Vernissage exposition OST. The vanished traces of the forced labourers from Ukraine, Russia and Bela

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The exhibition shows the vanished traces of 4,000 forced laborers brought to Luxembourg during World War II from Nazi-occupied territories of the Soviet Union. Half of them were from Ukraine, a third from Russia, and a fifth from Belarus. A large proportion were young women, teenagers, and children. Their daily lives in barracks and working conditions in steel mills, mines, agriculture, and private homes were reconstructed as part of a research project by the University of Luxembourg and published in a book by Inna Ganschow “Nobody cried, there were no tears left” (in German), Luxembourg 2025.

Through maps of the numerous camps in Luxembourg, objects preserved from them, and the personal stories of individual forced laborers, visitors gain insight into the fate of Ukrainians, Russians, and Belarusians under German occupation and how these experiences shaped their later lives, both after the liberation of Luxembourg and upon their return home.

The exhibition is curated by Joëlla van Donkersgoed.


Centre de Documentation Sur les Migrations

Where does it take place?

3481 Luxembourg Centre de Documentation Sur les Migrations (CDMH), Rue Gare-Usines, Dudelange, Luxembourg

Centre de Documentation Sur les Migrations
Centre de Documentation Sur les Migrations (CDMH)
Rue Gare-Usines
Dudelange
Luxembourg



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  • 2025-10-23 19:00:00 2025-10-23 21:00:00 Europe/Paris Vernissage exposition OST. The vanished traces of the forced labourers from Ukraine, Russia and Bela The exhibition shows the vanished traces of 4,000 forced laborers brought to Luxembourg during World War II from Nazi-occupied territories of the Soviet Union. Half of them were from Ukraine, a third from Russia, and a fifth from Belarus. A large proportion were young women, teenagers, and children. Their daily lives in barracks and working conditions in steel mills, mines, agriculture, and private homes were reconstructed as part of a research project by the University of Luxembourg and published in a book by Inna Ganschow “Nobody cried, there were no tears left” (in German), Luxembourg 2025. Through maps of the numerous camps in Luxembourg, objects preserved from them, and the personal stories of individual forced laborers, visitors gain insight into the fate of Ukrainians, Russians, and Belarusians under German occupation and how these experiences shaped their later lives, both after the liberation of Luxembourg and upon their return home. The exhibition is curated by Joëlla van Donkersgoed. Centre de Documentation Sur les Migrations (CDMH), Rue Gare-Usines, Dudelange, Luxembourg Centre de Documentation Sur les Migrations
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