Salaspils was the largest civilian camp in Nazi-occupied Latvia, built from late 1941 on a site about eleven miles southeast of Riga and officially branded a police prison and re-education-through-labor camp. It was raised by Soviet prisoners of war and by Jews deported from Germany, Austria, and Czechoslovakia, most of whom died or were sent back to Riga before the barracks were finished. Over its existence it held a changing population of political prisoners, partisans and their families, and forced laborers, and roughly 12,000 people passed through its gates. Its most enduring association is with the children imprisoned there in 1943. After the war Soviet authorities vastly inflated the death toll for propaganda, but current scholarship places it at two to three thousand.