That would depend upon which one. But apart from Auschwitz, most just had enough people to process the people into ash (ie. a few hundred).
Maybe a few hundred.
About 190,000 People died at Auschwitz I during the Holocaust.
Between 3,000 and 4,000 people died at Breendonk Concentration Camp during the Holocaust.
About 13,500 Jews died, however, they did not die IN the camp, they died after being moved to the Theresienstadt camp. See the related links for further reading.
Impossible to say... why do you want to know this? O_o
It was more than 'scary': for many it involved death.
of those taken out about 450 000 were taken to the death camp.
Death was administrated in numerous horrible ways. They would send them to gas chambers, usually telling them they were showers. The Jewish would then be gassed to death. Another way was that they would just shoot them. Yet there was many more ways than this, the HOLOCAUST was a very tradgic event. Yurr mom
The Ustasi were Croatian Nazis and they ran their own camps and carried out their very own Croatian holocaust. The best known and biggest Ustasi (Croatian Nazi) camp was Jasenovac, where many victims were murdered with blunt instruments, such as cudgels.
6 million Jewish people roughly and roughly 4 million other people were killed in the Holocaust. The term "Holocaust" means 'Death by fire', which was a method of killing some of the Death Camps used against its prisoners.
Reyna Siegel did not go to a concentration or death camp. She is known for her experiences during the Holocaust, but she was not imprisoned in such camps. Instead, she survived by escaping and finding refuge elsewhere. Her story highlights the resilience and survival of many during that dark period in history.
During the holocaust, Gleiwitz concentration camp in Gliwice, Poland, was operational between March of 1944 and January of 1945. During this time the camp held around 1,300 prisoners. It is thought that many, if not all, of these prisoners died.