he drug them behind his car. they were tied by their ankles and drug. pretty brutal. there were about 4 behind every car.
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Completely WRONG. Hitler had them moved by the hundreds in box cars. (trains) The trip was brutal and many died on the trip by starvation and disease.
The Jews were transported to death camps in trains (mainly). These trains were trains in which cattle were transported and people were crammed within them, so they had very little space to do anything. Many took days to reach their destinations, where they had no food, water, or bathrooms. The smell was awful.
In order to get the Jews to move to Poland, however, all that Hitler and the Nazi had to do was tell them that all they had to do was move there. That was only one thing he tricked them into doing, however. The Jews were not just compliant with death-sentences; little by little, Hitler had told them to do small things which ultimately lead to the mass-murder which occurred in the death camps. For example, he made them all put the letter "J" on their passports so that later, if any of them tried to escape, they would be brought back in toward their deaths.
The most common method of transport by far was by train.
In cattle cars from the Ghettos to the death camps or the labor camps.
By freight train (cattle-cars).
If the question is asking about Jews in Nazi-Occupied Europe, then the answer was effectively: No. While Jews were moved between ghettos and concentration camps using trains, these were not trains that Jews chose to get on, nor were they humane, nor Jews did not have the choice of where they were going, and, finally, Jews were strictly forbidden from using general public transport. Outside of Nazi-Occupied Europe, Jews were generally able to use transportation, especially in the UK and USA.
Jews and Poles, mainly. When it first started, Belsen was used as a transport camp to trade Jews with the Allies. At around November 1944, as the Allies drew near, transports from other concentration camps were made to Bergen-Belsen.
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Examples * Jews were not allowed to work in the public sector * They were not allowed to work in the media or in theatres * They were banned from universities and colleges * Jewish physicians were only allowed to treat Jews * Jewish lawyers were only allowed to represent Jews * Sex between Jews and non-Jews was made illegal These are only a few examples.
A number of Jews were sent to concentration camps in 1933, but because they were opponents of the Nazis, not simply for being Jews. (The Nazis were at that stage also obsessed with 'Jews in the media' and Jewish journalists and newspaper proprietors had a very rough time).In November 1938 during the Night of the Broken Glass about 30,000 Jews were sent to concentration camps and by Christmas 1938, 2,000 of these Jews had died.Routine transports of Jews to camps started, at first on a small scale, in 1940; and the wholesale transport of Jews, usually to extermination camps, began in 1941.
Nazis transported the Jews by train mostly.
to transport them to concentration camps
Not really. When Germany was loosing, instead of using trains to transport goods, he used them to transport Jews to their death
Assuming that you are referring to Orthodox Jews, they generally do not transport goods on Shabbat. The day is a day on which work ceases. However, within cities and smaller towns with a large Jewish presence, there is typically an "eruv" (עירוב) which is a ritual enclosure that permits Jews to treat a large area of a city as a communal space in which things may be carried. However, the Jews will only transport what desperately needs transporting, such as religious books, religious paraphernalia, and baby strollers. As a matter of course, they do not transport consumer goods on Shabbat, even within an eruv.
(Holocaust history) roundup of Jews from conquered territory for transport to death camps
(Holocaust history) roundup of Jews from conquered territory for transport to death camps
Boxcars are usually used to transport livestock. The Nazis used them to transport Jews and other minorities to the concentration camps.
in this area rescue of Jews was run by the Protestant church (as they were able to move freely). The network managed to transport Jews to Spain, Switzerland or to find places for them to hide.
you must mis-understand what troops are; they are people, not a mode of transport. Troops also used trains. The deportations were not a military action
the trains in the movie are a model of the trains Nazis used to transport Jews
First, for the purposes of this question, I am narrowing the analysis to Jews who keep kosher, e.g. follow the dietary laws, and also ignoring any personal allergies.Being on a train has no effect on a what a Jew can or cannot eat. Jews eat the same food on trains that they do in their homes or restaurants (except they may opt for particular dishes that are easier to transport like sandwiches over stews).If by "the trains" you are referring to the cattle cars used to transport Jews in miserable conditions to the Nazi Concentration Camps, Jews were not given food for the ride. They were "expected" to tough it out or die.
You're thinking of Eichmann, Hitler would not have bothered about such things.