Once they were in occupeid territory they could either live where they were told to, or try to live as an outlaw.
Ghettos were the places they kept the Jews. The ghettos were isolated, enclosed communities that the Germans kept the Jews in. Ghettos were where the Jews were forced to live, under horrible conditions.
There were signs posted all over the local areas. Some Jews reacted by going into hiding, some left for Switzerland and other places they could get to.
ghettos were places where Jews lived away from the Nazis they couldn't escape because they were a place where Jews were allowed in and could only sometimes go out .the Jews were usually taken away to the concentration camps after a while.
Yes, what ever Ghettos their were in the Axis state, jews were sent to them
The Jewish ghettos in WWII, sometimes known as Jewish quarters were sections of cities which were segregated for Jews to live in. (These becoming the only places where Jews were alowed to live).
Indeed. Jews were in ghettos.
once a year
Jews did not agree to be police in the ghettos, they were made to!
they had nowhere to go.
Traditional ghettos were seen as permanent places for Jews to live (separated from the rest of the population). The Nazis, on the other hand, saw the ghettos as temporary - as staging posts in the Final Solution. The last 'traditional' Jewish ghetto - that in Rome - had been opened (liberated) in 1870. The Nazis reintroduced ghettos for Jews in Poland, Lithuania and Latvia in 1939-41 and deliberately kept the food and water supplies inadequate.
In towns in Nazi-occupied Poland and some other countries, an area was designated as the ghetto. All Jews were ordered into that area by a certain date, and all new-Jews were ordered to leave. The ghetto was enclosed by high walls and the perimeter was patrolled. Some Jews in big cities knew that the ghetto was a death-trap and fled if they could. On the whole, though, the Jews did as they were told.
No. The Jews built, and paid for the walls.