Wed 19 Sep 2007
Posted by Travelman under Cruises
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The museum presents the city’s experience of war and occupation, illustrates the landscape and architecture of industrial ЕЃГіdЕє between the 1860s and 1939 and reveals the fate of Gypsies brought to and murdered in ЕЃГіdЕє by the Nazi.
Radogost was not a place of mass extermination. Nevertheless, it should be pointed out that every day people died here as a result of hunger, diseases, exhaustion and sadistic harassment.
The greatest tragedy was the massacre of its prisoners and setting fire to the prison building during the night from 17 to 18 January, several dozen hours before the Soviet Army entered ЕЃГіdЕє on 19 January 1945. At first, the prisoners were murdered in the prison rooms but when they put up resistance, the invaders set fire to the building. Around 1500 people were killed then, only about 30 survived.
Memorial Statue outside Radogost
Museum