The Bolzano transit camp (German: Polizei- und Durchgangslager Bozen) was a Nazi concentration camp active in Bolzano between 1944 and the end of the World War II. It was one of the largest Nazi Lager on Italian soil, along with those of Fossoli, Borgo San Dalmazzo and Trieste. Here a few recent photos of this sad place. More informations on Wikipedia.
A very interesting post, I didn't know of Bolzano as a transit camp.
ReplyDeleteHi Karl - reminders of a sad time - I didn't know that this transit camp ever existed but unfortunately it did.
ReplyDeleteHave a wonderful weekend.
"Adelaide and Beyond"
You are so right, a very sad place indeed.
ReplyDeleteThis is new to me, too. I'm glad the camp was kept as a memorial.
ReplyDeleteThe diagram of the destinations of the 13 transports is chilling.
The Wiki information is so interesting.
And the Nazis kept working up to the very end.
Thank you, Karl, for bringing this to our attention. Your photos are very moving.
I will say the same as Dina. I didn't know about this camp or others in Italy. In France we only learn about those of Auschwitz, Matthausen, Dachau, Ravensbruck etc...
ReplyDeleteThank you for keeping history alive. This is so important.
Thank you for the photos. I felt sick.
ReplyDeleteMy grandmother and my aunt were sent to this camp for helping the partisans.
Their next stop was to be Dachau.Val
Could you tell me where the first 2 photos were taken? i mena adress, name of street.. i'd like to visit this site
ReplyDeleteThe photos were taken in the Via Resia in Bolzano, it is easy to find this sad place...
DeleteMy father was arrested as a young boy by the Nazis and put into this camp and was scheduled to be executed the next morning. His mother went to the camp commander and pleaded for his life saying he was just a boy. The camp commander released him.
ReplyDeleteI like reading through a post that will make men and women think.
ReplyDeleteAlso, thanks for permitting me to comment!
My Great-Grandmother, Francesca, was part of the partisan movement in Italy - and she was sent here. She did survive and we are grateful for that. She was in Block F - where all other women were kept.
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