A dacha is basically a small cabin/cottage. I've never heard mention of it anywhere outside of Russia/Ukraine/etc., but -- as mentioned before -- it's a small cottage/cabin, usually in the countrysides or outskirts of cities, where people go on weekends to escape the stress of daily life. Sometimes they have little gardens where they grow vegetables, too.
It's very practical, really. It lets people keep in touch with more simple ways of life; the simple lifestyle they can't experience in the technological bustle of the city.
The sign on Dacha's gate said "Welcome to the cabin."
dacha, or izba
The word "dacha" is pronounced as DAH-chuh.
White Dacha was created in 1898.
Kuntsevo Dacha was created in 1934.
Academicheskaya Dacha was created in 1884.
The plural of the Russian word "dacha" is "dachi."
A Russian cottage is a 'dacha' or 'datcha.'
In English that is gibberish. -You may mean 'Dacha' which is a small Russian villa in the countryside.
"Дача" [`da-cha] (this means an owned or rent piece of countryside land with house on it. Without a house, it is "дачный участок" [`dach-nyi-u-`chas-tok] or simply "участок" [u-`chas-tok]).
NO auchwitz was.
a dacha