Bubanj Memorial Park is a monumental complex from the Second World War erected in memory of the shooting of more than 10,000 Serbs and citizens of Jewish and Roma nationalities.
The monument was erected and ceremoniously opened on October 14, 1963, on the day of the liberation of Nis from the Nazi occupiers in 1944.
Three sculptures in the form of fists express the powerful and universal symbolism of human struggle. The Partisan struggle, as the strongest resistance to the Nazi occupiers, adopted the clenched fist as one of its symbols.
Bubanj is one of the many Yugoslavia monuments scattered throughout Bosnia, Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia, Montenegro and North Macedonia.