Buchenwald is a necessary detour to gauge the scale of Hitler's regression.
Buchenwald is a necessary detour to measure the extent of the regression of Hitler's Germany versus the weimarienne humanist tradition. It was in July 1937 that the Nazis began the construction of this immense concentration camp, where more than 250 000 people were deported, 65 000 died. A resistance cell inside the camp organized an uprising that led to his release on 11 April 1945. In the camp, one cannot detach the gaze of the mounds of black stone, the remnants of the burnt barracks at the end of the war. It is a vision that will accompany you long. The violent wind sweeping this huge plateau will not succeed in making your mind lighter.
In addition to the various sites and buildings inside the camp, a memorial built by the GDR, a huge sculpture with a 50 m high bell, dominates the entire valley.
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Die Ausstellung sollte man sich auf jeden Fall anschauen und auch genügend Zeit mitbringen