
A moss-covered, square-cement building blends into the woodlands landscape outside the village of Brûly-de-Pesche in the South of the Province of Namur. The unsuspecting building was once the bunker accompanying Hitler’s temporary headquarters for three weeks in June, 1940, prior to his invasion of France. Only a few kilometers from France, the site is discreet but ideally located. From there, Hitler orchestrated the battle of France from June 6 and on. Known by the code name Wolfsschlucht, meaning Wolf’s Gorge, the site still bears the scars of Hitler’s stay and…