MUSEUM OF MEMORY - CAMP DU RÉCÉBÉDOU
Museum with a permanent collection that traces the history of the camp through a collection of documents, period photos...
Inaugurated in 2003 by Elie Wiesel, this museum reminds us that this former housing estate built in 1939 for the working families of the Poudreries nationales de Toulouse served as a reception and accommodation center for Republican refugees from the Spanish Civil War from 1940 on. Following the same process as other camps in France, it then welcomed people from Belgium and Northern France fleeing Nazism as well as foreign Jews after the vote of the anti-Jewish law of October 4, 1940. From 1941, the camp changed its use to become a hospital camp where Spanish republicans who had been mutilated in the war were housed, as well as sick or elderly German Jews from the Gurs camp. But the place looked more like a hospital...
In 1942, the camp was included in the plan for the Final Solution. The archbishop of Toulouse protested against this situation: the camp closed in September 1942. The museum's permanent collection retraces this history through a collection of documents, period photos and reconstructions that allow us to understand the daily life of the interned people. In the town cemetery, there is a square where the graves of those who died in the camp are kept, as well as a memorial to the victims of Nazism. A stele near the Portet-Saint-Simon train station reminds us that it was the departure point to the death camps for the internees of Récébédou and Noé (30 km away).
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Llame a todos los telefonos y nadie me respondio.... fatal. Un viaje largo para nada