2024

CONCENTRATION CAMP

Military monuments
5/5
1 review

The camp in Niš is one of the few remaining Nazi concentration camps. It bears witness to the suffering of the citizens of Niš and all of southern Serbia during the Second World War. Although at first glance the large building, located not far from the town's railway station, looks more like an old factory or warehouse of some kind, it is not. Everything here has remained unchanged, as if time had stood still in 1944: the gray, rectangular buildings where civilians were crammed together, the watchtowers and guardhouses, the intact barbed wire... During the war, more than 30,000 people passed through the camp, 10,000 of whom were shot on Bubanj Hill. At the beginning, the camp was intended to lock up, interrogate and torture the enemies of the regime: Serbian communists, hostages, gypsies and Jews. On February 12, 1942, a revolt broke out and more than a hundred prisoners managed to escape. The repression was ferocious: the remaining forty prisoners were butchered with a bestiality rarely seen until then, and the camp, called the Red Cross, became the death camp. A visit to the Skulls Tower and the Mediana is worthwhile, as is a visit to Niš.

On the hill of Bubanj, a monumental sculpture represents three huge closed fists. It honors the memory of the 15,000 prisoners shot by the Nazis on this hill, after having been in the jails of the Red Cross.

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 Niš
2024

TOWER OF SKULLS

Monuments to visit
5/5
1 review

Be careful, it is not suitable for young people. The Skull Tower, a unique place in the world, is the emblematic monument of the city, which should not be missed under any pretext! A small chapel was built in 1938 to protect what remains of the Skull Tower. On May 31, 1809, the voivode Stevan Sinđelić, leading 3,000 Serbian soldiers, lost a crucial battle against 10,000 Turks. While all over Serbia, uprisings against the Ottomans were gradually liberating the country, Niš would see its occupation extended for 68 years. As a warning and revenge, the sultan ordered his lieutenants to build a tower with the heads of Serbian soldiers and to place at the very top, last, that of the Serbian commander Stefan Sinđelić. On the spot, 952 skulls are thus stacked and ostensibly arranged in tiers, forming a tower several meters high. In Serbian history, the voivode Sinđelić became a hero of the resistance against the Turks, and the site of the Čegra, where the battle took place, was listed as a historical monument in 1983. During his visit to the country in 1824, Lamartine affixed a plaque at the bottom of the Skull Tower in honor of the fighters who died for their homeland, where it reads, "May the Serbs preserve this monument! It will teach children in future times what the price of freedom was for their ancestors and will serve as a constant reminder of the value of this struggle An unmissable stop during a visit to Niš!

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 Niš