Malta Independent

Mosta wartime shelter r

- Gabriel Schembri

The wartime shelter dug underneath the main square in Mosta has been reopened to the public after many years. This time, the organisers want to offer something which is related to this time of year. That is why the 15 t’Awwissu band club has decided to combine the shelter’s World War II history with the solemnity of Holy Week.

The Malta Independen­t paid a visit to the shelter, which is not particular­ly large, and met with Fr David Muscat, who showed us around this undergroun­d attraction. “You will not be impressed with the size or complexity of this shelter,” Fr Muscat warned as we entered the chilly undergroun­d space.

Surprising­ly, there was no strong smell of humidity. What immediatel­y got our attention was the smell of wine and incense, typical of Good Friday traditions. The hundreds of cars and people walking above us did not disturb the silence in the shelter. Somehow, the hard rock in which the dugout was built provides enough insulation to keep the noises out.

The type of rock found in this area of Mosta was a very relevant factor to how the shelter was constructe­d. “This shelter, unlike the shelters in the other localities around the island, is not built in a way to fit a lot of small rooms. In fact, this one is simply formed by three interconne­cting corridors.”

Fr Muscat explained that when works started, the diggers realised that the rock was very hard – not easy to dig.

Although small, the shelter still has the most important elements of any other wartime bomb refuge. This one, for instance, has multiple exit and entry points – four in all. One of the rooms is covered in tiles. It appears that the tiles were used to keep the place as clean as possible, and that it was used as the room where women would give birth.

Interestin­gly enough, the shelter was not always the first option for the Maltese fleeing the streets as the Germans bombed our island.

“In the beginning, people would seek shelter inside the

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