Picture 18. Bergen-Bedsen. The monument to the Jews killed in concentration camps |
Picture 19. Bergen-Bedsen. The obelisk and the stone wall with records of numbers of people killed in the prisoner-of-war camp. |
Picture 20. Bergen-Bedsen. The monument to the Soviet prisoners of war. |
Picture 21. Hemer, Stalag VIA. The monument to the Soviet prisoners of war. |
Picture 22. The monument in Hemer at the gates of Blueher-Barracks, situated in the place of the prisoner-of-war camp. |
Picture 23. The monument in Moosburg (Stalag VII-A). The Prisoner-of-War Camp Well |
Picture 24. The monument at the place of the prisoner-of-war camp in Moosburg. |
Picture 25. The memorial cemetery of the Soviet prisoners of war in Sandbostel prisoner-of-war camp |
Picture 26. The monument to the Soviet prisoners of war at Sandbostel memorial cemetery. |
Picture 27. Stalag VII-A, Gneksendorf, Austria. |
Picture 29. Russian prisoners of war in Austrian Hungary, 1916, Sagan (now Poland). |
Continuation of illustracions tu page 3.Several examples of how the memory of fascist victims is kept in Germany, Austria and Poland at the places where prisoner-of-war camps were situated. Examples given below are only few, taken occasionally out of the Internet search. Probably there is no prisoner-of-war camp in the territory of Germany - they were so numerous - that was left without any memorable mark.Picture 29. During World War I there also were prisoner-of-war camps. It is interesting to know about the state of Russian war prisoners in Germany and Dual Monarchy. The number of people who died there from wounds and diseases made about 5 percent, which regarded to exceed admissible sizes. |
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