Some were put on trial, a few fled to various countries in South America, but most 'lived happily ever after'.
most were executed
_________
No. Some were put on trial, convicted and punished; many changed their names and 'lived happily ever after'.
what happend to families in the concentration camps
Either Austria or Italy.
yes, they accepted millions of people.Many Nazi staff officers and Nazi officials visited the camps, civilian access was not completely ruled out, but it was rare.If you mean 'Were the camps open to the general public?' the answer is no.
Nazi leaders wanted to keep the existence of extermination camps secret.
The camps were mainly in Germany and in Nazi-occupied Poland.
The Allies (including Britain) stopped the Nazi concentration camps and the Holocaust by invading and defeating Nazi Germany.
Either Austria or Italy.
Most, if not all, experiments happened in the concentration camps.
yes, they accepted millions of people.Many Nazi staff officers and Nazi officials visited the camps, civilian access was not completely ruled out, but it was rare.If you mean 'Were the camps open to the general public?' the answer is no.
The ending of the Nazi camps came where when the USSR liberated them.
Ghettos, concentration camps and extermination camps.
No, but it had the Mauthausen group of camps.
By Adolf Hilter, He decided to build the Nazi camps but it was people who were going to be in it akak Labout workers who actually built the camps.
Nazi leaders wanted to keep the existence of extermination camps secret.
camps where hostages were held and killed for reprisals
Auschwitz-Birkenau (the Auschwitz group of camps).
No but they did have letters
The extermination camps were top secret.