World War II transformed Corfu from peaceful island into occupied territory experiencing Italian fascist rule, brutal German occupation, Allied bombardment, and tragic Jewish community destruction. The war years (1941-1944) left deep scars: nearly the entire Jewish population perished in Auschwitz, historic buildings suffered bomb damage, civilians endured hardship and resistance fighters operated against occupation forces. Today, memorials commemorate victims, synagogue restoration preserves memory, and historical sites reveal this dark chapter. Understanding Corfu’s WWII experience provides essential context for the island’s modern identity, honors those who suffered and resisted, and demonstrates how small communities faced totalitarian aggression. This guide maps historical sites, explains occupation timeline, shares resistance stories, and approaches this sensitive history with appropriate respect.
Pre-War Corfu and Jewish Community
Jewish Corfu Before the War
Community history: Jewish presence dating to 12th century. Venetian period growth. Sephardic Jews expelled from Spain (1492) settled Corfu. Romaniote Jews (Greek-speaking) earlier presence.
Population: Approximately 2,000 Jews (1940). About 5% of Corfu Town population. Concentrated in Old Town (Jewish Quarter).
Economic role: Merchants, craftsmen, professionals. Contributing members of cosmopolitan Corfu society. Integrated yet maintaining distinct identity.
Synagogues: Four active synagogues serving community. Scuola Greca (Greek/Romaniote rite). Scuola Pugliese (Apulian). Scuola Catalana. Scuola Grande.
Cultural life: Vibrant community. Schools. Social organizations. Religious observance. Part of Corfu’s multi-ethnic character (Greeks, Italians, British influences, Jews).
Relations with Greek population: Generally good. Centuries of coexistence. Some antisemitism existed but less virulent than elsewhere in Europe.
Occupation Timeline
Italian Occupation (April 1941 – September 1943)
Invasion: Italy invaded Greece (October 1940). Initial Greek resistance successful. German intervention (April 1941). Greece fell. Corfu occupied by Italians.
Italian administration: Relatively mild compared to German-occupied territories. Italian fascists antisemitic in theory but implementation inconsistent. Jewish community initially relatively protected.
Restrictions: Movement restrictions. Economic hardship. Food shortages. But no immediate deportations. Italian commanders often protected Jews from German pressure.
Population impact: Hardship for all residents. Rationing. Occupation authority arbitrary. Some resistance activity but limited (Italian reprisals feared).
September 1943: Italy surrendered to Allies. German forces immediately moved to occupy Italian-controlled zones. Disaster for Jewish communities.
German Occupation (September 1943 – October 1944)
Takeover: Germans occupied Corfu (September 1943). SS units present. Immediate implementation of Nazi racial policies.
Jewish persecution begins: Registration ordered. Yellow stars required. Restrictions intensified. Clear deportation preparation.
June 1944 Roundup:
- June 9-10, 1944: German forces rounded up Jewish population
- Approximately 1,800 Jews arrested
- Imprisoned in Old Fortress
- Held in terrible conditions (overcrowding, minimal food/water)
- Two weeks imprisonment before deportation
Deportation:
- June 14, 1944: Transport to mainland (boats)
- Train journey to Auschwitz-Birkenau
- Arrival late June
- Immediate selection
- Majority sent directly to gas chambers
- Approximately 1,600 murdered within days
- Fewer than 200 survived the war (returned to find community destroyed)
Timing significance: June 1944 = very late in war. Allied victories already achieved. Holocaust widely known. Yet deportations continued.
Greek helpers: Some Greeks hid Jews. Risked own lives. Numbers limited (informers, German surveillance, fear of reprisals). Stories of individual courage exist but couldn’t save community.
Allied Bombing and Liberation
Strategic importance: Corfu’s harbors and airfields. German supply lines. Allied target for disruption.
Bombing campaigns: Allied (mainly British) bombing raids. Target: German installations. Reality: Civilian casualties. Old Town damage. Harbor destruction.
