Want this question answered?
He had no choice. He (and many other Jews) were forced into many camps like this by the Nazis and Hitler.
At the beginning of the excerpt in "Night" by Elie Wiesel, Wiesel is in a train car with other Jews being transported to the Auschwitz concentration camp.
Doubt it because if you could imagine being send to a concentration camp and being forced to do physical labour and always scared of you being next in line of being killed and having your friends of family being killed, also hearing people especially children screaming when getting killed. That does F*CK up your head and traumatise you. the thought of that today witness the holocaust first hand Will never go away BUT he could be reluctant because of he being been tortured and scared, he knows that the pain and knows that suffering is other for now
Three character traits that describe Elie Wiesel as a young boy are courage, resilience, and empathy. He showed courage in facing the challenges of the Holocaust, resilience in surviving the horrors of concentration camps, and empathy in caring for his father and other prisoners.
Death camps
By 1942, the Germans had built 6 death camps. Some of theses death camps were Auschwitz, Belzec, Chelmno, Majdanek, Sobibor, and T.II. Some other Concentration camps were Bergen-Belsen, Buchenwald, Dachau, Sachsenhausen, Treblinka, and Theresienstadt. These camps were forced work camps and not killing camps. The worst death camp out of them all was Auschwitz.
No, you can either pick Islam or any other by itself. You can observe people with the religion and you be different but you can't pick 2.
From March 1944 at age 15, to January 1945, after that he and thousands of other inmates ran a death march to Buchenwald until he was liberated on April 11 1945.
The Holocaust camps differed in the ways they treated prisoners after they passed the selection that degrades and dehumanizes them. Sometimes the prisoners were forced to do hard labor and other times they were killed.
death camps changed history simply because there has never been death camps created in all of man kind. there has never been a place specificly built to kill innocent people because of their race and religion. Also it limited the Jewish population in Germany, and Poland, and other surrounding countrys.
According to numerouse sources and figures, Their's an estimate of 34,000 Jews were sent to Auschwitz from other Nazi Concentration Camps or Sub-Camps. According to most Historians, it widely agreed that 33,734 Jews were sent to Auschwitz from other Nazi Concentration Camps or Sub-Camps.
There have been and are many euphemisms used at various times, these include; resettlement camps, re-education camps, prison camps and personal protection camps.