- Frøslev Prison Camp
Frøslev Prison Camp ( _da. Frøslevlejren, _de. Polizeigefangenenlager Frøslev) was an
internment camp in German-occupiedDenmark duringWorld War II .In order to avoid deportation of Danes to German
concentration camp s, Danish authorities suggested, in January1944 , that an internment camp be created in Denmark. The German occupation authorities consented, and the camp was erected near the village of Frøslev in the south-west of Denmark, close to the German border. From mid-August until the end of the German occupation in May1945 , 12,000 prisoners passed through the camp's gates. Most of them were suspected members of theDanish resistance movement , Communists and otherpolitical prisoner s. Living conditions in the camp were generally tolerable, but 1,600 internees were deported to German concentration camps, where 220 of them died (approximate numbers).After the war, the Swedish count
Folke Bernadotte tried to get all Scandinavian concentration camp prisoners to Sweden. Simultaneously the Danish administration negotiated with the Germans about rescue of the Danish prisoners in Germany. As a result of these efforts many Scandinavian prisoners came with the white buses from the German camps. In March and April 1945 10,000 Danish and Norwegian captives were brought home from Germany. Some of the returning prisoners came to Frøslev Prison Camp. Among those were some of the 1,960 deported Danish policemen, which had been arrested and deported on19 September 1944.After the war
When the German occupation ended, the prisoners were released, only to be immediately replaced with suspected Nazi collaborators, and the camp's name was changed to Fårhus Camp ("Fårhuslejren"). The internment camp was now run by the Danish resistance movement, and among those interned was
Frits Clausen , former leader of the Danish Nazi party. Later on the Danish state would take over from the resistance movement, using the camp as the country's largest correctional facility for convicted collaborators.By 1949 most collaborators had served their sentences, and the camp was converted to army barracks under the name of Padborg Camp ("Padborglejren"). The Frøslev Prison Camp Museum ("Frøslevlejrens Museum") was inaugurated in
1969 . According to a2001 agreement, the camp will be preserved as a national memorial park. Some parts of the original 1944-45 prison camp, which had been demolished, have now been reconstructed, including a watchtower and a portion of the barbed-wire fence.External links
* [http://www.froeslevlejrensmuseum.dk Website of the Frøslev Prison Camp Museum]
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