No.
Horrible.
yes
Elie Wiesel
it was another day to be alive
They killed her. She died in concentration camp, so she didn't live to have a grudge.
While in a German concentration camp he traded his life so that another prisoner, who had a wife and children, might live. He was injected with carbolic acid and his body burned in the ovens.
Otto Frank was sent to Aushwitz, the biggest camp, in August 1944. He got out on the Aushwitz death march, and went back to Amsterdam in about January 1945. :)
No, Peter van Pels died shortly before liberation at the Matthausen concentration camp of undetermined causes.
Most people who "worked" in the concentration camps lived (if you can call it living) in the camp. People were shipped all across Europe to different camps. Sometimes they could be close to where they used to live, but more often than not they would simple be shipped like cattle to a camp that needed work. Where they would normally live out their remaining weeks/months/years and die a horrible death. Hope this helps you out. Was slightly confused by the question itself. Wasn't sure if you meant did they use to live close to the camp or if they were shipped in daily.
Anne Frank died in 1945, and is buried in a mass grave at the site of the former Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp on the Luneberg Heath in Germany.
Because they were fed very little - and nowhere near enough. If you had to live on a concentration camp diet you, too, would be starving ...
Jeremy Camp Live was created on 2009-03-04.