yes, the Poles suffered greatly, Slavs were seen as a lesser race.
concentration camps were German , NONE were Polish !!!
all day long
Your question was cut off. Here is an algebra formula for you. 30P + 30I = 60a a=all 35G = 60 - 8N 35G= 52 Germans, German and Irish and Polish, Polish and German 8N = people not German at all 52M-7A-13PG=32 German only M=mixed n=not German at all p=Polish I=Irish G=German only. But since the question was cut off my work is only an example for you to use to work your assigned question. I would need to know what 10 represented to solve the problem.
The excuse he gave to the German people was to give them "living space". In other words, he expected to replace Polish people with German people.
well tell the polish station that your family get kidnap and don't kill that polish. the polish station will do all the work to get your family ;) == == well tell the polish station that your family get kidnap and don't kill that polish. the polish station will do all the work to get your family ;) == ==
Hitler based his actions on his beliefs so he used the Polish Jews and all other Jews as scapegoats. He aroused people's interest's of killing Jews by using propaganda to show how "horrible" the Jews were. So basically he planned on slaughtering the entire population of Jewish people and have it be justified by his propaganda.
no.
Not easy for grown people but easy to a child
German.
Hitler considered people with Blonde hair, blue eyes and German were perfect. But he dident kill any Germans unless they were Jewish. But Hitler himself was none of the above, he had brown hair, green or brown eyes and was intact not German but polish or Austrian. Hope I helped :D
I'm not sure if this is exactly what happened, but supposedly German troops attacked a radio station in an ethnicly German part of Poland. Then they put Polish uniforms on dead civilians and announced that the Polish army had attacked the station. Then they invaded Poland to 'protect' the Germanic people living there.
The German-Polish border (after 1945) was often referred to as the Oder-Neisse Line.