Falstad

📜 History Forest Trøndelag

Falstad

60 minutes
Falstad was one of the main German concentration camps in Norway during World War II. It operated from 1941 to 1945, located in the village of Ekne, about 25 kilometres southwest of Levanger.

At least 4,500 prisoners passed through Falstad, from at least 13 different countries. The camp held political prisoners, prisoners of war, and Norwegian Jews. Forty-seven Jewish men were imprisoned here; at least eight were murdered at the camp itself, and others were deported to Auschwitz.

The main characteristic of the camp was forced, hard, and largely meaningless labour. Prisoners were deliberately worked to exhaustion. Executions took place in the nearby forest, Falstadskogen, which served as a killing ground for both show trials and extrajudicial murders.

Today the Falstadsenteret operates as a memorial and documentation centre, established in 2000 as a national centre for education about wartime imprisonment, international humanitarian law, and human rights. The exhibition is well made and does not shy away from the details. Falstadskogen can be visited on a marked path through the forest. It is a quiet, unsettling place.

This is not a comfortable visit, but it is an important one. Norway's wartime history is often told as a story of resistance. Falstad is a reminder that the occupation also meant collaboration, deportation, and murder on Norwegian soil.

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