It stands as a powerful symbol of peace and resilience.
In 1942, Allied troops captured 550 Italian soldiers during battles in North Africa and brought them to the Orkney Islands, an archipelago in the northernmost tip of Scotland that hosted Britain’s greatest military naval base during World War II.
It was customary to harness manpower from prisoners of war to build infrastructure, so the Italian captives were put to work at the construction of the Churchill Barriers, four causeways that had been designed to prevent access to the Scapa Flow, a body of water surrounded by the Orkney Islands. Just a few years earlier, in 1939, a German ship had managed to enter the Scapa Flow and launch a torpedo attack on a British ship, HMS Royal Oak, killing 883 crew members, prompting the need to build defensive causeways.
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