Early morning, April 6th, 1941. Belgrade remained shrouded in sleep. But above the capital’s heavy mist, the silence was suddenly shattered by the whale of air raid sirens. Within minutes, waves of Luftvafa bombers emerged to unleash a terrifying rain of fire. For Yugoslavia, dawn did not begin with the sun, but with the burning ruins of a kingdom on the brink of collapse. That bombardment was merely the opening shot. In less than two weeks, the Nazi war machine crushed all resistance, dismembering Yugoslavia and placing

Serbia under the iron heel of a new order. It was a cold and calculated order where human beings were no longer lives, but merely numbers waiting to be struck off in the occupying forces punitive reports. Out of this darkness of brutality, a monster took shape. This was the seventh SS Volunteer Mountain Division, Prince Yugen, consisting of men trained to forge compassion into atrocity. As the shadow of this unit swept through the valleys, their targets  were not just resistance fighters, but anyone who

dared stand in the path of the fascist advance. During a scorched earth campaign in the rugged Copionic  Mountains, a death list was prepared. And at the heart of that encirclement  lay a small and overlooked name, Crever Reka. A  remote village, once absent from any major military map, suddenly became the flash  point for one of the bloodiest purges in the history of the occupation. Why did a secluded hamlet at top the Copionic Peaks  become the site of one of the Balkan’s

most horrific massacres? What transformed men in SS uniforms  into monsters who burned civilians alive within their own sanctuary? More importantly, this story is not just one of blood and tears.  It is a journey toward reckoning. History always reserves a grim final chapter for the perpetrators. Today we delve into the anatomy of the crime at Creverka and witness how the wheels of fate dragged the ring leaders to the gallows in Belgrade. It all began with the heart-wrenching sirens on that fateful

morning. The occupation, the rise of resistance, and the fascist iron fist. In April 1941,  following the surrender of the Yuguslav army, the kingdom disintegrated as  it was dissected by Axis powers. Serbia was placed under direct military administration from Berlin. Here  the occupying forces did not just establish a standard administrative apparatus. They transformed terror into official policy, creating an administrative engine fueled by blood and fear. The Nazi occupation  of Serbia

was defined by the doctrine of brutal collective punishment. To stifle  any thought of rebellion, the occupiers issued a shocking execution ratio. For every German soldier killed, 100 local civilians would pay with their lives. Furthermore, for every soldier wounded, 50 innocents would  face the gallows. The arbitrary arrest and execution of civilians became a daily routine. Villages suspected  of harboring resistance were wiped off the map. Homes were torched and entire communities faced the threat of

annihilation. This was not merely the violence of war, but a systematic tactic designed to break the will of the Serbian people  in its infancy. Yet, instead of yielding, this very severity  ignited the flames of resistance under two opposing banners. First were the Cetnik who were nationalists  loyal to the monarchy led by General Draja Mihilovich. They retreated into the high mountains to build an intelligence network  and maintain hope for the kingdom’s restoration. Opposing them

were the Partisans,  a communist guerilla force under the command of Yseph Bros Tito. They executed hitandrun strikes and sabotaged key German  supply lines. The existence of these two forces turned the Serbian wilderness  into a borderless battlefield where the occupiers lived in a constant state of siege. Amidst this complex landscape of resistance,  the Copionic Mountains in central Serbia emerged as a strategic flash point. This area served as the base of operations for the Cetnic

Rsina Corps. Under the fierce command of Major Dragutin Keserovich, this unit established a tight-knit control network and gained the absolute support of the local population. The defiance  reached a tipping point in 1942 when German intelligence detected  continuous allied airdrops of weapons and communication equipment into the region. Copanik was no longer a remote mountain range. It had become an internationalized outpost of resistance. To Berlin, these peaks were a thorn in the side that had to be

removed through a total purge, setting the stage for the horrific atrocities about to descend  upon an innocent people. Operation Coponic,  the Prince Ugan destruction machine. The existence of resistance groups in central Serbia was no longer merely a local military issue, but had become a strategic threat to the  SS High Command. The mastermind behind this purge was Hinrich Himmler. He believed that eliminating General Mihovich  and eradicating the bases in Copaonic were key

conditions for pacifying southeastern Europe. To execute this intent, a combat plan named Operation Copic was meticulously drafted on September 30, 1942, and the formal execution order was issued just one week  later on October 5. The force chosen to lead this campaign  was the 7th SS Volunteer Mountain Division, Prince Yugen. This was a special unit established in  late 1941 with a core composed of ethnic German minorities living in the Balkans, also known as Folk Deutsche. These individuals were not

 trained to face regular armies on conventional battlefields. Instead, they were molded to become antipartisan  specialists under the command of SS Brigard Fura Arur Fle. The essence of this division was a combination of mountain warfare skills  and devastating violence directed at civilians to break the will of the resistance. The scale of operation Copionic was immense,  involving over 7,000 troops, including the SS main force operating alongside infantry battalions

from Bulgaria and the Russian  Protective Corps. Before the troops set out, Arur Fleps issued a  directive that blurred all moral boundaries to regard the entire population in the area  as either enemies or accompllices to the rebellion. This command served as a license for atrocity, transforming a military action  into a bloody punitive expedition. The entire machine stood ready to crush anything that appeared in its path as it advanced into the mountains of central  Serbia.

