Tibor Gombár

Tibor Gombár, born 1922, Pavlovce nad Uhom, Michalovce district

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How to cite abstract

Abstract of testimony from: HÜBSCHMANNOVÁ, Milena, ed. Po židoch cigáni.” Svědectví Romů ze Slovenska 1939 – 1945.: I. díl (1939 – srpen 1944). 1. Praha: Triáda, 2005. ISBN 8086138143, 239 – 247 (ces), 248 – 255 (rom). Testimonies of the Roma and Sinti. Project of the Prague Center for Romani Histories, https://www.romatestimonies.org/en/testimony/tibor-gombar (accessed 2/14/2026)

Testimony origin

The interview with the survivor took place in 1995 during a study trip by students of Roma Studies at the Charles University to south-east Slovakia, drawn there by an interest in the wartime memories of the survivors and the intention to obtain artefacts for the Museum of Roma History in Brno. The local Roma sent them to the basket-maker Tibor Cico,[1] who then invited Tibor Gombár who people in the village talked about as a resistance worker and soldier in General Svoboda’s army. Tibor Cico joined in the interview towards the end.

The interview has been left in its original unedited form. Gombár did not tell his story in chronological order and repeatedly had to be asked which events belonged to his time in Tiso’s army and which to his time with Svoboda. Tibor Gombár did not complete some of his answers or delivered them in an abbreviated form and so there are several places where it is difficult to determine the sequence of individual events. Just one passage has been omitted because of its poor technical quality.

At the time the interview took place, the Roma community in the village of Pavlovce nad Uhom was one of the largest in Slovakia, comprising more than twenty per cent of the population. The Roma lived on the outskirts of Pavlovce, some in imposing houses, some in simple cottages, and others in shacks. After 1989 many local Roma lost their jobs when the economy was being restructured, and so they began again to earn their living by making baskets of different kinds, the trade of their forefathers. Tibor Gombár’s evidence also testifies that a relatively large number of Roma ended up not into labour camps but into Jozef Tiso’s army.

Finding themselves prisoners-of-war in Russia they then changed sides and joined General Svoboda’s army. In Tiso’s army, entire platoons were composed exclusively or mostly of Roma. The editor considers the most interesting information to be the testimony about the sons of the farm”, that is, Roma agricultural labourers living with Slovak farmers, who entered the army regardless of their origin.


[1] See his testimony in the database.

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