The first prisoners were 340 men captured in various parts of Italy. Most of them were Jewish refugees from
Nazi Germany,
Austria,
Poland,
Czechoslovakia and
Rijeka,
Croatia. The number of inmates during the three years varied considerably, ranging between 230 (February 1941) and 150 (September 1943). In spite of everything happening around them, living conditions in the camp were relatively good. In October 1941, the then-secretary of the
National Fascist Party wrote a letter to the then-head of police in which he complained about "too much freedom in which the Jewish internees of the Campagna concentration camp live" and asked for "consequent measures by the regime's police forces." Prisoners were allowed to receive visits and enjoy the assistance, offered in forms of food clothing and money, offered to them by
DELASEM, an Italian and Jewish resistance organization. Only two of them were said to have died during the three years of its use as a concentration camp, and were buried in the city cemetery with funeral rites celebrated by two rabbis. Among the prisoners there were many Jewish doctors who began to treat the locals, even though this was forbidden. Among the various prisoners was Russian-Italian painter Aleksandr Degai, who painted several works there and gave them to various citizens. To ease the detention of the inmates, a library was set up and an
association football team was created that occasionally played with external teams. There was also a small synagogue set up in San Bartolomeo and, for a period, at the bishop's invitation, an interned pianist played the organ in the church during Sunday mass. On September 8, 1943, when the Allied troops arrived in Salerno, German troops stationed there headed towards the camp to execute the prisoners. When they arrived, however, they found the camp empty; the prisoners had previously been warned by the locals and fled into the mountains. Including a former Jewish refugee, about 300 civilians died in two heavy bombings conducted jointly by the British and Americans. After the liberation on September 19, 1943, a refugee camp managed by the Allies was set up in the San Bartolomeo barracks building. ==See also==