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    6 Kommentare

    1. Fabius_Macer on

      … „Moscow 33“, the designation for Russian „camps.“ … It’s right there in the article.

      This has nothing to do with Germany.

    2. digitalcosmonaut on

      Well it says right there – it was most likely a term/code used for mail sorting from the Soviet prison camps.

      https://ebay.us/m/Ed2hCS

      Probably very difficult to find any real archival data outside of Russia for this kind of stuff.

    3. The article contains a factual error. Herleshausen is not in East Germany. It was in West Germany. It was one of the border crossing points.

    4. I think the journalist lacked context and misunderstood what Moscow 33 could mean.
      Usually, international prisoner mail was handled by the Red Cross, their main office was located in Moscow, but after the Red Cross address in Moscow they also wrote a camp number, to be able to route mail back to the sender. For example, 33 could refer to GULAG Camp n.33 Tambov of the south-western district, Camp n.33 Magnitogorsk of Ural district, Camp n.33 New World of West Siberia district etc.

    5. WhileResponsible9595 on

      Many of my husband’s German family ended up in Russian camps and that’s what this sounds like based on others‘ comments 

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