It lies in the plain region of southeastern Srem, the south-western edge of Belgrade, 30 kilometers from the center,[2] and between the river Sava and Јarčina channel.
In more than one base under the ground, which have been saved to date, many of the fighters from Central Serbia continued for east Bosnia during the remainder of the war, after crossing the Sava River and taking a short stop in order to recover and train, and then took part in heated battles against the enemy.
At a distance of 2 km from the entrance to the forest, on the site where the partisan bases where Srem army hid in the dugouts and catacombs once stood, there is a memorial set up in 1963.
[7] At the edge of the Forest of Bojčin, on the right side of the road for Progar, a monument in the form of a concrete pillar was erected on a pedestal of rough hewn stone of rectangular shape.
On the right side of the pillar, a white marble plaque is built in with the text: "In the year 1942 the first battle in the southeastern Srem between partisans and ustashas took place in this forest.
The area is still relatively preserved, has great natural value, but it is in danger of further degradation[8] due to its proximity to the urban zone, which is why it has been put under protection.
[9] Directly behind the stage, an art colony was built in the same year, consisting of six wooden houses at a distance of about twenty meters.
[10] Next to the stage, there is an ethno restaurant "Bojčinska koleba", a catering facility consisting of typical Srem houses for pigs, covered with reeds.
The same road can be taken by car from Belgrade, or from highway E70 by taking a detour at the airport in Surčin from the direction of Kupinovo and Ašanja or Bečmen and Petrovčić, and from Obrenovac, one can arrive across the Obrenovac-Surčin Bridge over the Sava River.