[citation needed] Initially, bodies of dead prisoners were buried near the camp, most likely in the woods behind the northern fence.
Efforts by the Institute of National Remembrance to place a stone or plaque in the cemetery to mark these unmarked graves have been unsuccessful.
Some prisoners also worked on the construction of an underground hospital (525 m2, with a capacity of 1600 m³) for the nearby Lublinek airport on the corner of ul.
Only a group of prisoners who were sick and unable to work remained in Łódź, most of whom lived to see the arrival of the Soviet Red Army on January 19, 1945.
14, standing at the northern fence of the camp, to a small forest outside the stalagium located at a distance of about 25 m. The escape was to take place in the spring of 1942.
The Germans found on him the things of one of the prisoners, and this allowed them to reach the organizers, including Yuriy Curkan (Юрий Цуркан), who had been imprisoned in the Stalag since October 29, 1941.
All of the organizers were first imprisoned and subjected to brutal interrogation, and then transported to Stalag Luft VI in Šilutė in German-occupied Lithuania.
While remaining in hiding, they joined the conspiratorial work, beginning by editing "Peperian" newspapers based on Russian radio listening.
After a few months, Kuznetsov, threatened with arrest, was included in the first Łódź partisan detachment People's Guard, known today as the "Radiant".
It lasted until December 1977 and ended with a suspension due to no further opportunities to collect evidence that brings new facts, not establishing the perpetrators of war crimes and the possibility of conducting further work outside of the proceedings.
In the collection of the Lodz Museum of Independence Traditions [pl] there is a reconstruction of the camp plan made in 1961 by a resident of this area [16] and wooden decorative plate signed "Stalag Luft 2 – Litzmannstadt – 1942".
[17] Also, in the collection of World War II Department of this museum, there are unregistered materials regarding Sasha Kuznetsov (mainly scans of his occupation documents and photos).