Civilian experience: Air raids. Shelters inadequate. Deaths from bombing. Starvation conditions. Disease. Desperation.
German retreat (October 1944):
- Allied advances mainland Greece
- German garrison withdrew
- British forces arrived
- Liberation celebration mixed with discovery of Jewish community’s fate
- Survivors began trickling back (devastating realization)
Historical Sites and Memorials
Jewish Museum and Synagogue
Location: Velissariou Street, Old Town. Jewish Quarter (Evraiki area).
Building: Scuola Greca (Greek Synagogue). Only surviving synagogue. Others destroyed (bombing, neglect).
Museum establishment: 1980s-1990s restoration. Community effort. International support. Preserving memory.
Collections:
- Pre-war photographs (community life)
- Religious artifacts (rescued items)
- Deportation documentation
- Survivor testimonies
- Memorial wall (names of victims)
- Educational displays
Visiting:
- Hours: Usually mornings (verify, irregular schedule)
- Free admission (donations appreciated)
- Respectful behavior essential
- Head covering for men (provided)
- Active place of worship (tiny surviving community uses for services)
Emotional impact: Profound. Small museum but powerful. Photographs of vibrant community contrasted with knowledge of fate.
Guided tours: Sometimes available. Survivor family members or community representatives. Personal stories. Advance arrangement helpful.
Holocaust Memorial (Old Fortress)
Location: Old Fortress. Site where Jews imprisoned before deportation.
Memorial: Modern installation. Commemorative plaque. Names of communities destroyed.
Significance: Physical location where prisoners held. Final days on Corfu soil. Emotional pilgrimage site for descendants.
Access: Within Old Fortress (admission ticket required). Respectful visit appropriate.
Jewish Cemetery
Location: Outskirts of Corfu Town (specific location: ask locally, somewhat hidden).
Condition: Ancient cemetery. Some gravestones dating centuries. War damage. Neglect. Recent restoration efforts.
Historical value: Sephardic and Romaniote tombstones. Hebrew and Ladino inscriptions. Jewish heritage physical evidence.
Visiting: Usually accessible. Respectful behavior. Head covering (men). Photography acceptable if respectful.
Serbian War Cemetery
Context: WWI Serbian army refuge in Corfu (1916-1918). 150,000+ Serbs. Many died (disease, exhaustion). Buried Corfu.
Cemetery location: Vido Island (visible from Old Town, short boat trip).
Significance: Separate from WWII but war memorial nonetheless. Serbian pilgrimage site.
Mausoleum: Blue domed structure. Ossuary. Orthodox chapel. Maintained by Serbian government.
Visiting: Ferry from Old Port (€2-3 round trip). 15 minutes to island. Cemetery well-maintained. Peaceful setting. Restaurant on island.
British Cemetery
Location: Near Corfu Town center.
Burials: British servicemen (mainly WWI, some WWII). British Protectorate era (1815-1864) civilians. Commonwealth War Graves.
Maintenance: Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Immaculate condition. British military tradition evident.
Access: Usually open. Free. Peaceful setting. Garden atmosphere.
Resistance and Occupation Stories
Greek Resistance Activity
Limited operations: Island geography limited partisan activity (unlike mountainous mainland). German reprisals brutal. Population small (collective punishment effective threat).
Forms of resistance:
- Intelligence gathering for Allies
- Sabotage (limited)
- Hiding Allied POWs escaped from camps
- Refusing collaboration
- Passive resistance
Risks: Execution for resistance. Family reprisals. Collective punishment of villages. Fear pervasive.
Post-war: Resistance fighters honored. Stories preserved. Contributed to Greek national resistance narrative.
