that is a very dumb question
The Death Marches took place between 1944 and 1945. Prisoners were forced to march for tens of miles in the snow to travel from camp to camp. No one really knows ho many people survived these marches but what is known is that around 250,000 Jews died during the marches.
No one survived from the death marches. Everyone involved in the actual marching was sent to another concentration camp where they would have died or maybe would have survived butthat wouldn't be a death march then. The others went to be executed.
there were two main reasons: the marches occurred because the camps from which they started were under threat of liberation, so the inmates were marched to another camp the marches were a way of killing the participants, some marches did not even reach their destination, they would just keep marching until all of the charges died or the guards deserted
1 hour to a couple days, some were 8 miles, some were 80 __________________ Death marches were generally hundreds or thousands of miles, the aim was to march people until they died.
its in the name Jews along with other prisoners was sent on death marches accompanied by the some SS at the camp during day and night in any weather condition without food or water for miles, most of them died on a single march.
Death marches were so tragic because lots of people died.
The Death Marches took place between 1944 and 1945. Prisoners were forced to march for tens of miles in the snow to travel from camp to camp. No one really knows ho many people survived these marches but what is known is that around 250,000 Jews died during the marches.
No one survived from the death marches. Everyone involved in the actual marching was sent to another concentration camp where they would have died or maybe would have survived butthat wouldn't be a death march then. The others went to be executed.
there were two main reasons: the marches occurred because the camps from which they started were under threat of liberation, so the inmates were marched to another camp the marches were a way of killing the participants, some marches did not even reach their destination, they would just keep marching until all of the charges died or the guards deserted
1 hour to a couple days, some were 8 miles, some were 80 __________________ Death marches were generally hundreds or thousands of miles, the aim was to march people until they died.
James of the Marches died in 1476.
its in the name Jews along with other prisoners was sent on death marches accompanied by the some SS at the camp during day and night in any weather condition without food or water for miles, most of them died on a single march.
A common word from the holocaust that starts with 'D' is "Death'' or "Die". Jews died in the holocaust because of the Nazis. The holocaust was World War 2.
hard to tell with any accuracy, obviously the longer marches would have a lower survival rate, but also some people managed to escape and the guards left some, with the whole column disbanding.
they were forced to walk 200 miles to boot camp without drink or food and they didn't get rest and if you fell they killed you and left you there to rot
almost anyone who got the disease died from it.
Nanny died of natural death. She wasn't killed by anyone, it was old age.