Margrethe II, the Danish Queen and German Vice-Chancellor Robert Habeck inaugurated a Denmark museum that includes the tales of refugees who have brought cover in the Nordic nation back home. Flugt – Refugee Museum of Denmark – shows the record of migrants and displaced people who have been a piece of Danish society and their commitments, starting with Germans who left the Soviet during World War II.

The museum is built in Oksboel, a town situated close to Denmark’s west coast and was only 95 kilometers (60 miles) from Germany’s line. Beforehand, the site filled in as a previous exile camp. Post the conflict, the site gave safe house to 1,00,000 displaced people from Germany.

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Themuseum is planned by Bjarke Ingels, a Danish designer and organized by Claus Kjeld Jensen. The museum includes the system of a cutting edge working of wood and glass. These interface with old extensions which were utilized as emergency clinic structures when the conflict was finished.

Exiles can recount their own accounts through enormous video screens. Just prior to entering the historical center, guests can see plaques which portrayed the existences of the Germans who lived in the evacuee camp somewhere in the range of 1945 and 1949, called Oksboellejren. They at last moved to West Germany yet a burial ground on the site has been raised as a resting place for individuals who passed on there.

In Danish, flugt means to get away. The gallery likewise portrays accounts of settlers from Iran, Lebanon, Hungary, Vietnam and different spots. As of now, Denmark has opened up to evacuees who have passed on Ukraine because of the continuous conflict.

Individuals can visit the historical center on June 29. As indicated by a report, the historical center has been funded by confidential gifts, the bureaucratic German government and the state legislature of Germany’s northernmost province of Schleswig-Holstein.

Margrethe II, the Danish Queen and German Vice-Chancellor Robert Habeck inaugurated a Denmark museum that includes the tales of refugees who have brought cover in the Nordic nation back home. Flugt – Refugee Museum of Denmark – shows the record of migrants and displaced people who have been a piece of Danish society and their commitments, starting with Germans who left the Soviet during World War II.

The museum is built in Oksboel, a town situated close to Denmark’s west coast and was only 95 kilometers (60 miles) from Germany’s line. Beforehand, the site filled in as a previous exile camp. Post the conflict, the site gave safe house to 1,00,000 displaced people from Germany.

Themuseum is planned by Bjarke Ingels, a Danish designer and organized by Claus Kjeld Jensen. The museum includes the system of a cutting edge working of wood and glass. These interface with old extensions which were utilized as emergency clinic structures when the conflict was finished.

Exiles can recount their own accounts through enormous video screens. Just prior to entering the historical center, guests can see plaques which portrayed the existences of the Germans who lived in the evacuee camp somewhere in the range of 1945 and 1949, called Oksboellejren. They at last moved to West Germany yet a burial ground on the site has been raised as a resting place for individuals who passed on there.

In Danish, flugt means to get away. The gallery likewise portrays accounts of settlers from Iran, Lebanon, Hungary, Vietnam and different spots. As of now, Denmark has opened up to evacuees who have passed on Ukraine because of the continuous conflict.

Individuals can visit the historical center on June 29. As indicated by a report, the historical center has been funded by confidential gifts, the bureaucratic German government and the state legislature of Germany’s northernmost province of Schleswig-Holstein.

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