National Monument Camp Vught
National Monument Camp Vught is a memorial site with a museum located in Vught, in the Dutch province of North Brabant. It commemorates the concentration camp known as Kamp Vught that was established there during World War II. The memorial was founded in 1990, with an exhibition building added in 2002. The monument is located on the northeastern tip of the former camp grounds.
The initial aim of Kamp Vught was to improve the efficiency of the deportation of Jews from Westerbork by holding Dutch Jews prior to their transport to extermination camps in Germany and Poland. The first prisoners arrived at Vught in January 1943. The camp facilities were liberated on October 26, 1944.
Outdoor area
The outdoor area features a reconstructed half barrack, number 13b, and several reconstructed watchtowers. The watchtowers are lower than the original ones to prevent visibility over the walls of the nearby penitentiary facility located on the former camp grounds.The former crematorium of the concentration camp is also situated on the outdoor area; it is the only museum element that has not been reconstructed. Within the crematorium, the cell in which the Bunker Tragedy took place has been recreated. At the rear of the building, there is the Monument of the Lost Children to commemorate the children's transports on June 1943 to Sobibor.