 161. ISBN978-080-50598-4-7.
^Holmila, Antero (2011). "Varieties of Silence". Finland in World War II : History, Memory, Interpretations. Leiden; Boston: Brill. p. 530. ISBN978-900-42089-4-0.
^Rautkallio, Hannu (1985). Ne kahdeksan ja Suomen omatunto : Suomesta 1942 luovutetut juutalaispakolaiset (in Finnish). Espoo: Weilin + Göös. p. 230. ISBN951-35322-9-1.
^Adam, Thomas (2011). Intercultural Transfers and the Making of the Modern World, 1800–2000: Sources and Contexts. London: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 75. ISBN978-023-02435-4-5.