Yes, there were some Jewish survivors from extermination camps. Here are some the names of some of them: * Elie Wiesel (Auschwitz III and later Buchenwald) * Primo Levi (Auschwitz III) * Fania Fénélon (Auschwitz II and later Bergen-Belsen) * Esther Bejanaro (Auschwitz II) * Rudolf Reder (One of only two (!) known survivors from Belzec * Alexander Pechersky (Sobibor, where he led the revolt and mass break-out) The two women were both members of the Auschwitz Girls' Orchestra which was treated better than ordinary inmates.
Jew's, gypsies, bisexuals, lesbian, and gays were all taken to the camps the children , adults, elderly all suffered ever newborns:(
The chances were very frail , they would have to hide and not be found or survive the camps.
the Jews were killed at death camps mainly in Poland and Germany by the Nazis
torture, lack of sanitation, and hunger answer 2 -- and the most common 'death'
Unfortunately, there were dozens upon dozens of death camps, or concentration camps as the Nazis preferred to call them. However, they were all centered in Germany and Poland. Poland was primarily where the camps were because that was basically 'Jew central'. It was also the first country in the war to be invaded and conquered.
Because he was a Jew and Jews were getting captured and was sent to death camps
concentration camps or death camps Edit: Like the above said, they were sent to concentration camps. Although, if they were healthy the Jew was then send to work camps, but before this they lived in the ghettos. (or they had to go hide.)
no.
It was the night of the Kristallench, when the Germans invaded Jews' homes, smashed all their china and crystal, and forced them to go into the death camps
Work.
yes
while the jew were in the consentration camps the ate gross food.