Credits: Comune di Borgo San Dalmazzo
Where are we?
We are at the Deportation Memorial in Borgo San Dalmazzo
Inaugurated in 2006, the Memorial consists of the silhouettes of the 20 survivors and of slabs bearing the names of 335 deportees who left the station and died in the Nazi camps.
On 7th December 1943, 328 of them were sent to Auschwitz. San Dalmazzo was then reopened by the fascists of Salò who intended to use it for the Jews of the province. 26 people were interned there before being taken to Fossoli concentration camp. From there, they too were deported to the Polish camps on 22nd February 1944.
Today, no material trace of the camp remains. School buildings and social services can be found along its perimeter, with two epigraphs commemorating the detention and the departure of convoys to the extermination camps. On 30th April 2006, the Memorial was inaugurated, an installation depicting the reality of the Borgo San Dalmazzo camp. Above a concrete platform, large vertical letters give the destinations of the deportees, while on the ground 335 metal plates give the names of the victims. The very recent multimedia installation MEMO4345 (2021) accompanies visitors to the Memorial.
Photo: The former camp of Borgo San Dalmazzo
Facility or museum: yes
Website: www.comune.borgosandalmazzo.cn.it/archivio/pagine/MEMO4345.asp
Geographic location: Borgo San Dalmazzo (CN), Piedmont
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