Over 200 thousand because they wanted to show people what they were capable of.
During World War 2, many Gypsies were forced to wear uniforms and identification badges in concentration camps to distinguish them from other prisoners. They faced persecution and discrimination by the Nazis for their ethnicity.
they remained parasic
World War 1 went on for about 4 years.
Yes, some Roma people, often referred to as Gypsies, did survive World War 2. However, they were one of the groups targeted by the Nazis for persecution and many were killed in the Holocaust. The exact number of survivors is difficult to determine, but there are Roma communities around the world today.
Germany blamed the Jews, Gypsies, un-Aryian races for the loss in world war one so Germany killed the Jews, Gypsies, etc... Japan wanted to control The pacific and southeast Asia and attacked the USA for them to get into the war. There're fault he he he.
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In Nazi racial ideology, the Gypsies (Romani) were right up there with Jews as sub-human beasts. The Nazis sought to exterminate them, and many of them were massacred or sent to the death camps.
Between 1.8 million and 2 million Poles were killed and between 220,000 and 1,5000,000 gypsies were killed in the Holocaust. 66,000 Poles were killed in the invasion of Poland.
The Jewish, the gypsies, and the disabled
150,000 went to Europe
1914 to 1918
5200