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Concentration Camps.
People with a Polish background were often sent to both Nazi concentration camps and Soviet labor camps. Both Germany and the Soviet Union wanted control of Poland.
They were people against all Jewish people and sent them to concentration camps and Hitler was the leader for this
Their was no Jewish Concentration Camp but in total between 15-16 Million Jews were sent to Nazi Concentration Camps.
According to numerouse sources and figures, Their's an estimate of 34,000 Jews were sent to Auschwitz from other Nazi Concentration Camps or Sub-Camps. According to most Historians, it widely agreed that 33,734 Jews were sent to Auschwitz from other Nazi Concentration Camps or Sub-Camps.
The Allies liberated many Nazi and Axis concentration camps in World War Two.The prisoners of war were sent to concentration camps.
The boss of the Nazi terror apparatus was Himmler.
The entire Nazi terror apparatus, including sections of the police, had the authority to send people to concentration camps. For example, sometimes the police decided that people with previous convictions were repeat offenders and, instead of sending them for trial, simply sent them to concentration camps.
Nazi members would beat them in the streets. They got sent to concentration camps were they had to do forced labour and the children and the old got sent straight to the gas chamber.
criminals.
The earliest Nazi concentration camps were intended mainly for: * Communists * Social Democrats * Labour leaders * Dissidents * People against whom influential Nazis had a grudge Some Jews were also sent to concentration camps in 1933-34.
During World War II, after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, and the US declared war with Japan, the US sent Japanese-Americans to internment camps. The US did thisin order to prevent any Japanese-Americans from being able to support the Japanese during the war.Theese internment camps, unlike Nazi concentration camps, did not mass murder their inhabitants, and they had much better conditions than the Nazi camps, but they were similar to the Nazi concentration camps in other ways:The people sent there were sent there based on their race, not on any crimes they had committedThe people's homes and belongings were confiscated and they were forced to go to the camps without warningThe people's belongings were not returned to them when they were freed from the camps (although the US did later pay these Japanese-Americans some compensation).