The idea of turning old prisons
into hotels is not a new one, and one of the best examples is the Malmaison in
Oxford, England, but now I read that Brits are now captivated by a new tourist
“hotel” — the notorious World War Two prison Colditz. So I can see the
advertising campaign already, “Come to a place that others tried so dam hard to
leave, some even died trying, and pay us for the privilege”.
Guests pay £20 a night to stay in the
Nazi castle where Allied officers such as legless RAF hero Douglas Bader were
held. The guards’ living quarters and offices have been spruced up and 161 beds
installed for visitors. Meals are served in the canteen used by wartime staff. Guests get a three-hour tour of tunnels and
hidden rooms used by PoWs in ingenious escape attempts.
Colditz, in southern Germany, housed
troublesome British officers who had already made repeated breakout bids from
prison camps. Birmingham-based
battlefield tour specialists the War Research Society have won the right to
offer the “prisoner experience”. Official Alex
Bulloch said: “The accommodation is spartan but the idea is to give people an
idea of what it was like to be there as a PoW.
“Colditz is the trip of a lifetime for anyone
interested in this aspect of the war. To stay under the same roof as the Allied
officers is incredible.” More than 30 prisoners
escaped from Colditz before US troops came to the rescue in 1945. But I guess
it does have a real historical story behind it and a hotel is a sensible use
for such a beautiful building, but making money from such a history would not
be my idea.