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Jutland beyond Legoland: why visit Denmark’s Coastal Land

Rupert Parker finds refuge and history off the beaten track in Jutland

January 25, 2024 15:42
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Kayakers on Horsens Fjord

ByRupert Parker, Rupert Parker

5 min read

In the middle of the Danish forest, I suddenly hear a band playing — but there’s nothing to be seen, just the trees. Instead, the sound is coming from my audio guide; I’m at a museum in Jutland, not far from the sandy beaches that make this region a popular tourist destination today.

But back in 1945, the people coming to Denmark were refugees, 250,000 Germans fleeing the advancing Red Army. Some 35,000 of them ended up here in the Oksbøl refugee camp, making it Denmark’s fourth largest city at the time. It occupied four square kilometres and didn’t close until 1949.

Now, only a few buildings remain and the forest has taken over. But the memory of those who lived there has never been forgotten and, in 2015, it was decided to create a museum commemorating it. FLUGT, meaning flight in Danish, opened in 2022, not only to tell the story of these refugees, but also those from across the world.

It’s housed in what was once the camp’s hospital, the only building remaining, which has been adapted and extended.