Once one was actually a prisoner in a camp escape was extremely hard. At Sobibor, one of the most easterly camps, there was a riot: some prisoners managed to flee and to hide in surrounding forests and afterwards to join a group of guerrillas. There were also a few successful escapes from Auschwitz and Treblinka.
Actually many Jews escaped the concentration camps,but it was very difficult to escape because they didn't have any where to go. Some people who were non Jews helped Jews hide when they escaped, but it was dangerous for them to hide anyone who escaped because they could get killed if they were caught.
Many people were caught trying to escape concentraion camps. When they were caught, they were either beaten very badly, beaten to death, shot, or worse.
Yes! There were MANY Holocaust survivors. About one-third of European Jews survived the Holocaust.
Escape was very difficult. The children that did escape did so with one or both parents. Some were hidden by people who took pity on them.
yes but maybe a little over 1000:(
Yes. Some also succeeded.
Yes.
Yes, prisoners at the Flossenbürg concentration camp were tattooed. In many concentration camps, including Flossenbürg, prisoners were marked with a series of numbers as a means of identification. These tattoos were typically placed on the prisoner's forearm.
Prisoners at Flossenburg wore what prisoners in other concentration camps wore; striped uniforms.
they didn't, not even close.
concentration camps
Concentration camps were used for forced prison labor, while extermination camps were built to kill all prisoners.
Most were killed. Others were shipped to concentration camps...then killed.
Croatian Association of Prisoners in Serbian Concentration Camps was created in 1995.
Able bodied prisoners had to work as slave labourers.
Hard physical labor.
No, there was no such thing as a "good" concentration camp!
allied forces arrived at the camps and freed the prisoners
Death camps were built to kill prisoners systematically
prisoners the free and camps consentration the enter us the did year what 1945
they wore striped pajamas
Agriculture and crafts
Prisoners at Flossenburg wore what prisoners in other concentration camps wore; striped uniforms.
Yes, prisoners at the Flossenbürg concentration camp were tattooed. In many concentration camps, including Flossenbürg, prisoners were marked with a series of numbers as a means of identification. These tattoos were typically placed on the prisoner's forearm.