The Crever Rea tragedy hell amidst the Copionic slopes. October 1,942. On October 11, 1942, Operation Copanic officially commenced. According to the coordinated  plan, German battalions advanced from the directions of Kosovska, Mitravika, and Rashka, while Bulgarian forces closed the encirclement from the direction  of Bruce. Their most vital objective was the village of Crearka where intelligence had identified the headquarters of Major Cacerovich and the presence of  a British military

mission. However, a military failure occurred from the very beginning. Thanks to a civilian intelligence network,  Kazerovich was warned and withdrew his entire force into the deep mountains before the encirclement could close. When the SS surged into the village on the morning of October 12th,  their death trap held only innocent civilians who had not been able to evacuate  in time. The fury of losing their primary target transformed the soldiers of the Prince Jugan 

Division into savage beasts. A systematic massacre began immediately under the command of August Schmidhuba  and Richard Cassera. A total of 330 lives were taken  during that bloody day. Among them were 270 local villages, accounting for nearly half the population of Creverka. The troops ransacked  every cellar, looted thousands of livestock, and raised more than 100 houses.  Yet, none of this represented the peak of their cruelty. The most repulsive form of atrocity took place at the local

church. The SS forced at least 46 civilians, mostly women, children, and the elderly, inside  the sanctuary and locked the doors. They used explosives to collapse the dome and set the building on fire to burn those trapped inside alive. Amidst the dust  and heat, anyone who attempted to escape through the cracks in the ruins was cut down without mercy by machine gun fire from the  outside. The church, once a sacred sanctuary, was transformed into a haunting slaughterhouse. The brutality of the Prince Eugene

division was so horrific that it caused a wave of unease even within the occupying administration. Paul Bader, the military commander in Serbia, was forced to speak out in criticism and demanded that the division limit its baseless attacks on civilians.  However, this reaction did not stem from humanity, but from a pragmatic fear that excessive cruelty would ignite the flames  of hatred among the local people, causing the situation in Serbia to become uncontrollably unstable in the

long term. For the people of the Copionic region, Crevar became a tragic symbol where the blood of the innocent was spilled to cover up the military failure of the fascist army. Postwar, the judgment of history,  blood for blood. As the scales of war tipped in favor of the Allies, darkness began to shroud the fate of the leaders of the Prince  Yugan Division. The man who molded the brutal soul of this unit, Artur  FPS, never had the opportunity to stand before an official tribunal. In

September 1944, amidst the chaos of the German retreat  from Romania, FPS was captured by the Soviet Red Army. On September 21, 1944, the SS  general was killed in the ruins of an obscure village. A mundane and abrupt end for a man who had ordered the burning of hundreds of human beings. For the commanders who directly dipped their hands in the blood of Crever, justice arrived more slowly, but far more severely upon the gallows in Belgrade. August Schmid Huba, the man who ordered the bloody purge, was

extradited to Yugoslavia to face undeniable evidence of war crimes. On February 19, 1947, the Yugoslav military court  executed a death sentence by hanging against Schmid Huba. Only a month prior, on January  24, 1947, Richard Kasera, the man who directly forced civilians into that fateful church, was also extradited from Norway to Serbia  to meet the same fate on the execution platform. Those who once boasted of  the power over life and death finally departed this world in stripping of rank

and universal contempt. However, the most catastrophic  judgment fell upon the thousands of ordinary soldiers of the Prince Eugen Division. On May 11, 1945, only 3 days after the collapse of Nazi Germany, the remnants of the division were forced to surrender to Tito’s partisans near Chel, Slovenia. What followed was not a standard prisoner escort, but a furious purge of vengeance for four years of brutal occupation. Around May 22,  1945, in the area of the town of Breis, a horrifying scene was 

established. An estimated 2,000 former members of the Prince Yugan  division were stripped of their uniforms, bound together with barbed wire, and subjected to final judgment within abandoned trenches.  There were no trials and no right to a defense. Thousands of gunshots rang out to end the existence of a  unit that had once been the terror of the entire Balkans. The mass graves  discovered decades later in Slovenia serve as evidence of a harsh law of history. Those who sow hell through

inhuman violence  will eventually be consumed by the very fires of hatred and justice. Lessons from the past. The Creverka tragedy was not merely a military loss. It is authentic evidence of the ultimate inhumanity when war combines with extremist ideology. Here the boundary between combatant and civilian was completely erased  transforming an anonymous village into the scene of a crime against humanity. The postcript of this story lies not in military reports but in the mass graves excavated decades

later in Slovenia and Serbia. These sites exist as a non-silent reminder of an era when compassion was regarded as a weakness and brutality was celebrated as a virtue. Ultimately, history has proven a grim truth. Justice may be delayed by smoke and chaos, but those who choose to sew the seeds of fear must sooner or later face the ultimate judgment of both law and conscience. From the perspective of a historical researcher, I observe that the rise and fall of the Prince Eugene division is a costly lesson on

the benality of evil. When ordinary individuals abandon independent thought to become cogs in a fanatical machine, they do not only destroy others, but also bury their own humanity with their own hands. Assessing objectively the postwar justice in Belgrade or Breis, though fierce, was a necessary correction of history to reestablish fundamental moral values. The advice for today’s generation is to always remain vigilant against hateful rhetoric and divisive doctrines. Historical education is not meant to

nurture hatred, but to build a cognitive filter, helping us identify and prevent the seeds of brutality from the moment they first begin to sprout. The greatest lesson from the ashes of the Creka Church is that peace is never achieved by oppressing the weak. And a civilized society is one where human life is protected by the law rather than determined by the barrel of a gun. History has turned the page, but the ghosts of the past will remain if we choose to forget. In today’s volatile modern world, have we truly built strong

enough barriers to prevent a second creka from happening again? Subscribe to the channel and share your perspective in the comments below so we can keep the flame of history burning.