Individual Heroism
Greeks who hid Jews:
- Names often remain private (family modesty)
- Yad Vashem “Righteous Among Nations” designations (few, investigation ongoing)
- Dangerous undertaking (discovery meant death)
- Limited success (most Jews still deported)
Mayor Spiros Liatsos:
- Corfu mayor during occupation
- Attempted delaying tactics
- Warned Jewish community (some escaped to countryside)
- Protested to Germans (unsuccessful)
- Post-war: Honored by survivors
Archbishop Chrysostomos:
- Greek Orthodox leader
- Spoke against persecution
- Limited power to prevent
- Moral stand significant
Civilian Suffering
Food shortages: Severe rationing. Starvation conditions (especially 1943-1944). Black market. Desperation.
Medical crisis: Disease outbreaks. Medicine scarce. Infant mortality. Elderly deaths.
Forced labor: German occupation forced Greeks to work on fortifications, airfields.
Executions: Hostage-taking. Reprisal executions for resistance. Public hangings (terrorize population).
Psychological trauma: Occupation’s psychological toll. Fear. Uncertainty. Moral compromises. Post-war trauma.
Educational Approach to Dark History
Why This History Matters
Holocaust remembrance: Corfu’s Jewish community destruction part of broader Holocaust. Personal stories humanize statistics.
Small community vulnerability: Demonstrates how total destruction occurs. Entire communities erased.
Moral questions: Collaboration vs. resistance. Risk-taking to help others. Ordinary people’s choices in extraordinary circumstances.
Historical continuity: Understanding past illuminates present. Tolerance. Democracy’s fragility. Warning against hatred.
Respectful Tourism
Appropriate attitudes:
- Solemnity visiting memorial sites
- Educating oneself beforehand
- Listening to survivor testimonies/accounts
- Avoiding sensationalism
- Recognizing real people suffered
- Holocaust not abstract history
Photography ethics:
- Memorials: Acceptable if respectful
- No selfies at Holocaust sites
- Somber demeanor
- Read room’s emotional atmosphere
Survivor community:
- Tiny surviving community (fewer than 50 Jews in Corfu now)
- Descendants worldwide
- Pilgrimage visits common
- Respect their emotional connection
Comparative Context
Greek Holocaust:
- 87% of Greek Jews murdered (one of highest percentages in Europe)
- Thessaloniki’s 50,000-strong community nearly annihilated
- Island communities particularly vulnerable
- Athens had higher survival rate (hiding easier in large city)
Corfu’s specific tragedy:
- Late deportation (1944) particularly cruel
- War clearly ending
- Could have been saved if delayed weeks/months
- German ideological commitment to “Final Solution” regardless of military situation
Post-War Legacy
Survivors’ return:
- Fewer than 200 returned
- Found homes looted
- Community destroyed
- Many emigrated (Israel, USA)
- Painful displacement
Community rebuilding:
- Attempted restoration 1950s-1960s
- Numbers too small
- Younger generation emigrated
- Today: Minuscule community
Memory preservation:
- Synagogue restoration (1990s-2000s)
- Museum establishment
- Memorial installations
- Educational programs
- International Holocaust Remembrance Day observances
Reconciliation:
- Greek-German relations evolved
- Official apologies
- Educational exchanges
- “Never again” commitment
Academic and Educational Resources
Research: University studies. Holocaust documentation. Oral histories. Archive materials.
Books: “The Jewish Community of Corfu” and academic publications. Survivor memoirs.
Documentaries: Greek and international films about Corfu’s Jews.
Educational programs: School visits to museum. Holocaust education integration.
VforVIP Historical Context Tours
Our electric van service approaches this sensitive history respectfully:
Historical site visits: Jewish Museum, memorials, Old Fortress. Appropriate pacing. Reflection time.
Context provision: Drivers provide historical background. Timeline explanation. Sensitive narration.
Educational focus: Learning rather than entertainment. Appropriate solemnity. Meaningful engagement.
Combination touring: Balance heavy history with cultural sites. Emotional pacing important.
Survivor connections: Can arrange meetings with community representatives (advance notice, subject to availability).
Customized approach: Adapt to visitor interest level. Scholarly depth or general awareness. Personal family connections honored.
