generally they were told to go to a non-Jewish (so that there would be no Synagogues) section of the city and wall themselves in.
There were Closed, Open, and Destruction ghettos during the Holocaust..
The Jewish ghettos were sections of the city that were allocated specifially for Jewish housing.
Jewish ghettos did not maintain medical records.
The Jews were moved into the new extermination camps. That is why they lived in the ghetto. The Germans only built the ghettos because they didnt have means of the transportation to take the Jews to the camps they saw it as a way to temporarily solve the Jewish "problem". They were taken to extermination camps and killed.
They are called 'Jewish ghettos', they were used to house Jews (and gypsies).
there were no Jewish ghettos in Germany during the Holocaust.
The Jewish councils during the Holocaust they were responsible for administering the ghettos set up by the Nazis. Their role was highly problematical, to say the least.
The Nazis themselves 'put a stop to Jewish ghettos during the Holocaust' because they liquidated them all: in other words, the inhabitants were sent to extermination camps. The last ghetto to be liquidated was Lodz in August 1944.
What do you mean by Jewish traitors? Are you thinking of the Jewish Councils (Judenräte) in the ghettos and elsewhere?
The (Jewish) ghettos were sections of certain towns and cities which were segregated for the habitation of Jews.
Wojciech Lenarczyk has written: 'Erntefest, 3-4 listopada 1943' -- subject(s): Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), Jewish ghettos, Jews, Persecutions, History 'Erntefest, 3-4 listopada 1943' -- subject(s): Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), Jewish ghettos, Jews, Persecutions, History
the Jewish people did and an estimate of about 100,000 of them died well, almost all of them died before long. Some ghettos also held gypsies.
Ghettos were blocked off sections of town where Jewish people were forced to live. Walls were built around the ghettos in order to keep the Jews inside. It was hard living in the ghettos. Food and personal space were scarce.
open and closed ghettos.
There were Closed, Open, and Destruction ghettos during the Holocaust..
The largest Jewish ghettos were in Poland, where the largest Jewish populations were, but there were ghettos across eastern Europe.
The Jewish ghettos were sections of the city that were allocated specifially for Jewish housing.