That were wonderful hours in Torun. Again old documents helped us to provide retracing warpaths of Arthur form Wiltshire Regiment, 2nd Battalion who was captured and moved to Stalag XXA in Torun. Arthur spent whole war in camp in Torun but in docs were also information about staying in working commando 172. This time the most helpful were medical documentation thanks which we could see all places connected to his story. Unfortunatley this story has not happy end. In 1945 during evacuation of POW from Stalag XXA in Torun, Arthur died after 4 days of marching. Its hard to write about what was the casue, nevertheless he was buried now in Poznan where his family reach too. We are happy that we could help another Stalag XXA family members which deepen their relative's war story. It is working in both ways because each trip make us enrich and by colleting priceless little pieces of stories we have bigger picture of reality in POW camp.
May and her husband Peter crossed the borders of Toruń, ready to discover places connected to their family history. Their journey had a special purpose - to uncover traces left by World War II in their family's story. Their relative was one of many soldiers from the Seaforth Highlanders who, as prisoners of Stalag XXA in Toruń, had to endure the horrors of those times. Thanks to preserving fragments of memories and family stories, Piotr and his wife had the opportunity to delve into the history of their loved one. Acquiring several basic facts was an important step for them in understanding what he went through during his stay in the German prisoner of war camp Stalag XXA. The visit to Toruń was not only a journey into their family's past, but also an exploration of the history of Stalag XXA itself. By visiting preserved places associated with the camp's history and its prisoners, Piotr and his wife could feel the closeness of those events and understand how much they chang